Business
Global Mergers And Acquisitions Rise 10% To USD 1.9 Trillion In 2025: BCG Report
New Delhi: Global mergers and acquisitions (M&A) activity is showing signs of recovery after a slow start to the year, with deal value rising 10 per cent to USD 1.9 trillion through the first nine months of 2025, according to the 22nd Annual Global M&A Report released by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG).
The report notes that the rebound is being led by a small group of experienced dealmakers making selective and strategic moves, rather than a broad wave of optimism. Despite ongoing market uncertainty, BCG says these investors are navigating volatility with discipline and long-term planning.
Jens Kengelbach, BCG’s global head of M&A and a co-author of the report, said, “The global M&A recovery is real but uneven, with markedly different trajectories across regions and sectors. We’re seeing an increase in deal preparation in the second half of 2025, and early signs that IPO pipelines are starting to move. Momentum is building.”
The report highlights that North America led all regions, accounting for 62 per cent of global M&A activity, with deal value in the Americas rising 26 per cent to USD 1.3 trillion. Europe recorded a mixed performance, down 5 per cent overall, while Asia-Pacific fell 19 per cent to a ten-year low of USD 284 billion. Within Asia, Singapore and mainland China showed growth, but India’s deal value slipped 20 per cent, reflecting broader regional slowdowns.
Dhruv Shah, Managing Director and Partner at BCG, said India’s M&A landscape “continues to demonstrate remarkable resilience and strategic depth.” He added, “While global deal value saw a modest rebound in 2025, India maintained above-average transaction volumes since the post-pandemic recovery, underscoring investors’ sustained confidence in the country’s growth fundamentals.”
Across sectors, industrials rose 77 per cent versus last year, led by transportation and infrastructure transactions. Technology, media, and telecommunications (10 per cent), energy (20 per cent), and health care (20 per cent) also posted gains. Conversely, the materials (-16 per cent) and consumer (-17 per cent) sectors saw substantial declines in deal value.
Large-scale transactions are returning, with 27 megadeals (valued over USD 10 billion) announced so far in 2025, up from 21 last year.
The report further notes that artificial intelligence (AI) is becoming a key tool for dealmakers, improving due diligence and execution speed. Meanwhile, cross-border M&A has dropped to just 30 per cent of total deal value, down from about 50 per cent in 2007.
Despite challenges, BCG finds that companies with more experience in dealmaking consistently outperform others. “Uncertainty is often seen as the enemy of dealmaking, but it doesn’t have to be,” said Daniel Friedman, BCG’s global leader of transactions and integrations. “Savvy dealmakers stay focused on the long game, making bold, measured, and disciplined bets that can unlock value even when markets are at their most volatile.”
Business
Hyundai Motor India’s Q3 profit rises 6.3% to Rs 1,234 crore
Mumbai: Hyundai Motor India Limited on Monday reported a solid performance in the third quarter (Q3) of FY26, with its consolidated net profit rising 6.3 per cent year-on-year to Rs 1,234.4 crore. The growth was supported by steady demand in the domestic market, strong export numbers and higher sales during the festive season, the company said in its stock exchange filing.
Revenue from operations during the quarter increased 8 percent compared to last year to Rs 17,973.5 crore. Operating performance also improved, with EBITDA rising 7.6 percent year-on-year to Rs 2,018.3 crore. The EBITDA margin stood at 11.2 percent, remaining broadly stable compared to the same period last financial year.
The company said domestic demand during the quarter benefited from GST 2.0-related advantages and festive-season momentum.
Wholesale volumes rose 5 per cent sequentially, supported by strong retail sales across key models.
Exports played an important role in overall growth, with export volumes jumping 21 per cent year-on-year in the December quarter.
Exports contributed around 25 per cent to Hyundai Motor India’s total sales during the period.
On the product front, the Creta once again emerged as a key growth driver. The SUV reclaimed its position as India’s best-selling SUV and achieved its highest-ever annual sales of more than 2 lakh units in calendar year 2025.
The newly launched Venue also saw healthy demand, with nearly 80,000 bookings so far. The company said first-time buyers accounted for 48 per cent of the total bookings for the model.
For the nine months ended December 31, 2025, Hyundai Motor India reported EBITDA of Rs 6,632.5 crore, marking a year-on-year growth of 3.3 per cent.
EBITDA margins expanded to 12.8 per cent despite higher costs related to capacity stabilisation and commodity prices. Net profit for the nine-month period rose to Rs 4,175.9 crore.
Commenting on the results, Managing Director and CEO Tarun Garg said the company delivered healthy growth in volumes, revenue and profitability during the quarter.
He added that an improved sales mix and disciplined cost management helped support margins on a year-to-date basis.
Garg also highlighted strong sales in January 2026 as a positive sign for the rest of the financial year.
Business
India-US trade deal: Hope and uncertainty as Trump cuts tariffs
Indian industry has welcomed lower tariffs, but experts caution against celebration until details are clearer.
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Business
MCX Silver Jumps 6% To Hit Upper Circuit After 46% Crash; Can India–US Deal Spark A Sustained Rally?
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Silver prices staged a sharp rebound on Tuesday after an intense phase of liquidation that followed the abrupt unwinding of a record-setting rally
Silver Rates Surge Today
Silver Rates Today: Silver prices staged a sharp rebound on Tuesday after an intense phase of liquidation that followed the abrupt unwinding of a record-setting rally. The earlier sell-off had pulled prices down more than 46% from their peak in just three sessions, highlighting the extreme volatility in the precious metals space. Gold prices also recovered alongside silver.
On the MCX, silver hit the 6% upper circuit at Rs 2,50,436 per kg on February 3, while MCX gold climbed 3% to Rs 1,48,310 per 10 grams.
A key macro catalyst emerged after US President Donald Trump announced a trade agreement with India. The deal lowers US tariffs on Indian goods to 18% from 50% in exchange for India halting Russian oil purchases and easing certain trade barriers. The development added a fresh geopolitical layer to already jittery commodity markets.
Gold mirrored silver’s recovery in global trade. Spot gold rose as much as 4.2% to move above $4,855 an ounce after sliding 4.8% in the previous session. That decline had extended Friday’s slump, the steepest in over a decade.
Earlier, on January 30, spot gold had tumbled nearly 10% in its sharpest single-day fall since 1983, dragging prices back below the $5,000-an-ounce mark that had been crossed only days before and erasing a sizable portion of the year’s gains.
The rebound extended beyond gold and silver. Spot platinum advanced 3% to $2,183.64 an ounce after touching a record $2,918.80 on January 26, while palladium rose 2.7% to $1,765.75, joining the broader recovery across precious metals.
What drove the rebound after the crash?
Domestic sentiment got a lift from the India–US trade deal, while investors also reassessed geopolitical risks, currency movements and the outlook for US monetary leadership. Strong buying from Chinese retail investors ahead of the Lunar New Year further supported demand, although China’s markets are set to shut for over a week from February 16, temporarily sidelining a key source of consumption.
Traders are also watching developments involving Iran after Trump signalled that talks on a potential new nuclear agreement could begin soon. Any diplomatic progress could reduce gold’s safe-haven appeal and cap gains.
The earlier sell-off in bullion was initially triggered by Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh as the next Federal Reserve chair, which strengthened the US dollar and pressured metals. The slide intensified after CME Group raised margin requirements for precious metals futures, forcing leveraged traders to unwind positions quickly. A stronger dollar combined with higher trading costs led to a sharp liquidity squeeze, accelerating the fall.
Will the rally sustain?
Hareesh V, Head of Commodity Research at Geojit Investments, said longer-term drivers such as geopolitical tensions, central bank buying and macro uncertainty remain supportive for precious metals.
He noted that the previous correction was magnified by extremely overbought conditions after gold and silver had surged to record highs, with silver rallying more than 60% in a month and gold over 20%. Profit-booking snowballed into panic selling as liquidity thinned and volatility spiked.
“The violent drop was more of a technical correction than a deterioration in core fundamentals,” he said, suggesting that the broader structural support for the metals remains intact.
February 03, 2026, 11:07 IST
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