Oct 3 (Reuters) - Leading U.S. and international law
firms are advising on fewer but larger corporate deals compared
to last year, continuing a trend in worldwide mergers and
acquisitions activity.
The value of global announced M&A deals during the first
nine months of 2024 reached $2.3 trillion, a 16% increase
compared to the same period last year and the "strongest opening
nine-month period for deal making since 2022," the London Stock
Exchange Group ( LDNXF ) said in its rankings of M&A legal advisers
released on Thursday.
The number of M&A transactions hit an eight-year low through
the third quarter, however, with more than 35,500 deals
announced, LSEG said. That's a 20% drop compared to one year
ago.
Chicago-founded law firm Kirkland & Ellis was again the top
principal adviser in LSEG's rankings for the period by deal
value, working on 556 global announced deals worth $295 billion.
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom edged out Kirkland as
top adviser on global announced deals by value among firms that
advised any party in a transaction, including deals that were
withdrawn or called off. The firm worked on a total of 159 deals
worth $331 billion.
Kirkland and Skadden were on opposite sides of one of the
biggest deals of the year -- candy giant Mars' $36 billion
purchase of Cheez-It maker Kellanova ( K ). Skadden advised Mars while
Kirkland advised Kellanova ( K ).
Boston-founded Goodwin Procter took the No. 1 principal
adviser spot by number of deals in the LSEG data, just ahead of
Kirkland. Goodwin worked 603 deals worth $91 billion.
Latham & Watkins served as the principal adviser on 458
global announced deals valued at $273 billion during the first
nine months of the year, ranking second by deal value and third
by volume. It advised building materials supplier SRS
Distribution in its acquisition by Home Depot ( HD ) and Skydance Media
on its acquisition of Paramount Global ( PARAA ), one of Hollywood's
oldest film studios.
"We're still in a market that has some headwinds," said Mark
Bekheit, global vice chair of Latham's M&A practice. He noted
that the U.S. Federal Reserve only just cut interest rates last
month while government agencies continue to scrutinize deals.
Some dealmakers told Reuters last week that they are
expecting a slowdown in the fourth quarter as companies put off
big deals until after next month's U.S. elections. But Bekheit
said he still expects significant M&A activity in the final
quarter.
"The number of reported deals is not really representative
of the level of activity we're seeing," Bekheit said. "For every
deal that's announced, there's quite a few deals happening in
the background."
Other M&A partners were also hopeful for a strong end to the
year.
"The M&A pipeline looks robust, but we all need to keep an
eye on how the election and geopolitical events generally could
affect the M&A market as we head into the fourth quarter and
into 2025," Kirkland dealmaker Michael Weisser said in a
statement.
David Barkus, who co-leads Holland & Knight's corporate, M&A
and securities practice, said in a statement he anticipates an
"increase in deal activity regardless of the victor" in the U.S.
election.