February’s US deal calendar may have seen fewer transactions cross the line, but the ones that did were large, strategic, and highly visible.
Early-year data suggests a market still finding its footing. EY’s latest US activity snapshot shows announced deals above $100m down year-on-year by both value and volume. Yet transactions valued at more than $1bn increased. The pattern is familiar: fewer deals overall, but boards prepared to move decisively where the strategic logic is clear.
February’s largest announcements reflect that shift. Media, telecoms infrastructure, banking, healthcare technology, and payments logistics — sectors where scale and distribution matter — dominated the headlines.
The five deals that defined February —
Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros Discovery — $110bn
On 27 February, Warner Bros Discovery agreed to be acquired by Paramount Skydance in a $110bn transaction, ending a bidding contest that had also drawn interest from Netflix.
The combined group would bring together one of Hollywood’s largest studio and television portfolios with a substantial streaming and production operation. The structure includes $47bn in equity from the Ellison family and RedBird Capital Partners, alongside significant debt financing and a planned rights offering.
The strategic logic is straightforward. Streaming has turned scale — in libraries, distribution, and production — into a strategic necessity. The focus now shifts from strategy to execution: financing discipline, integration, and regulatory review will determine how smoothly the transaction progresses.
Charter Communications and Cox Communications — $34.5bn
Regulators played a central role in February’s second-largest development. The Federal Communications Commission approved Charter Communications’ $34.5bn acquisition of Cox Communications.
The decision clears the way for a consolidation that will create the largest US cable television and broadband provider by subscribers. Charter committed to invest heavily in network upgrades, extend its $20-per-hour starting wage to Cox workers, and onshore certain functions currently performed overseas.
Deals in regulated infrastructure rarely hinge solely on price. This one illustrates the growing importance of regulatory commitments — on investment, jobs, and service access — as part of the transaction architecture.
Santander and Webster Financial — $12.2bn
Santander’s agreement to acquire Webster Financial marks one of the largest cross-border banking deals involving the United States in recent years.
Announced on 3 February, the $12.2bn transaction would push Santander into the top tier of US retail and commercial banks by assets, with a combined balance sheet of roughly $327bn.
The strategic aim is scale in the world’s largest banking market. Delivering the expected $800m in cost synergies, while preserving customer relationships and satisfying regulators, will be the real test.
Danaher and Masimo — $9.9bn
Healthcare technology also featured prominently. Danaher agreed to acquire medical device manufacturer Masimo for $9.9bn, paying $180 per share.
Masimo specialises in patient-monitoring systems widely used in hospitals and clinical settings. The acquisition expands Danaher’s diagnostics and life-sciences portfolio into adjacent monitoring technologies.
For serial acquirers such as Danaher, the appeal is not simply growth. It is platform depth — the ability to integrate specialised technologies into a broader operating system.
Brink’s and NCR Atleos — $6.6bn
The final major transaction highlights an underlying theme in February’s deal flow: consolidation in financial infrastructure.
Brink’s agreed to acquire NCR Atleos in a cash-and-stock transaction valued at approximately $6.6bn including debt. Atleos provides self-service banking technology and ATM infrastructure used by banks and retailers.
The deal brings together physical cash logistics and the technology that supports self-service banking networks — an operational combination rather than a consumer-facing brand play.
Bottom line —
February’s transactions point to a consistent pattern. Buyers are pursuing scale where distribution, infrastructure, and platform depth determine competitive advantage.
At the same time, the pathway to closing has become more complex. Financing conditions, regulatory scrutiny, and integration capacity now carry as much weight as headline valuations.
Boards appear increasingly willing to move on transformative deals. They are doing so, however, with a clear understanding that execution — not announcement — is where value will ultimately be determined.
Four lessons stand out for business leaders watching the deal market.
- First, regulatory strategy must sit alongside financial planning from the outset.
- Second, integration capacity is now a critical constraint. Large deals demand sustained leadership attention.
- Third, scale acquisitions must be anchored in operating logic, not simply market share.
- Finally, financing discipline matters. Markets are quick to reassess leverage and balance-sheet risk.
February did not produce a surge of transactions. It revealed a market where the biggest deals are proceeding — but only where the strategic case is strong enough to withstand scrutiny.




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