Publication | Closed Access
A Financial Analysis of Acquisition and Merger Premiums
42
Citations
6
References
1973
Year
Mergers And AcquisitionsOwnership StructureMerger SynergyCurrent Merger MovementAntitrust PolicyTwo-sided MarketBusinessLawAntitrustBusiness StrategyMerger EnforcementMerger PremiumsMerger Synergy ConceptCoordinated EffectsMarket DesignFinanceAntitrust EnforcementCorporate Finance
The current merger movement has been characterized by the willingness of the management of some acquiring companies to pay substantial merger premiums. A merger premium exists when the common stockholders of an acquired company receive cash and/or securities possessing a value greater than the company's premerger market value. The rationalization or justification of these “premiums” is based on a merger synergy concept. Contemporary merger literature recognizes two broad forms of merger synergy — the potential for greater operating efficiencies [14] and/or potential financial benefits — with the latter containing instantaneous [12] and real elements [1, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13].
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