Hanoi (VNA) – The year 2025 marks a “new momentum” phase for Vietnam’s merger and acquisition (M&A) market as Southeast Asia continues to grapple with financial volatility, geopolitical uncertainty, and valuation expectatio gaps.
Domestic investors remain main driving force
Vietnam maintained a degree of resilience, supported by selective large transactions and steady participation from regional strategic investors.
While the deal volume stood at around 220 transactions in the first 10 months of 2025, total disclosed value reached 2.3 billion USD, with each transaction averaging 29.4 million USD, down from the peak of 50.7 million USD last year. This indicates more cautious underwriting, stricter due diligence, and disciplined valuations, particularly in sectors facing margin pressure or slower near-term demand.
Market value this year was driven by several sizeable deals, including the 365 million USD acquisition of Eastern Real Estate by Birch, Hyosung’s 277 million USD restructuring, AEON’s 162 million USD buyout of Post and Telecommunication Finance Co., Ltd., and Ares Management’s 50 million USD acquisition of Medlatec Group.
Notably, these top megadeals were led by foreign and regional investors, underscoring continued cross-border appetite for high quality, asset-backed, and strategically essential platforms.
Following the unusually high 50.7 million USD average deal size in 2024, the value moderated to 29.4 million USD in January–October this year, reflecting a return to more typical deal size distribution and a larger share of mid-market activity.
Deal activity became more evenly distributed across major sectors, with real estate supported by improving liquidity, health care strongly boosted, and materials and industrials benefiting from ongoing supply chain realignment. The consumer sector remained muted amid competitive pressures, tariff-related uncertainty earlier in the year, and tighter tax enforcement.
This year up to November, Vietnamese investors continued to play a pivotal role in the market, contributing more than 30% of the total disclosed deal value. However, the gap with foreign investors has narrowed meaningfully, as Singapore posted 613 million USD, followed by Japan with 214 million USD, the US with 150 million USD, and the Republic of Korea with 122 million USD.
Increasingly diverse M&A appetites
Deal activity shows a notable shift in sector contribution, with real estate (27%), materials (20%), and health care (10%) emerging as the top three drivers of total deal value. Together, these sectors account for more than half of all transactions, underscoring investor preference for asset-backed businesses, essential upstream industries, and high-growth service platforms.
The M&A market is expected to speed up in 2026 thanks to support from the revised Land Law, which will pave the way for large real estate deals; the direct power purchase mechanism, hoped to fuel renewable energy investment; and more resources poured into health care, education, infrastructure, manufacturing, and export due to domestic demand and the national development roadmap.
In particular, when the legal framework becomes more transparent and market liquidity improved, Vietnam is gradually establishing itself as one of the most attractive M&A detinations in Southeast Asia in both medium and long terms.
Though the M&A number continued to decrease, a rise in transaction quality and value shows that investors are prioritising strategic assets promising long-term value. The increasing focus on quality real estate, private health, material production, and sustainable business models is an irreversible trend.
From multi-million-USD deals in 2025 to M&A plans for 2026, Vietnam is shaping a new M&A cycle – stricter selection but greater opportunities, especially for investors with long-term vision and clear strategies./.
Rising FDI inflows drive surge in M&A deals
According to the Foreign Investment Agency under the Ministry of Finance, total registered foreign investment in Vietnam reached 31.52 billion USD in the first 10 months of 2025, up 15.6% year-on-year.