Mergers and acquisitions (M&A)

RECENT NEWS
Wall Street Journal  Nov 6  Comment 
Last week Deal Journal opined on the sparsity of M&A activity in October. Oh, what a difference a week makes.
Reuters  Nov 6  Comment 
EMEA Mid-Market M&A from January-October halves compared to last year, to US$110.2bn from US$218.8bn. JPMorgan tops the rankings.
The Australian  Nov 6  Comment 
GOLDMAN was the top bank earner for M&A fees in Australia and New Zealand's mid-market sector, a survey shows.
Reuters  Nov 5  Comment 
Like UBS and Societe Generale, Deutsche Bank's researchers are now forecasting a resurgence in M&A and say investors should "prepare to ride the wave".
Reuters  Nov 5  Comment 
Maybe it's time to add a new weapon to the familiar M&A arsenal of poison pills, dawn raids, and bear hugs -- the corporate blog.
Reuters  Nov 5  Comment 
The following bids, mergers, acquisitions and disposals involving European, U.S. and Asian companies were reported by 0400 GMT on Thursday.
Wall Street Journal  Nov 5  Comment 
Two of the founders of the KKR, which went public last month, talk about the current market, the status of megadeals and investments that went wrong.
Wall Street Journal  Nov 4  Comment 
Two of the founders of the KKR, which went public last month, talk about the current market, the status of megadeals and investments that went wrong.
Reuters  Nov 4  Comment 
Deloitte's Energy and Resources group says M&A in these sectors could return to "pre-recession levels" by 2011. The rise of big state-backed rivals is putting pressure on large mining groups
Sydney Morning Herald  Nov 3  Comment 
US stocks stumbled overnight after Morgan Stanley downgraded the semiconductor sector and a shake-up at two big British banks prompted investors to sell financial shares.
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How Stocks react to M&A

When companies, announce that they are going to be buying other companies, the stock prices of both institutions react. However, they don't usually react the same way. One stock price typically goes up while the other stock price typically goes down.

The Price of One Stock Goes Up

The stock that usually benefits the most from a merger or an acquisition is the stock of the company that is being acquired. In most cases, the stock price of the company that is being acquired goes up.

The reason the stock price of the company being acquired typically goes up is the company that is doing the acquiring usually pays a premium for the stock of the company it is acquiring. For instance, when Pfizer announced it was going to acquire Wyeth, the price of Wyeth stock jumped higher.

The Price of the Other Stock Goes Down

The stock that usually benefits the least—at least in the short term—from a merger or an acquisition is the stock of the company that is doing the acquiring. In most cases, the stock price of the company doing the acquiring goes down.

The reason the stock price of the company doing the acquiring typically goes down is the company is taking on increased risk by acquiring the new company. Companies involved in mergers and acquisitions like to talk about the "synergies" the combination of the two companies will create, but there are no guarantees combining two companies will result in improved performance and profits.

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