PayPal headquarters in San Jose, Calif. 2019 Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images
PayPal headquarters in San Jose, Calif. 2019

Pinterest Deal to Top Charts in Tech’s $1 Trillion M&A Year

PayPal Holdings Inc.’s potential takeover of social media firm Pinterest Inc. would top the charts in what’s already a record-breaking year for tech deals.

(Bloomberg) -- PayPal Holdings Inc.’s potential takeover of social media firm Pinterest Inc. would top the charts in what’s already a record-breaking year for tech deals and push industry M&A volumes past the $1 trillion mark for the first time.

The online payments provider is discussing a roughly $45 billion acquisition of Pinterest, Bloomberg News reported Wednesday. That would rank as the biggest takeover in the tech industry this year, surpassing Square Inc.’s proposed $29 billion purchase of “buy now, pay later” company Afterpay Ltd. and Microsoft Corp.’s $20 billion deal for speech-recognition pioneer Nuance Communications Inc.

Tech companies have announced $971 billion of mergers and acquisitions this year, double the tally for the same period in 2020, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It’s already the busiest year on record by far, thanks to a series of ambitious deals like Intuit Inc.’s $12 billion purchase of email marketing firm Mailchimp and cybersecurity company NortonLifeLock Inc.’s up to $8.6 billion takeover of rival Avast Plc. 

Pinterest investors welcomed news of PayPal’s interest, sending the company’s stock up 13% on Wednesday. It clawed back some of that gain Thursday, with shares falling as much as 3.2% in early New York trading.

A string of tech executives have been cooking up their biggest-ever acquisitions in recent months, emboldened by soaring stock valuations and easy credit conditions. Still, their enthusiasm could run into trouble amid increasingly assertive regulators in the U.S.

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s new chair Lina Khan has vowed to restore the agency’s power to take on dominant companies thwarting competition. She’s specifically called out the tech industry, where she’s scrutinizing privacy practices and clamping down on deals falling below the radar. Khan’s aggressive stance has spooked some in the market, as traders become wary about whether major deals can be completed. 

Those worries haven’t slowed the pace of dealmaking just yet. There’s been a new billion-dollar tech deal announced roughly every two days this year, Bloomberg data show. 

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