DoorDash closes Deliveroo takeover —
DoorDash completed its $3.9 billion acquisition of London-based Deliveroo on 2 October, bringing an end to Deliveroo’s turbulent tenure as a UK-listed technology company. The deal, structured as an all-cash purchase, gives the San Francisco group control of a leading UK delivery platform. Deliveroo’s board, including founder Will Shu, is stepping down at completion.
The acquisition consolidates a sector long challenged by profitability and competitive pressure. For DoorDash, the transaction cements a major foothold in the UK and broader European markets, where rivals Just Eat Takeaway and Uber Eats also operate. For London, it marks the exit of a high-profile tech IPO that once symbolised the city’s ambition to attract global listings.
Lloyds takes full control of Schroders Personal Wealth —
Lloyds Banking Group announced plans to buy Schroders’s 49.9 percent stake in their wealth management joint venture, Schroders Personal Wealth (SPW). The move ends a six-year partnership launched in 2019 and will give Lloyds sole ownership of the £15.7 billion-AUM adviser.
For Lloyds, full control offers scope to reposition SPW within its wider retail and private banking strategy. The unwind also marks a retrenchment by Schroders, which has increasingly focused on institutional and fund management. The deal highlights how UK banks are re-evaluating joint ventures in search of greater operational alignment.
Serica and Prax amend North Sea acquisitions —
On 29 September, Serica Energy and Prax Upstream signed amendment agreements relating to their previously announced asset purchases from TotalEnergies (TTE) and ONE-Dyas in the UK North Sea. While commercial terms remain broadly unchanged, the agreements extend longstop dates and refine completion mechanics.
These assets, once completed, would significantly bolster both companies’ upstream positions in UK waters. Amid policy uncertainty around future North Sea licensing, deal continuity is vital for operators seeking clarity on capital investment and production forecasts.
Modella Capital secures Claire’s UK & Ireland rights —
Investment firm Modella Capital acquired the UK and Ireland brand rights of Claire’s, the accessories retailer, in a transaction advised by Slaughter and May. The deal carves out regional operating rights for the chain, which has faced restructuring pressures globally.
The move illustrates investor appetite for consumer brand carve-outs, particularly in the fashion and accessories space. For Modella, it provides control over a well-recognised high street brand with scope for targeted revitalisation across UK and Irish stores.
CMA probes Subsea 7 and Saipem merger —
The UK Competition and Markets Authority launched a formal inquiry into the planned merger of Subsea 7 and Saipem, two major oilfield services companies headquartered in Norway and Italy. The regulator will assess whether the combination reduces competition in subsea engineering and offshore energy services affecting UK projects.
Although not a completed transaction, the probe could materially shape the outcome. The CMA has taken an increasingly assertive approach to cross-border deals with UK impact, and energy services consolidation sits high on its agenda given the strategic importance of North Sea activity.
Bottom line —
M&A activity in the UK this week reflects a market shaped more by defensive manoeuvres than expansive ambition. Buyers are looking for scale where domestic platforms have struggled to stand alone, as in the delivery sector, and for tighter ownership where joint ventures no longer offer the flexibility once promised. The common thread is a desire for control — whether over distribution networks, financial services operations, or upstream assets in energy.
This is playing out against a backdrop of regulatory assertiveness and structural headwinds. The CMA’s scrutiny of energy services consolidation, for example, mirrors the heightened oversight seen in other sectors, reminding companies that strategic rationale must now be matched with competition resilience. Investors, meanwhile, are sharpening their focus: instead of sweeping acquisitions, they are favouring carve-outs and amendments that limit exposure while still capturing value.
What emerges is a picture of a UK market that remains attractive but is no longer a stage for unrestrained growth stories. Capital continues to flow in, but with sharper boundaries. International buyers see opportunity in UK assets that cannot thrive independently, domestic players are consolidating ownership to weather tougher conditions, and private equity is picking off selective consumer plays rather than backing broad roll-ups. Far from exuberant, the tone of dealmaking is one of pragmatism — careful steps taken in a landscape where resilience has become as important as expansion.
Key takeaways —
- Global consolidation pressures — DoorDash’s $3.9bn Deliveroo takeover and the CMA’s probe into Subsea 7–Saipem highlight how UK markets remain central to international consolidation plays.
- Strategic control shifts — Lloyds’s buyout of Schroders Personal Wealth and Serica–Prax’s amendments show companies prioritising clarity and control in financial and energy assets.
- Selective brand and retail investment — Modella’s acquisition of Claire’s UK and Ireland rights reflects investor appetite for targeted consumer brand carve-outs.
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