在瑞士达沃斯举行的世界经济论坛年会召开前夕,《财富》杂志采访了高盛(Goldman Sachs)全球投行业务联席主管金·波斯内特,请她展望2026年最紧迫的商业议题。
作为《财富》“最具影响力的商界女性”上榜者,波斯内特是高盛最顶尖的交易撮合者之一,同时还担任公司级客户业务委员会副主席及管理委员会成员。此前,她曾出任科技、媒体与电信业务全球主管,并历任投行业务服务负责人和OneGS项目负责人等多个高管职务。她向《财富》杂志分享了自己对当前商业环境的判断,以及2026年最重要的发展趋势,涵盖了人工智能、IPO市场以及并购活动。过去20年里,高盛一直稳居全球并购顾问排行榜榜首,2025年亦不例外;而波斯内特正是缔造这一辉煌成绩的核心推动者之一,曾为Alphabet、Uber、eBay、Etsy和X等公司提供咨询服务。
您如何看待当前的市场环境?
我们正目睹一系列强劲的催化因素在推动并购和资本市场的活跃发展。2025年下半年加速商业活动的基本驱动因素,在迈入2026年之际持续改善,且保持强劲态势。建设性的宏观环境,包括AI作为各行业、各地域的增长催化剂,正在增强首席执行官与董事会的信心。我们的客户正积极推动以规模、增长和创新为核心的战略行动与融资活动。随着AI从一种理论上的催化因素转变为真正的产业驱动力,它正在为董事会创造一系列新的优先议题;这些议题已成为我们所有客户在迈入2026年之际最为关注的焦点。
2025年AI领域最重要的进展是什么?2026年我们又应当有何期待?
2025年是AI的突破之年:我们告别了AI实验阶段,正式迈入AI产业化时代。在模型、智能体、基础设施和治理等多个层面,我们目睹了重大的技术与结构性突破。2025年1月,深度求索(DeepSeek)推出了其DeepSeek-R1推理模型,证明完全开源模型也能实现世界级推理能力,并且极具成本效益,对闭源模型的“护城河”发起了挑战。同月,由OpenAI、软银(SoftBank)和甲骨文(Oracle)等参与的、规模达5,000亿美元的历史性公私合营项目“星际之门”启动,标志着AI基础设施进入“千兆瓦时代”。仅仅两个月后的2025年3月,xAI收购X平台的事件释放出一种全新战略信号:社交平台可以作为庞大的实时数据引擎,用于模型训练。到2025年年底,随着OpenAI的GPT-5.1 Pro、谷歌(Google)的Gemini 3以及Anthropic的Claude 4.5相继发布,模型能力出现了近乎同步的大幅跃升。这些模型均提升了深度思考与推理能力,进一步拓展了多模态的边界,并为自主智能体工作流树立了新的行业标准。
在企业层面,讨论的主题已经从几年前的“什么是AI”,演变成“我们能多快部署”。我们已经跨过试点阶段,进入深层次结构性转型期。对全球企业而言,AI正在从根本上重塑工作的完成方式。AI不再只是附加功能,它已成为新型生产力与运营杠杆的基础。有前瞻性眼光的企业,早已不仅仅把AI用于自动化;它们正在构建智能体工作流,将其视为企业最宝贵资产“人力资本”的效能放大器。随着企业从“AI辅助型”任务执行转向“AI主导型”流程构建,我们已经开始看到首批真实的、可量化的投资回报,这从根本上改变了组织的成本结构和执行速度。
当然,所有这些进展都伴随着监管和政策层面的复杂性。随着AI扩展到消费级、企业级乃至国家级规模,全球政策路径正出现分化,企业董事会必须谨慎应对。在美国,近期的一系列行政命令,例如2025年1月的“消除障碍”行政令以及随后推出的“创世使命”计划,释放出一个明确的政策转向信号,即通过撤销此前的申报要求、加速基础设施建设,来优先巩固美国在AI领域的主导地位。与之形成对比的是欧盟:《欧盟人工智能法案》已全面生效,对“高风险”系统和通用模型设定了严格的监管框架。与此同时,英国采取了一种“促进创新”的混合模式:一方面推动“安全即服务”,另一方面又投入数十亿资金建设国家级算力和“AI增长区”,以弥合创新与公众信任之间的鸿沟。对我们的客户而言,挑战已不再只是合规问题,更在于战略规划与套利。他们需要决定在哪里建设、在哪里部署、与谁合作、该收购什么,以及如何在一个碎片化的监管环境中保持全球竞争优势。
迈入2026年,创新的节奏不仅在加快,更迫使每一家全球性企业彻底重构其业务流程和资本配置策略。
在今年IPO预期和热度高涨的背景下,您对市场有何展望?它将呈现出哪些特征?
我们正迈入一个IPO“超级周期”,其特征将是前所未有的交易数量和IPO规模。不同于20世纪90年代末互联网泡沫时期数百家小盘股公司上市的浪潮,也不同于2020至2021年由众多十亿美元级IPO驱动的那一轮高峰,下一轮IPO周期将在数量和体量上同时刷新历史纪录。这轮周期的特征是,既有制度上成熟的行业巨头首次公开亮相,也会有极具颠覆性、发展迅猛且资本密集的创新者上市。过去十年,一些公司选择长期保持私有状态,并募集了规模空前的私募资本,使得一批公司在上市前就达到了以往私募市场前所未见的估值水平和运营规模。我们讨论的已不再是“独角兽”,而是在上市时就已具备《财富》美国500强企业的体量与影响力的全球性公司。对投资者而言,IPO窗口的重新开启,将带来一个难得的机会:投资全球最具颠覆性、增长最快的公司,并推动公开市场指数实现跨代际的结构性再平衡。
2018年,前五大上市科技公司合计估值达3.3万亿美元,其中苹果(Apple)以约1万亿美元居首;如今这五家公司的合计估值为18.3万亿美元,增长超过5.5倍。更值得注意的是,2018年市值排名前十的私营科技公司合计估值约3,000亿美元,如今已达3万亿美元,增长超过10倍。这些都是具有时代意义的标志性公司,拥有前所未有的私募市场市值,其中一些还存在巨大的资本需求,这势必会催生一个前所未见的IPO市场。
当然,每家公司在上市时机、规模和结构上都会有各自的考量,这将影响它们是否、如何以及何时进入公开市场;但整体潜力十分巨大。在上一轮IPO浪潮中,高盛始终处于IPO创新的中心,率先推动了直接上市和拍卖式IPO;而在即将到来的这一轮周期中,我们预计还会涌现出更多创新模式。当前,建设性的宏观环境与突破性的技术进步正在形成合力,这不仅将重新打开IPO窗口,更是在为投资者创造一个时代性的机遇,让他们参与到那些将定义未来一个世纪全球商业格局的公司。
2025年并购活动激增,市场是否已具备再迎一个并购大年的条件?
随着我们迈入2026年,全球并购市场已经从复苏(2025年并购总额达5.1万亿美元,同比增长44%)转向更为大胆、更具战略性的新阶段。得益于有利的监管环境、美联储降息周期启动以及估值逐步回归常态,2025年下半年并购市场的关键词是“解冻”;而接下来的一年,市场将以雄心勃勃的并购交易为特征。
我们已进入一个全面、果敢且富有雄心的战略性交易新时代:行业领导者正推动具有变革性的高确信度交易,他们不再单纯为了扩大规模而寻求并购,而是主动出击,争相收购那些将决定未来十年商业格局的战略性资产、AI能力和数字基础设施。首席执行官与董事会的信心已达到多年来的最高点,其根本原因在于一个共识正在形成:在AI产业化的经济体系中,固步自封就是最大的风险。我们与客户进行的战略讨论的质量与节奏都清晰表明:全球各行业和各地区最具影响力的公司,已经准备好动用自有资产和公开市场资金,重新绘制竞争版图。
AI已不再是一个孤立的技术趋势;它是一种横向颠覆力量,正在全面提升各个经济部门对战略性并购的需求。董事会层面的讨论,已经从理论性的“AI试点”转向大规模资本投入,但技术演进的速度,正超越传统治理框架的适应能力。董事会和管理团队需要在历史基准已不再适用的新环境下,作出数十亿美元量级的高风险决策。在这样的背景下,并购已成为实现战略跃迁的工具——企业既可以通过并购采取防御姿态,保护核心业务,也可以主动出击,收购实现非线性增长所需的关键基础设施与人才。2026年的成败,将取决于战略定力,即能否将前所未有的复杂性,转化为清晰、可执行的战略和竞争优势。
随着AI持续重塑企业的并购战略,财务投资者也正在重返并购舞台的中心。2025年,财务投资者主导的并购活动明显加速。随着买卖双方估值差距收窄、融资市场环境改善,以及创新型交易结构的出现,私募股权机构能够推进更大规模、更复杂的交易,并购规模同比增长超过50%。全球财务投资者目前持有约1万亿美元待投资金,以及超过4万亿美元尚未变现的投资组合公司。在这样的背景下,向有限合伙人(LP)返还资本的压力持续上升。进入2026 年,财务投资者呈现出双线并进的策略:一方面,通过私有化交易和战略拆分来部署新资本;另一方面,借助重新打开的退出通道,包括IPO、二级市场出售和战略出售,来满足流动性需求。随着退出通道重启、估值差距收窄,再叠加更为健康的宏观经济环境和持续改善的流动性条件,财务投资者将在2026年拥有更大的灵活性。
本次问答基于同金·波斯内特的电子邮件交流整理而成,本文出于篇幅和清晰度考虑进行了适当编辑。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
在瑞士达沃斯举行的世界经济论坛年会召开前夕,《财富》杂志采访了高盛(Goldman Sachs)全球投行业务联席主管金·波斯内特,请她展望2026年最紧迫的商业议题。
作为《财富》“最具影响力的商界女性”上榜者,波斯内特是高盛最顶尖的交易撮合者之一,同时还担任公司级客户业务委员会副主席及管理委员会成员。此前,她曾出任科技、媒体与电信业务全球主管,并历任投行业务服务负责人和OneGS项目负责人等多个高管职务。她向《财富》杂志分享了自己对当前商业环境的判断,以及2026年最重要的发展趋势,涵盖了人工智能、IPO市场以及并购活动。过去20年里,高盛一直稳居全球并购顾问排行榜榜首,2025年亦不例外;而波斯内特正是缔造这一辉煌成绩的核心推动者之一,曾为Alphabet、Uber、eBay、Etsy和X等公司提供咨询服务。
您如何看待当前的市场环境?
我们正目睹一系列强劲的催化因素在推动并购和资本市场的活跃发展。2025年下半年加速商业活动的基本驱动因素,在迈入2026年之际持续改善,且保持强劲态势。建设性的宏观环境,包括AI作为各行业、各地域的增长催化剂,正在增强首席执行官与董事会的信心。我们的客户正积极推动以规模、增长和创新为核心的战略行动与融资活动。随着AI从一种理论上的催化因素转变为真正的产业驱动力,它正在为董事会创造一系列新的优先议题;这些议题已成为我们所有客户在迈入2026年之际最为关注的焦点。
2025年AI领域最重要的进展是什么?2026年我们又应当有何期待?
2025年是AI的突破之年:我们告别了AI实验阶段,正式迈入AI产业化时代。在模型、智能体、基础设施和治理等多个层面,我们目睹了重大的技术与结构性突破。2025年1月,深度求索(DeepSeek)推出了其DeepSeek-R1推理模型,证明完全开源模型也能实现世界级推理能力,并且极具成本效益,对闭源模型的“护城河”发起了挑战。同月,由OpenAI、软银(SoftBank)和甲骨文(Oracle)等参与的、规模达5,000亿美元的历史性公私合营项目“星际之门”启动,标志着AI基础设施进入“千兆瓦时代”。仅仅两个月后的2025年3月,xAI收购X平台的事件释放出一种全新战略信号:社交平台可以作为庞大的实时数据引擎,用于模型训练。到2025年年底,随着OpenAI的GPT-5.1 Pro、谷歌(Google)的Gemini 3以及Anthropic的Claude 4.5相继发布,模型能力出现了近乎同步的大幅跃升。这些模型均提升了深度思考与推理能力,进一步拓展了多模态的边界,并为自主智能体工作流树立了新的行业标准。
在企业层面,讨论的主题已经从几年前的“什么是AI”,演变成“我们能多快部署”。我们已经跨过试点阶段,进入深层次结构性转型期。对全球企业而言,AI正在从根本上重塑工作的完成方式。AI不再只是附加功能,它已成为新型生产力与运营杠杆的基础。有前瞻性眼光的企业,早已不仅仅把AI用于自动化;它们正在构建智能体工作流,将其视为企业最宝贵资产“人力资本”的效能放大器。随着企业从“AI辅助型”任务执行转向“AI主导型”流程构建,我们已经开始看到首批真实的、可量化的投资回报,这从根本上改变了组织的成本结构和执行速度。
当然,所有这些进展都伴随着监管和政策层面的复杂性。随着AI扩展到消费级、企业级乃至国家级规模,全球政策路径正出现分化,企业董事会必须谨慎应对。在美国,近期的一系列行政命令,例如2025年1月的“消除障碍”行政令以及随后推出的“创世使命”计划,释放出一个明确的政策转向信号,即通过撤销此前的申报要求、加速基础设施建设,来优先巩固美国在AI领域的主导地位。与之形成对比的是欧盟:《欧盟人工智能法案》已全面生效,对“高风险”系统和通用模型设定了严格的监管框架。与此同时,英国采取了一种“促进创新”的混合模式:一方面推动“安全即服务”,另一方面又投入数十亿资金建设国家级算力和“AI增长区”,以弥合创新与公众信任之间的鸿沟。对我们的客户而言,挑战已不再只是合规问题,更在于战略规划与套利。他们需要决定在哪里建设、在哪里部署、与谁合作、该收购什么,以及如何在一个碎片化的监管环境中保持全球竞争优势。
迈入2026年,创新的节奏不仅在加快,更迫使每一家全球性企业彻底重构其业务流程和资本配置策略。
在今年IPO预期和热度高涨的背景下,您对市场有何展望?它将呈现出哪些特征?
我们正迈入一个IPO“超级周期”,其特征将是前所未有的交易数量和IPO规模。不同于20世纪90年代末互联网泡沫时期数百家小盘股公司上市的浪潮,也不同于2020至2021年由众多十亿美元级IPO驱动的那一轮高峰,下一轮IPO周期将在数量和体量上同时刷新历史纪录。这轮周期的特征是,既有制度上成熟的行业巨头首次公开亮相,也会有极具颠覆性、发展迅猛且资本密集的创新者上市。过去十年,一些公司选择长期保持私有状态,并募集了规模空前的私募资本,使得一批公司在上市前就达到了以往私募市场前所未见的估值水平和运营规模。我们讨论的已不再是“独角兽”,而是在上市时就已具备《财富》美国500强企业的体量与影响力的全球性公司。对投资者而言,IPO窗口的重新开启,将带来一个难得的机会:投资全球最具颠覆性、增长最快的公司,并推动公开市场指数实现跨代际的结构性再平衡。
2018年,前五大上市科技公司合计估值达3.3万亿美元,其中苹果(Apple)以约1万亿美元居首;如今这五家公司的合计估值为18.3万亿美元,增长超过5.5倍。更值得注意的是,2018年市值排名前十的私营科技公司合计估值约3,000亿美元,如今已达3万亿美元,增长超过10倍。这些都是具有时代意义的标志性公司,拥有前所未有的私募市场市值,其中一些还存在巨大的资本需求,这势必会催生一个前所未见的IPO市场。
当然,每家公司在上市时机、规模和结构上都会有各自的考量,这将影响它们是否、如何以及何时进入公开市场;但整体潜力十分巨大。在上一轮IPO浪潮中,高盛始终处于IPO创新的中心,率先推动了直接上市和拍卖式IPO;而在即将到来的这一轮周期中,我们预计还会涌现出更多创新模式。当前,建设性的宏观环境与突破性的技术进步正在形成合力,这不仅将重新打开IPO窗口,更是在为投资者创造一个时代性的机遇,让他们参与到那些将定义未来一个世纪全球商业格局的公司。
2025年并购活动激增,市场是否已具备再迎一个并购大年的条件?
随着我们迈入2026年,全球并购市场已经从复苏(2025年并购总额达5.1万亿美元,同比增长44%)转向更为大胆、更具战略性的新阶段。得益于有利的监管环境、美联储降息周期启动以及估值逐步回归常态,2025年下半年并购市场的关键词是“解冻”;而接下来的一年,市场将以雄心勃勃的并购交易为特征。
我们已进入一个全面、果敢且富有雄心的战略性交易新时代:行业领导者正推动具有变革性的高确信度交易,他们不再单纯为了扩大规模而寻求并购,而是主动出击,争相收购那些将决定未来十年商业格局的战略性资产、AI能力和数字基础设施。首席执行官与董事会的信心已达到多年来的最高点,其根本原因在于一个共识正在形成:在AI产业化的经济体系中,固步自封就是最大的风险。我们与客户进行的战略讨论的质量与节奏都清晰表明:全球各行业和各地区最具影响力的公司,已经准备好动用自有资产和公开市场资金,重新绘制竞争版图。
AI已不再是一个孤立的技术趋势;它是一种横向颠覆力量,正在全面提升各个经济部门对战略性并购的需求。董事会层面的讨论,已经从理论性的“AI试点”转向大规模资本投入,但技术演进的速度,正超越传统治理框架的适应能力。董事会和管理团队需要在历史基准已不再适用的新环境下,作出数十亿美元量级的高风险决策。在这样的背景下,并购已成为实现战略跃迁的工具——企业既可以通过并购采取防御姿态,保护核心业务,也可以主动出击,收购实现非线性增长所需的关键基础设施与人才。2026年的成败,将取决于战略定力,即能否将前所未有的复杂性,转化为清晰、可执行的战略和竞争优势。
随着AI持续重塑企业的并购战略,财务投资者也正在重返并购舞台的中心。2025年,财务投资者主导的并购活动明显加速。随着买卖双方估值差距收窄、融资市场环境改善,以及创新型交易结构的出现,私募股权机构能够推进更大规模、更复杂的交易,并购规模同比增长超过50%。全球财务投资者目前持有约1万亿美元待投资金,以及超过4万亿美元尚未变现的投资组合公司。在这样的背景下,向有限合伙人(LP)返还资本的压力持续上升。进入2026 年,财务投资者呈现出双线并进的策略:一方面,通过私有化交易和战略拆分来部署新资本;另一方面,借助重新打开的退出通道,包括IPO、二级市场出售和战略出售,来满足流动性需求。随着退出通道重启、估值差距收窄,再叠加更为健康的宏观经济环境和持续改善的流动性条件,财务投资者将在2026年拥有更大的灵活性。
本次问答基于同金·波斯内特的电子邮件交流整理而成,本文出于篇幅和清晰度考虑进行了适当编辑。(财富中文网)
译者:刘进龙
审校:汪皓
Ahead of the World Economic Forum‘s Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, Fortune connected with Goldman Sachs’ global co-head of investment banking, Kim Posnett, for her outlook on the most urgent issues in business as 2026 gathers steam.
A Fortune Most Powerful Woman, Posnett is one of the bank’s top dealmakers, also serving as vice chair of the Firmwide Client Franchise Committee and is a member of the Management Committee. She was previously the global head of the Technology, Media and Telecommunications, among several other executive roles, including Head of Investment Banking Services and OneGS. She talked to Fortune about how she sees the current business environment and the most significant developments in 2026, in terms of AI, the IPO market and M&A activity. Goldman has been the No. 1 M&A advisory globally for the last 20 years, including in 2025 — and Posnett has been one of the star contributors, advising companies including Alphabet, Uber, eBay, Etsy, and X.
Heading into Davos, how would you describe the current environment?
As the global business community converges at Davos, we are seeing powerful catalysts driving M&A and capital markets activity. The foundational drivers that accelerated business activity in the second half of 2025 have continued to improve and remain strong heading into 2026. A constructive macro backdrop — including AI serving as a growth catalyst across sectors and geographies — is fueling CEO and board confidence, and our clients are looking to drive strategic and financing activity focused on scale, growth and innovation. As AI moves from theoretical catalyst to an industrial driver, it is creating a new set of priorities for the boardroom that are top of mind for every client we serve heading into 2026.
What were the most significant AI developments in 2025, and what should we expect in 2026?
2025 was a breakout year for AI where we exited the era of AI experimentation and entered the era of AI industrialization. We witnessed major technical and structural breakthroughs across models, agents, infrastructure and governance. It was only a year ago, in January 2025, when DeepSeek launched its DeepSeek-R1 reasoning model challenging the “moats” of closed-source models by proving that world-class reasoning could be achieved with fully open-source models and radical cost efficiency. That same month, Stargate – a historic $500 billion public-private joint venture including OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle – signaled the start of the “gigawatt era” of AI infrastructure. Just two months later in March 2025, xAI’s acquisition of X signaled a new strategy where social platforms could function as massive real-time data engines for model training. By year end, we saw massive, near-simultaneous escalation in model capabilities with the launches of OpenAI’s GPT-5.1 Pro, Google’s Gemini 3, and Anthropic’s Claude 4.5, all improving deep thinking and reasoning, pushing the boundaries of multimodality, and setting the standard for autonomous agentic workflows.
In the enterprise, the conversation has matured from “What is AI?” just a few years ago to “How fast can we deploy?” We have moved past the pilot phase into a period of deep structural transformation. For companies around the world, AI is fundamentally reshaping how work gets done. AI is no longer just a feature; it is the foundation of a new kind of productivity and operating leverage. Forward-leaning companies are no longer just using AI for automation; they are building agentic workflows that act as a force multiplier for their most valuable asset: human capital. We are starting to see the first real, measurable returns on investment as firms move from ‘AI-assisted’ tasks to ‘AI-led’ processes, fundamentally shifting the cost and speed of execution across organizations.
Of course, all this progress is not without regulatory and policy complexities. As AI reaches consumer, enterprise and sovereign scale, we are seeing a divergence in global policy that boards must navigate with care. In the United States, recent Executive Orders — such as the January 2025 ‘Removing Barriers’ order and the subsequent ‘Genesis Mission’ — have signaled a decisive shift toward prioritizing American AI dominance by rolling back prior reporting requirements and accelerating infrastructure buildouts. Contrast this with the European Union, where the EU AI Act is now in full effect, imposing strict guardrails on ‘high-risk’ systems and general-purpose models. Meanwhile, the UK has adopted a “pro-innovation” hybrid model: on the one hand, promoting “safety as a service”, while also investing billions into national compute and ‘AI Growth Zones’ to bridge the gap between innovation and public trust. For our clients, the challenge is no longer just regulatory compliance; it is strategic planning and arbitrage – deciding where to build, where to deploy, who to partner with, what to buy and how to maintain a global edge across a fragmented regulatory landscape.
As we enter 2026, the pace of innovation isn’t just accelerating; it is forcing a total rethink of business processes and capital allocation for every global enterprise.
Given the expectation and anticipation for IPOs this year, what is your outlook for the market and how will it be characterized?
We are entering an IPO “mega-cycle” that we expect will be defined by unprecedented deal volume and IPO sizes. Unlike the dot-com wave of the late 1990s, which saw hundreds of small-cap listings, or even the 2020-2021 surge driven by a significant number of billion-dollar IPOs, this next IPO cycle will have greater volume and the largest deals the market has ever seen. It will be characterized by the public debut of institutionally mature titans, as well as totally disruptive, fast moving and capital consumptive innovators. Over the last decade, some companies have stayed private longer and raised unprecedented amounts of private capital, allowing a cohort of businesses to reach valuations and operational scale previously unseen in the private markets. We are no longer talking about “unicorns” — we are talking about global companies with the gravity and scale of Fortune 500 incumbents at the time they go public. For investors, the reopening of the IPO window will enable an opportunity to invest in the most transformative and fastest growing companies in the world and a generational re-weighting of the public indices.
In 2018, the five largest public tech companies were collectively valued at $3.3 trillion, led by Apple at ~$1 trillion. Today, the five largest public tech companies are valued at $18.3 trillion, more than five and half times larger. Even more significant, the 10 largest private tech companies in 2018 were valued at $300 billion. Today, the 10 largest private tech companies are valued at $3 trillion, more than 10 times larger. These are iconic, generational companies with unprecedented private market caps some of which have unprecedented capital needs which should lead to an unprecedented IPO market.
Each of these companies will have their own objectives on IPO timing, size and structure which will influence if, how and when they come to the market, but the potential across the board is significant. During the last IPO wave, Goldman Sachs was at the center of IPO innovation by leading the first direct listings and auction IPOs, and we expect more innovation with this upcoming wave. The current confluence of a constructive macro backdrop and groundbreaking technological advancements is doing more than just reopening the window; it is creating a generational opportunity for investors to participate in the companies that will define the next century of global business.
M&A activity exploded in 2025, are the markers there for another boom year?
As we enter 2026, the global M&A market has transitioned from a year of recovery ($5.1 trillion of M&A volume in 2025, up 44% YoY) to one that is bold and strategic. While the second half of 2025 was defined by a “thawing” — driven by a constructive regulatory environment, fed easing cycle and normalizing valuations — the year ahead will be defined by ambition.
We have entered an era of broad, bold and ambitious strategic dealmaking: transformative, high-conviction transactions where industry leaders are no longer just consolidating for scale, but also moving aggressively to acquire the strategic assets, AI capabilities and digital infrastructure that will define the next decade. CEO and board confidence have reached a multi-year high, underpinned by the realization that in an AI-industrialized economy, standing still is the greatest risk of all. The quality and pace of strategic discussions that we are having with our clients signals that the world’s most influential companies — across sectors and regions — are ready to deploy their balance sheets and public currencies to redraw the competitive map.
AI is no longer an isolated tech trend; it is a horizontal disrupter, broadening the appetite for strategic M&A across every sector of the economy. While the dialogue in boardrooms has moved from theoretical ‘AI pilots’ to large-scale capital deployment, the speed of technology is currently outpacing traditional governance frameworks. Boards and management teams are being asked to make multi-billion dollar, high-stakes decisions in a landscape where historical benchmarks often no longer apply. In this environment, M&A has become a tool for strategic leapfrogging — allowing companies to move both defensively to protect their core and offensively to secure the critical infrastructure and talent needed for non-linear growth. Success in 2026 will be defined by strategic conviction: the ability to turn this unprecedented complexity into a clear, actionable strategy and competitive advantage.
As AI continues to reshape corporate M&A strategy, we are also seeing financial sponsors return to the center of the M&A stage. Sponsor M&A activity accelerated sharply in 2025 — with M&A volumes surging over 50% as the bid-ask spread between buyers and sellers started to narrow, financing markets became more constructive and innovative deal structures enabled private equity firms to pursue larger, more complex transactions. With $1 trillion of global sponsor dry powder and over $4 trillion of unmonetized sponsor portfolio companies, the pressure for capital return to LPs has continued to escalate. Financial sponsors are entering 2026 with a dual-focus: executing take-privates and strategic carveouts to deploy fresh capital, while simultaneously utilizing reopened monetization paths – from IPOs to secondary sales to strategic sales — to satisfy demand for liquidity. With monetization paths reopening and valuation gaps narrowing, sponsors are entering 2026 with greater flexibility, reinforced by a healthier macroeconomic backdrop and improving liquidity conditions.
This Q&A is based on an email conversation with Kim Posnett. This piece has been edited for length and clarity.