• Skip to content
  • Skip to navigation
You are currently in the Global version of the Grant Thornton website. Would you like to visit our United States website?
Go to:
grantthornton.com
  • About us
    • Why Grant Thornton
    • Culture and experience
    • Global scale and capability
    • Leadership, governance and quality
    • Meet our International Business Centre Directors
    • Join our network
  • Global locations
    • Africa
    • Americas
    • Asia-Pacific
    • Europe
    • Middle East
  • Services
    • Advisory
      • Advisory
      • Business consulting services
      • Business process solutions
      • Business risk services
      • Cybersecurity
      • Forensic services
      • Mergers and acquisitions
      • Recovery and reorganisation
      • Transactional advisory services
      • Valuations
      • Sustainability advisory
    • Assurance
      • Assurance
      • IFRS
      • Audit quality monitoring
      • Global audit technology
      • Sustainability assurance
    • Tax
      • Tax
      • Corporate and business tax
      • Direct international tax
      • Global mobility services
      • Indirect international tax
      • Transfer pricing
      • Africa tax desk
      • Sustainability tax
  • Industries
    • Asset management
    • Automotive
    • Banking
    • Business services
    • Energy and natural resources
    • Healthcare
    • Insurance
    • Life sciences
    • Media
    • Not for profit
    • Private equity
    • Public sector
    • Real estate and construction
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Telecommunications
    • Travel, tourism and leisure
  • Topics
    • Latest insights
      • Latest insights
      • Thriving through disruption
      • Scaling sustainability
      • CFO success: Inspiring change in female mid-market leadership
      • Trade in transition
      • Navigating tariffs
      • Women in Business 2025
    • Growing internationally
      • Growing internationally
      • Thriving through disruption
      • Trade in transition
      • Navigating tariffs
      • Top five constraints to international business in the mid-market
      • Brand and international marketing – breaking global barriers
      • The key to international business: Investing in people
      • Building resilience in international business
      • International business: Mid-market growth and expansion
    • Diversity, equity and inclusion
      • Diversity, equity and inclusion
      • CFO success: Inspiring change in female mid-market leadership
      • Women in Business 2025: Impacting the missed generation
      • Women in tech: A pathway to gender balance in top tech roles
      • Women in leadership: A pathway to better performance
      • Women in Business 2024: Pathways to parity
      • Women in Business 2023: The push for parity
    • Environmental, social and governance (ESG)
      • Environmental, social and governance (ESG)
      • Scaling sustainability
      • The journey to a sustainable future
      • Promoting ESG excellence through tax
      • Understanding the impact of environmental taxes
      • Engaging with incentives to drive your ESG goals
      • Transparency and tax governance in the ESG era
    • International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
      • International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
      • Example Financial Statements
      • IFRS 8
      • IFRS 16
      • IAS 36
      • IFRS 17
    • Tax
      • Tax
      • Pillar 2
      • Global expatriate tax guide
      • International indirect tax guide
      • Global transfer pricing guide
  1. Home
  2. Press releases
  3. 2015
  4. M&A activity strengthening

Growing appetite for acquisitions as vendor confidence returns

20 Mar 2015

M&A activity strengthening

Third of businesses plan to grow through M&A

The latest research from the Grant Thornton International Business Report (IBR), a global survey of 5,400+ business leaders in 35 economies, finds strong M&A activity and set to grow further over the next 12 months. Businesses' M&A plans, both current and forecast, are becoming more focused as the quality of available targets improves and is matched by a five-year high in the willingness of potential vendors to contemplate a sale.

The IBR reveals that 33% of businesses are planning to grow through M&A over the next three years, a steady rise from 31% in 2013 and 28% in 2012. North American business leaders remain the most bullish (45%), ahead of Latin America (38%), Europe (32%) and Asia Pacific (22%). Meanwhile, 43% of business leaders seriously considered at least one acquisition opportunity over the past 12 months, up from 39% in the previous period.

Mike Hughes, global service line leader of M&A at Grant Thornton, commented:“The results confirm that the M&A market has rediscovered its vigour, with the most dynamic businesses embracing acquisitions as a vital growth tool. Despites some familiar challenges and uncertainties, underlying growth is relatively strong in many developed economies, while other key metrics such as interest rates, employment and availability of funding are also positive.

"That said, there are considerable regional variations - ranging from a bullish North American outlook to a fragile eurozone and less activity in some of the previous powerhouses such as China - indicating that transaction activity will be far from uniform across the globe."

Business leaders are increasingly looking to banks to fund growth according to the IBR. Retained earnings (62%) are still expected to be the largest source of finance, but the proportion of businesses planning to use bank debt to finance deals has risen to 57%, up from 48% this time last year. Meanwhile confidence is also rising on the vendor side: 14% of business leaders plan to sell up over the next three years, up from 11% in 2013 and 8% in 2012.

Mike Hughes added: "Historically the transaction market has been relatively cyclical but  according to our research we may well now be at a point where the objectives and valuations of buyers and sellers are broadly aligned. The supply of available targets is clearly key for a successful M&A market but in recent years vendor confidence in achieving a successful exit has been low, driven by modest financial performance, valuation concerns and perceived transaction risks, such as availability of buyer funding.

"We have also seen a significant shift in the funding landscape with traditional bank funding more accessible and the rise of the alternative lending sector."

To read the full report, go to www.grantthornton.global or to benchmark your economy's M&A outlook since 2008 go to our data visualisation tool

– ends – 

Share this page
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Xing
  • Email

Related content

M&A 2015 March 2015 Read more
Gathering momentum: The resurgence of M&A November 2014 Read more
The rise of the cross-border transaction March 2014 Read more

Connect Connect

  • Meet our people
  • Contact us
  • Global reach

About About

  • About us
  • Careers
  • Press
  • Modern slavery statement
  • GPPC

Legal Legal

  • Privacy policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Site map
  • Unauthorised trademark use
  • Transparency report 2024
  • Cookie Preferences

Services Services

  • Advisory
  • Assurance
  • Tax

Follow usFollow us

© 2025 Grant Thornton International Ltd (GTIL) - All rights reserved. "Grant Thornton” refers to the brand under which the Grant Thornton member firms provide assurance, tax and advisory services to their clients and/or refers to one or more member firms, as the context requires. GTIL and the member firms are not a worldwide partnership. GTIL and each member firm is a separate legal entity. Services are delivered by the member firms. GTIL does not provide services to clients. GTIL and its member firms are not agents of, and do not obligate, one another and are not liable for one another’s acts or omissions.