{"title":"Measuring Competition in M&A Negotiations","authors":"Richard Schubert","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3640480","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper provides novel insights about competition among bidders during the whole takeover process, its effect on offered deal premiums, bidder announcement returns, and post-bid dynamics. Exploiting a representative sample of 780 public U.S. transactions, extended with comprehensive hand-collected data from SEC filings, I find that takeover premiums are higher, the higher pre-announcement competition among bidders is. I measure competition during the private sales process with a ratio that relates the number of bids submitted to the target to the number of signed confidentiality agreements with the target, the Proposals-to-CA-Ratio. A one-standard deviation increase of this ratio corresponds to a statistically and economically significant 5.99% increase of the deal initiation premium (Eaton, Liu, and Officer (2020)), 0.87% lower announcement returns for the winning bidder in auctions, a 130% increased probability of receiving a rival bid prior to closing, and a 44.5% increased probability of cancelling the originally announced deal (measured relative to the unconditional probability). The latter two results are more pronounced if the announcement returns of the acquirer are positive, suggesting that competing bidders are lured by potentially value-increasing deals. By applying Heckman (1979) two-stage selection models with instrumented regressors, I show that my results are robust to endogeneity concerns, especially to target’s decision to initiate the deal as well as the decision of the subsequent selling procedure (auction vs. one-to-one negotiation). The advantages of this competition measure are that (1) it relies on data as reported in target firm’s official merger documents filed with the SEC, which creates a strong incentive to report truthfully, and (2) it takes the evolution of bidding into account, controlling for the number of submitted bids. I conclude that competitive private negotiations stay competitive during the public phase of the deal, and that target boards fulfill their fiduciary duties by selecting the highest-bidding acquirer.","PeriodicalId":347848,"journal":{"name":"Corporate Governance & Management eJournal","volume":"234 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-07-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Corporate Governance & Management eJournal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3640480","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper provides novel insights about competition among bidders during the whole takeover process, its effect on offered deal premiums, bidder announcement returns, and post-bid dynamics. Exploiting a representative sample of 780 public U.S. transactions, extended with comprehensive hand-collected data from SEC filings, I find that takeover premiums are higher, the higher pre-announcement competition among bidders is. I measure competition during the private sales process with a ratio that relates the number of bids submitted to the target to the number of signed confidentiality agreements with the target, the Proposals-to-CA-Ratio. A one-standard deviation increase of this ratio corresponds to a statistically and economically significant 5.99% increase of the deal initiation premium (Eaton, Liu, and Officer (2020)), 0.87% lower announcement returns for the winning bidder in auctions, a 130% increased probability of receiving a rival bid prior to closing, and a 44.5% increased probability of cancelling the originally announced deal (measured relative to the unconditional probability). The latter two results are more pronounced if the announcement returns of the acquirer are positive, suggesting that competing bidders are lured by potentially value-increasing deals. By applying Heckman (1979) two-stage selection models with instrumented regressors, I show that my results are robust to endogeneity concerns, especially to target’s decision to initiate the deal as well as the decision of the subsequent selling procedure (auction vs. one-to-one negotiation). The advantages of this competition measure are that (1) it relies on data as reported in target firm’s official merger documents filed with the SEC, which creates a strong incentive to report truthfully, and (2) it takes the evolution of bidding into account, controlling for the number of submitted bids. I conclude that competitive private negotiations stay competitive during the public phase of the deal, and that target boards fulfill their fiduciary duties by selecting the highest-bidding acquirer.
本文对整个收购过程中竞标者之间的竞争、竞标者对出价溢价、竞标者公告回报和出价后动态的影响提供了新颖的见解。我对780宗美国公开交易的代表性样本进行了研究,并从美国证券交易委员会(SEC)的备案文件中收集了全面的手工数据。我发现,收购溢价越高,竞购者之间公布前的竞争就越激烈。我用一个比率来衡量私人销售过程中的竞争,这个比率将提交给目标公司的投标数量与与目标公司签署的保密协议的数量联系起来,即提案与ca比率。该比率的一个标准差增加对应于统计学和经济上显著的5.99%的交易启动溢价增加(Eaton, Liu, and Officer(2020)),拍卖中标者的公告回报降低0.87%,成交前收到竞争对手出价的可能性增加130%,取消最初宣布的交易的可能性增加44.5%(相对于无条件概率衡量)。如果收购方公布的收益为正,后两种结果就更为明显,这表明竞争对手受到潜在增值交易的吸引。通过应用Heckman(1979)的两阶段选择模型和仪器回归量,我表明我的结果对内生性问题是稳健的,特别是对目标发起交易的决定以及随后的出售程序的决定(拍卖与一对一谈判)。这种竞争措施的优势在于:(1)它依赖于目标公司向美国证券交易委员会提交的官方合并文件中报告的数据,这就产生了强烈的动机来如实报告;(2)它考虑了投标的演变,控制了提交的投标数量。我的结论是,竞争性的私下谈判在交易的公开阶段保持竞争性,目标董事会通过选择出价最高的收购方来履行其受托责任。