UK Finance has indicated that mergers and acquisitions have always reflected the broader state of global markets. As the second half of 2026 approaches, deal activity is recovering, but the backdrop remains intricate. Geopolitical tensions, regulatory shifts, technological change, cybersecurity demands, and evolving shareholder priorities are altering how deals are identified, funded, structured, completed, and integrated.
UK Finance’s third annual M&A Conference, scheduled for 7 July 2026 in London, will bring together senior regulators, economists, investment bankers, corporate executives, private equity specialists, and legal advisers.
The full-day program will examine cross-border patterns, geopolitical influences, emerging high-growth sectors, regulatory expectations, AI-related opportunities and risks, cybersecurity issues, and engagement strategies across public and private markets.
Governments worldwide are applying greater scrutiny to foreign investment, focusing on national security and economic resilience in strategically important industries.
Deal teams must now balance traditional competition reviews with industrial policy considerations, supply-chain robustness, and economic security requirements.
At the same time, geopolitical developments are generating new opportunities.
Rising defence budgets, energy security priorities, and demand for advanced cybersecurity and telecommunications capabilities are shaping investor interest and strategic transactions.
The distinction between public and private markets continues to blur.
UK dealmaking is moving beyond a straightforward choice between IPOs and buyouts toward more varied funding options and hybrid structures, supported by the new PISCES regime that facilitates trading in private company shares.
Realizing value remains challenging, however.
Longer holding periods, continuation vehicles, and a subdued IPO market are forcing sponsors to explore alternative paths.
Take-private transactions are rising, alongside refinancing activity and greater use of private credit, hybrid instruments, and asset-backed solutions to preserve flexibility.
Artificial intelligence is influencing M&A in two distinct ways. On the strategic side, companies are increasingly acquiring AI capabilities through deals rather than building them organically.
Analysis by PwC of the 100 largest corporate transactions in 2025 showed that roughly one-third cited AI as a key consideration, with the technology featuring in nearly all major technology deals.
On the execution side, AI tools are beginning to support target screening, due diligence, integration planning, and value-creation initiatives.
Deal professionals must weigh these efficiency gains against risks in governance, data quality, cybersecurity, and accountability.
Cross-border regulatory frameworks are becoming more demanding. Merger control and national security reviews now affect target selection, deal design, timelines, and valuations from the earliest stages.
Policymakers are attempting to reconcile competition, growth, resilience, and security objectives, creating a more nuanced environment for strategically significant transactions.
Shareholder activism and engagement are also rising in prominence.
Investors are examining strategy, valuation, governance, and execution more closely, and their views can determine both the feasibility and outcome of deals.
As organizations prepare for the remainder of 2026 and beyond, successful M&A will require clear strategic vision, proactive regulatory preparation, effective use of technology, and disciplined focus on value creation throughout the transaction lifecycle. UK Finance’s session is designed to deliver practical insights and expert perspectives to help practitioners navigate this evolving landscape.