The Market for Corporate Control: The Scientific Evidence
Author(s) -
Richard S. Ruback,
Michael C. Jensen
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.244158
Subject(s) - market for corporate control , shareholder , business , bidding , control (management) , corporate governance , harm , accounting , corporate action , market power , stakeholder , corporate security , tender offer , industrial organization , economics , finance , microeconomics , marketing , management , political science , law , monopoly
This paper reviews much of the scientific literature on the market for corporate control. The evidence indicates that corporate takeovers generate positive gains, that target firm shareholders benefit, and that bidding firm shareholders do not lose. The gains created by corporate takeovers do not appear to come from the creation of market power. With the exception of actions that exclude potential bidders, it is difficult to find managerial actions related to corporate control that harm shareholders. Finally, we argue the market for corporate control is best viewed as an arena in which managerial teams compete for the rights to manage corporate resources.
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