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2017
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.3078497
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What Twenty Years of Regulations Have to Say About M&As of U.S. Banks?

Abstract: We extend the U.S. bank M&As literature by examining announcement returns for acquisitions of both listed and unlisted targets by U.S. banking firms for a long period of time from the eighties till to date. Over these decades there have been implemented several regulation changes, notably the Dodd-Frank Act that would be of interest to examine whether they have any impact, and if indeed they have to which direction, on value creation in M&As in the U.S. banking industry. Contrary to the conventional wisdom tha… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(7 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(25 reference statements)
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“…Small acquirers gain more from mergers compared to large ones, irrespectively of the form of financing and the listing status of targets. Hankir et al (2011) find similar results for bank mergers, while Leledakis et al (2017), Doukas and Zhang (2013) and Gupta and Misra (2007) report an insignificant relationship between the abnormal returns of acquiring banks and their size. Kane (2000) shows that large banks—being “too big to discipline adequately”—gain value when acquiring large targets, while Brewer and Jagtiani (2013) find insignificant returns for acquirers that already have or reach the “too big to fail” status after the merger.…”
Section: Data and Empirical Methodologymentioning
confidence: 88%
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“…Small acquirers gain more from mergers compared to large ones, irrespectively of the form of financing and the listing status of targets. Hankir et al (2011) find similar results for bank mergers, while Leledakis et al (2017), Doukas and Zhang (2013) and Gupta and Misra (2007) report an insignificant relationship between the abnormal returns of acquiring banks and their size. Kane (2000) shows that large banks—being “too big to discipline adequately”—gain value when acquiring large targets, while Brewer and Jagtiani (2013) find insignificant returns for acquirers that already have or reach the “too big to fail” status after the merger.…”
Section: Data and Empirical Methodologymentioning
confidence: 88%
“…However, the uncertain valuation of target firms complicates the assessment of their fair value and thus the premium offered by acquirers. Leledakis et al (2017), Barbopoulos and Wilson (2016) and Gupta and Misra (2010) confirm the presence of a “listing effect” in bank mergers, since they find that acquirers of unlisted targets gain more than acquirers of listed targets. Hence, to control for the listing status of targets, we use a dummy variable that is assigned a value of 1 if the target is listed and 0 otherwise.…”
Section: Data and Empirical Methodologymentioning
confidence: 92%
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