Skip to content

Search

Latest Stories

Report: Travel and tourism deals down 8 percent

Venture financing and private equity transactions see steepest drop

Travel & Tourism Deals Fall 8% Globally

Global travel and tourism deals fell 8 percent in H1 2025, led by sharp declines in venture financing and private equity activity, according to GlobalData report.

iStock

Summary:

  • Global travel and tourism deal activity fell 8 percent YoY in H1 2025.
  • Venture financing dropped 25 percent and private equity fell 20 percent.
  • North America recorded a 10 percent decline while Central America dropped 12 percent.

THE GLOBAL TRAVEL and tourism sector recorded an 8 percent year-on-year decline in total deal activity during the first half of 2025, according to market data firm GlobalData. Reduced investor appetite was seen across major deal types: mergers and acquisitions, private equity and venture financing.


GlobalData’s analysis shows venture financing deals fell by about 25 percent and private equity deals dropped by around 20 percent compared to the same period last year. M&A activity proved more resilient with a smaller 3.5 percent decline in volume. North America saw a 10 percent decline while Central America saw a 12 percent decline.

“The overall decline underscores a broader trend where macroeconomic factors and investor sentiments are reshaping deal-making strategies within the industry. The subdued activity suggests that dealmakers are becoming increasingly cautious, likely due to macroeconomic challenges and volatile market conditions,” said Aurojyoti Bose, lead analyst at GlobalData. “The decline in venture financing and private equity deals, suggests a dent in investor sentiment, emphasizing a trend of reduced risk appetite.”

The Asia-Pacific region posted growth, with deal volume rising 11 percent in H1 2025, driven by increased activity in Japan and India. In contrast, Europe saw a 19 percent drop, the Middle East and Africa fell 39 percent and South and Central America declined 12 percent.

Among major markets, the US, China and Germany all recorded declines in deal announcements while the UK maintained deal volumes at similar levels to last year.

GlobalData notes that historical figures may change if additional deals from earlier months are disclosed later.

Last year saw a 12.6 percent decline, with a total of 347 mergers and acquisitions, private equity and venture financing deals reported in the global travel and tourism sector during the first half of 2024.

More for you

US Extended-Stay Hotels Outperforms in Q3

Report: Extended-stay hotels outpace industry in Q3

Summary:

  • U.S. extended-stay hotels outperformed peers in Q3, The Highland Group reported.
  • Demand for extended-stay hotels rose 2.8 percent in the third quarter.
  • Economy extended-stay hotels outperformed in RevPar despite three years of declines.

U.S. EXTENDED-STAY HOTELS outperformed comparable hotel classes in the third quarter versus the same period in 2024, according to The Highland Group. Occupancy remained 11.4 points above comparable hotels and ADR declines were smaller.

The report, “US Extended-Stay Hotels: Third Quarter 2025”, found the largest gap in the economy segment, where RevPAR fell about one fifth as much as for all economy hotels. Extended-stay ADR declined 1.4 percent, marking the second consecutive quarterly decline not seen in 15 years outside the pandemic. RevPAR fell 3.1 percent, reflecting the higher share of economy rooms. Excluding luxury and upper-upscale segments, all-hotel RevPAR dropped 3.2 percent in the third quarter.

Keep ReadingShow less