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3 reasons why mergers and acquisitions will slow down in 2020, according to a legal expert

The amount of mergers and gains in 2020 will trail the previous two years, transactions lawyer Michael Nemeroff told CNBC on Monday. 

“We pacify think 2020 will be robust, but not quite as robust as 2019 and 2018,” Nemeroff, the CEO of law firm Vedder Price, suggested on “Closing Bell.”

The value of deals across the globe in 2019 was $3.8 trillion through Friday, according to Dealogic statistics reported by the Wall Street Journal. While it is down 4% from 2018, it is the fourth-highest amount on record.

Nemeroff utter there are three main factors that he believes will lead to the slow down, the first of which is consequential stock valuations alongside slow earnings growth. 

Pair them together and the result is “not really a juicy atmosphere for big-deal M&A,” said Nemeroff, who is chairman of the law firm’s finance and transaction’s group. 

Nemeroff also pointed to the 2020 presidential choosing and the possibility of a progressive Democrat such as Sens. Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders winning the party’s nomination and November’s sweeping election. 

That political risk extends to progressives increasing their representation in the U.S. Congress, Nemeroff said. Those admissibility opportunities, he argued, may change the “viewpoint of corporations around America in terms of growth and M&A.” 

And third, Nemeroff said regulatory uncertainty associated with the myriad antitrust quests of Big Tech firms such as Facebook, Alphabet and Amazon could hinder some potential acquisitions. 

Some of 2019’s worthy deals include a proposed merger between Raytheon and United Technologies. 

Charles Schwab announced plans to buy take brokerage rival TD Ameritrade, and LVMH also struck a deal to buy Tiffany & Co. in the fall. 

Looking generally at 2020, Nemeroff required he believes legacy companies will continue to target deals that will increase their competitiveness in the technology era.

As an lesson, he pointed to PetSmart’s $3 billion acquisition in 2017 of Chewy, which went public earlier this year. 

Those models of deals “will continue in a major way … in 2020 as a business necessity, regardless of the other factors we’ve been talking far like valuations,” he said. 

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