India's M&A market recorded $36.3 billion in deal value during Q2 2026, a 127 percent surge from the prior quarter, according to Grant Thornton Bharat's quarterly tracking. The figure marks the highest quarterly M&A total since Q2 2022, with 240 transactions worth $27.9 billion accounting for the bulk of activity. Transaction count declined year-over-year, but average deal size expanded sharply as outbound acquisitions by Indian corporates replaced the smaller domestic consolidation trades that dominated 2024 and early 2025.
The divergence between volume and value signals a structural shift. Indian conglomerates and mid-cap operators, flush with dollar reserves and facing saturation in home markets, are acquiring European and North American assets at scale. Three deals above $2 billion closed during the quarter, each targeting technology infrastructure or industrial manufacturing. Domestic M&A, by contrast, saw average transaction size fall 18 percent as regulatory scrutiny on sectoral consolidation—particularly in telecommunications and financial services—slowed large-ticket approvals. The Reserve Bank of India has informally signaled caution on banking mergers until post-election fiscal clarity emerges in Q4.
The timing matters. Moody's downgrade of the US credit rating to Aa1 earlier this week has already begun repricing risk-free rate assumptions across emerging-market capital structures. Indian acquirers with dollar-denominated debt will face higher refinancing costs starting Q3, and the rupee's 2.1 percent depreciation against the dollar since April compounds the cost of cross-border deals. Family offices and sovereign wealth funds that co-invested in several of the quarter's outbound transactions are now stress-testing currency hedges and reassessing leverage multiples. The window for cheap dollar acquisition financing is closing.
Allocators should watch three developments. First, the Securities and Exchange Board of India is expected to release revised guidelines on mandatory open offers for cross-border mergers by late August, which could raise the threshold for minority shareholder protections and slow deal closures. Second, Indian corporates have $14.7 billion in acquisition-related debt maturing between Q4 2026 and Q1 2027, per central bank filings—refinancing that debt in a higher-rate environment will compress margins and force asset sales if rupee weakness persists. Third, private equity exits, which contributed only $3.1 billion to Q2 deal flow, remain suppressed; a pickup in secondary transactions would signal renewed confidence in domestic valuations and could shift momentum back toward inbound capital.
The Grant Thornton data shows one other detail: 62 percent of Q2 deal value came from just eight transactions, all involving promoter-led groups with direct government or quasi-sovereign linkages. That concentration suggests the rally in deal values is less about broad market health and more about a handful of operators executing long-planned international expansions before currency and credit conditions deteriorate further.