Acquirer-target social ties and merger outcomes

被引:255
|
作者
Ishii, Joy [1 ]
Xuan, Yuhai [2 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Grad Sch Business, Knight Management Ctr, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Sch Business, Soldiers Field, Boston, MA 02163 USA
关键词
Mergers; Acquisitions; Social ties; Social connections; CORPORATE PERFORMANCE; BOARD CONNECTIONS; TAKEOVER BIDS; COMPANY STOCK; ACQUISITIONS; MARKET; GAINS; CEOS; ALLOCATION; NETWORKS;
D O I
10.1016/j.jfineco.2014.02.007
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
This article investigates the effect of social ties between acquirers and targets on merger performance. We find that the extent of cross-firm social connection between directors and senior executives at the acquiring and the target firms has a significantly' negative effect on the abnormal returns to the acquirer and to the combined entity upon merger announcement. Moreover, acquirer-target social ties significantly increase the likelihood that the target firm's chief executive officer (CEO) and a larger fraction of the target firm's pre-acquisition board of directors remain on the board of the combined firm after the merger. In addition, we find that acquirer CEOs are more likely to receive bonuses and are more richly compensated for completing mergers with targets that are highly connected to the acquiring firms, that acquisitions are more likely to take place between two firms that are well connected to each other through social ties, and that such acquisitions are more likely to subsequently be divested for performance-related reasons. Taken together, our results suggest that social ties between the acquirer and the target lead to poorer decision making and lower value creation for shareholders overall. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:344 / 363
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mergers & acquisitions and the acquirer-target cultural differences
    Wai-Ming Fong
    Kevin C. K. Lam
    Pauline W. Y. Wong
    Yiwei Yao
    [J]. Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, 2019, 53 : 633 - 661
  • [2] Mergers & acquisitions and the acquirer-target cultural differences
    Fong, Wai-Ming
    Lam, Kevin C. K.
    Wong, Pauline W. Y.
    Yao, Yiwei
    [J]. REVIEW OF QUANTITATIVE FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING, 2019, 53 (03) : 633 - 661
  • [3] Determinants of acquirer-target distance in M&A
    Kim, Tae-Nyun
    Chun, Bumseok
    [J]. MANAGERIAL FINANCE, 2016, 42 (02) : 95 - 117
  • [4] Reaching beyond the acquirer-target dyad in M&A-Linkages to external knowledge sources and target firm valuation
    Grimpe, Christoph
    Hussinger, Katrin
    Sofka, Wolfgang
    [J]. LONG RANGE PLANNING, 2023, 56 (03)
  • [5] Antitrust merger review costs and acquirer lobbying
    Fidrmuc, Jana P.
    Roosenboom, Peter
    Zhan, Eden Quxian
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CORPORATE FINANCE, 2018, 51 : 72 - 97
  • [6] Social ties and IPO outcomes
    Cooney, John W., Jr.
    Madureira, Leonardo
    Singh, Ajai K.
    Yang, Ke
    [J]. JOURNAL OF CORPORATE FINANCE, 2015, 33 : 129 - 146
  • [7] BANKING ACQUISITIONS - ACQUIRER AND TARGET SHAREHOLDER RETURNS
    NEELY, WP
    [J]. FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 1987, 16 (04) : 66 - 74
  • [8] On modeling acquirer delisting post-merger using machine learning techniques
    Thompson, Ephraim Kwashie
    Kim, Changki
    Kim, So-Yeun
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT ANALYTICS, 2024, 11 (02) : 247 - 275
  • [9] Target-firm information asymmetry and acquirer returns
    Officer, Micah S.
    Poulsen, Annette B.
    Stegemoller, Mike
    [J]. REVIEW OF FINANCE, 2009, 13 (03) : 467 - 493
  • [10] When IT capabilities are not scale-free in merger and acquisition integrations: how do capital markets react to IT capability asymmetries between acquirer and target?
    Tanriverdi, Hueseyin
    Uysal, Vahap Buelent
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS, 2015, 24 (02) : 145 - 158