Subject category:
Finance, Accounting and Control
Published by:
Harvard Business Publishing
Version: 10 March 2003
Length: 14 pages
Data source: Generalised experience
Abstract
The consideration paid by an acquiring company to a target can be a combination of cash and stock. During the 1980s and 1990s, for example, approximately 12% to 13% of all deals between public companies involved both cash and stock. This case series describes the basic mechanics of equity-linked consideration. Part 3 looks at the value and risk of cash-and-stock transactions to the shareholders of the acquiring and the target companies. The case also considers the announcement effects of such transactions and their impact on the post-announcement betas of the two companies.
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Abstract
The consideration paid by an acquiring company to a target can be a combination of cash and stock. During the 1980s and 1990s, for example, approximately 12% to 13% of all deals between public companies involved both cash and stock. This case series describes the basic mechanics of equity-linked consideration. Part 3 looks at the value and risk of cash-and-stock transactions to the shareholders of the acquiring and the target companies. The case also considers the announcement effects of such transactions and their impact on the post-announcement betas of the two companies.