UK M&A deals of the week: 29 August 2025

UK M&A deals of the week: 29 August 2025

Wood Group nears Sidara takeover as Boots goes private. The UK M&A market saw high-profile transactions this week, spanning energy, retail, fashion, infrastructure, and leisure. From Wood Group’s contested future to Boots’ transition into private ownership, the breadth of deals underscores both sector diversity and investor appetite.








This week’s UK M&A activity highlights the interplay between global capital, domestic heritage, and strategic infrastructure. Sidara’s bid for Wood Group demonstrates how overseas buyers continue to target London-listed companies, even amid regulatory scrutiny, while Sycamore Partners’ acquisition of Boots reflects private equity’s appetite for legacy retail brands transitioning through structural change.

At the same time, Castore’s move on Belstaff shows how UK-founded businesses are consolidating heritage names to compete at the intersection of sport and luxury fashion. Zenobē’s acquisition of a 400 MW battery storage site underscores the scale of investment required to deliver on Britain’s clean energy commitments, while GENDA’s entry into the leisure market illustrates international interest in UK consumer experiences.

Taken together, the week’s transactions reveal a dual narrative: established British icons seeking renewal under new ownership, and infrastructure deals channelling capital into the future of energy and entertainment. In both, the constant is a recalibration of ownership to meet shifting market, policy, and consumer demands.

  • Global capital targeting UK assets — From Sidara’s approach to Wood Group to Sycamore’s buyout of Boots and GENDA’s entry into leisure, overseas investors continue to see opportunities in the UK across industrial, retail, and consumer markets.
  • Heritage meets reinvention — Castore’s acquisition of Belstaff and Boots’ move into private ownership highlight how established British brands are being repositioned — either through consolidation or new capital structures — to compete in shifting global markets.
  • Energy transition investment — Zenobē’s purchase of a 400 MW battery-storage site illustrates the growing flow of M&A capital into infrastructure critical to the UK’s net-zero goals, underscoring investor confidence in long-term demand for clean energy assets.

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