Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements
We estimate how an acquiring firm’s risk changes depending on whether the market initially judges the acquisition to be neutral, strongly negative, or strongly positive for the shareholders of the acquiring firm. We found that for an average neutral acquisition, the annualized standard deviation of...
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doaj-4552eac2d883483f92cb2094f933f6b22021-07-23T13:49:51ZengMDPI AGJournal of Risk and Financial Management1911-80661911-80742021-07-011433433410.3390/jrfm14070334Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A AnnouncementsYe Cai0Hersh Shefrin1Leavey School of Business, Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA 95053, USALeavey School of Business, Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA 95053, USAWe estimate how an acquiring firm’s risk changes depending on whether the market initially judges the acquisition to be neutral, strongly negative, or strongly positive for the shareholders of the acquiring firm. We found that for an average neutral acquisition, the annualized standard deviation of an acquiring firm’s total return declines by 5%. In contrast, acquisitions judged negatively by the market result in a 5% increase in total risk, while acquisitions judged positively by the market feature a 30-basis-point increase in total risk. We found the median acquisition to be value creating, not value destructive. Value destruction tends to be concentrated among large firms and to be associated with extreme negative outliers. Acquiring firms with longholder CEOs are more prone to undertake acquisitions and more prone to take on risk, but are less prone to engage in value-destructive acquisitions than acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs. In this respect, acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs are more apt to undertake risky bad acquisitions, especially when their prior returns lie above the industry average. In addition, acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs are less prone to take on good acquisitions that are high in risk. As a general matter, firms with longholder CEOs are less risk sensitive to changes in prior returns than firms with non-longholder CEOs.https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/14/7/334acquisition riskfocal-point-based risk takingoverconfidencelongholders |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ye Cai Hersh Shefrin |
spellingShingle |
Ye Cai Hersh Shefrin Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements Journal of Risk and Financial Management acquisition risk focal-point-based risk taking overconfidence longholders |
author_facet |
Ye Cai Hersh Shefrin |
author_sort |
Ye Cai |
title |
Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements |
title_short |
Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements |
title_full |
Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements |
title_fullStr |
Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements |
title_full_unstemmed |
Risk and the Market’s Reaction to M&A Announcements |
title_sort |
risk and the market’s reaction to m&a announcements |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Journal of Risk and Financial Management |
issn |
1911-8066 1911-8074 |
publishDate |
2021-07-01 |
description |
We estimate how an acquiring firm’s risk changes depending on whether the market initially judges the acquisition to be neutral, strongly negative, or strongly positive for the shareholders of the acquiring firm. We found that for an average neutral acquisition, the annualized standard deviation of an acquiring firm’s total return declines by 5%. In contrast, acquisitions judged negatively by the market result in a 5% increase in total risk, while acquisitions judged positively by the market feature a 30-basis-point increase in total risk. We found the median acquisition to be value creating, not value destructive. Value destruction tends to be concentrated among large firms and to be associated with extreme negative outliers. Acquiring firms with longholder CEOs are more prone to undertake acquisitions and more prone to take on risk, but are less prone to engage in value-destructive acquisitions than acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs. In this respect, acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs are more apt to undertake risky bad acquisitions, especially when their prior returns lie above the industry average. In addition, acquiring firms with non-longholder CEOs are less prone to take on good acquisitions that are high in risk. As a general matter, firms with longholder CEOs are less risk sensitive to changes in prior returns than firms with non-longholder CEOs. |
topic |
acquisition risk focal-point-based risk taking overconfidence longholders |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/14/7/334 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT yecai riskandthemarketsreactiontomaannouncements AT hershshefrin riskandthemarketsreactiontomaannouncements |
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