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Global M&A activity on track to eclipse 2021 deal boom, Morgan Stanley says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 9, 2026 | 9:35 AM

By Manya Saini

July 9 (Reuters) – Morgan Stanley expects global mergers and acquisitions activity to hit a record $6.4 trillion in 2026, overshadowing the levels seen in 2021 as buoyant equity ​markets and renewed corporate confidence set off a flurry ‌of transactions.

The projection points to a broad-based revival in global dealmaking after years of high interest rates and market volatility kept executives on the sidelines.

Although the Middle East conflict and fears of AI-driven disruption weighed on sentiment earlier ‌this ​year, Wall Street appears to have largely ⁠brushed aside those worries.

Morgan ⁠Stanley said momentum picked up in the second quarter, with announced deals surging more than 64% from a year earlier, led by software, utilities, energy and healthcare. Deal completions climbed more ​than 33%.

Companies have also been encouraged by signs that regulators under the Trump administration are more receptive to large deals, easing ⁠concerns that aggressive antitrust enforcement could ⁠derail transactions.

“In line with our expectations ahead of the ​2024 election, the Trump administration has pursued a lighter-touch regulatory regime, ​albeit with important nuances under the surface,” Morgan Stanley analysts ‌said in a note to clients. “That means the M&A backdrop has become more constructive.”

The brokerage expects deal opportunities to expand as geopolitical uncertainty recedes, prompting companies to reshape businesses while private-equity sponsors ⁠put their dry powder to work.

Morgan Stanley estimates that alternative asset managers are sitting on about $4.3 trillion of capital available for deals. Sponsor-backed M&A ⁠announcements rose more ‌than 10% in the second quarter.

Potential interest-rate hikes, ⁠it said, remain a key risk to its ​M&A outlook, ‌but the current M&A wave has proven largely ​resilient.

Higher borrowing ⁠costs typically dampen acquisition activity by raising financing costs and making leveraged buyouts harder to execute.

Next week’s second-quarter earnings from largest U.S. banks will offer investors fresh insight into the dealmaking outlook as well as debt and equity issuance.

(Reporting by Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing ​by Shilpi Majumdar)