Dealmaking Slips by Almost a Third in 2022 Marked by Volatility, Inflation

Stubbornly high inflation, soaring borrowing costs and geopolitical uncertainty hindered dealmaking in 2022, sending global mergers and acquisitions activity down by almost a third compared with last year’s record haul.

Companies announced $3.5 trillion of deals in 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, striking transactions to bulk up existing businesses, push into new sectors or reorganize operations against a volatile backdrop of slumping equity markets and forceful antitrust actions. Megadeals announced early in the year were soon replaced by jitters about getting M&A over the finish line, with monthly deal activity plummeting by almost half from May to June. The volumes have yet to recover.

“It’s really the tale of two years,” said Melissa Sawyer, global head of Sullivan & Cromwell’s M&A group. “When we started 2022, people were churning out deals left and right and SPACs were still a thing. Then the landscape for M&A changed dramatically.”

The year started off on a high note when Microsoft Corp. agreed in January to buy video game publisher Activision Blizzard Inc. for $69 billion, in the biggest deal since 2019. For a moment, 2021’s gangbuster performance — which saw a record $5 trillion of deals announced – looked set to continue.

Sentiment quickly started to fizzle. In February, Russia invaded Ukraine, and the next month the US Federal Reserve embarked on its most aggressive interest rate hiking spree in decades, bringing the overnight rate to the highest level since 2007.