Latest News “Stay informed with breaking news, world news, US news, politics, business, technology, and more at latest news.

Category: ma

Auto Added by WPeMatico

  • Sports and gambling investors expect ‘substantial’ M&A ahead. These 5 hot areas could fuel dealmaking.

    Toronto Blue Jay bobbleheads sit on a shelf
    Collectibles are one area that could see considerable M&A in the near future.

    • Sports and gambling investors shared key areas they think will drive M&A deals looking ahead.
    • Crypto, sweepstakes, and fantasy sports were a few topics of discussion at a recent conference.
    • Overall, these investors expected “significant” M&A in the space in the next two years.

    Crypto, sports sweepstakes, and gambling’s expansion in Latin America are a few areas that could fuel the future of dealmaking in the sports and betting spaces.

    Investors speaking last week at Next.io‘s Next Summit, a gambling conference in New York, predicted M&A will increase in the sector over the next two years.

    “I think there is going to be substantial M&A over the course of the next 24 months,” said Edward King, cofounding partner and co-chief investment officer of Acies Investments, which invests in sports wagering, technology, and online gambling.

    King said he expects M&A in the next 12 months to be more of the same, with major companies continuing to fill product and distribution gaps by buying smaller players. But he thinks dealmaking beyond that will shift as gambling operators like DraftKings and FanDuel grow profits.

    “Suddenly these companies are going to have enormous financing capacity and firepower,” said King. “I would love to see the branching out of that industry and I think we are coming at some point in time towards that.”

    DraftKings has been a big acquirer in recent years, for example. Last year, it bought Jackpocket, an app where people can order lottery tickets online.

    Sports and gambling investors shared their M&A predictions during a panel at the conference. They said crypto, sweepstakes, pick ’em fantasy, collectibles, and the growing industry in Latin America are hot areas that could drive M&A in the coming months.

    1. More sportsbooks expand into pick ’em fantasy sports

    Emerging formats that are gaining popularity and resemble sports betting could be ripe for takeover.

    Pick ’em” fantasy sports is one area that could be targeted for M&A. In pick ’em fantasy, there is no point spread, just a decision to make, like if LeBron James will score more or less 20 points in tonight’s game. Joey Levy, CEO of sports betting and media company Betr, which has a pick’em product, predicts these games will continue to become more popular across the world.

    Several challenger brands like PrizePicks, Underdog, Sleeper, and Betr exist in this space. But DraftKings is the only top-tier provider to launch a pick ’em format so far. Levy thinks at least one more major operator could launch its own version of the service in the coming months and turn to M&A to do so.

    2. Sweepstakes and prediction markets converge with gambling

    Levy expects sportsbooks to expand into sports sweepstakes, which are free-to-play games that have become increasingly popular in which people can wager in-game currency.

    He also pointed to prediction markets that have expanded into sports contracts, which are similar to betting, and could see growth.

    “This convergence between the existing incumbents and emerging operators is going to be something that is worth watching,” Levy said.

    3. A crypto company buys a betting company

    Roger Ehrenberg at Eberg Capital thinks a crypto exchange or or a large retail trading app is going to buy a sports betting company.

    Fintech companies like Robinhood are already pushing into sports betting via prediction markets, for example.

    “Crypto is a huge unlock for the space,” he said. “That access to gaming users and the cross-fertilization between those who are effectively betting — they are just betting with different vehicles.”

    Crypto has been on a rollercoaster since the Trump administration embraced it.

    4. Collectibles see a resurgence

    Collectibles are another area that could be attractive for a gambling company looking to branch out. Sandford Loudon, a partner at Oakville Capital, said collectibles are a largely untapped market.

    Fanatics, for one, has expanded to the space, acquiring the trading card company Topps in 2022 and collectibles company PWCC Marketplace in 2023.

    5. Latin America could be the next big area for gambling expansion

    The US has been the epicenter of the gambling boom in recent years, but Latin America could be next as countries like Brazil legalize sports betting.

    Loudon predicts that North American operators will move to South America to dominate the space and help it grow while it continues to develop.

    Loudon said places like Peru, which has a stable economy, or Mexico, have a lot of room to set up good gambling structures that allow for a lot of M&A to flow. Because Brazil is legalizing sports betting, new markets in that region of the world could continue to pop up.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • What Google’s $32 billion Wiz acquisition means for startups — and Trump

    Wiz CEO
    Assaf Rappaport, the CEO of Wiz.

    • Google is buying cybersecurity firm Wiz for $32bn — its biggest acquisition ever.
    • It’s also the biggest deal of the year so far and a major test for Donald Trump’s antitrust regime.
    • A deal of this size could also supercharge more M&A following a slow few years.

    Google just announced the biggest deal of the year so far and the largest in its history — the $32 billion acquisition of cybersecurity startup Wiz.

    Google parent company Alphabet and Wiz confirmed Tuesday that they had reached an agreement for the all-cash deal.

    The two companies were in talks last year for a $23 billion deal, but they fizzled out, and Wiz later said it would instead pursue an initial public offering.

    Google CEO Sundar Pichai said during a Tuesday briefing that the deal would boost its cloud security offering at a time when AI is bringing “new risks” and “multi-cloud and hybrid are becoming the norm.”

    “Against this backdrop, organizations are looking for cybersecurity solutions that improve cloud security and span multiple clouds,” he added.

    Wiz, an Israeli-founded startup headquartered in New York, specializes in technology that scans everything companies put onto the cloud and identifies security risks. Under the agreement, Wiz’s services would continue to be available through other cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian said in the Tuesday briefing.

    Anat Ashkenazi, Google’s CFO, said the company expects the deal to close in 2026, subject to regulatory approvals.

    For Google, the deal would give it the chance to show customers its cloud offerings — which trail behind that of Microsoft and Amazon — are as secure as can be. “With Wiz, we believe we will vastly improve how security is designed, operated, and automated,” Kurian added.

    Here’s why the acquisition is a big deal for startup exits and a big test for the Trump administration.

    Return of startup dealmaking?

    A deal of this size could catalyze more startup M&A activity following a sluggish few years.

    In 2024, there were 2,066 VC-backed startup M&A exits, worth $83.6 billion, according to PitchBook data. The first quarter of 2025 was off to a slower start, with 382 M&A deals worth $13.6 billion.

    Wiz’s $32 billion deal has tipped the scales significantly, potentially pointing to more appetite for acquisitions as an exit route.

    “Acquisitions allow startups to avoid the inherent volatility of public markets altogether and just focus on long-term growth and their daily operations,” Mariam Pettit, managing partner of Graph Theory Capital, told Business Insider, adding that they could deliver faster returns than IPOs.

    Startups have been gravitating towards secondary share sales and acquisitions in lieu of public listings for multiple reasons. The IPO process can be tough, requiring thorough auditing of a company’s financials, potential restructurings, and regulatory compliance — as well as more intense quarterly scrutiny, Pettit said.

    The US IPO market remained relatively dormant in 2024 despite high multiples and low volatility. According to PitchBook data, most VC-backed listings underperformed last year, with Instacart, Klaviyo, and Ibotta trading significantly lower relative to the Morningstar Growth Index.

    Wiz’s deal with Google would offer the company a strong avenue to bolster its growth, a person familiar with the process told BI, adding that the company surpassed $700 million in annual recurring revenue in the last quarter.

    A test for Trump’s antitrust regime

    A $32 billion acquisition for Google would be a big test of the regulatory environment under the Trump administration.

    While President Donald Trump had been expected to bring in a more favorable M&A environment, Vice President JD Vance has previously supported stricter dealmaking rules. Last year, he backed legislation to eliminate tax breaks for corporate mergers, signaling a stance that’s closer to former FTC chair Lina Khan, who, under Biden, launched investigations into Microsoft and Amazon’s businesses.

    However, Andrew Ferguson, Khan’s replacement, said in February that the Trump administration would continue using strict corporate merger guidelines adopted under Biden.

    Against this backdrop, Google is facing two antitrust lawsuits, including one against its search business that was brought during Trump’s first term.

    Two recent Google mergers have come under close scrutiny by regulators but ultimately passed: its $2.1 acquisition of Fitbit in 2021, and its purchase of cybersecurity firm Mandiant for $5.4bn in 2022.

    Read the original article on Business Insider
  • Dealmaking slumps over Trump’s tariff turmoil. ‘It’s almost as bad as Covid.’

    Donald Trump looks serious
    Donald Trump’s tariffs have put dealmaking on hold

    • Dealmaking on Wall Street has sputtered out in recent weeks, bankers and consultants said.
    • It’s a reversal of the industry’s hopes that 2025 would deliver an M&A and IPO rebound.
    • Industry insiders pointed to Trump administration actions that have clouded the economic outlook.

    Wall Street’s dreams of a dealmaking rebound have been put on hold over Trump’s tariff turmoil.

    Investment bankers welcomed 2025 with high hopes that Trump’s business-friendly, antiregulation policies would lead to a surge in fee-generating deals. Instead, many corporate boards and buyout firms are standing on the sidelines as they wait to see the impact Trump’s aggressive trade policies and gutting of federal agencies could have on the economy and stock market.

    How bad things are depends on who you ask. Some bankers said corporate dealmaking has merely slowed, while others described Wall Street’s bread-and-butter business of M&A and IPOs in more dire terms. What’s clear is that no one knows when — or whether — the clouds might lift, raising questions about everything from bonuses to layoffs to hiring.

    “A common refrain I hear amongst dozens of sponsors over the last six to eight weeks,” said Seth Goldblum, whose firm provides deal advisory services to private equity firms, is that “the uncertainty in and of itself is actually the worst thing.”

    “A lot of our sponsors are just sitting on the sideline,” he said, referring to private equity firms, which are often referred to as financial deal sponsors. The managing director for CBIZ Private Equity Services pointed to the negative impact Trump’s tariffs could have on inflation and interest rates as among the issues holding firms back.

    “It’s a shame. It looked like we were finally getting unstuck,” Goldblum said, adding that the deals industry now appears “back to being stuck.”

    What bankers are saying

    Rob Stowe, an equity capital markets banker with Barclays, agreed that 2025 has proved more challenging than many in his field anticipated.

    “We are still seeing companies coming to market, and we still expect we’ll see companies coming to market, but it’s definitely making decisions harder, and it’s adding an extra element of caution for corporates and the sponsors that are thinking about raising capital,” said Stowe, who heads the division that handles IPOs for the bank’s Americas region.

    Eric Li, who covers investing banking for research firm Crisil Coalition Greenwich, said his discussions with clients suggest a more dire picture.

    Dealmaking, he said, has largely “frozen.”

    “There aren’t any deals going on,” Li said. “It’s almost as bad as Covid,” he added, referring to the dealmaking stoppage that followed widespread stay-at-home orders in 2020 as the deadly virus spread across the globe.

    According to the consulting and advisory firm EY, Wall Street started the year strong. In January, there was a 29% year-over-year increase in mergers and acquisitions in the US, valued at more than $1 billion. The consulting firm’s M&A data has yet to be released for February, however, and that is when the stock market started reacting negatively to Trump’s trade policies, sending the S&P 500 down roughly 10% since a high set on February 19 and about 8% since Trump was sworn in on January 20.

    Stock market performance from November 1, 2024, to March 13, 2025
    S&P 500 Index performance from November 1, 2024, to March 13, 2025. The market took a nosedive in March as the global economy reacted to Trump administration policies.

    Layoffs and hiring

    On Wall Street, the big question is what it all means for the bottom line — and how it will impact pay and jobs.

    At the end of 2024, investment banks were hiring aggressively as dealmaking heated up in anticipation of a Trump White House. Now, there are questions about whether the momentum will continue.

    Brianne Sterling, head of the investment-banking recruiting practice at the financial services search firm Selby Jennings, said hiring hasn’t reached the gangbuster levels some had hoped to see when the year started. She said some clients are still interviewing new hires even if they’ve indicated they’ll push off the timeline for filling open roles till later in the year in hopes of improved market conditions.

    Still, she feels optimistic.

    “I think we will still see hiring,” she said. “I just don’t think it’ll be as aggressive or as much volume as we initially anticipated, but we’ll see how the year goes.”

    Even amid rosier expectations many banks were focused on cutting costs this year, including Goldman Sachs. As Business Insider previously reported, CEO David Solomon has tasked some staffers with finding ways to save money, including by reducing redundancies and moving workers to cheaper locations like Dallas, Texas.

    The bank’s vice president ranks have been targeted for cuts because their numbers have gotten bloated. The bank even moved its annual headcount-cutting exercise from fall to spring, when it is set to cut roughly 3% to 5% of its workforce, which stood at 46,500 as of the end of 2024.

    Bank of America has also recently cut investment banking roles, including positions in New York, a person familiar with the cuts said. The more recent round of layoffs primarily impacted junior bankers, such as analysts and associates — though some may be reassigned to other roles within the firm, added the person. Earlier this year, the bank also cut more senior positions in a round that amounted to under 1% of the bank’s workforce in global markets and global corporate and investment banking, this person added. The cuts were first reported by Reuters.

    Sid Khosla, a financial services executive at EY who serves as the firm’s banking and capital markets leader, told BI that such layoffs are part of what he calls “the efficiency conversation” among companies seeking to please shareholders — a trend that started before Trump took office. The topic has come up increasingly in talks with clients, particularly in the past three to four months, Khosla said. “It’s always the top two or three conversations. Some institutions may think it’s a No. 1 conversation.”

    Whether corporate dealmaking picks back up depends on how long the turmoil lasts, bankers said.

    “I think any reasonable outlook is going to be a little clouded here for a while because there’s no certainty that the conversations around tariffs and the concerns around the US economy or around interest rates are going to stop,” said Stowe, adding: “I also don’t think there’s any certainty that the current level of volatility will dissipate in the near term.”

    Reed Alexander is a correspondent at Business Insider covering Wall Street and financial services. He can be reached via email at ralexander@businessinsider.com, or SMS/the encrypted app Signal at (561) 247-5758.

    James Faris contributed reporting.

    Read the original article on Business Insider