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Hanging in there
To:Brew Readers
CFO Brew // Morning Brew // Update
M&A soldiers on in 2025.

Good morning, and welcome back. About four in 10 employers last year gave workers paid time off on Juneteenth, the newest federal holiday, according to a recent Mercer survey, and we’re hoping that yours was one of them.

In this issue:

Topsy turvy

Big ticket item

Tax dodge

Alex Zank, Natasha Piñon, Jesse Klein

M&A

PWC deals outlook

Aitor Diago/Getty Images

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

Presented By KPMG Managed Services

TECHNOLOGY

Illustration of a briefcase spilling out AI code and dollar bills.

Hannah Minn

A million dollars isn’t cool. You know what is cool? A billion dollars…in AI investment.

Accounting firm RSM is investing $1 billion in AI over the next three years. This marks a huge jump over the $150 million to $200 million the firm has spent on AI in the past three years.

With this investment, RSM joins Ernst & Young, PwC, KPMG, and Deloitte, which have all dumped money into AI since 2023.

According to a recent press release, RSM plans to integrate agentic AI into workflows. These agentic systems that can autonomously take actions and make decisions will enhance RSM’s tax offerings, auditing services, compliance tracking, and data analysis.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Sergio de la Fe, enterprise digital leader and partner with RSM US, explained how one of the AI systems, RSM Atlas, has boosted productivity by as much as 80%. The tool uses generative AI to review regulations and confirm compliance—work that was previously done manually, one rule at a time. RSM applies a similar system to audits, freeing employees from the grind of combing through a 100-page checklist.

Click here for more on RSM’s AI investment.JK

IRS

IRS cut

Peter Blottman Photography/Getty Images

If you’ve ever considered committing tax evasion, this could be the year to do it, because the IRS might be too understaffed to catch tax dodgers.

The IRS will be staffed at its lowest level since 2019, its budget was slashed by 37%, and employees will decrease by 20% compared to the 2025 fiscal year. According to a report from the Treasury Department, the agency will have 77,728 total employees, a drop from 96,700 last year, and its budget will decline from nearly $22.5 billion to $14.2 billion.

In a May report, The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration recorded that 11% of employees left the IRS department in the first quarter of 2025.

With these budget cuts, the IRS plans to trim technology and operations support by 59%, and enforcement employees by 31%. And even with a plan to increase phone operators by 11,158 full-time employees (a 48% increase), the IRS says it’ll only be able to answer 16% of calls during next year’s tax season. So if you need to reach the IRS, plan on getting really sick of its hold music.

For more on IRS budget cuts, click here.—JK

Together With Leapfin

MARKET FORCES

market forces chart

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top finance reads.

Stat: $100 million. The signing bonus that OpenAI’s Sam Altman says Meta offered some of his employees in efforts to poach them from the AI company. That’s an amount that would make even an NFL quarterback blush. (CNBC)

Quote: “Today, the church offers its trove of social teaching to respond to another industrial revolution and to innovations in the field of artificial intelligence that pose challenges to human dignity, justice and labor.”—Pope Leo XIV, who has made AI a “signature issue” (Wall Street Journal)

Read: Utility companies are competing for new business from power-hungry data centers by offering discounts—which possibly means higher rates for the rest of us. (The Salt Lake Tribune)

Leveled-up service: Modern managed service providers are going far beyond traditional outsourcing expectations. Learn about the super-charged capabilities setting them apart and delivering strategic value in this KPMG article.*

*A message from our sponsor.

JOBS

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✢ A Note From KPMG Managed Services

Source: KPMG and HFS Managed Services Outlook 2024–2025

         
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