India recorded 190 M&A and private equity transactions worth $10.2 billion in May 2026, a decline from April's elevated levels driven by concentrated large-ticket deals. Bharti Airtel's infrastructure carve-out and the Rajasthan Royals ownership restructuring accounted for the bulk of April's spike, which now appears to have been episodic rather than the start of a sustained rebound.
May's transaction count held steady at 190 deals, consistent with the 180–200 monthly range India has maintained since Q4 2025. The dollar value normalization reflects the absence of billion-dollar-plus transactions that characterized April, rather than a collapse in underlying deal flow. Sector distribution remained concentrated in technology, financial services, and consumer discretionary—categories that have absorbed 62% of deal count and 58% of capital deployed year-to-date. No single transaction in May exceeded $800 million, a threshold breached three times in April.
The pullback matters because India's M&A market has spent eighteen months trading range-bound between $9 billion and $12 billion monthly, unable to break through the $15 billion level last seen in Q1 2024. Foreign institutional appetite remains calibrated rather than aggressive, with US and European pension allocators maintaining 12–18 month due diligence cycles on Indian mid-market opportunities—double the timeline for comparable Southeast Asian deals. Domestic family offices and corporate treasury buyers continue to dominate sub-$200 million transactions, a structural pattern that limits headline deal flow but sustains volume.
The semiconductor OSAT buildout running parallel to this M&A cycle creates an observable bifurcation. India's ₹64,000 crore OSAT capital commitment represents patient, infrastructure-grade investment timelines stretching to 2028, while the M&A market remains weighted toward 18–36 month payback horizons in services and consumer sectors. Allocators tracking India exposure need to distinguish between the two capital flows: OSAT money is government-catalyzed industrial policy with locked-in holding periods, while the M&A market reflects commercial timing and exit flexibility. The ₹64,000 crore figure translates to roughly $7.7 billion at current rates, meaning semiconductor infrastructure alone could absorb capital equivalent to 75% of a typical monthly M&A volume over the next thirty months.
Operators should watch June transaction announcements for evidence of whether May's normalization persists or whether large-ticket deals resume. The ₹50,000 crore threshold—approximately $6 billion—has historically been the monthly floor for India M&A during structurally healthy periods. A June print below that level would suggest calendar H2 2026 deal flow may undershoot the $120–$140 billion annual range India maintained from 2023 through early 2025. Secondary market pricing on India-focused PE funds has held steady at 92–96 cents on NAV, indicating limited distress but also limited urgency among LPs to add exposure.
Bharti Airtel's May absence from the deal sheet is itself a signal. The company completed its April infrastructure sale but has telegraphed no follow-on divestiture plans through Q3 2026, removing a repeat catalyst. Rajasthan Royals ownership churn, tied to IPL franchise valuation cycles, is episodic by nature and unlikely to generate comparable May transactions. Without anchor deals in the $1–2 billion range, India's monthly M&A print will remain a function of deal count rather than headline size—a structural headwind for allocators benchmarking capital deployment velocity.