How is the German M&A market evolving amid rising energy uncertainty, geopolitical tensions, and gradually improving financing conditions? In our latest edition of the Taylor Wessing M&A Market Momentum, we take a closer look at the key dynamics shaping Q2 2026 – from the growing role of private credit and the resurgence of carve-outs to increasingly sophisticated deal structures bridging valuation gaps.
Which sectors remain resilient? Where are new opportunities emerging – and which risks should decision-makers be prioritising now?
Our new quarterly analysis provides the answers – concise, data-driven, and focused on what M&A leaders should know today to stay ahead.
The German M&A market is set for a measured, mid-market-led pickup in Q2 2026, with technology, industrial automation, and selected healthcare niches at the forefront. Data through 2023–2025 highlighted the relative resilience of technology, the dominance of add-ons and carve-outs, and the growing role of private credit—patterns that still anchor the base case.
The conflict in Iran heightens volatility in oil and gas prices and indirectly in European power costs, tightening underwriting for energy-intensive assets and lengthening diligence around hedging and supply chains. The drag is most pronounced in Industrials; Technology and asset-light Healthcare remain comparatively insulated.
Financing is incrementally more supportive, but lenders remain selective; unitranche/private credit solutions provide speed and certainty for sponsor deals. Regulatory filings (FCO, EU FDI screening, Foreign Subsidies Regulation) continue to be a critical-path variable.
We expect more pre-emptive bids, conservative valuation frameworks, increased use of MAC-clauses and continued use of earn-outs and deferred consideration to bridge pricing gaps.
Automotive: M&A in the automotive sector will be driven less by scale and more by strategic portfolio realignment amid regulatory, technological, and geopolitical pressures. OEMs and suppliers are expected to divest non-core and legacy assets to fund electrification, software, and AI, while intense cost pressure across the value chain accelerates consolidation—particularly in lower supplier tiers — creating both opportunities and heightened risks for transactions. This environment is likely to generate a strong pipeline of carve-outs and distressed deals, attracting private equity and strategic investors focused on operationally separable businesses with robust cash flows. At the same time, increasing emphasis on data, IP, and regulatory compliance is reshaping due diligence, while successful transactions will depend on managing separation complexity, navigating consolidation dynamics, and deploying flexible deal structures. Overall, 2026 will favor focused, resilient, and regulatory-aligned M&A strategies over pure scale expansion.
Defence: Europe is entering a new defence-industrial era. Geopolitical shocks have triggered a historic rearmament cycle, backed by initiatives like ReArm Europe and a clear push for strategic autonomy. At the same time, AI, autonomy, cyber and quantum technologies are reshaping the sector, accelerating procurement and scaling capacity.
Despite regulatory and structural challenges, Europe is moving toward a more integrated, innovation-driven ecosystem. Surging investment shows defence tech is now a strategic priority for both governments and private capital. Current investor focus is on later-stage AI-enabled systems, C2 software, autonomy, and counter-UAS — with near-term funding likely to concentrate on low-cost, scalable effectors such as autonomous drones and missiles, driven by lessons from Ukraine and the Middle East.
Slight increase, driven by tech/software, cyber, industrial automation, and energy transition assets; healthcare stable to slightly higher.
Concentration in the mid-market; megadeals remain selective.
Modest relief from lower rate volatility, counterbalanced by energy risk premia in exposed sectors.
Broader adoption of bilateral/pre-emptive approaches and dual-track positioning where equity stories are credible.
Private Wealth: There is a noticeable uptick in activity among privately held or family-controlled businesses. On the buyer side, the structurally strong equity base is helping to facilitate strategic add-ons. At the same time, we continue to see many sales of family businesses driven by a lack of succession within the family.
Technology remains a relative outperformer with active sponsor and strategic demand for software and IT services.
Healthcare M&A is holding steady, with medtech, diagnostics, outsourced pharma services, and healthcare platforms continuing to show stability, as investors focus on scalable buy-and-build opportunities while remaining disciplined on capital deployment.
Medtech niches and outsourced services (CRDMO/CDMO, diagnostics) remain comparatively resilient, with caution around provider assets amid reimbursement pressures.
The Iran conflict injects volatility into oil/gas benchmarks and, through fuel-to-power dynamics, into European electricity prices. This simultaneously pressurizes energy-intensive industries and increases strategic value for assets enabling energy security and efficiency.
German industrials continue to retool for energy efficiency and automation. Public data highlights increased activity within the automotive and defence sector with carve-outs and joint ventures and buyer preference for assets with automation, service/aftermarket revenues, and power-electronics exposure as well as within the entire value chain of the defence sector. Automotive will in particular be shaped by portfolio realignment rather than scale. OEMs and suppliers are divesting non-core assets to fund electrification and software, while cost pressure drives consolidation - especially among lower-tier suppliers.
Sponsors entered 2026 with elevated dry powder, a tilt toward add-ons, and heavy use of private credit given uneven syndicated markets—dynamics that still shape Q2 2026.
The market indicates reset late-stage valuations, increased use of structure, and active CVC in strategic domains.
Build energy cost bridges, validate hedging and PPA structures, and test pass-through and supply-chain resilience.
Secure private credit indications early; maintain flexibility between unitranche and syndicated options; pre-agree W&I and covenant frameworks.
Map FCO, EU FDI, and Foreign Subsidies milestones early; adjust long-stop dates and CPs accordingly.
For industrial/automotive/tech divestitures, accelerate standalone planning and TSAs to secure Day-1 operations.
Use earn-outs, deferred consideration, and minority instruments to reconcile valuation and energy risk.
Technology’s relative strength, the preeminence of mid-market, add-on and carve-out activity, and the pivotal role of private credit—Germany’s M&A in Q2 2026 points to a selective recovery. The main swing factor is the energy price path shaped by the conflict in Iran. Buyers that pair rigorous energy-risk underwriting with financing certainty and regulatory foresight will be best positioned to convert Q2 opportunities into closed transactions.