Dealmakers eye $4 trillion-plus M&A haul in 2025
An evening view of the financial Central district and Victoria Harbour in Hong Kong · Reuters

By Anirban Sen, Anousha Sakoui and Kane Wu

LONDON/NEW YORK/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Top dealmakers expect global mergers and acquisitions (M&A)volumes to surpass $4 trillion next year, the highest in four years, buoyed by U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's promise of less regulation, lower corporate taxes and a broadly pro-business stance.

Following are comments from investment bankers and M&A lawyers on the outlook for dealmaking in 2025:

DANIEL WOLF, M&A PARTNER AT KIRKLAND & ELLIS

“I think people are getting a little bit worried that the pace of interest rate drops is getting slower and probably less predictable because of stubborn inflation numbers. A more unpredictable problem is the possibility that you have a target business where you signed the deal and are waiting to close the deal, and suddenly a tariff war breaks out in that industry or country. And this deal that you penciled out, suddenly doesn't make sense because the tariffs change the economics so drastically. So, you have to brace yourself for more unpredictability.”

JAY HOFMANN, CO-HEAD OF M&A, NORTH AMERICA, JPMORGAN

“Antitrust enforcement will no doubt be more accommodating (under Trump) than it was under the Biden administration, but probably won't be quite as accommodating as it has been under traditional Republican administrations. The discussions and the sentiment around unshackling businesses in the financial sector from some of the regulatory burdens that they've had over the last 20-plus years - that's probably the biggest upside we see next year for M&A. The prospect of a more challenging tax regime, whether it's corporate or individual, has obviously gone away. Those two things are tailwinds for the economy and for dealmaking.”

DAN GRABOS, HEAD OF AMERICAS M&A AT BARCLAYS

“2024 has been one of the most unique years I've seen in my career - it was all about the quarters. The first quarter was dominated by transformational deals of $10 billion-plus in North America. And Q2 saw a comeback in dealmaking in Europe as well as pick-up in deal sizes below $10 billion. Somewhat surprisingly in Q3, we saw activity in Asia-Pacific, except for China, with some sizeable situations in Japan. The fourth quarter has been all about private equity with elevated levels of take-privates.”

ALISON HARDING-JONES, GLOBAL HEAD OF M&A AT DEUTSCHE BANK

"It's been a year of real political change around the world with big elections. Now that we are through those, the expectation is that things will pick up. That’s combined with one of the most important drivers being inflation under control and interest rates coming down."