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EY's 13th Capital Confidence Barometer finds US corporate executives are leveraging the opportunities the strong deal market brings, but are still being careful about making a move.
Cautious optimism
These executives may be upbeat, but they're bracing for challenges in 2016. So, they're considering the following before making a deal:
- Volatility in commodities and currencies.
- Corporate earnings' muted outlook in a constant low-growth environment.
- Geopolitical instability, including security risks, ongoing Eurozone turmoil, and the 2016 US presidential election.
EY
Collectively, these views reflect how the C-suite and boardroom are running their businesses. And as contradictory as they may seem, the overall outlook on the deal market is positive; it shows future activity and general enthusiasm for deal making.
Pipelines are bigger now than they were six months ago; one-deal or two-deal pipelines now include threes and fours. And respondents cite the strong number and quality of M&A opportunities, and increased likelihood of closing a deal - indicators that are all up solidly from six months to a year ago. Yet virtually all of the respondents say they have canceled or walked away from a deal in the last 12 months, evidence that dealmakers are determined to wait for the right opportunity - and they are more confident now that they will find it.
EY 2
The 13th Capital Confidence Barometer shows US executives are leading the way as the global market's professional skeptics. But across an entire market, this attitude is how an M&A flurry turns into a sustained boom, and how deal making creates a foundation for future growth.
Read more about the M&A outlook in EY's 13th Capital Confidence Barometer.
- Written by Rich Jeanneret, vice chair of the Americas, Transaction Advisory Services, EY.
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