Also: Europe VC's next chapter; Warehouse automation advances; Fresh fund benchmarks; Industry & tech First Looks...
July 18, 2026  |  Log in   |  Read online   |  Manage your subscription  
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PitchBook Benchmarks: Fresh data is here for fund returns through Q4 2025, with preliminary figures for Q1 2026. See it here.

Q2 data: Our industry & tech First Look datasets are in for the gaming, ecommerce, defense tech and agrifood sectors.

ICYMI: Our 7th annual Sustainable Investment Survey closes next week. Share your views on AI, defense spending and where sustainable investing is headed. Take it here.

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Mega-deals are carrying the global M&A market
Jinny Choi
By Jinny Choi
Senior Research Analyst, Private Equity

Global M&A activity held its ground in Q2 2026, but the headline numbers are doing heavy lifting, according to our Global M&A Report. Strip out a handful of giant transactions, and a more cautious, selective market comes into view.

Quarterly global M&A value by size bucket - research pitch@2x.png

Just 34 transactions of $5 billion or more generated $553 billion in value in Q2, accounting for roughly 42% of the quarter’s total. Total M&A value for the quarter reached an estimated $1.3 trillion, which was up 35.3% year-over-year. Deal count, meanwhile, barely moved. With 11,880 transactions, volume was up only 3.4% YoY. The divergence between flat M&A volume and changing value reveals that global M&A value is driven overwhelmingly by a few very large deals.

Understanding why mega-deals have returned and who benefits is the defining question for dealmakers heading into the second half of 2026.

A key shift driving mega-deal activity is the return of the strategic acquirer—and the structural advantage they hold over financial sponsors right now.

With the Federal Reserve holding rates steady and the European Central Bank raising them for the first time since 2023, the leveraged buyout math has become increasingly difficult to justify. PE buyout value fell 35.7% quarter-over-quarter to $287.3 billion, while corporate buyers filled the vacuum, executing $892.7 billion in strategic M&A value.

Public companies with elevated share prices can fund transformational acquisitions in stock, and a seemingly more passive antitrust environment encourages corporates to pursue scale. The $118.5 billion Dominion Energy-NextEra merger and the $60 billion Cursor acquisition were both all-stock deals, and also examples of compelling large deals corporates are pursuing to build scale in high-demand sectors.

Mega-deal activity is expected to continue through the rest of 2026, given three variables that are unlikely to meaningfully change in the next six months.

First, interest rates: A Fed pivot would materially improve the LBO underwriting and bring sponsors back into competition for large assets, compressing the strategic advantage corporates currently enjoy. Half of the committee signaled for a rate hike by the end of the year.

Second, dealmakers can become more hesitant to pursue mega-deals if antitrust scrutiny increases, but regulators’ recent stance toward lighter reviews and revised merger control guidelines suggests the risk is low.

Lastly, the continued theme of AI and related investment plays. If revenue projections or appetite for AI deals decline, the momentum behind this quarter’s largest transactions might slow down in the second half of 2026. However, ongoing structural demand for AI capabilities is expected to encourage buyers to pursue opportunistic deals.

Download the full report for the complete breakdown of sector rotations, valuations, and the antitrust outlook.

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Private equity and private credit are powering America’s economic growth and providing the long-term capital businesses need to grow, invest in new technologies, and create well-paying jobs in communities nationwide

The impact is clear. In 2024, private equity-backed small businesses directly employed over 1.6 million workers, earning more than $165 billion in wages and benefits. These investments strengthen local economies and give businesses the support they need to compete.

The American Investment Council is the voice of private investment in Washington, advocating for policies that support growth, educating policymakers on the industry’s economic impact, and promoting a better understanding of how private capital strengthens businesses, retirement security, and local communities.

Learn more about how AIC is advancing the industry’s priorities.

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European VC rebounds as AI reshapes the market
Navina Rajan.jpg
By Navina Rajan
Senior Research Analyst, EMEA Private Capital

European venture capital has entered the second half of 2026 with renewed momentum, driven by one unmistakable force: AI.

According to PitchBook’s latest European Venture Report, venture deal value reached €44 billion in the first half of the year, putting the market on track to surpass 2025 levels if activity continues at its current pace. While funding has broadly improved across the ecosystem, AI has become the defining story, accounting for more than 60% of all venture capital invested in Europe so far this year. Our analyst note The State of European AI explores this trend further.

Copy of Power grid technologies VC deal activity - YEAR@2x.png

The trend extends well beyond a handful of mega-rounds. AI is now attracting a growing share of both capital and deal count, suggesting the technology is becoming increasingly embedded across Europe’s startup landscape rather t