Private equity firms closed $127 billion in leveraged buyouts over seventeen trading days, with Electronic Arts' pending $56.5 billion take-private anchoring the largest concentration of jumbo deals since March 2023. Blackstone-led consortiums and Gulf sovereign wealth funds deployed dry powder at a pace unseen since pre-Volcker rate cycles, marking the formal end of the LBO winter that froze deals above $10 billion for five quarters.
The EA transaction—structured at 13.2x trailing EBITDA with $38 billion in senior and mezzanine debt—cleared syndication in eleven days, a velocity that surprised sell-side desks still pricing in 200-basis-point risk premiums three months ago. Two additional deals in the $15-20 billion range followed within the same window: a consortium take-private of a European industrial conglomerate and a Gulf fund's acquisition of a U.S. healthcare payments processor. Combined, the three transactions deployed more leverage than the prior six quarters combined, with average debt-to-EBITDA ratios settling near 6.1x, up from the 4.8x caution bands that characterized 2024 vintage deals.
The resurgence reflects three structural shifts. Credit markets absorbed $520 billion in corporate refinancings between November and February, clearing the maturity wall that kept leveraged loan desks risk-off through last summer. Private credit funds sitting on $430 billion in undeployed capital competed aggressively with bank syndicates, driving all-in borrowing costs down 180 basis points from their October peaks. Sovereign wealth funds, flush with energy windfalls and facing home-market saturation, shifted from co-investment minority stakes to control buyouts, bringing $85 billion in new equity that hadn't circulated in traditional PE deal flow.
Operators should watch three follow-on events. First, the $12 billion backlog of signed-but-unfinanced deals from 2023-2024 will test whether syndication appetite extends beyond brand-name assets; four of those transactions face April refinancing deadlines. Second, public company boards with stock prices trading below 8x EBITDA—roughly 220 names in the Russell 2000—will field inbound calls from sponsors who now have provable debt capacity; expect go-shop processes to proliferate by May earnings season. Third, the private credit funds that underwrote these jumbo deals will seek to syndicate $18-22 billion in participations by June, which will either validate the leverage levels or force a repricing.
The EA deal's 15% day-of-announcement premium tells the real story: allocators believe the debt is financeable and the returns pencil at current exit multiples, which means the LBO market isn't just open—it's priced for volume.