Yes, the Best Investment Bankers Are Worth Paying For

Recent dealmaking by OpenAI appears to raise an awkward question for mergers and acquisitions advisers: What value do you add?

The ChatGPT developer has relied mainly on in-house teams in negotiating recent commercial partnerships in chip supply and shunned outside advisers, the Financial Times reported last month, citing someone with knowledge of the situation.

It would be tempting for bankers and lawyers to dismiss what Big Tech does as an outlier, just as one might not be too surprised if Unicredit SpA boss Andrea Orcel, a former investment banker himself, relied on an internal team in a takeover approach. Moreover, OpenAI wasn’t doing traditional mergers, acquisitions and disposals.

But some paranoia is surely justified. For starters, OpenAI’s transactions aren’t just commercial deals akin to licensing and development agreements struck in, say, the pharmaceutical industry. They’ve sometimes involved taking stakes or accepting investment — conventional fee opportunities for banks and law firms.

Dealmakers should ask themselves where else they can be disrupted. After all, OpenAI itself already has more than 100 ex-bankers hired through a third-party training ChatGPT to do the work of junior bankers in a project known as Mercury.

Sure, the advisory world benefits to a degree from a moat. Hiring an external adviser is often a regulatory requirement. All the same, it’s clear AI can meddle with certain elements of the transaction chain. Take due diligence on buyout targets by private equity firms. That’s a time-consuming and lucrative activity for corporate law firms that charge by the hour. AI can help private equity partners interrogate the data room themselves, without the expensive legal brains.