DISTRIBUTION M&A MARKET DYNAMICS
- In Q1-25, the market saw 141 Distribution transactions close worldwide. Strategic buyer activity declined by 22%, while financial buyers increased their activity, closing 12 deals compared to 11 in the same quarter last year. Strategic acquirers continued to lead the market in terms of volume, accounting for nearly 85% of total deal activity—a trend that has remained consistent over the past year.
- In the U.S., M&A activity also declined. Deal volume fell from 88 transactions in Q1-24 to 69 in Q1-25. However, the first quarter has historically shown lower activity than the remainder of the year. Market participants point to uncertainty surrounding the current administration’s proposed tariffs as a primary cause for the domestic M&A slowdown. According to the Head of Capital Equity Markets at Truist Securities, deal activity is expected to pick up once the administration provides clearer guidance on tariff implementation and its economic implications.
- Despite the uncertainty around tariffs, macroeconomic indicators showed encouraging signs through Q1-25. The U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI), which tracks the annual inflation rate, eased to 2.4% in Mar-25—down from 2.8% in Mar-24 and below market expectations of 2.6%. Although geopolitical uncertainty continues to pressure key economic measures, analysts remain optimistic that core indicators will strengthen as 2025 progresses.