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Der Übernahmekampf um die ABN Amro aus der Sicht der Kapitalgeber und des Managements aller beteiligter UnternehmenMoreno, Daniel. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Bachelor-Arbeit Univ. St. Gallen, 2008.
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Nutzung von Produktionssynergien bei UnternehmungszusammenschlüssenBoeglin, Peter. January 2002 (has links)
Diss., Technische Wissenschaften ETH Zürich, Nr. 14752, 2002.
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The economics of library acquisitions a book budget allocaton model for university libraries /Pierce, Thomas John, January 1976 (has links)
Thesis--University of Michigan. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 96-99).
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Operational due diligence Identifizierung leistungswirtschaftlicher Chancen und Risiken bei Unternehmenstransaktionen ; eine theoretische und empirische UntersuchungMehler, Simon January 2010 (has links)
Zugl.: München, Techn. Univ., Diss., 2010
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Synergiecontrolling im Rahmen von Mergers & Acquisitions /Eckhoff, Jana. January 2006 (has links)
Zugl.: Erlangen-Nürnberg, Universiẗat, Diss., 2006.
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Partnering versus Mergers & Acquisitions : Theory and an Exploratory Case Study in the Tourism Industry /Säubert, Hannes. January 2005 (has links)
European Business School, Diss., 2005--Oestrich-Winkel.
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Proces konsolidace v bankovnictví a jeho vliv na koncentraci a výkonnost českého bankovního sektoruBláhová, Marta January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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Mergers Advisors Impact on M&A Success: Canadian EvidenceNabiyou, Romaric 03 July 2020 (has links)
This paper investigates the impact of advisors on the success of Canadian firms’ mergers and acquisitions. Using a sample of 791 deals from Canadian TSX listed acquiring firms from 2001 to 2015, we first investigate what types of firms hire advisors and top advisors in particular. Second we investigate two important hypotheses of mergers advisors role: (a) the superior deal hypothesis, which expects the improvement in firm performance after the support of an advisor; and, (b) the deal completion hypothesis, which expects higher completion rates and speed for advisor-backed acquirers.
In summary, we found little support for the superior deal hypothesis. The short-term performance of an advisor-backed acquirer was significantly higher than that of non-advisor-backed acquirer only when the target has no advisor. The acquirer’s CAR was worst when both parties (acquirer and target) had an advisor. In addition, we saw no evidence that acquirers with top advisors generate higher short-term returns than those with lower tier advisors. When investigating the long-term performance, we do not find any significant evidence that advisors positively impacted value for acquirers. The same conclusion holds for the completion hypothesis as we discovered that advisors have no impact on the time to completion. All the analyses controlled for acquirer, target, and deal characteristics.
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Essays in FinanceLight, Nathaniel January 2014 (has links)
Chapter 1 investigates whether acquirer firms structure unpopular M&A transactions so as to avoid a vote by their shareholders. This question touches directly on the broader issue of M&A and agency conflicts, and the paper may partially explain how so many deals get done despite the evidence of limited long-term benefits to acquiring firm shareholders. More specifically, we examine how firms respond to the 20% issuance rule of the major American stock exchanges (NYSE, Nasdaq, and Amex), which requires a bidder shareholder vote on any merger-related issuance that exceeds 20% of the bidder’s shares. We observe a large clustering of share issuance just below this 20% threshold, a pattern that suggests that many bidders prefer to avoid a vote. Among deals for non-public targets, the primary concern seems to be timesaving. Instances in which bidders circumvent a vote in order to intentionally thwart opposition constitute only a small number of cases, although firms also avoid a vote as a precautionary measure when they have high institutional ownership. Finally, we investigate financial and legal mechanisms that companies employ in order to avoid the vote. Chapter 2 proposes a new approach for estimating expected returns on individual stocks returns obtained by applying our method to thirteen asset pricing anomalies generate a wide cross-sectional dispersion of realized returns. Our results provide evidence of strong commonality in asset pricing anomalies. The use of portfolios based on the estimated expected returns as test assets increases the power of asset pricing tests. / Business Administration/Finance
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An analysis of UK domestic cash acquisitionsWang, Yuan-Hsin January 2009 (has links)
The significant impact of method of payment on the share price abnormal returns following mergers and acquisitions have been broadly considered and documented in US and UK empirical studies (Agrawal and Jaffe 2000). In the UK, all-cash acquisitions show insignificant negative or small positive abnormal returns, whilst the all-equity acquisitions have significant negative returns. Whilst it is tempting to conclude that it is simply the form of financing that separates the shareholder value destruction of equity-financed takeovers from cash takeovers, such a conclusion tends to ignore the question of where the cash to fund the acquisition comes from in the first place. Theory tells us this should matter. Whilst different theories on firm financing offer competing explanations on both managerial choices and shareholder preferences, it seems reasonable to ask the question whether the source of the cash influences the long run wealth effect of the acquisition. In order to shed light on this issue, this investigation looks at short-term daily abnormal returns as well as long-term abnormal returns including a five-year horizon of post-takeover returns and a three-year horizon of pre-takeover returns. The short-term daily abnormal returns support the signalling information hypothesis to some extent as acquirers financing takeovers using internal cash out-perform those financing takeovers by equity or debt issues. After categorizing the research sample firms into two sub-groups, one being internal funding while the other being external sources including equity or debt, the share price abnormal returns show statistically significant differences between these two sub-groups over 11-day event windows. Further, by using one- and two-dimensional analyses and a univariate test, the results reveal that UK cash acquisitions explored by this investigation contradict the free cash flow (FCF) hypothesis. Regression models show that book-to-market ratio is important in explaining the short-term daily abnormal returns. The long-term post-takeover stock performances show sensitivity to the benchmark adopted as well as the calculation used for the long-term abnormal returns, i.e. cumulated or compounded. Owing to the small sample firms entering the calendar time monthly portfolios, the calendar time approach employs White (1980) corrections and a GLS model to mitigate the effects of heteroskedasticity in the research sample. Generally speaking, long-term abnormal returns show a negative pattern for the whole sample as well as the sub-groups depending on their dominant financing methods. Furthermore, the univariate and multivariate tests demonstrate that the FCF hypothesis cannot explain the 60-month share price abnormal returns of the research sample. According to the coefficient derived from regression model(s), the most significant factor to predict 60-month abnormal returns is relative size (market value of target to that of bidder). The results suggest that the bigger the relative size of the target, the more negative the abnormal return will be (Hansen 1987, Martin 1996, Loughran and Vijh 1997). Besides, the institutional investors contribute a positive effect on long-term share price performance, which is consistent with the findings of Chen, Harford, and Li (2007). The pre-takeover share price abnormal returns over three years intervals prior to the bid announcements clearly show that cash acquirers overall experience a significant positive stock performance. This result is robust to adopting various benchmarks of event time and calendar time regression-based framework. Based on the dominant financing method used for the acquirers, firms issuing debt before the bid announcements do perform extremely well. Those firms subsequently perform badly for post-takeover long-term intervals. Accordingly, this phenomenon demonstrates a mean reversion picture. Regardless of whether an event time or a calendar time approach is used, high q firms always have higher abnormal returns even when allowing for other factors, such as free cash flow or cash stock. However, multinomial logistic tests fail to find any statistically significant link between pre- takeover abnormal returns and the form of financing.
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