An Examination of the Efficiency, Foreclosure, and Collusion Rationales for Vertical Takeovers

被引:33
|
作者
Shenoy, Jaideep [1 ]
机构
[1] Tulane Univ, AB Freeman Sch Business, New Orleans, LA 70118 USA
关键词
finance; corporate finance; vertical integration; antitrust; efficiency; market power; mergers; acquisitions; product markets; firm boundaries; corporate restructuring; foreclosure; collusion; PRODUCT MARKET RELATIONSHIPS; CORPORATE EQUITY OWNERSHIP; OPERATING PERFORMANCE; HORIZONTAL MERGERS; STOCK RETURNS; INTEGRATION; FIRM; INDUSTRY; WEALTH; GAINS;
D O I
10.1287/mnsc.1110.1498
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
We investigate the efficiency, foreclosure, and collusion rationales for vertical integration in a large sample of vertically related takeovers. The efficiency rationale, as discussed under the transaction cost economics and property rights theories, posits that vertical integration mitigates contractual inefficiencies between suppliers and customers (termed as holdup) and provides incentives to undertake relationship-specific investments. In contrast, the foreclosure and collusion rationales suggest that vertical integration is anticompetitive in nature. Specifically, the foreclosure argument suggests that vertical integration is used to raise costs of rival firms, and the collusion argument suggests that vertical integration facilitates coordination between the integrated firm and its rivals. To distinguish between the three hypotheses, we examine (1) the announcement period wealth effects to the merging firms, rival firms, and customer firms; and (2) the operating performance changes to the merging firms in vertical takeovers. We find that firms expand their vertical boundaries consistent with an efficiency enhancing rationale.
引用
收藏
页码:1482 / 1501
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Corporate Takeovers and Economic Efficiency
    Eckbo, B. Espen
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, VOL 6, 2014, 6 : 51 - 74
  • [22] Vertical foreclosure with the choice of input specifications
    Choi, JP
    Yi, SS
    RAND JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2000, 31 (04): : 717 - 743
  • [23] VERTICAL FORECLOSURE IN CEMENT INDUSTRY - COMMENT
    MEEHAN, JW
    JOURNAL OF LAW & ECONOMICS, 1972, 15 (02): : 461 - 465
  • [24] CORPORATE TAKEOVERS - THE EFFICIENCY ARGUMENTS
    SCHERER, FM
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES, 1988, 2 (01): : 69 - 82
  • [25] MARKET FORECLOSURE WITHOUT VERTICAL INTEGRATION
    HARDT, M
    ECONOMICS LETTERS, 1995, 47 (3-4) : 423 - 429
  • [26] Systems competition, vertical merger, and foreclosure
    Church, J
    Gandal, N
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS & MANAGEMENT STRATEGY, 2000, 9 (01) : 25 - 51
  • [27] THE FORECLOSURE EFFECTS OF VERTICAL MERGERS - COMMENT
    SCHWEIZER, U
    JOURNAL OF INSTITUTIONAL AND THEORETICAL ECONOMICS-ZEITSCHRIFT FUR DIE GESAMTE STAATSWISSENSCHAFT, 1991, 147 (01): : 227 - 231
  • [28] Downstream vertical foreclosure and upstream innovation
    Stefanadis, C
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECONOMICS, 1997, 45 (04): : 445 - 456
  • [29] Vertical integration, collusion, and tariffs
    Mendi, Pedro
    Moner-Colonques, Rafael
    Sempere-Monerris, Jose J.
    SERIES-JOURNAL OF THE SPANISH ECONOMIC ASSOCIATION, 2011, 2 (03): : 359 - 378
  • [30] Vertical integration and downstream collusion
    Biancini, Sara
    Ettinger, David
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION, 2017, 53 : 99 - 113