Dealmakers Hit $1.8 Trillion as They Get Used to Trade Chaos

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8b(3o83oalicu5amyodoo4gg_media_dl_1.png8b(3o83oalicu5amyodoo4gg_media_dl_1.png Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) — Big money takeovers of private companies helped drive mergers and acquisitions in the first half, as dealmakers got comfortable writing sizable checks in topsy-turvy markets. 

Financial Post

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More than half of the 10 largest deals announced in 2025 have involved a private target, data compiled by Bloomberg show, including the tie-up of Charter Communications Inc. and Cox Communications, Alphabet Inc.’s purchase of cybersecurity firm Wiz Inc. and Constellation Energy Corp.’s acquisition of US power station operator Calpine Corp. All were valued at around $30 billion or more including debt.

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Transactions like these and Meta Platforms Inc.’s $14 billion-plus investment in data-labeling startup Scale AI have lifted the value of all deals globally by almost a fifth to $1.8 trillion, the data show. 

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“The creativity we’re seeing across deals is symptomatic of the need to unwind the massive amounts of capital tied up in privately held companies,” said Haidee Lee, global head of sponsor M&A at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

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A strong second-quarter means advisers can head into their summer breaks with more confidence about the rest of 2025. That’s despite the ongoing geopolitical and trade turmoil has at times this year set alarm bells ringing across Wall Street’s M&A desks and which could still damage sentiment going forward. 

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“Corporate buyers have come back in force as they look to diversify their revenue base and enhance growth,” said David Kamo, head of financial sponsor M&A at Evercore Inc. “There’s no doubt that the M&A market is open — especially in unaffected sectors like software, health-care technology and data center infrastructure.”

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Trump Turnaround

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Until mid-March, transaction values had been trailing 2024 levels, in large part due to the unpredictable start to Donald Trump’s second term as US president. Things took a sharp turn for the worse in early April, when Trump unleashed global tariffs that sent markets crashing and business leaders back into wait-and-see mode.

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Major indexes have since recouped losses as Trump has softened some trade demands. And while the speed of announcements from his administration initially caught many on Wall Street off guard, there’s now more clarity on policy direction, according to Eric Rutkoske, global head of M&A at Guggenheim Securities LLC.

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“If we continue to see moderate inflation, a healthy financing environment and a bit more geopolitical and macro certainty, we should have a very good second half,” Rutkoske said. “Those are three things that have been concerns for a while, so we don’t take it for granted.”

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Companies are also getting a better grasp of the US government’s approach to antitrust issues. Advisers say a return to traditional enforcement practices under Trump is emboldening companies to strike more ambitious mergers. This month, the Federal Trade Commission greenlit Omnicom Group Inc.’s $13.5 billion buyout of rival advertising agency Interpublic Group on the condition it promise not to withhold online ads for political reasons.

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