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Bermuda Public Companies Update, Summer 2025
Home > Insights & Resources > Bermuda Public Companies Update – Winter 2026
Jan 2026 | Newsletters | 42 minute read
Director, Head of Bermuda Corporate Practice
Counsel
The global IPO market continued to show signs of recovery in 2025. By mid-year, activity had rebounded from the instability of the previous two years, positioning the market for a robust second half.
In Q3, IPO deal volume increased by 19% year-on-year, while proceeds rose by approximately 89%. By the end of 2025, global IPO activity saw 1,293 listings raise US$171.8 billion, which is a 39% increase in proceeds despite flat deal volumes. This reflects renewed investor interest. Private equity-backed IPOs more than doubled compared to 2024, as sponsors took advantage of improving public market conditions to pursue exits. As always, sustaining the current momentum will depend heavily on stable macroeconomic conditions and continued investor confidence.
Two market trends worth noting emerged in the second half of 2025. In the venture capital space, it has become increasingly the norm that companies come to the IPO stage with tighter cost controls and mature revenue models, reflecting a shift in investor expectations for these launches.
Another notable development is the move of larger, already established firms from the NYSE to the Nasdaq exchange, which has until recently been the more natural home for tech startups. Walmart’s (NYSE: WMT) recent migration from the NYSE to Nasdaq, for example, illustrates a major corporation aligning its listing status with a greater focus on technology, digital retail and AI-driven e-commerce strategies.
Global M&A activity in the latter half of 2025 was marked by a sharp rebound in deal value, with many of the year’s largest transactions announced as earlier concerns around tariffs and financing conditions began to ease. In November, GE Healthcare (NASDAQ: GEHC) announced its US$2.3 billion acquisition of leading medical imaging software company Intelerad, reflecting the appetite for large tech transactions. By the third quarter, global M&A value reached nearly US$1 trillion. This represents a strong increase both quarter-on-quarter and compared with 2024. The current market reflects a shift toward a ‘fewer-but-larger-deals’ ethos, with strategic acquirers and private capital leading a rebound that is mainly driven by big transactions.
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For Bermuda-listed companies, the re/insurance market recorded two significant transactions in 2025. The US$7 billion acquisition of Convex Group by Onex Corporation (Nasdaq: (ONEXF) and American International Group (NYSE: AIG) stands out as a landmark deal. Under the terms of the agreement, Onex will acquire approximately 63% of Convex, while AIG will take a 35% equity stake, becoming a strategic minority investor.
The second noteworthy transaction is the acquisition by Sompo Holdings, Inc. (Sompo) of Aspen Insurance Holdings Ltd. (NYSE: AHL), a Bermuda-based specialty (re)insurer, for approximately US$3.5 billion. Under the merger agreement announced in August 2025, Sompo will purchase all outstanding Class A ordinary shares of Aspen at US$37.50 per share in cash, with the transaction expected to close in the first half of 2026.
Bermuda has seen an increase in litigation involving Bermuda public companies being taken private by merger or amalgamation. These transactions can lead to litigation when minority shareholders apply to the Bermuda court for an appraisal of the fair value of the target company’s shares. For more information and access to Conyers’ three-part series on this subject, please see:
“Fair Value” In Appraisal Actions Under the Companies Act 1981 S 106(6) (February 2025)
The Duties of Independent Directors in Amalgamations and Mergers (June 2025)
Discovery in Amalgamation Claims (December 2025)
Below are some recent some recent notable examples of Bermuda public companies being taken private by merger.
Bermuda’s enactment of the Corporate Income Tax Act 2023 (the “CIT Act”) and the adoption of a corporate income tax is likely to be a key driver of future deal structuring and strategic planning in Bermuda, influencing how multinational groups structure their M&A, financing and possible redomiciliation strategies in response to the new regime. Recent amendments to the CIT Act and the introduction of tax credits under the Tax Credits Act 2025 (the “TCA”) are significant for large public companies. The TCA provides a range of credits that companies in scope of the CIT Act may use to reduce corporate income tax and payroll tax liability.
Tax credits under the TCA are now a key factor in shaping Bermuda’s value proposition for businesses evaluating Bermuda as a potential corporate domicile. Several public companies have already re-domiciled to Bermuda to take advantage of these incentives. For existing Bermuda companies, the CIT Act and TCA developments create opportunities and risk: the corporate income tax regime aligns the island with global minimum tax standards, while the new tax credit framework helps maintain Bermuda’s attractiveness for companies committed to a long-term presence on the island.
Cushman & Wakefield plc (NYSE:CWK) has completed its change of incorporation from the UK to Bermuda.
The English High Court sanctioned the company’s scheme of arrangement on 25 November 2025, and the redomicile completed on 27 November 2025.
At completion, all issued and outstanding shares of Cushman & Wakefield plc were cancelled and exchanged on a one-for-one basis for new common shares of Cushman & Wakefield Ltd., the new Bermuda parent holding company. Cushman & Wakefield Ltd. shares trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol “CWK”.
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On 21 November 2025, the Government of Bermuda tabled the Tax Credits Act 2025 (the “TCA”). As previewed in our September alert, the TCA establishes, for the first time in Bermuda’s history, a series of credits that certain Bermuda-based organisations can utilise to reduce their corporate income tax or payroll tax liability significantly.
The substance of the TCA remains consistent with the “illustrative” draft tax credits legislation that was released in a public consultation in September. The TCA establishes three types of credits:
(i) a substance-based tax credit targeting the insurance and reinsurance industry;
(ii) a utilities infrastructure tax credit targeting regulated utility providers in Bermuda; and
(iii) a community development tax credit available to all Bermuda taxpayers that are not individuals.
The criteria for benefiting from tax credits is completely independent from the question of whether a corporate group is in scope of Bermuda’s new corporate income tax under the CIT Act. An organisation does not need to be a corporate income taxpayer to benefit from the new tax credits, provided it meets the relevant tax credit’s prerequisites set out in the TCA. All tax credits are calculated on the basis of an individual organisation’s fiscal year, beginning with the first fiscal year starting on or after 1 January 2025.
Read our recent full alert on this subject here.