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The sources of value destruction in acquisitions by entrenched managers
Date Issued
2012-11
Date Available
2016-02-10T11:06:13Z
Abstract
Prior work has established that entrenched managers make value-decreasing acquisitions. In this study, we determine how they destroy that value. Overall, we find that value destruction by entrenched managers comes from a combination of factors. First, they disproportionately avoid private targets, which have been shown to be generally associated with value creation. Second, when they do buy private targets or public targets with blockholders, they tend not to use all-equity offers, which has the effect of avoiding the transfer of a valuable blockholder to the bidder. We further test whether entrenched managers simply overpay for good targets or choose targets with lower synergies. We find that while they overpay, they also choose low synergy targets in the first place, as shown by combined announcement returns and post-merger operating performance.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Elsevier
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics
Volume
106
Issue
2
Start Page
247
End Page
261
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 Elsevier
Classification
G34
G32
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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Name
Harford_Powell_Sources_of_Value_Destruction.pdf
Size
709.88 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
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