Title: Target valuation complexity and takeover premiums
Authors: Luis García-Feijóo; Margarita Kaprielyan; Jeff Madura; Ariel M. Viale
Addresses: Department of Finance, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA ' Department of Finance, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA ' Department of Finance, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA ' Department of Finance, Rinker School of Business Palm Beach Atlantic University, 901 South Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, FL 33416, USA
Abstract: Firm- and deal-specific characteristics that complicate estimation of target value simultaneously increase the level and variance of takeover premiums. Specifically, the mean premium is higher and the precision of the premium as a signal is lower (i.e., the error variance higher) when targets belong to the tech industry, when target stock returns are more volatile, when the bidders are larger, and when the cost of deal advising is higher. We also find that deal characteristics that we believe reduce target valuation complexity (transactions involving private bidders or LBOs) result in a lower mean premium and dispersion of premiums. Conversely, deal characteristics that we believe increase target valuation complexity (such as tender offers and deals that take a long time to complete) result in a higher mean premium and higher dispersion of premiums. Overall, characteristics that complicate the valuation of targets feed back into the level of the premium through potential pricing errors and inflate the dispersion of premiums.
Keywords: mergers and acquisitions; M&A; takeover premiums; valuation complexity; pricing errors.
DOI: 10.1504/IJBAAF.2015.077033
International Journal of Banking, Accounting and Finance, 2015 Vol.6 No.2, pp.151 - 176
Received: 06 Jun 2015
Accepted: 19 Apr 2016
Published online: 17 Jun 2016 *