Arab News
Arab News, Sat, Mar 29, 2025 | Ramadan 29, 1446
M&A deals in Saudi Arabia rise in sign of foreign investor confidence: Marsh
Saudi Arabia:
Mergers and acquisitions in Saudi Arabia
recorded a 55 percent annual rise in 2024 as deal value hit $9.6 billion, fueled
by foreign investors and key sector activity.
According to Marsh’s Transactional Risk Insurance
report, 59 M&A transactions closed in the Kingdom, with 25 percent of deal
activity concentrated in the industrial sector, 20 percent in technology, and 14
percent in consumer and retail — all areas aligned with the country’s Vision
2030 economic transformation strategy.
This helped to fuel an increase in transactional
risk insurance across the Gulf Cooperation Council region, with demand climbing
78 percent, the analysis showed.
The robust M&A industry throughout the Middle East
and North Africa in 2024 was in contrast to trends in other regions, with a
report released by GlobalData in December showing such transactions — as well as
those involving private equity and venture financing — recording an annual fall
of 8.7 percent during the first 11 months of the year
In an interview with Arab News, Luke Sutton, head
of transactional risk for the Middle East and Africa at Marsh, said: “Foreign
investors accounted for 32 percent of Saudi Arabia’s $9.6 billion in M&A
activity, including several deals involving consortiums of local and
international buyers.”
He added: “The most active non-Saudi acquirers
were from the US, UAE, and UK, with 25 percent of inbound investment
concentrated in tech, 15 percent business services, 15 percent industrials, 10
percent energy and natural resources, and 10 percent transportation.”
Across the wider GCC, inbound investment accounted
for 25 percent of all insured M&A transactions, reflecting a growing presence of
foreign buyers in regional dealmaking.
“Saudi Arabia is a market with very significant
and well-hedged M&A potential; and government-sponsored capital expenditure is
expected to bring opportunities to market as the country focuses on
diversification,” Sutton said.
He also highlighted the effect of recent
regulatory changes, noting that efforts to boost foreign direct investment have
opened up Saudi Arabia to global buyers.
“Warranty and indemnity is a staple feature of M&A
transactions in the US, Europe, and Asia. So it is natural that those buyers
have imported this trend into the Saudi market,” he said.
According to the expert, the Saudi Insurance
Authority’s approval of W&I insurance for the Kingdom’s incorporated buyers is
also expected to significantly increase domestic adoption.
Sutton said that transactional risk insurance not
only reduces risk, but also plays a key role in expediting deal execution. By
covering potential post-sale liabilities, W&I insurance allows parties to avoid
lengthy negotiations over indemnities.
When asked if insurance helps speed up closure, he
replied: “Yes — very significantly. Buyers and sellers — and their legal
advisers — can focus on other facets of the transaction, knowing that the
insurance market can back-stop seller representations and indemnities.”
According to Sutton, as Saudi Arabia pursues
diversification, warranty and indemnity insurance is increasingly used to manage
deal risks — giving buyers protection from hidden issues and sellers a clean,
liability-free exit.
As part of Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia has made
attracting foreign investment a national priority.
Reforms such as 100 percent foreign ownership in
select sectors, streamlined licensing procedures, and a new law that places
local and foreign companies under a unified regulatory framework are aimed at
boosting the Kingdom’s global competitiveness and reducing its dependence on oil
revenue.
The launch of special economic zones,
privatization of state assets, and incentives for international companies to
establish regional headquarters in Riyadh have all contributed to rising foreign
direct investment flows.
Saudi Arabia is targeting an increase in annual
FDI from $26 billion in 2023 to $100 billion by 2030. This openness has
coincided with the region’s rise as a global investment hub, largely driven by
sovereign wealth funds.
The Public Investment Fund, alongside other major
Gulf sovereign wealth funds, is no longer just a passive investor, but a key
player in cross-border M&A, frequently taking controlling stakes and co-leading
big-ticket international transactions.
M&A insurance activity in the GCC
Marsh reported that it had placed more than
$550 million in insurance capacity for insured transactions in Saudi Arabia and
the UAE, representing a total deal value of $2.25 billion, with a median deal
size of $450 million.
SWFs were instrumental in driving deal
activity, according to the firm, with 2024 marking the highest level of global
deal making by these organizations in more than a decade.
While insured deals still leaned toward the
domestic, Marsh noted a growing shift. The investment mix is evolving toward a
50/50 split between domestic and inbound capital, fueled by international
partnerships and increased foreign participation in strategic sectors.
The rising presence of private equity funds has
also influenced the demand for risk insurance. Their focus on clean exits and
post-deal protection has made W&I insurance an increasingly standard part of
deal structuring.
“While historically many deals were completed
without insurance due to limited insurer appetite and perceived high costs; in
the last two years, there has been a significant increase in requests for quotes
on deals within GCC,” said Nirav Modi, private equity and mergers and
acquisition services practice leader at Marsh.
Regionally, while the total number of M&A deals in
the Middle East and Africa fell 13 percent in 2024, deal value jumped 42 percent
to $33 billion, as investors prioritized larger, more strategic transactions,
according to the report.
Saudi Arabia played a major role in this growth,
particularly through infrastructure and public-private partnership initiatives
under Vision 2030.
These trends have been matched by a notable
evolution in the region’s insurance landscape, as market capacity and
competition have grown in response.
According to the report, the number of insurers
underwriting deals rose from five in 2021 to nearly 15 in 2024, resulting in
broader coverage options and a sharp decline in premiums. Marsh reported a mean
premium rate of just over 1.3 percent, down more than 60 percent from three
years ago.
Strategic sponsors, including SWF-backed
corporates, made up 66 percent of insured buyers, highlighting the role of
institutional investors in driving deal flow and relying on insurance to manage
complex transactional risks.
As global M&A rebounds in 2025, Saudi Arabia is
expected to remain a top destination for international capital, particularly in
clean energy, logistics, digital infrastructure, and advanced manufacturing.
With continued regulatory support and a strong
push for diversification, M&A insurance is poised to play a pivotal role in
facilitating secure, high-value transactions across the Kingdom.