The Missing Relation Between Announcement Returns and Value Creation

Working Paper: NBER ID: w27976

Authors: Itzhak Bendavid; Utpal Bhattacharya; Stacey E. Jacobsen

Abstract: Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) computed during acquisition announcements are widely considered to be market-based assessments of expected value creation. We show that announcement returns do not correlate with commonly used and new measures of ex-post acquisition outcomes. A simple characteristics model using standard information known at announcement can predict outcomes reasonably well, and CAR fails even to capture the prediction from this model. A likely reason is that, because acquisition decisions are endogenous, CAR conveys information about the NPV of the deal as well as the event that triggered the deal announcement. We find that CAR variance is too high to be explained by NPV variance alone, suggesting that other non-NPV information related to this trigger dominates. We conclude that CAR is an unreliable measure of expected value creation.

Keywords: acquisition; announcement returns; value creation; cumulative abnormal returns

JEL Codes: G02; G14; G32; 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
Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) (C22)post-acquisition performance outcomes (L25)
Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) (C22)abnormal return on assets (ROA) (G32)
Characteristics known at the time of announcement (D84)acquisition outcomes (G34)
Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) (C22)expected value creation (D46)
Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) (C22)realized value creation (D46)
Cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) (C22)probability of acquisition failure (C59)

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