Global corporate mergers surged to near-record highs in 2025 Federal Trade Commission, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
USA

Trump’s Lax Approach to Antitrust Helps Spur Banner Year for Corporate Mergers

“Trump’s new antitrust enforcers have demonstrated a willingness to facilitate dealmaking through an uptick in early terminations and settlements,” said the American Economic Liberties Project.

Author : Common Dreams

This article was originally published in Common Dreams under Creative Commons 3.0 license. Read the original article. Contact: editor@commondreams.org

By Brad Reed

Global corporate mergers surged to near-record highs in 2025, driven in part by US President Donald Trump’s lax approach to antitrust enforcement.

The Financial Times reported on Friday that global dealmaking in 2025 topped $4 trillion, including 68 mergers worth $10 billion or more, highlighted by Netflix’s $72 billion bid to buy Warner Bros. Discovery and a proposed $85 billion mega-merger between railway giants Union Pacific and Norfolk Southern.

The US alone accounted for $2.3 trillion worth of mergers and acquisitions, which the Financial Times said highlighted the Trump administration’s role in green-lighting corporate consolidation.

“Top dealmakers said that the Trump administration’s push to loosen regulation had encouraged companies to explore tie-ups that they might otherwise have been hesitant to pursue,” the Financial Times explained.

Andrew Nussbaum, co-chair of the executive committee at law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, told the Financial Times that corporate leaders “see a willingness of the regulators to engage in constructive dialogue” under the second Trump administration, which has given them “a willingness to take on regulatory risk for transactions that are strategic.”

The American Economic Liberties Project has also taken note of the Trump administration’s role in shepherding through big mergers, and created a Trump Merger Boom tracker earlier this year to document the massive wave of corporate consolidation.

In its analysis of the administration’s lax approach to antitrust enforcement, the American Economic Liberties Project said that “Trump’s new antitrust enforcers have demonstrated a willingness to facilitate dealmaking through an uptick in early terminations and settlements.”

“Despite pro-enforcement rhetoric early on from Trump’s heads of the FTC and DOJ Antitrust Division,” the American Economic Liberties Project added, “it’s becoming increasingly clear that agency leadership is having trouble making their decisions in a vacuum—with a quiet tide of deals granted to companies that have been friendly to the White House.”

[VP]

Suggested Reading:

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp

Download our app on Play Store

Trump Extends Cease-Fire Amid Uncertainty Over Iran's Position; Blockade To Remain

Assembly Elections 2026 Phase 1 Polling LIVE: Final Voter Turnout — Assam at 85.38%, Keralam at 78.03%, and Puducherry at 89.83%

Parliament Budget Session LIVE: Constitutional Amendment Rejected, Consideration of Delimitation and Women's Reservation Suspended

Reliance Power CFO Ashok Kumar Pal and Two Others Arrested in ₹136 Crore Bank Guarantee Fraud Case

ECI Publishes Supplementary List of Voters Cleared by Tribunals for Phase 1 Polling in Bengal—Of 34 Lakh Appeals, Only 139 Eligible to Vote