Fall in sterling and Europe’s economic problems raise prospect of cheap assets after drop in deals

US dealmakers hope strong dollar will alleviate M&A drop


US mergers and acquisitions activity has dropped 40 per cent year on year in volume terms but dealmakers hope the strengthening dollar will drive a flurry of activity in the coming months as buyers snap up cheap assets in the UK and Europe.
Just $1.2tn worth of transactions have been agreed in the US so far this year, according to data from Refinitiv. That is the slowest nine months since the start of the coronavirus pandemic in 2020, which preceded a boom in dealmaking. By comparison, M&A volume was down by 30 per cent in the Asia Pacific and 25 per cent in Europe for the same period.
However, US dealmakers find themselves in a strong position for cross-border transactions as Britain and Europe grapple with a cost of living crisis and a war that is much closer to home.

However, he cautioned that buyers may want to bide their time. “As the UK outlook becomes so uncertain will it hold back from buying or will it actually attract bargain hunters? For strategic buyers, this could be a very interesting and opportune time to make a move on companies that they’ve always liked,” he said. “Other people will want to sit back and watch what happens for a bit.”
Global M&A is down 34 per cent from the same period last year to $2.7tn in the nine months to September. Dealmakers struck $642bn worth of deals in the third quarter, breaking a historic run for M&A where global transactions exceeded $1tn for eight consecutive quarters.
“As the global economy has been hit by serious headwinds, M&A activity has been a prime casualty. Interest in consolidation continues in many sectors so we are busy, but getting deals across the finish line at the moment is truly challenging,” said Frank Aquila, senior M&A partner at Sullivan & Cromwell.
Private equity firms, once a bright spot for softening M&A markets, are facing their own reckoning as financing conditions tighten and hamper their ability to get large deals done. Globally $642bn in buyouts have been struck through the first nine months of this year, a 26 per cent decline.
At the outset of the year, a string of large deals, including the privatisations of Citrix for $16.5bn and Nielsen for $16bn, signalled that buyout volumes might again surpass $1tn. Elon Musk’s $44bn buyout of Twitter bolstered expectations, though the South African billionaire is now waging a legal battle to back out of the takeover.
This story originally appeared on: Financial Times - Author:Ortenca Aliaj