SRM, a trusted advisory firm serving financial institutions globally, today announced the release of its latest Perspectives report on M&A, offering research-backed analysis on what is driving the current wave of bank and credit union consolidation and what separates the deals that create lasting value from those that don’t.
With bank M&A activity up roughly 45% in 2025 and 33 banking deals announced in Q1 2026, and credit unions experiencing steady consolidation numbers from the prior year, the report shows that consolidation is no longer driven primarily by distress or cost reduction. The institutions leading this cycle are well-run organizations that have determined their existing scale is no longer sufficient to fund the investments in technology, talent, and payment infrastructure that the next decade will require.
“Every institution considering M&A asks whether the numbers work and the timing is right,” said Pete Duffy, Managing Director, M&A Advisory at SRM and one of the report’s authors. “The ones that create durable value are also asking a more demanding question: What can we do together that neither of us can do alone? That requires a specific, defensible answer from both sides before the deal can advance—and the data makes it clear why getting that answer right has never been more important.”
Key findings from the report include:
- The deal window is real, but not permanent: Regulatory conditions are more favorable to M&A today than in years, closing timelines have dropped from a median of 185 days in 2024 to 131 in 2025, and valuations have stabilized. However, as peer institutions combine, compatible partners will become increasingly rare.
- Scale deals are redefining the market: Merger-of-equals combinations now frequently deliver post-merger cost savings exceeding 20%, according to SRM data, and the institutions pursuing them are doing so from a position of strength, not survival.
- Technology is both the rationale and the risk: Tech-driven mergers can lift customer and member acquisition by 10-15%. However, institutions that defer integration planning until after close consistently underperform on synergy capture and face consumer-facing disruption that outlasts the technical fix.
- Vendor rationalization is the most underutilized lever in most mergers: SRM’s contract work in one recent merger of equals delivered more than $250 million in savings across network, processor, and technology agreements.
- Payments infrastructure is a deposit strategy: The institution that owns the payment relationship owns the customer. Institutions that treat payments technology as a line item will see their deposit base follow the payment experience, not the other way around.
“Margin compression, competition, and investments in technology are not going away,” added Keith Ash, Managing Director, at SRM, who also contributed to the report. “What has changed is the cost of inaction. Our findings show that the institutions that are able to move with clarity now have the opportunity to shape the competitive landscape before others have even finished debating whether to enter it.”
The report is based on SRM proprietary data, analysis of third-party data, and advisory experience across hundreds of financial institution engagements.
For more insights, download the full report at srmcorp.com, and join SRM’s upcoming webinar on June 25th, where SRM experts will discuss the findings. Register here.
About SRM
SRM is a global advisory and execution firm that helps financial institutions and fintechs modernize with confidence. For more than 30 years, SRM has gone beyond traditional consulting by uniting strategy, technology, and execution under one roof and one partner—bringing clarity to complexity and momentum to transformation. SRM consultants and practitioners pair deep industry expertise with a bias for action, helping organizations modernize payments, optimize vendor sourcing, shape enterprise strategy, accelerate M&A integration, and deploy transformative technologies. SRM is built to activate what’s next, empowering clients to unlock growth, improve performance, and strengthen the institutions that strengthen communities—fueling their resilience, competitiveness, and capacity to sustain a diverse, thriving financial ecosystem for generations to come.
Learn more at srmcorp.com and on LinkedIn.
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