A relentless wave of foreign buyouts has pushed British mergers and acquisitions (M&A) to a near-historic peak of $192 billion in early 2026. This massive volume represents more than a tripling of deal activity compared to the same period last year, coming just shy of the $194 billion total recorded for the entirety of 2025.
The Key Numbers:
- Global Share: UK-targeted acquisitions currently command 10% of total global M&A announcements, the country’s highest year-to-date share since 2015.
- Foreign Dominance: Overseas buyers account for $165 billion—an all-time year-to-date record representing 86% of all UK M&A by value (up from 74% last year).
- The U.S. Factor: U.S. bidders comprise over 50% of all inbound foreign takeovers, aggressively capitalizing on the steep discount of the FTSE 100 relative to American exchanges.
- GDP Share Spike: M&A volume as a percentage of UK GDP has scaled dramatically, jumping from 5% in 2025 to 14% in the first part of 2026 (though still below the 26% peak recorded in 2000).
Marquee Deals Driving the Volume:
- Intertek ($ITRK.L): The testing giant’s board announced it is minded to recommend a £9.4 billion ($12.7 billion) buyout proposal by Swedish private equity firm EQT. If finalized, this will mark the largest private equity takeover of a British public company since the acquisition of Alliance Boots in 2007.
- Tate & Lyle ($TATE.L): The historic 165-year-old food ingredients company received a £2.7 billion ($3.7 billion) all-cash conditional takeover bid from U.S. peer Ingredion ($INGR.N).
- Corporate Scale-Ups: Landmark bids for asset manager Schroders ($SDR.L) and Unilever’s ($ULVR.L) food unit continue to headline the crowded deal calendar.
The Bottom Line: The UK has become the ultimate hunting ground for corporate consolidation. Corporate attorneys at Clifford Chance highlight that a combination of deeply depressed public equity valuations and a highly predictable, tried-and-tested legal landscape makes British corporations prime targets for opportunistic foreign buyers looking to execute complex, business-altering mergers.
