US M&A deals of the week: 6 July 2025

US M&A deals of the week: 6 July 2025

Five US transactions lifted M&A volumes in a shortened week. Regulatory clarity and strategic appetite drove landmark acquisitions by HPE, Home Depot, Boeing, AbbVie, and Thoma Bravo, marking a renewed focus on scale, sector positioning, and technology leadership.








After months of volatility, the US M&A market is regaining momentum, buoyed by a plateau in policy rates, contained inflation, and a resurgent S&P 500. For the holiday-shortened week ending 4 July, US dealmakers announced 92 transactions worth $29.4 billion, while 57 deals closed at $18.6 billion in disclosed value. Technology led with 37% of all consideration, mirroring the surge in large-cap AI and networking acquisitions, as reflected in Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s $14 billion Juniper Networks deal.

Aggregate monthly deal values are outpacing volumes: May’s $198.8 billion tally marked an 86% jump year-on-year, while the number of deals rose just 9%. This points to a renewed appetite for scale among strategic buyers and the return of blockbuster transactions, despite total deal counts still trailing the pre-pandemic five-year average.

Private equity, however, remains on the sidelines — May’s 91 PE-backed deals marked an 11% monthly decline and a 16% shortfall against 2024’s run-rate. Sector rotation is increasingly evident: technology and transportation have seen double-digit increases in activity, while finance and healthcare continue to lag. These trends are amplified by a financing environment that, while still costly, has stabilised at predictable levels, with the Fed’s target rate steady at 4.25–4.50% and credit spreads only marginally wider since April.

In sum, US M&A is being shaped by three factors: a resurgent strategic bid for scale and capability, shifting sector priorities as AI and infrastructure dominate the headlines, and an ongoing wait-and-see approach from sponsors amid elevated, but steady, borrowing costs.

  • Technology continues to dominate deal values, with large AI and infrastructure plays setting the tone.
  • Strategic buyers are prioritising scale, even as deal counts lag historic highs.
  • Private equity remains cautious but may re-enter as financing stabilises and sector valuations reset.
  • Sector rotation is picking up: transportation and process industries are active, while finance and healthcare lag.

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