Personally, our foolish prediction for 2025 was that Rihanna would finally release new music, and, well, that song for the Smurfs movie doesn’t count. So, we’re 0–1 predictions-wise this year. We’re not alone: Dealmakers expected a very different 2025 than we’ve had so far. “If we were to look back 12 months and six months, I think we all were looking for 2025 to be a banner year for M&A,” Kevin Desai, US deals platform leader at PwC, said at a talk with reporters tied to the firm’s 2025 midyear deals outlook. “I think with the new incoming administration, what was thought to be a more business-friendly environment with interest rates coming into clarity, with inflation coming down, it was poised to be a good year.” But it hasn’t exactly been a good year, with deal volume (4,535) and value ($567 billion) remaining flat compared to 2024, per PwC’s midyear outlook. That’s actually something of an accomplishment, Desai pointed out, “just given the level of new uncertainty.” Still, not the year some may have expected. In May, a PwC survey found that about 30% of executives responding had paused or planned to revisit deals because of tariffs. “When you look at it across sectors, it’s interesting that it’s affecting all sectors relatively equally—even financial services, telecom,” Desai noted. What does the rest of 2025 look like for deals?—NP |