Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics
Anticipation, Acquisitions and the Bidder Return Puzzle
Moon H. Song and Ralph A. Walkling
ABSTRACT
This paper documents a dramatic difference in the abnormal
announcement period returns of the first bidder to announce an acquisition
attempt in a particular industry. Typical of the literature, the set of all
bidders in our sample earn abnormal returns indistinguishable from zero.
However, bidders announcing an acquisition after a ‘dormant period’ of at least
a year without such activity in their industry earn significantly positive
abnormal returns of 0.8%. This contrasts with the insignificantly negative
returns earned by bidders with shorter industry dormant periods. We also
document that the prices of subsequent bidders adjust proportionately to returns
of the initial bidder at the time of that initial announcement. In addition,
bidder abnormal returns are significantly positively related to the length of
the dormant period. These results provide strong evidence in support of an
anticipation hypothesis. Our results hold after controlling for variables
typically associated with bidding firm returns.
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