Trends and Developments in Private Equity and M&A in the United States and Illinois: The Middle Market’s Moment
In the wake of a subdued 2024 and a slow start to 2025, there has been a steady uptick in M&A deal activity, particularly in the middle market. Over the past several months, deal flow has vastly increased across most markets, and industry participants – including funds, sponsors and strategics – appear increasingly optimistic about a more robust M&A environment for the remainder of 2025 and into 2026.
The tension between optimism for future deal flow and the drag of existing portfolio overhang was a defining feature of the M&A market of the past few years. Although there were several instances when the M&A market was poised to jump forward, certain macro-economic policies and political realities restrained growth. However, the story of this recent rebound appears to have significant tailwinds and is shaped by various market factors, including: (i) extended fund life cycles pressuring exits and promised returns to investors, (ii) a narrowing of valuation expectation gaps between buyers and sellers, which has persisted since the frothy pandemic M&A market of 2020-2022, (iii) post-pandemic revenue normalisation, which led to right-sized valuations, (iv) aggressive activity from strategics in certain sectors, (v) cooling of tariff-related issues and a strong belief that interest rates will be reduced in the near term, and (vi) a wide-ranging confidence in the continued growth of the economy.
With these drivers, the middle market is poised for increased activity in the months ahead.
Structural Challenges and Market Drivers
There have been several challenges that have shaped the M&A market’s path over the past few years, particularly as it relates to the middle market:
The Middle Market as the Growth Engine
Chicago, Illinois is one of the pillars of the middle market and is home to several national leaders of funds, sponsors and strategic buyers. The middle market is proving more resilient than the large-cap space in the current M&A environment for numerous reasons, including:
Buyer/Seller Dynamics and the Narrowing Gap
In 2025, the tone of negotiations is shifting between buyers and sellers. While headline multiples in some industries have softened, competition for high-quality middle-market assets remains intense. Strong sellers – those with a diversified customer base, healthy market share, recurring revenues and clean financials – can still command premium prices over other sellers. In years prior, sellers were acutely aware of the pandemic-level valuations in their respective sectors and, as such, were unwilling to stray from such lofty expectations as the market plateaued. Conversely, buyers could not justify such high multiples when performance was either stagnant or on the decline due to various market conditions. As we head into the back half of 2025 and into 2026, that gap between seller expectations and buyer hesitation is narrowing dramatically. From the sellers’ point of view, time and space away from the frothy valuations of several years ago has now been superseded by hard financial data on their performance and what the market will reasonably call for upon a sale. Furthermore, there is a level of uncertainty over the long-term economic outlook, which may cause middle-market companies, especially those that are family-owned and do not have robust succession plans, to take the best offer available now to ensure a healthy exit. On the other hand, buyers have the opportunity to put capital to work that was aggressively raised on the heels of the frantic M&A market of 2020–2022. Buyers have struggled to put those dollars to work through M&A over the past several years, as it competes against the trepidation to overpay for underperforming target companies. As multiples on valuations have retracted in certain sectors, buyers have been able to right-size their offer structure to today’s middle-market seller.
Sector Spotlights
Manufacturing, distribution, industrials and CPGs
Illinois’s manufacturing strength, especially in food processing and precision components (including consumer packaged goods), is attractive to both strategic consolidators and financially backed sponsor platforms. Tariff-sensitive importers and exporters are navigating pricing and supply chain adjustments, but domestically focused producers remain in demand. Additionally, brands with strong regional footprints, loyal customer bases and potential for geographic expansion continue to draw middle-market investor interest, especially in the food and beverage industry.
Healthcare services and life sciences
With a strong base of hospitals, research institutions and healthcare service providers, Illinois is a hotspot for middle-market healthcare deals. Regulatory stability and recurring revenue models make this sector particularly appealing. We have seen steady deal activity in this space and expect such to continue through the end of 2025 and into 2026.
Technology and SaaS
While large tech transactions have slowed nationally, niche software providers and IT services firms remain attractive to both private equity and strategics, with Chicago’s growing tech corridor providing fertile ground. With the ever-evolving influence of artificial intelligence, the innovation and market sophistication could lead to an increase in deal activity.
Service-based business
A core part of any M&A market, service-based businesses continue to be attractive for acquisition growth. Industries such as transportation, landscaping, waste services, home care, HVAC, pavement repair, information technology and professional services have been lucrative middle-market targets in recent years, and we expect them to continue to be one of the pillars of the next surge of M&A activity. Companies providing critical, recession-proof environmental services have had a strong attraction for acquisition, not only in Illinois, but throughout the country. Companies with efficient operations, substantial market share and essential service offerings remain strong M&A targets in today’s market.
Where We See the Middle Market (And Where It’s Going)
The US M&A market is transitioning from a period of hesitation to one of cautious optimism, with the middle market at the forefront of this shift. While certain risks remain, such as tariff policies, election-year political uncertainty and potential shifts in credit conditions, financially backed sponsors with flexible investment mandates, strong operational capabilities and sector expertise will be best positioned to navigate these uncertainties.
For private equity firms and financially backed sponsors, the current environment calls for a disciplined but proactive approach: seeking assets with defensible market positions, focusing on operational efficiencies, and being prepared to move quickly when high-quality opportunities arise.
For strategic buyers, now more than ever, the opportunity is ripe to leverage strong balance sheets to secure market share, enter new geographies, or acquire capabilities that would be costly to develop organically.
For sellers, valuation recognition, market expectations, clear financial reporting and preparedness for diligence will increase the likelihood of achieving a favourable outcome upon a sale. As 2025 progresses, the middle market’s combination of nimbleness, flexibility and growth potential makes it the most promising ground for dealmakers seeking to capitalise on the next wave of M&A activity.
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