India logged 190 M&A and private equity transactions worth $10.2 billion in May 2026, a retreat from April's elevated close but still above the twelve-month median. Bharti Airtel and Rajasthan Royals led the month's large-ticket activity, with both deals clearing $500 million in disclosed consideration and accounting for approximately 15 percent of total volume.
The May figure marks a 28 percent sequential decline from April's $14.1 billion across 207 deals, though April carried two billion-dollar-plus strategic transactions that skewed the trailing quarter. On a year-over-year basis, May 2026 sits 11 percent ahead of May 2025's $9.2 billion, suggesting modest momentum in the mid-market even as mega-deals thin. Deal count per month has compressed from Q1's 220-deal average to 198 across April and May, a function of slower sponsor appetite in the $50 million to $200 million band where Indian PE firms typically deploy capital.
The composition matters more than the headline. Bharti Airtel's transaction—likely a spectrum or tower consolidation given the company's ongoing fiber and 5G rollout—signals continued infrastructure rationalization among India's top three telecom operators, all of whom have raised debt or equity in the past eight months to fund capex. The Rajasthan Royals deal, presumably a franchise valuation step-up or minority stake sale tied to IPL media rights, reflects the sustained premium investors assign to cricket-adjacent assets in a market where sports broadcasting commands $6 billion in annual rights fees. Both transactions point to sectoral concentration: telecom, media, and digital infrastructure absorbed 42 percent of May's deal value, consistent with 2025's full-year sectoral split.
Operators should track June's pipeline for two reasons. First, the Reserve Bank of India's June monetary policy meeting could shift the cost of acquisition financing if the repo rate moves from its current 6.25 percent, and recent inflation prints at 4.8 percent suggest headroom for a 25-basis-point cut by Q3. Second, the government's divestment calendar lists three public-sector sales totaling $2.1 billion for the June-August window, which historically pulls private-sector M&A forward as bidders lock balance sheets. The $10 billion monthly threshold has held for three of the past four months, but sponsor dry powder in India-focused funds sits at $18 billion as of April, the highest since 2021, and deployment pressure mounts as vintage years age.
May's data confirms the India M&A market is running at an annualized $122 billion pace for 2026, ahead of 2025's $108 billion close but still 18 percent below the $149 billion recorded in 2021. The gap narrows if three pending deals—totaling $3.7 billion and awaiting competition or foreign-investment approvals—close by September, which would lift the rolling twelve-month average and validate allocator theses on India as the highest-velocity emerging market for corporate control.