Report

Global trends in merger control enforcement

Antitrust authorities continued to disrupt M&A in 2023, frustrating more deals and stepping up scrutiny of digital and private equity transactions.

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Read Time
8 mins
Published Date
Apr 9, 2024
In this report we examine how antitrust authorities particularly in the U.S., EU and U.K. continue to take a tough approach to merger control enforcement and consider the impact on transaction timetables and the allocation of execution risk. We explore the complexity created by new and expanding foreign investment regimes and the EUs foreign subsidy review tool. We also look ahead to what dealmakers should watch out for in 2024.
Summary

Regulators have focused their attention on digital/tech and private equity M&A, while also scrutinizing sciences, transport, energy and consumer deals.

In technology, which accounted for 20% of deals blocked in 2023, authorities are looking at the impact on ecosystems, innovation and potential competition. Transactions resulting in data concentration as well as those involving AI are also in the spotlight, while the EU’s Digital Markets Act and forthcoming U.K. equivalent will require designated digital firms to submit information about deals falling below standard filing thresholds.

As countries work to meet their green transition targets, we expect sustainability and environmental arguments to feature more heavily in merger control reviews, potentially outweighing antitrust concerns. But some antitrust authorities (e.g., in the U.S.) remain sceptical of ESG considerations. A patchwork of approaches is emerging.

Supporting report content

Global trends in merger control enforcement 2024

pdf8.1 MB
Content Disclaimer
This content was originally published by Allen & Overy before the A&O Shearman merger

Meet the authors

This report was developed by lawyers across our global antitrust group. You can read about their expertise below.