Abstract

Policy uncertainty has been documented to have a significant impact on corporate investment decisions. This paper investigates the effect of policy uncertainty on cross-border acquisitions. We find a significant monotonic relationship between the size of the acquired equity stake in a target firm and the level of policy uncertainty in the target’s country of origin. More specifically, the acquirer is less inclined to purchase a sizeable ownership stake in the target firm, if the target is domiciled in unstable macroeconomic environment. Moreover, we find that acquirers are less willing to pay in cash if the target faces high policy uncertainty. The above results do not seem to depend on the quality of the country’s institutional environment and are robust to alternative econometric specifications. Our study discusses policy implications and should be of interest to academics as well as finance practitioners.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call