Citation:
Richard Schoenberg, Measuring the Performance of Corporate Acquisitions: An Empirical Comparison of Alternative Metrics. British Journal of Management, 2006, Volume 17, Issue 4, pages 361-370
Abstract:
The choice of performance measure has long been a difficult issue facing
researchers. This article investigates the comparability of four common measures
of acquisition performance: cumulative abnormal returns, managers' assessments,
divestment data and expert informants' assessments. Independently each of these
measures indicated a mean acquisition success rate of between 44–56%, within a
sample of British cross-border acquisitions. However, with the exception of a
positive relationship between managers' and expert informants' subjective
assessments, no significant correlation was found between the performance data
generated by the alternative metrics. In particular, ex-ante capital market
reactions to an acquisition announcement exhibited little relation to corporate
managers' ex-post assessment. This is seen to reflect the information asymmetry
that can exist between investors and company management, particularly regarding
implementation aspects. Overall, the results suggest that future acquisitions
studies should consider employing multiple performance measures in order to gain
a holistic view of outcome, while in the longer term, opportunities remain to
identify and refine improved metric