Bay of Plenty Times

Deal-making drops as inflation fears rise

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Companies hit the brakes on dealmaking during the first half of 2022 as concerns over pervasive inflation, interest rate hikes and the threat of a recession loomed over Wall St.

Overall, companies announced US$2.2 trillion ($3.5 trillion) worth of buyout deals in the first half of the year, a 21 per cent drop from a year earlier.

The number of deals also fell, dropping 17 per cent during that period according to Refinitiv.

It’s the slowest start to the year for deal-making since the pandemic stunned markets in 2020.

Some of the biggest deals, such as Microsoft’s US$69 billion purchase of game maker Activision Blizzard, were announced early in the year, before the long list of worries really started weighing on Wall St.

The tally also includes Elon Musk’s US$44 billion takeover bid for Twitter, announced in April but now uncertain to go through.

Recession concerns have hampered deal-making, but worries about higher interest rates have also played a key role in crimping activity.

Higher interest rates make deals, much like overall borrowing, more expensive and tend to make companies more cautious about pursuing big purchases.

“Higher interest rates, by definition, cause the discount mechanism to fade,” said Terry Sandven, chief equity strategist at United States Bank

Wealth Management.

“If you believe interest rates are going to trend higher, the goal is to get the deal done before then.”

The Federal Reserve had kept rates at historic lows to goose economic growth during the pandemic.

That helped fuel gains for the stock market as well as a surge in mergers and acquisitio­ns activity.

Now the Fed is aggressive­ly raising rates to help temper inflation by slowing economic growth.

Wall St is worried that the Fed could hit the brakes too hard on an already slowing economy and send the economy into a recession.

Technology sector deals, which are typically among the biggest, totalled US$531 billion in the first half, a 19 per cent drop.

The sector has been hit particular­ly hard by concerns about rising interest rates, which make pricey stock valuations less attractive to investors.

Analysts expect companies and investors to remain cautious until they see inflation easing enough to prompt the Fed to soften their rate increases.

“We’re kind of in an inflection point,” said Matt Toole, director of deals intelligen­ce at Refinitiv.

“But, M&A has proved to be a very resilient area of the market from a value and volume perspectiv­e.”

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