Mergers and partial ownership
Working paper
View/ Open
Date
2010-01Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Discussion papers (SAM) [658]
Abstract
In this paper we compare the profitability of a merger to the profitability
of a partial ownership arrangement and find that partial ownership arrangements
can be more profitable for the acquiring and acquired firm because they can result
in a greater dampening of competition. We also derive comparative statics on the
prices of the acquiring firm, the acquired firm, and the outside firms. In a dual
context, we show that a cross-majority owner may have incentives to sell a fraction
of the shares in one of the firms he controls to a silent investor who is outside the industry. Aggregate ex post operating profit in the two firms controlled by the cross-majority shareholder then increases, such that both the cross-majority shareholder
and the silent investor will be better off with than without the partial divestiture.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of EconomicsSeries
Discussion paper2010:1