Abstract

This study aims to assess the impact of deal size, value and firm-specific factors on the performance of UK acquiring firms from 2006 to 2016 in short-run. The event window methodology was used to analyze short run effects and standard market model was used to calculate abnormal and expected returns. Short event window was made from one day before the announcement of CBM&A to the one day after the announcement date of the event and from five days before the announcement date to the five days after the date of the announcement of the deal and similarly from ten days before the event was announced for ten days after the event was announced (-1, 1), (-5, 5) and (-10, 10) respectively. The study infers that the UK acquirers do not earn statistically significant positive abnormal returns in the short run. The uni variate analysis shows that the short-run performance of UK acquirers is influenced by acquisition strategy, and the payment methods. After the fifth merger wave, international deals in merger and acquisition along with cross border deals started, which created the value for the economy as well. Since 1985, several deals have been done in the United States and the United Kingdom. This research paper is intended to provide empirical evidence on recent data of CBM&A transactions of the UK acquiring firms. The present study is a indispensable for the firms seeking cross border deals and fills the gap in the existing literature.

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