Takeover Bids Below the Expected Value of Minority Shares

Working Paper: NBER ID: w2524

Authors: Lucian Arye Bebchuk

Abstract: Focusing on takeover bids whose outcome can be predicted in advance with certainty, Grossman and Hart established the proposition, which subsequent work accepted, that successful bids must be made at or above the expected value of minority shares. This proposition provided the basis for Grossman and Hart's identification of a free-rider problem and became a major premise for the analysis of takeovers This paper shows that this important proposition does not always hold once we drop the assumption that the only successful bids are those whose success could have been predicted with certainty In particular, it is shown that any unconditional bid that is below the expected value of minority shares but above the independent target's per share value will succeed with a certain positive probability, that the bidder's expected payoff from such a bid (not counting the transaction costs of making the bid) is always positive; and that bidders might elect to make such bids. These results have implications for the nature of the free-rider problem and for the operation of takeovers; in particular, it is shown that, when a raider can increase the value of a target's assets, the raider might elect to bid even if no dilution of minority shares is possible and it holds no initial stake in the target

Keywords: Takeover Bids; Freerider Problem; Expected Value of Minority Shares

JEL Codes: G34


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
unconditional bid below expected value of minority shares (G34)likelihood of success (C52)
unconditional bid below expected value of minority shares (G34)expected payoff for bidders (D44)
absence of dilution (Y40)expected payoff for bidders from unconditional bids below expected value of minority shares (D44)

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