What's The Big Deal?
Global M&A hit a record $2.83 trillion in H1 2026, the highest total since records began, eclipsing the 2021 peak of $2.74 trillion. Deal values in Q2 alone were up 41% year-on-year, deal count up around 10%, mega deals continue to dominate, and small-cap and venture activity is up 200%. But the picture underneath the headline numbers is more complicated, and both think the drivers behind the surge may not last into 2027. In this episode, Debs and Graham work through Bain's mid-year M&A report and unpack the themes behind the numbers. They open with market context: SpaceX post-IPO with the share price now below $160 and the first lock-up expiries approaching, the AI mini-correction of June driven by CapEx discipline concerns, Meta joining xAI in selling excess compute capacity, and news of a Chinese frontier model claiming performance at 10% of the cost of leading Western models. The M&A conversation itself focuses on the defensive posturing thesis. With geopolitical, business model, and AI-disruption uncertainty at unusual levels, large corporates are buying up smaller disruptive companies as insurance against being outmaneuvered. The 200% increase in small-cap and venture activity supports the read. Debs highlights the awkward setup for a typical M&A cycle: hawkish interest rate environment, frothy sector valuations, and low certainty, none of which usually correlate with peak deal activity. The sector-by-sector split reveals financial services quietly lagging the broader market. Graham & Debs speculate on why, and neither has a strong answer. Europe is the standout regional performer, driven partly by the valuation gap versus the US (roughly 15x forward P/E versus 22x) and partly by the possibility that acquirers are moving now ahead of a mooted merger benefit test that could add a second regulatory hurdle to European deals. The episode closes on H2 predictions. Debs is skeptical the second half will match the first, citing hawkish rates, frothy valuations, and the pent-up demand carrying over from 2025 already being absorbed. Graham expects continued growth from the existing pipeline but flags 2027 as the genuine question mark: once the current pipeline works through, whether the fundamentals actually justify M&A at this level is an open question. Key Discussion Points: * Global M&A hits record $2.8 trillion in H1 2026 * Q2 stats: deal values up 41% YoY, deal count up ~10%, mega deals dominating * The defensive M&A thesis: uncertainty as a driver of acquisition activity * Small-cap and venture activity up 200%: what it signals about corporate defensive posturing * The sector-by-sector split: energy and industrials leading, financial services quietly lagging * Europe outperforming: valuation gap, competition clearance, and the potential merger benefit test * Market context: SpaceX post-IPO dynamics, AI selloff drivers, Meta's excess compute sale, and the Chinese model story * H2 2026 and 2027 predictions: pent-up demand vs. fundamentals Bain M&A Report: https://www.bain.com/insights/m-and-a-midyear-outlook-2026-a-winners-paradox/ [https://www.bain.com/insights/m-and-a-midyear-outlook-2026-a-winners-paradox/] WTBD Newsletter: https://webmail.wallstreetprep.com/whats-the-big-deal [https://webmail.wallstreetprep.com/whats-the-big-deal] Follow Us On Socials: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/wall-street-prep/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wallstreetprep/ Resources: https://linktr.ee/wallstreetprep
16 episodes
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