Determinants of successful M&As : an empirical study of listed companies in the United States
Abstract
Since 1985, the U.S. market has been facing an increase in merger and
acquisition activity. In addition to detect potential determinants of M&A
success, this thesis does not only examine the short-term performance of
acquirers and targets, but it also determines the long-term M&A performance
of U.S. acquirers across all industries. With a sample of 1,288
M&As between 2002 and 2015, we found negative short-term abnormal returns
to acquirers using the cumulative abnormal return method. However,
since target shareholders gain significantly higher abnormal returns, M&As
create value overall from a short-term perspective. Acquirers’ negative
short-term abnormal returns persist in being negative over the long-term
analysis. The buy-and-hold abnormal return method in event-time reveals
significant value destruction of 25.8% over a three-year investigation period.
Also, the study detects a significant impact of the acquirer´s and target
´s price-to-book ratio, method of payment, relative profitability, and
deal rationale on the long-term post-acquisition performance. However, the
influence of relative size is inconclusive and could not ultimately be determined
in this study. Lastly, the acquisition attitude (friendly vs. hostile)
and cross-border transactions provided no evidence of affecting deal success.