Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A): a process perspective

Published on March 31, 2015   27 min

A selection of talks on Finance, Accounting & Economics

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0:00
Hi. My name is Mehdi Safavi, and I am an early career fellow in strategy and international business at the University of Edinburgh Business School. In this talk, I will take you through a short tour on the topic of integrated business ventures, namely Mergers and Acquisitions, or M&A, while introducing to you the process perspective in mergers and acquisitions research, which initiated by Haspeslagh, Jemison and Sitkin in early '90s.
0:27
As you can see in the talk's agenda, I will spend a few minutes first to define mergers and acquisitions briefly, providing few examples. Then I take you through various corporate strategies in line with conducting mergers and acquisitions. Then I'll list the general advantages and disadvantages of mergers and acquisitions deals. Provided a brief basic understanding, I then focus on the main task of this talk, which is to provide an overview to the process perspective in integrative ventures. Based on these, I then discuss the potential benefits of mergers and acquisitions and highlight the role of integration in the success or failure of these integrative ventures. Based on Haspeslagh and Jemison's work, I then provide you with various integration approaches and an example from my own research, hopefully for a better understanding of the phenomenon.
1:21
Let's define a merger first. A merger is a transaction involving two or more corporations in which stock is exchanged but in which only one corporation survives.
1:35
Examples include various industries. For example, a famous merger between Daimler and Chrysler, the world's largest cross-border deal ever, which lasted for almost nine years. Indeed, in 1998, in a so-called merger of equals, Daimler-Benz and Chrysler corporation merged in an exchange of shares in which Daimler bought 92% of Chrysler. However, Chrysler suffered a series of setbacks, plus the fact that very low level of synergy effects were realized between the two companies. As a result, in 2007, Daimler-Benz sold the unit to Cerberus Capital Management for $6 billion. Another example in banking industry, Dai-Ichi Bank in 1971 merged with Nippon Kangyo Bank. Later on, they combined with Fuji Bank and Industrial Bank of Japan to form Mizuho Financial Group. Another example is the University of Edinburgh, which has a great history in mergers. The university has merged with various other academic and research institutions. For example, it merged with the New College during the 1930s or the Royal Veterinary School in 1951. Also, it merged with Moray House's School of Education in 1998 and with the Roslin Institute in 2008. Recently, it merged with Edinburgh College of Art. I will use the last one as an example later on in this talk to elaborate on various integration approaches.
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