Global deal activity disappoints, M&A revenue falls as Trump pursues tariffs

Echo Wang - Reuters - 01/04
A global trade war kicked off by U.S. President Donald Trump and the ensuing market turmoil soured bankers' predictions for a robust start to a blockbuster year for deals on Wall Street.
  • Global M&A activity up 12.6% year to date, at $984.38 billion
  • US M&A volumes tumble 13%, Europe up 7%, Asia-Pacific jumps 92%
  • CoreWeave, Venture IPOs disappoint
April 1 (Reuters) - A global trade war kicked off by U.S. President Donald Trump and the ensuing market turmoil soured bankers' predictions for a robust start to a blockbuster year for deals on Wall Street.
First-quarter mergers and acquisitions volume rose 12.6% to $984.38 billion from year-ago period, Dealogic data compiled for Reuters showed. This was due almost entirely to the Asia Pacific region where three large state-run deals announced by China on Sunday and a ports deal driven by Trump helped nearly double M&A volume from last year.

Sign up here.

Bankers worldwide are paring back deals and generating less revenue. In the U.S., which accounts for almost half of global M&A transactions, first-quarter volume slipped 13% to $436.56 billion. And while IPO activity increased, a prolonged trade war will make it less palatable in the future, said Matt Witheiler of Wellington Private Investments.
"Could they go public? Sure anybody can go public at any time, if the fundamentals are good. But is it worth the brain damage and potential price that you go public at? Probably not," Witheiler said.
New stock offerings rose about 4.1% to $160.22 billion, but some recent initial public offerings have failed to impress and the number of offerings fell 17.7% to 1,065 according to Dealogic data.
"A lot of the deals that were announced in the first quarter were generated last year at a time when there was increasing exuberance with a potentially new administration in the U.S., with the expectation of tax cuts and deregulation," said Cassander Verwey, JPMorgan's co-head of M&A in Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
"Given the developments over the last weeks the reality is that exuberance has left the market and more uncertainty has creeped in."
Wall Street executives and analysts had predicted a b, expecting Trump to slash regulations, lower taxes and enact more pro-business policies. But U.S. stocks have fallen sharply since his inauguration, and the hoped-for scenario looks less likely by the day, analysts and dealmakers said.
Verwey said M&A markets need confidence and some potential deals were abandoned because of the uncertainty.
Bankers fear a three-year s...
[Short citation of 8% of the original article]
Loading...