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Best Practices in Corporate Governance: What Two Decades of Research Reveals
Author(s) -
Shivdasani Anil,
Zenner Marc
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of applied corporate finance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1745-6622
pISSN - 1078-1196
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-6622.2004.tb00536.x
Subject(s) - shareholder , business , corporate governance , database transaction , cash , event study , stock (firearms) , mergers and acquisitions , stock market , monetary economics , shareholder value , market value , finance , transaction cost , accounting , economics , mechanical engineering , paleontology , context (archaeology) , horse , computer science , engineering , biology , programming language
This report addresses two key questions for today's top executives: Do acquisitions create value for acquirers? And under what circumstances have acquisitions created the most value for acquiring shareholders? The authors' analysis of over 1,500 completed deals by non‐financial companies in the United States over the past 12 years shows that, at announcement, acquirers' shareholders suffer small losses, on average, in the short term around the initial deal announcement. Over longer intervals, such as one or two years following the announcement of the transaction, acquirers tend to slightly outperform industry peers. The average or median market response hides tremendous variability in how the market has reacted to individual deals, however. This article provides evidence that the “right” M&A transaction can create substantial value for acquirers. One‐quarter of the transactions lead to market‐adjusted gains in excess of 5% for the acquirer and oneeighth of the transactions lead to gains in excess of 10% in the short term. However, some deals have also destroyed substantial shareholder value. Financing structure is a key driver of the stock market reaction. Stock‐financed transactions, on average, have a negative stock market reaction, while cash‐financed transactions have benefited acquirers in both the short term as well as the long term. Acquisitions of private companies or assets and units of public companies have consistently generated higher returns for acquirers than purchases of public companies. Moreover, EPS dilution is not a major driver of how the stock market reacts to a deal. Although “accretive” deals perform slightly better than “dilutive” ones in the short and long run, the difference is small and not statistically significant. Over the long run, acquiring shareholders have benefited the most from deals within the same industry and that avoid targets with relatively optimistic earnings growth projections.