Abstract

A substantial body of academic literature continues to investigate whether M&A deals create or destroy shareholdervalue and what are the main determinants of M&A performance, but the results are still inconclusive. In this paper, weinvestigate the impact of corporate life cycle on M&A performance from the perspective of acquiring firms.We shed additional light on the performance of M&A deals from the perspective of bidders’ life cycle stages and thedeal size . We single out mega deals, where activity remains upbeat, and compare their effects on M&A performancewith the effect of non-mega transactions. In contrast to previous studies in the area, we identify four life cycle stages(introduction, growth, maturity and decline), whereas the existing literature mostly focuses on three life cycle stages.Our sample includes 2413 US domestic M&A deals from 2003 to 2017, and consists of 386 mega deals and 2027 nonmega transactions. The data for analysis were obtained from Capital IQ, Bloomberg and Thomson Reuters Eikondatabases.Based on the event study method and regression analysis, we find that stock market reaction is positive for M&A deals inthe US and this reaction is more favourable for non-mega acquisitions than for mega M&A deals. We show that nonmega deals outperform mega transactions for acquirers at the introduction and growth stages of the business life cycle.Our results also indicate that benefits for shareholders from acquiring firms decrease on average with the lifecycle of anorganisation, but the returns for shareholders are positive in both cases. By contrast, in mega deals, shareholders receivenegative returns when the acquiring firm is at introductory life cycle stage.The scientific novelty of this paper is reflected in our contribution and expansion of the scope of research in this field.There is a relative scarcity of analysis examining M&A deals from the perspective of life cycle stage, and our addition of afourth category of analysis in this area, along with a focus on the value of the deal, expands the range of methodology forfuture research. This research is open to further expansion in different markets and our methodology is readily adaptablefor the addition of further analytical variables. Importantly, with the validation of our research hypotheses and theconfirmation of significant results, we provide a useful new tool for managers and professionals engaged in M&A dealsto actively gauge and forecast practical implications of their deals.

Highlights

  • The rise in M&A activity over the past several decades has led to levels of intense research into M&A impact on company performance

  • The first step of analysis is an estimation of cumulative abnormal returns (CARs) over lifecycle stages

  • While analysing mega deals and non-mega deals separately, it can be seen that investors evaluate non-mega deals better – CARs for non-mega deals are two times higher compared to the results for mega deals

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Summary

Introduction

The rise in M&A activity over the past several decades has led to levels of intense research into M&A impact on company performance. Within this context, debates touch two main issues: whether M&A deals create or destroy firm value, and what are M&A performance drivers. One possible explanation for the observed ambiguity in research findings suggest that M&A performance and its determinants vary according to a company’s organisational (or corporate) life cycle (LCO). Firms demonstrate particular financials, strategies, and organisational structure. A company’s financial and non-financial features change with LCO stages, which may potentially affect both M&A performance and its determinants.

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