Banking On A Deal Frenzy

This hurts a bit. It kills me to potentially reward poor behaviour, but hey, I’m not nominated to be the Attorney General of the United States of America. The financial giants of Wall Street kept their heads down in the lead up to the US election. We didn’t hear too much commentary on the rule of law, inflationary tariffs or accelerating budget deficits. I mean…who needs property rights (law) or a functioning national balance sheet? Possibly, the infamous Leona Hemsley’s “little people” because they pay taxes, aka the price, in time. But, for now, there’s a very clear short-term calculation being made by Wall Street. A Trump administration determined to slash regulation and speed up commercial transactions is a godsend for bankers. Of course, Elon Musk, Tesla and Bitcoin are perceived as the early big ‘winners’ of a transactional incoming President. However, at a broader level the clear winner in the week since election is the enormous financial sector.

US Financials are the best performing sector in the markets over the last week (+1.5%) while tech, telecoms, healthcare and materials all have actually booked negative returns for investors(Source: Finviz). That big picture split is interesting and highlights the very essence of what financials are about. It’s all about deals. More deals, more commissions, more fees, more revenues, more bonuses. What deals you ask? Let’s start with the biggies like massive M&A deals. In recent years, the broligarchs have been frustrated by FTC Commissioner, Lina Khan, who has blocked more than 30 corporate mergers/acquisitions on grounds of reduced competition. High-profile deals attracting government(FTC) scrutiny included Microsoft/Activision and Kroger/Albertsons. Only this week, the parent companies of luxury brands Coach and Michael Kors abandoned their merger due to FTC competition-based objections. No deal, no fees. Hence, a more lenient transaction-friendly FTC under Trump is expected to increase deal flow. And, not just in M&A.

How do I put this delicately? Well, if the incoming Attorney General is already under investigation by his House of Representatives colleagues for sex trafficking, let’s just say the whole area of compliance could be significantly relaxed. We can expect more financial products to be launched and faster in a more relaxed regulatory environment. One area already due to increase activity levels is the IPO sector. Interestingly, Sweden’s Klarna has just announced its plans to list publicly (IPO). However, despite its Swedish home, Klarna is going to list in the US, not Europe. Oh, and Klarna is a financial company. It’s also a great comeback story – the buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) platform and its 85 million customers is heading for a $20 billion valuation. That’s a tripling of value since the fintech ‘winter’ of 2022. Note fintech is not the only survivor of the investor ‘winter’ of 2022…

The cryptocurrency universe has already been perceived as a Trump regulatory relaxation winner. Bitcoin has rocketed to all-time-highs of $93,000 with an individual asset value of $1.7 trillion exceeding that of Facebook/Meta. The wider cryptocurrency ecosystem has achieved a market value of $3.2 trillion but the bigger story is possibly stablecoins (cryptocurrencies backed by liquid financial assets ). Again, I’d highlight ‘transactions’ as the opportunity for financial services platforms. Stablecoins were used in $8.5 trillion of transactions in the second quarter of this year. That’s more than double Visa’s transaction volume of $3.9 trillion. It also provides a pretty good clue as to why Stripe acquired stablecoin platform, Bridge, for $1.1 billion.

For the avoidance of doubt, more transactions and deals is an overall positive. More exits, more funding, more deals… the circle of start-up life. At Spark we know more deals, exits and IPOs eventually feeds into the smaller regions of financial markets. We also know there’s a hefty €150 billion sitting in Irish bank accounts earning almost zero returns. It’s not just an Irish phenomenon. There is currently a record $7 trillion of cash sitting in US money-market funds. That’s not a huge surprise when one can earn 4-5% interest in these US deposit accounts for relatively minimal risk. However, watch out for lower US interest rates and increased mega deal headlines in the coming months. Then watch that cash move. And, not just in the USA.

The EU economy is 99% driven by 26 million private small and medium sized businesses (SME) who account for €5.4 trillion of economic activity. The headlines will almost exclusively focus on the impact of a Trump regime on US multinationals, corporation tax, homeshoring etc. Rather like the trading evidence in markets of the past week, probably not much will really change for the “broligarchs” and the big tech multinationals. However, the markets are telling you financial services will enjoy greater deal activity which will feed through the global funding ecosystem. Indeed, right now there’s an all-time-high number of investment campaigns on the Spark platform (8) with interesting additional private asset/deal opportunities in the 2025 pipeline. We’ve written it before; the future is private.

So, it seems like a good time to launch Spark Private, the personalised service to grow your private asset portfolio. More details on that next week, after you’ve finished gasping at AG Gaetz.