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17 October 2025 / Ludovica Pizzetti , Agnieszka Marciniak
Issue: 8135 / Categories: Features , Commercial , Competition , Employment
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You’re acqui-hired!

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In today’s rapidly evolving mergers & acquisitions landscape, deal structures are becoming more targeted, write Ludovica Pizzetti & Agnieszka Marciniak
  • ‘Acqui-hires’ are increasingly common—particularly in AI and frontier technologies—and are likely to come under antitrust scrutiny.
  • Microsoft’s recent acqui-hire of Inflection AI is an example of acqui-hire that has captured the attention of authorities around the world.

In today’s rapidly evolving mergers and acquisitions (M&A) landscape, traditional transactions are increasingly being replaced by more targeted and flexible deal structures, such as asset deals, ‘acqui-hires’ and IP licensing arrangements. These allow companies to acquire specific components of a business, such as talent, technology, data, or specific compounds (which may not necessarily, by themselves, generate revenue), without taking on an entire entity or a shareholding thereof.

While the acquisition of ‘bare’ physical assets (such as office equipment, vehicle fleets or warehouse space) is unlikely to engage merger control rules, such targeted transactions may be viewed by regulators as substantially equivalent to a full merger and therefore may be subject to antitrust scrutiny—particularly

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Winckworth Sherwood—David Fendt

Winckworth Sherwood—David Fendt

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Gateley Legal—Billy Poulter & Shay Moore

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Burgess Mee—Victoria Sterritt

Burgess Mee—Victoria Sterritt

Family law boutique expands London team with legal director hire

NEWS
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Artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming legal practice, but its successful adoption depends as much on culture as technology
The fallout from Lord Mandelson’s appointment and dismissal as UK ambassador to Washington raises profound questions about constitutional governance, accountability and political appointments
Pastries may be in the firing line while kebabs escape scrutiny, but the reality is far more nuanced
The Supreme Court’s decision in Dillon highlights a central tension in modern public law: rights may be recognised without being fully realised
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