Wealth effects of relative firm value in M&A deals: reallocation of physical versus intangible assets

This paper distinguishes between value creation through redistribution of physical assets and that from intangible assets. We decompose the market-to-book ratio into fundamental value and unexplained components and find that mergers create wealth when high - value firms primarily acquire physical as...

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Veröffentlicht in:Review of quantitative finance and accounting 2020-11, Vol.55 (4), p.1513-1548
Hauptverfasser: Bhattacharya, Debarati, Li, Wei-Hsien
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper distinguishes between value creation through redistribution of physical assets and that from intangible assets. We decompose the market-to-book ratio into fundamental value and unexplained components and find that mergers create wealth when high - value firms primarily acquire physical assets from low - value firms. In contrast, deals motivated by transfer of investment opportunities generate wealth when growth-constrained low - value firms acquire substantial intangible assets from high - value targets. By separating the two motives for mergers, we provide empirical evidence of two diametrically opposed effects of relative firm value on wealth gains to shareholders, thus reconciling the conflicting evidence of the ‘ high - buys - low ’ effect from earlier studies. Concomitantly, our findings also explain the patterns of firm pairings in merger data that run contrary to conventional wisdom. Our empirical framework considers the effects of mispricing, governance, and size of assets reallocated and addresses concerns of selection bias. Additionally, we find evidence of post-merger wealth generation through the acquisition of growth opportunities in the form of intangible asset transfer from a high - value target to a low - value acquirer.
ISSN:0924-865X
1573-7179
DOI:10.1007/s11156-020-00882-0