Title: Discussion on
1Discussion on Acquirer Gains in Emerging
Markets by Chari, Ouimet, and Tesar (COT)
Winter Research Conference December 21 - 22 ISB
campus
2Outline
- General observations
- Comments on main results
- Comments on factors driving main results
- Comments on a few methodological issues
- Some suggestions for future work
3General observations
- Interesting results
- Careful and meticulous analysis
- Excellent presentation very well-written
- Overall, a significant contribution to the
literature on cross-border mergers
4Main results
- In a sample of acquisitions involving
developed-market acquirers and emerging market
targets in Latin America and East Asia, both
acquirers and targets gain, based on
announcement-period abnormal returns. - The division of gains shifts in favor of
acquiring firms, compared to transactions where
the same acquirers make acquisitions in developed
markets. -
- Further, the findings are in striking contrast
to the previous literature that uses US data.
5Comments on main results
- Previous literature on bank mergers in the USA
has documented positive bidder returns in intra-
as well as inter-state bank mergers. - Intrastate bank mergers
- James and Wier (JPE 1983) 60 mergers during
1972-82 - Desai and Stover (JFR 1985) 18 mergers during
1976-82 - Interstate bank mergers under Douglas Amendment
to the Bank Holding Company Act - Cornett and De (JBF, 1991) 196 mergers during
1982-86 - Cornett and De (JMCB, 1991)
- Significantly, 21 of emerging market targets and
19 of developed-market acquirers are in
financial services sector in COT study (Table 1) - Why did interstate bank mergers favor acquirers?
6Search for factors driving main results
- Property rights hypothesis
- Majority Control (MC) appears to significantly
increase acquirer returns in emerging market
acquisitions in many model specifications in COT
study (Tables 6, 8 10) - However, its no longer significant when
regression specification includes an
institutional quality variable, except jointly
with Expropriation Risk (ER) (tables 7C, 7D)
7Search for factors driving main results
- Institutional quality hypothesis
- Only ER seems to matter. Acquirer returns
increase in ER in emerging market country.
Further, they increase even more if control is
acquired conditional on ER being high (Tables 7C,
7D) - How to make sense of this result?
8Search for factors driving main results
- Even when significant, property rights and
institutional quality variables may not explain
shift in division of synergy gains in favor of
acquirers, as opposed to the level of synergy
gains. - Need to examine bargaining power of acquirers
vis-à-vis targets in emerging economies.
9Search for factors driving main results
- COT conduct some indirect tests on bargaining
power. The tests do not offer any resolution. - Access to capital in emerging market hypothesis
Cost of capital (as measured by EMBI spread does
not matter when MC is included in regression
specification (Table 6) - Difference in size and industrial classification
between acquirers and targets, acquirer cash etc.
do not matter (Table 10)
10An alternative hypothesis
- Bidder competition hypothesis
- Using a non-cooperative bargaining model, De and
Knez (JEMS, 1994) show that a target can
effectively use the threat of potential
(implicit) competition to raise its share of
gains, and lower the acquirers share. This
works even when the potential bidder is known to
have a strictly lower reservation price for the
target. - Conversely, target premium will be lower, and
acquirers gain higher, if potential competition
for the target is limited or non- existent.
11Bidder competition hypothesis
- Many empirical findings are consistent with this
hypothesis. - Inter-state bank mergers (Cornett De 1991a
1991b) happened under a regime that strictly
limited potential bidder competition.
12Support for bidder competition hypothesis in COT
- Some findings in COT indicate that potential
bidder competition is limited in emerging
markets. - Very few (miniscule) competing bids are
observed for targets in their samples. Observed
competition is likely to be correlated with
potential competition. - Acquirers returns increase in majority control.
Such control would limit potential competition. - Acquirers returns increase in expropriation
risk. Such risk would limit potential
competition.
13Testing bidder competition hypothesis
- Some possible factors limiting potential bidder
competition in emerging markets - Gradualism in relaxation of controls on foreign
entry - High costs of information collection on targets
- How to test for relationship between gradualism
and acquirer returns? - First market entry in the sector
- How to test for relationship between information
collection costs and acquirer returns? - Acquirer (first bidder) return should be
decreasing in country rating on accounting
standards (LLSV, 98)?
14A few methodological issues
- COT samples include only completed transactions.
This sample selection procedure may inflate
acquirer returns. - Why a three-week event window for targets? Is
noise in daily prices in emerging markets
negatively correlated with each other?
15Suggestions for future work
- Analyze acquisitions in financial sector and
non-financial sector separately. - Investigate implications of potential bidder
competition. - Compare findings with acquirer returns when both
parties are based in emerging markets, if such
studies are available. - Address the methodological issues, particularly
why only completed transactions are included.
16References
- De, S. and M. Cornett, Common stock returns in
corporate takeover bids Evidence from
interstate bank mergers, Journal of Banking and
Finance, 1991 - De S. and M. Cornett, Medium of payments in
corporate acquisitions Evidence from interstate
bank mergers, Journal of Money, Credit, and
Banking - De S. and P. Knez, Managerial Reaction to
takeover bids A theory of strategic resistance,
Journal of Economics and Management Strategy,
1994 - Desai A. and R. Stover, Bank holding company
acquisitions, stockholder returns and regulatory
uncertainty, Journal of Financial Research, 1985 - James C. and P. Wier, The returns to acquirers
and competition in the acquisitions market The
case of banking, Journal of Political Economy,
1983
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