shareholder rights and the effects of acquirer cash

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Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash Holdings on Merger Performance * Ning Gao a,† and Abdulkadir Mohamed b a University of Manchester, Manchester Business School, Manchester Accounting and Finance Group, Booth Street West, M15 6PB, UK. Email: [email protected]. b University of Liverpool, Management School, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK. Email: [email protected] . March 2015 Abstract In the U.S., cash richer acquirers perform better in the presence of strong shareholder rights, both at deal announcement and over the long run post mergers. Cash-rich acquirers underperform only when they are less financially constrained and their shareholders possess weak rights. In the U.K. the positive cash effect on acquirer performance persists on average. In both countries, positive cash holdings effects are stronger when an acquirer is more financially constrained. The positive effects of acquirer cash holdings can be explained by the precautionary motive. Key words: shareholder rights, acquirer performance, cash holdings, the precautionary motive, mergers and acquisitions. JEL Classification: G30, G34 * We thank Kevin Aretz, Heitor Almeida, Paul André, Sanjay Banerji, Onur Bayar, Mike Bowe, Michael Brennan, Francis Breedon, Gary Cook, Murray Dalziel, Viet Dang, Sudipto Dasgupta, Chris Florackis, Laurent Frésard, Ian Garrett, Alfonsina Iona, Weimin Liu, Evgeny Lyandres, Maria Marchica, Aydin Ozkan, Neslihan Ozkan, Jay Ritter, Konstantinos Stathopoulos, Ronald Masulis, Christos Mavis, Ser-Huang Poon, Norman Strong, Richard Taffler, Martin Walker, and Huainan Zhao. We also thank seminar participants at Durham University, University of Nottingham, University of Nottingham (Ning Bo), University of Manchester, University of Liverpool, Queen Mary University of London, and Zhejiang University as well as the participants of the FMA 2012 annual conference in Atlanta, the ESRC Conference on Corporate Governance and Corporate Investment 2011, the European Financial Management Association (EFMA) 2011 conference, and the British Accounting and Finance Association Northern Area Group Annual Conference 2011. All errors are ours. We gratefully acknowledge the support of ESRC Grant RES-061-25-0225. Corresponding author, Accounting and Finance Group, Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, Booth Street West, M15 6PB, U.K. Email: [email protected], Tel: +44 (0) 1612754847, Fax: +44 (0) 2754023.

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Page 1: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

 

Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash Holdings on Merger

Performance*

Ning Gao a,† and Abdulkadir Mohamed b

a University of Manchester, Manchester Business School, Manchester Accounting and Finance Group, Booth

Street West, M15 6PB, UK. Email: [email protected]. b University of Liverpool, Management School, Liverpool, L69 3BX, UK. Email:

[email protected] .

March 2015

Abstract 

In the U.S., cash richer acquirers perform better in the presence of strong shareholder

rights, both at deal announcement and over the long run post mergers. Cash-rich acquirers

underperform only when they are less financially constrained and their shareholders possess

weak rights. In the U.K. the positive cash effect on acquirer performance persists on average.

In both countries, positive cash holdings effects are stronger when an acquirer is more

financially constrained. The positive effects of acquirer cash holdings can be explained by the

precautionary motive.

Key words: shareholder rights, acquirer performance, cash holdings, the precautionary motive, mergers and acquisitions. JEL Classification: G30, G34

                                                            * We thank Kevin Aretz, Heitor Almeida, Paul André, Sanjay Banerji, Onur Bayar, Mike Bowe, Michael Brennan, Francis Breedon, Gary Cook, Murray Dalziel, Viet Dang, Sudipto Dasgupta, Chris Florackis, Laurent Frésard, Ian Garrett, Alfonsina Iona, Weimin Liu, Evgeny Lyandres, Maria Marchica, Aydin Ozkan, Neslihan Ozkan, Jay Ritter, Konstantinos Stathopoulos, Ronald Masulis, Christos Mavis, Ser-Huang Poon, Norman Strong, Richard Taffler, Martin Walker, and Huainan Zhao. We also thank seminar participants at Durham University, University of Nottingham, University of Nottingham (Ning Bo), University of Manchester, University of Liverpool, Queen Mary University of London, and Zhejiang University as well as the participants of the FMA 2012 annual conference in Atlanta, the ESRC Conference on Corporate Governance and Corporate Investment 2011, the European Financial Management Association (EFMA) 2011 conference, and the British Accounting and Finance Association Northern Area Group Annual Conference 2011. All errors are ours. We gratefully acknowledge the support of ESRC Grant RES-061-25-0225. † Corresponding author, Accounting and Finance Group, Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, Booth Street West, M15 6PB, U.K. Email: [email protected], Tel: +44 (0) 1612754847, Fax: +44 (0) 2754023.

Page 2: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash Holdings on Merger

Performance

Abstract 

In the U.S., cash richer acquirers perform better in the presence of strong shareholder

rights, both at deal announcement and over the long run post mergers. Cash-rich acquirers

underperform only when they are less financially constrained and their shareholders possess

weak rights. In the U.K. the positive cash effect on acquirer performance persists on average.

In both countries, positive cash holdings effects are stronger when an acquirer is more

financially constrained. The positive effects of acquirer cash holdings can be explained by the

precautionary motive.

Key words: shareholder rights, acquirer performance, cash holdings, the precautionary motive, mergers and acquisitions.

JEL Classification: G30, G34 

Page 3: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

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1. Introduction

That cash-rich acquirers make value-destroying acquisitions is frequently cited as

evidence of the agency theory of free cash flow (Jensen, 1986). Nevertheless, extant literature

has failed to consider how cash-rich acquirers’ performances are determined according to the

strength of shareholder rights (e.g., Lang, Stulz, and Walkling, 1991; Harford, 1999; Oler, 2008).

In several influential studies, researchers demonstrate a robustly negative relation between firm

value and restrictions on shareholder rights in the past thirty years, which strongly suggests that

the analysis of cash-rich acquirers’ performances should incorporate the impact of shareholder

rights (Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick, 2003; Bebchuk and Cohen, 2005; Cremers and Nair, 2005;

Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009; Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang 2013; Giroud and Mueller,

2011; Lewellen and Metrick, 2010; Cremers and Ferrell, 2014).1 In this paper, we demonstrate

that, under strong shareholder rights, cash-rich acquirers in the U.S. perform better both at deal

announcements and over the long run after merger completion. The negative relation between

acquirer cash holdings and performance exists only when the acquirers are less financially

constrained and their shareholders possess weak rights. Our further analysis using U.K. data

reveals a positive relation between acquirer cash holdings and performance, which is more

pronounced when institutional shareholders have non-trivial share holdings.

                                                            1 We refer to shareholder rights at the firm level. Several influential studies examine shareholder rights at the

country level, e.g., La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer, and Vishny (1998), which is not our focus.

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Overturning the entrenched negative perception of acquirer cash holdings requires a solid

conceptual framework in addition to robust empirical evidence. We argue that in the presence of

strong shareholder rights, a manager is more likely to hold cash under the precautionary motive

than under the agency motive. In the presence of the precautionary motive, the manager of a

financially constrained firm may forgoe current investment opportunities and holds cash to invest

in future projects that are more profitable.2 In the presence of strong shareholder rights, a

manager is less likely to stockpile cash to obtain private benefits.

We briefly describe here the mechanism through which the precautionary motive yields a

positive cash holdings effect on acquirer performance. A more detailed discussion is in Appendix

C. Almeida, Compello, and Weibach (2004) formalize the idea of the precautionary motive,

which can be traced back to Keynes (1936). In their model, the manager of a financially

constrained firm faces a trade-off between current and future investment projects. She saves cash

out of current cash flows if a future project is expected to be more valuable than the current

project. Cash holdings are optimized when the expected marginal return of the future project

equals the expected marginal return of the current project. Consequently, a financially

constrained firm holds more cash today if the manager believes that the future project is more

profitable. In other words, ceteris paribus, a cash-rich firm foresees more valuable projects in the

future compared to a cash-poor firm. Stock prices prior to an acquisition should have

incorporated such an expectation; however, an update to the acquisition probability induces

                                                            2 The terminology is inconsistent in the previous literature (see Kim, Mauer, and Sherman, 1998, p336). In this

paper, we adopt the definition provided by Almeida, Campello, and Weisbach (2004) as well as Han and Qiu (2007), which focuses on the trade-off between current and the future projects.

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greater announcement returns for cash-rich acquirers. To establish this idea, assume that

acquisition is the only type of future investment. Let E(VH) denote the expected value of an

acquisition available to a cash-rich company H and E(VL) denote the expected value of an

acquisition available to a cash-poor company L. According to the precautionary motive, E(VH) >

E(VL) if the concavity of the production function is constant (Appendix C provides a more

detailed discussion). Assume that both acquisitions are anticipated equally by the market with

probability p < 1. At deal announcement, the return to company H should be higher than the

return to company L, i.e., (1 − p) E(VH) > (1 − p) E(VL). Note that our hypothesis is not based on

the cash flow sensitivity of cash proposed by Almeida et al. (2004) but builds on their analysis of

how the value of a future project relates to optimal cash holdings.

Previous studies overlooked the moderating role of shareholder rights. Conversely, we

emphasize the importance of shareholder rights in determining the direction of acquirer cash

holdings effects. Throughout this paper, we use the term shareholder rights with the knowledge

that shareholder rights and managerial power are two sides of the same coin. We analyze cash

holdings effects in the U.K. and U.S. In the U.S., shareholder rights vary substantially at the firm

level (Cremers and Ferrell, 2014). We use the E-index (the entrenchment index developed by

Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009) and CEO duality (Brickley, Coles, and Jarrell, 1997;

Rechner and Dalton, 1991; Baliga, Moyer, and Rao, 1996) to distinguish between firms with

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strong and weak shareholder rights.3 We use the terms combined and separated leadership rather

than CEO duality to facilitate our subsequent discussions. As previously mentioned, we observe

positive acquirer cash holdings effects on acquirer performance over both the short and long run

for those U.S. acquirers with strong shareholder rights (using low E-index values or separated

leadership structure as proxy). The positive effect at deal announcement emerges when a

transaction surprises the market (Appendix D explains how we classify predicted and

unpredicted acquirers), which is consistent with the view that the update of acquisition

probability produces differing announcement returns for cash-rich and cash-poor acquirers. In

the U.K., acquirer cash holdings on average have a positive effect on merger performance, which

is more pronounced under stronger shareholder rights (using non-trivial institutional holdings as

proxy). The U.K. market is particularly relevant to demonstrating the validity of our observations

in a different institutional environment. Although these two countries are similar on several

dimensions of shareholder rights (La Porta, Lopez-De-Silanes, Shleifer, and Vishny, 1997), a

closer examination reveals that, on a number of other dimensions, the U.K institutions give more

rights to shareholders than those of the U.S. (In Appendix A, we explain the U.K. institutional

context in more details). Several influential studies postulate that shareholder rights on average

are particularly strong in the U.K. due to its legal, regulatory, and cultural institutions (Black,

1990; Black and Coffee, 1994; Bebchuk, 2005; Armour and Skeel, 2007). Bebchuk (2005), in

contrast, argues that the U.S. is exceptional among developed economies in that its institutions

                                                            3 Using the G-index of Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003) yields similar results. The E-index summarizes six

most essential elements of the G-index (Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009). Moreover, RiskMetrics does not provide all the data needed to calculate the G-index for years after 2006.

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empower managers too much. A few previous studies also demonstrate that the U.K. institutions

offer better protection to minority shareholders from self-dealing (Djankov, La Porta, Lopez-de-

Silanes, Shleifer, 2008) and provide incumbent shareholders better protection from disruptive

takeovers (Nenova, 2006), compare to the U.S. institutions. Strong shareholder rights in the U.K.

are exemplified by the high-profile takeover of Cadbury by Kraft in 2009. Despite objections

from Cadbury management, the deal was completed without much trouble. As is noted in an

article published by the New York Times, “…If the takeover battle were happening in the United

States, it would most likely be a fierce fight… The potential for a CEO or entrenched board to

block a deal — or otherwise act in its own self-interest — is virtually nil. In other words,

England (U.K.) is as close as any country gets to a true shareholder democracy. Any bid gets put

to a vote, and all the board can do is to offer an opinion” — November 17, 2009, New York

Times.4

To the extent that the precautionary motive is more relevant when a firm is more

financially constrained, we observe that the positive cash holdings effect is particularly strong

when acquirers either have high Whited-Wu index (Whited and Wu, 2006) or do not have bond

ratings (Whited, 1992; Almeida, et al., 2004; Denis and Sibilkov, 2010; Duchin, 2010) regardless

of the acquirer’s country of domicile.5 The Whited-Wu index was developed by Whited and Wu

(2006) and captures a wide range of firm characteristics that relate to financial constraints. The use

of bond rating is motivated by several theoretical studies that examine how information

                                                            4 In Appendix A, we explain the U.K. institutional context in more detail. 5 We estimate Whited-Wu indexes for the U.S. and the U.K. using their respective data.

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asymmetry in the bond market affects firm ability to obtain external financing (Myers, 1977;

Jensen and Meckling, 1976; Whited, 1992). We follow previous studies (Almeida, et al., 2004;

Denis and Sibilkov, 2009; Duchin, 2010) to define a No bond ratings dummy as equal to 1 if an

acquirer has ever obtained a bond rating and 0 otherwise. We also find in the U.S. that, even

under weak shareholder rights (i.e., combined leadership or high E-index values), the negative

cash holdings effect disappears when acquirers are more financially constrained.

In all regressions of acquirer announcement returns, we control for the estimated

acquisition probability to ensure that the differing returns to acquirers of differing cash status are

not driven by the extent of market anticipation. To ensure that our results are not driven by self-

selection of the acquirer sample, we estimate a Heckman (1979) model and demonstrate that our

results are robust to self-selection bias. Another plausible concern about the U.K. results is that

the positive cash holdings effect is due to unmeasured institutional differences between the U.K.

and U.S. To the extent that these countries are characterized by similar legal origins, financial

market developments, and dispersed company shareholder bases, this concern is substantially

mitigated. Furthermore, we observe that positive cash holdings effects in the U.K. over both the

short and long run are strengthened in the presence of non-trivial institutional share holdings in

acquirers. To measure the level of cash holdings, we follow the excess cash holdings estimated

by Opler, Pinkowitz, Stulz, and Williamson (1999), but our results are robust to several

alternative measures of excess cash holdings (Appendix B provides more details).

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Our study demonstrates that the performance of cash-rich acquirers depends on the

strength of shareholder rights. When shareholder rights are strong, acquirer cash holdings are

positively associated with performance. We extend the original study of Harford (1999) by

demonstrating that the negative acquirer cash-holdings effects on performance are reversed in the

presence of strong shareholder rights. Harford’s (1999) analysis covers a sample period in the

U.S. from 1976 to 1993. We analyzes an updated period from 1990 to 2007 during which market

participants in the U.S. experienced increased importance and awareness of shareholder rights

(Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang, 2013; Cremers and Ferrell, 2014) and enhanced relevance of the

precautionary motive for corporate cash holdings (Bate, Kahle, and Stulz, 2009).6 Our evidence

from the U.K., a regime that offers shareholders strong rights, further confirm the positive

acquirer cash-holdings effects suggested by the precautionary motive. Jensen (1986) maintains

that, left unchecked, self-serving managers spend cash on value destroying investments. We

mirror his argument by suggesting that cash holdings enhance firm value in the presence of

strong shareholder rights that discipline managerial incentives. We argue that agency theory

alone is insufficient to explain all cash holdings effects in acquisitions. As Fresard (2010) noted,

not long ago, cash holdings were considered dangerous to shareholders. However, recent

developments in finance research and turmoil in financial markets have highlighted the possible

benefits of cash holdings. Our study suggests that, while the agency theory of free cash flow may

dominate when shareholder rights are weak, the precautionary motive of cash holdings is likely

                                                            6 Data needed to calculate the E-index become available from RiskMetrics since 1990.

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to prevail under strong shareholder rights. The balance between costs and benefits of corporate

cash holdings relies on the strength of shareholder rights.

Our finding that strong shareholder rights relate to cash-rich acquirers’ better

performances are very much in line with those of Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith (2007) and

Pinkowitz, Stulz, and Williamson (2006), who find that strong corporate governance and

investor protection are associated with greater value of cash. Moreover, Faulkender and Wang

(2006) and Pinkowitz and Williamson (2007) posit that the value of cash holdings increases with

the degree of financial constraints. We demonstrate that the positive cash holdings effect on

acquirer performance is particularly pronounced when an acquirer is more financially

constrained. Our study also contributes to a broader literature that document a robust positive

association between shareholder rights and firm value (Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick, 2003;

Bebchuk and Cohen, 2005; Cremers and Nair, 2005; Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009;

Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang 2013; Giroud and Mueller, 2011; Lewellen and Metrick, 2010;

Cremers and Ferrell, 2014). Our evidence suggest that an important channel through which

shareholder rights enhance firm value is the incentive for managers to invest cash holdings

optimally.

Our study also closely relates to the precautionary motive of cash holdings, which is

formalized in a few theoretical studies (Almeida, et al., 2004; Kim, Mauer, and Sherman, 1998;

Han and Qiu, 2007) and supported by a strand of empirical literature (Kamien and Schwartz,

1978; Opler, et al., 1999; Almeida et al., 2004; Ozkan and Ozkan, 2004; Khurana, Martin, and

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Pereira, 2006; Opler et al., 1999; Bates, Kahle, and Stulz, 2009; Gryglewicz, 2011; Mikkelson

and Partch, 2003; Acharya, Almeida and Campello, 2007; Duchin, 2010). However, previous

research focuses on the determinants of cash holdings. Much less is understood about how cash

reserved under the precautionary motive enhances firm value. We fill in some of this gap by

demonstrating that cash held under strong shareholder rights relates to better acquirer

performance. We also specify the mechanism that leads to a positive cash holdings effect on

acquirer returns at merger announcement, building on the precautionary motive of cash holdings.

Our study therefore also contributes to the literature that analyzes the implications of the

precautionary motive on corporate decisions.

The remainder of this paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 reviews the relevant literature

and provides the context to develop our hypotheses. Section 3 specifies the hypotheses; Section 4

describes the sample and data; and Section 5 reports the empirical results. Section 6 concludes.

2. Literature review

2.1. The performances of cash-rich acquirers

Jensen (1986) predicts that firms with excessive cash flows tend to make value-destroying

investments. Several studies find that acquirer cash flows or cash holdings are negatively related

to acquirer performance, consistent with Jensen’s (1986) prediction. Lang et al. (1991) find that

acquirers that possess low Tobin’s Q ratios but high free cash flows experience lower

announcement returns. Schlingemann’s (2004) study of all-cash deals reports that free cash flow

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negatively affects bidder announcement returns. Harford (1999) finds that, on average, the more

excess cash holdings an acquirer has prior to a deal announcement, the worse that acquirer’s

performance is (excess cash holdings can be viewed as free cash flows accumulated over time).

Extending Harford’s (1999) analysis, Oler (2008) observe that cash-rich acquirers have worse

performance measured by both long-term post-acquisition stock market returns and accounting-

based operating performance. What is more, Morck, Shleifer, and Vishney (1990) argue that

acquisitions can be driven by managerial motives; Richardson (2006) maintains that firms with

high levels of free cash flow tend to invest above the optimal levels. In contrast, Mikkelson and

Partch (2003) argue that firms that persistently hold large cash reserves neither perform poorly

nor exhibit evidence of agency conflicts between managers and shareholders.The extant studies,

however, are silent on how shareholder rights affect cash-rich acquirers’ performance.

2.2. Shareholder rights

In their seminal study, Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003) examine an important

dimension of corporate governance—shareholder rights. They aggregate 24 governance

provisions to form a G-index to proxy the strength of shareholder rights and find that stronger

shareholder rights relate to higher stock abnormal performance and greater firm value. In a later

study, Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell (2009) demonstrate that firm value is crucially related to 6 of

the 24 governance provisions. They use these 6 provisions to form and entrenchment index (E-

index) to proxy for shareholder rights. Those 18 provisions not included in their E-index were

found irrelevant to firm value or abnormal returns.

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Extant studies have examined how shareholder rights relate to either abnormal stock

returns or firm value or both. Those studies on abnormal returns are complicated by expectations

of and learning by market participants and by pricing of risks. Following the original studies of

Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003) and Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell (2009), researchers have

demonstrated that the relation between shareholder rights and abnormal stock returns are only

present for firms with significant pension fund ownership (Cremers and Nair, 2005), firms in

non-competitive industries (Giroud and Mueller, 2011), or firms in the 1990s (Bebchuk, Cohen,

and Wang, 2013). Johnson, Moorman, and Sorescu (2009) argue that the relation between

shareholder rights and abnormal stock returns disappears once industry clustering is considered.

However, Lewellen and Metrick (2010) offer the opposite conclusion.

Despite the mixed observations of the relation between shareholder rights and abnormal

stock returns, Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang (2013) and Cremers and Ferrell (2014) conclude that

shareholder rights have a robust and persistent negative association with firm value and

operating performance. Related, several studies demonstrate that weaker shareholder rights are

associated with lower announcement-period abnormal stock returns for acquirers in merger

transactions (Masulis, Wang, and Xie, 2007), higher cost of equity (Chen, Chen, and Wei, 2011)

and lower value of cash holdings (Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith, 2006; Pinkowitz, Stulz, and

Williamson, 2006).

2.3. The value of cash and the precautionary motive of cash holdings

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The value of cash has attracted much academic attention. On the one hand, excessive cash

flows or holdings can concern shareholders, as theorized by Jensen (1986) and Stulz (1990). On

the other hand, the precautionary motive (Almeida, et al., 2004; Froot, Scharfstein, and Stein,

1993; Keynes, 1936) maintains that financially constrained firms benefit from holding more cash

than they currently need if future opportunities are more profitable. These two theories are based

on contrasting premises of principle-agency relations. Managers are self-interested under the

agency theory, while they maximize shareholder value under the precautionary motive. Several

studies document that the relation between cash and firm value varies according to the robustness

of company corporate governance policies. Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith (2006) estimate that the

value of $1.00 in cash is between $1.27 and 1.62 for well-governed firms but only $0.42–0.88

for poorly governed firms. Pinkowitz, Stulz, and Williamson (2006) use international data and

observe that the value of cash is higher in countries with better investor protection. Both studies

report evidence consistent with the view that firms waste cash under poor corporate governance

(or weak investor protection), but strong shareholder rights reverses the negative effect of cash

on firm value.

The precautionary motive forms the theoretical foundation of the positive cash holdings

effect identified in this paper. Keynes (1936) originally posited that a major benefit of cash

reserves is that it enables a firm to undertake valuable investment opportunities whenever they

arise, which enhances firm value ex ante. He further notes that the benefits of cash reserves are a

function of the extent to which a company is financially constrained. An unconstrained company

can access external financing any time and, therefore, has no need for cash holdings.

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Consequently, cash holdings do not affect firm value in the absence of financial constraints.

Subsequent studies demonstrated that financial constraints arise under common market

imperfections, e.g., adverse selection in equity markets (Myers and Majluf, 1984) and the agency

cost of debt (Myers, 1977; Jensen and Meckling, 1976).

Almeida et al. (2004) formally analyze the precautionary motive. In their model, a

financially constrained firm chooses between a current and a future project. If the manager

believes that the future project is more valuable than the current one is, she discards the current

project and saves cash from current cash flows generated by the assets in place so that she can

invest in the future project when the opportunity arises. Optimal cash savings occur when the

expected marginal return to the future project equals the expected marginal return to the current

project. Importantly, holding the concavity of the production function constant, the more

valuable the future project is compared to the current one, the stronger the incentive to save part

of the current cash flow (p1785 Almeida et al., 2004). Almeida et al. (2004) assume that

companies can fully hedge the risk of cash flow generated from the assets in place. As a result, a

company is only concerned about the expected value of cash flows and not cash flow volatility.

Han and Qiu (2007) extend Almeida et al.’s (2004) model by assuming that firms can only

partially hedge their cash flow risk. They demonstrate that, when the marginal return to investing

in the future project is convex for a given amount of cash saved out of the current cash flows, the

marginal return to the future project increases with cash flow volatility. The increased marginal

return to the future project induces managers to save more cash out of the current cash flows to

equalize the marginal returns to both current and future projects (proposition 1, Han and Qiu,

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2007). When the concavity of the production function is constant, a greater marginal return

implies a higher value future project. In Appendix C, we elaborate the mechanism that generates

this positive relation between optimal cash savings and future project value. Our focus here is not

on the cash flow sensitivity of cash. Rather, we emphasize the positive relation between optimal

cash holdings and the value of a future project relative to a current project, as modelled by

Almeida et al. (2004).

An earlier study conducted by Kim, Mauer, and Sherman (1998) also models optimal

company cash savings in relation to future investments. However, the trade-off in their model is

not between current and future projects but between investments and cash savings in the same

period. In another theoretical study, Froot, Scharfstein, and Stein (1993) posit that higher cash

reserves enhance firm value by shielding investment capability from the negative impact of

volatile cash flows. More recently, Riddick and Whited (2009) demonstrate that firms hold more

cash when external financing is more costly or when firm cash flows are riskier.

A strand of literature provides empirical evidence consistent with the precautionary

motive. Extant studies have demonstrated that high-growth companies hold more cash in both

the U.K. and U.S. (Kamien and Schwartz, 1978; Opler, Pinkowitz, Stulz, and Williamson, 1999;

Almeida et al., 2004; Ozkan and Ozkan, 2004; and Khurana, Martin, and Pereira, 2006) and

higher cash flow volatility is associated with greater cash holdings (Han and Qiu, 2007; Opler et

al., 1999; Bates et al., 2009; and Gryglewicz, 2011). Acharya et al. (2007) demonstrate both

theoretically and empirically that firms prefer to hold more cash rather than retire debt when they

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expect a financing gap between cash flows and investment opportunities (i.e., cash flows and

investment opportunities are not synchronized). Duchin (2010) finds that diversified companies

hold less cash when investment opportunities at the divisional level are less correlated and when

cash flows at some divisions are highly correlated with the investment opportunities available to

other divisions (a smaller financing gap). He argues that this pattern occurs because diversified

companies can transfer cash across divisions to finance investments. However, to our

knowledge, the previous research focuses on the determinants of cash holdings under the

precautionary motive. Much less is known about how companies benefit from holding cash

under the precautionary motive. In this paper, we fill this gap by demonstrating that acquirers

with strong shareholder rights benefit from their cash holdings.

3. Hypotheses

When shareholder rights are strong, an acquirer is more likely to hold cash under the

precautionary motive, which induces a positive relation between acquirer cash holdings and

performance. Since the precautionary motive is most prominent when a firm faces severe

financial constraints, this positive relation should be most pronounced among more financially

constrained acquirers. As noted in the introduction, announcement returns are driven by the

updated acquisition probability, and we expect the positive cash holdings effect to be strongest

when a deal is not predicted by the market. Our hypotheses are presented below:

Hypothesis 1 (H1): When shareholder rights are strong, a cash-rich acquirer experiences higher announcement returns than a cash-poor bidder.

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Hypothesis 1a (H1a): The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer announcement returns is stronger for unpredicted acquisitions. Hypothesis 1b (H1b): The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer announcement returns is stronger for more financially constrained acquirers.

Deal synergies should manifest through long-term operating performance after an

acquisition; therefore, we test the following hypotheses:

Hypothesis 2 (H2): When shareholder rights are strong, a cash-rich acquirer experiences better post-acquisition operating performance than does a cash-poor acquirer. Hypothesis 2a (H2a): The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer operating performance is stronger for more financially constrained acquirers. We distinguish between predicted and unpredicted acquirers (H1a); a full discussion is

presented in Appendix D. We elaborate the mechanism that drives the positive relation between

acquirer cash holdings and the value of an acquisition in Appendix C, i.e., why E(VH) > E(VL) as

is highlighted in the introduction.

4. Sample and Data

Our sample of acquisitions were obtained from the SDC mergers and acquisitions (M&A)

database. For the U.K., the sample period is from 1984 to 2007. For the U.S., we begin in 1990

when the E-index became available. The sample period ends in 2007 to allow several years over

which to measure post-acquisition operating performance. We then impose several selection

criteria to the initial samples. First, following Harford (1999), we include only the major types of

acquisitions, namely mergers, acquisitions of majority interests, acquisitions of remaining

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interests, and acquisitions of partial interests.7 Second, all acquisitions were completed, which

allows us to analyze post-acquisition operating performance. Third, following Harford (1999),

both the acquirer and target must be publicly listed firms. One benefit of focusing on public

targets is that we avoid confounding issues, such as concerns about loss of control to potential

block shareholders and target demand for liquidity (Chang, 1998; Fuller, Netter, and

Stegemoller, 2002). It also allows us to compare our results to those of previous studies. A

practical reason to exclude private targets is that target data are required to calculate the

operating performance of the merging firms prior to the acquisition. Fourth, the means of

payment (i.e., percentages of stock, cash, or mixed payments) must be available from the SDC.

To mitigate problems associated with recording error, we require the sum of the percentage

stock, cash, and mixed payments to be between 95% and 105%. Fifth, the transaction value must

be available and no less than £10 million. This criterion eliminates transactions that have little

price impact. Sixth, deal announcement and completion dates must be available from the SDC.

Seventh, we exclude financial acquirers (SIC 6000-6999) whose cash holdings are of a different

nature than those of industrial firms and utility acquirers (SIC 4900–4999) which are intensely

regulated. Eighth, we require data to be available to calculate performance measures (from

DataStream for the U.K. and Compustat for the U.S.). To measure acquirer announcement-

period performance, we calculate the cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) from two days before

                                                            7 These transactions are defined by the SDC and are commonly used in M&A studies. In a merger, all shares

outstanding of the target are acquired by the acquirer. In an acquisition of majority interests, the acquirer holds less than 50% of the target before the transaction and more than 50% after the transaction. In an acquisition of minority interests, the acquirer holds less than 50% of the target before the transaction and less than 50% after the transaction. In an acquisition of remaining interests, the acquirer holds more than 50% of the target before the transaction and the entire target after the transaction.

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to two days after the announcement, i.e., CAR (−2, +2). Abnormal returns are estimated using the

market model. If the announcement day is a public holiday, we use the subsequent trading day as

day 0. The estimation period is a 250-day window ending 15 trading days before the

announcement day (we require at least 30 non-missing daily stock returns within the estimation

window). A 5-day test period is chosen in case the announcement date listed in the SDC is

inaccurate. To measure operating performance, we follow Healy, Palepu, and Ruback (1992);

Harford (1999); and Powell and Stark (2005). In particular, we measure operating performance

by first calculating the difference between the operating cash flow and the change in working

capital and then dividing the difference by total assets. We adjust the calculated operating

performance using the median performance of other firms in the same industry, size decile, and

operating-performance decile. The final measure, Post-acquisition operating performance, is the

combined-firm’s adjusted operating performance averaged over the 3 years following deal

completion. Pre-acquisition operating performance is the value-weighted (using the market

value of assets) combination of acquirer and target adjusted operating performances, averaged

over the three years prior to deal announcement. Ninth, we require that data are available (from

DataStream and Thomson One Banker for the U.K. and CRSP and Compustat for the U.S.) to

calculate the excess cash reserve ratio as defined in Appendix B, and the predicted and

unpredicted acquirers as defined in Appendix D. High cash holdings can be accumulated out of

either internal or external cash flows. For example, McLean (2011) finds that firms issue shares

to hoard cash when the cost of external equity is low. The focus of this paper, however, is not on

how excess cash holdings are accumulated. The model presented by Almeida, et al. (2004) can

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incorporate external cash flows with minimal modification. Tenth, we require all control

variables in our regressions to be calculated from the data provided by DataStream, Thomson

One Banker, CRSP, or Compustat. The following are the control variables: probability of being

an acquirer (defined in Appendix D); acquirer total assets; acquirer market-to-book ratio

(defined as the sum of market value of equity and book value of long-term liabilities divided by

the sum of book value of equity and book value of long-term liabilities); acquirer leverage

(defined as book value of debt over total assets); acquirer asset tangibility (defined as the ratio of

tangible assets to total assets); acquirer return on assets (ROA) (defined as operating income

over total assets); relative deal value (defined as deal value divided by bidder market value of

equity); acquirer average sales growth over the two years before the announcement; and cash

payment (%)(the percentage of cash paid in the consideration). All acquirer characteristics are

measured at the fiscal-year end prior to deal announcement unless otherwise stated. For

approximately 30% of our final U.K. sample, DataStream codes are available but accounting

information is missing from WorldScope. We manually collect accounting data from the annual

reports provided by Thomson One Banker for these acquirers. All variables are measured in real

1994 values. The final sample includes 185 (2196) acquisitions with the full range of data for our

main regression analysis for the U.K. (the U.S.). The U.K. sample is substantially smaller than

the U.S. sample; however, this sample size is comparable to other U.K. studies, e.g., Antoniou,

Petmezas, and Zhao (2007) report a sample of 148 public targets during the period 1985–2004.

Our regression specifications are robust to outliers and heteroskedasticity. We also winsorize all

continuous variablesat the 1st and 99th percentiles, except the CAR.

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Panel A of Table 1 reports the summary statistics for the U.S. sample. The CAR (−2, +2) has

a mean of −1% and a median of −0.8%, which are both insignificant (test statistics not

tabulated). The mean excess cash reserve ratio is 0.2% (median −2.3%), which suggests the U.S.

acquirers are scattered around their target level of cash holdings. An average acquirer has an

adjusted operating performance of 4.8% prior to the deal announcement and 6.6% after deal

completion, which suggests that acquisitions are value enhancing in the U.S. The average

Whited-Wu index is 1.88 and the median is 0.33, which suggests that, in the U.S., some acquirers

are extremely financially constrained. Of the acquirers, 1104 of 2196 firms have never obtained a

bond rating. The average E-index value is 1.96 and the median is 2, suggesting that, on average,

the shareholders of our sample acquirers are not weak; however, substantial differences in

shareholder power exist (i.e., the standard deviation is 1.4). Of the acquirers, 1681 of 2196 firms

have separated leadership structures, which suggest that, for a majority of our sample, acquirer

managerial power is contained to some extent. There is no significant difference between high-

and low-cash groups in terms of the CAR (−2, +2). In terms of operating performance, the high-

cash group significantly outperforms the low-cash group both before and after the acquisitions.

Notably, acquisitions seem to improve operating performance only for the high-cash group (from

4.88 to 6.69). High-cash acquirers are less financially constrained. High-cash firms have a

Whited-Wu index of 0.26, and 772 of 1098 high-cash acquirers have ever received a bond rating,

while the low-cash group has a Whited-Wu index of 0.425, and 320 of 1098 low-cash acquirers

have ever obtained a bond rating. The high- and low-cash groups are similar in terms of their E-

index values, but the high-cash group contains more acquirers with separated leadership.

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Panel B of Table 1 reports the summary statistics for the U.K. sample. These statistics are

comparable to the U.S. statistics. The acquirer CAR has a mean of −0.4% and a median of

−0.3%, and neither value is significantly different from zero (test statistics not tabulated). The

mean excess cash reserve ratio is −5.3% (median −3.4%), which indicates that the U.K.

acquirers, on average, have cash reserve ratios below their target levels. An average acquirer has

an adjusted operating performance of 5.2% prior to the deal announcement and 6.7% after deal

completion, which suggests that the acquisitions enhance value. The average Whited-Wu index is

0.88 (median 0.57), and 106 of the 185 acquirers have been assigned a bond rating. Institutional

holdings are substantial at 46.3% of the total shares outstanding (median 12.2%), and 53

acquirers possess total institutional holdings above 3%. In the right section of Panel A, we report

the median values for acquirers with high (above the median) and low excess cash holdings. As

in the U.S., there is no significant difference between the high- and low-cash groups in terms of

the CAR (−2, +2); however, a fair comparison should be conditioned on other variables that also

affect returns. In terms of operating performance, the high-cash group significantly outperforms

the low-cash group both before and after the acquisitions. Notably, the acquisitions seem to

improve operating performance regardless of the level of excess cash holdings. Our subsequent

regression analysis should demonstrate which group experiences greater improvement. The high-

cash group exhibits greater growth measured by market-to-book ratio of assets (1.6 vs. 1.3). This

group is less financially constrained. High-cash acquirers possess a median Whited-Wu index of

0.46, and 81 of 92 acquirers have bond ratings, while low-cash acquirers possess a median

Whited-Wu index of 0.69, and only 25 of 93 firms have bond ratings. Institutional holdings are

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greater for the high-cash group, who possess median holdings of 14.2%, and 39 of 92 firms have

institutional holdings greater than 3%. The low-cash group possesses median institutional

holdings of 10.1%, and only 14 of 93 firms have institutional holdings greater than 3%.

[TABLE 1]

5. Empirical results

In this section, we present the U.S. results first, followed by the U.K. evidence.

5.1. The positive cash holdings effect on bidder announcement returns in the U.S.

We use the following baseline model to test H1:

1i i i i i iCAR Excash Controls YDUM INDDUM , (1)

where i indexes the acquisitions; CAR is the acquirer cumulative abnormal returns from 2 trading

days before to 2 trading days after the announcement day, i.e., CAR (−2, +2); Excash is the

acquirer excess cash reserve ratio; and Controls is a vector of control variables suggested by

previous research, which includes the probability of being an acquirer, bidder size measured by

log (1 + total assets), asset tangibility, returns on assets, log (1 + average sales growth), log (1 +

market-to-book ratio), leverage, relative deal value, cash payment (%), tender offer dummy,

friendly deal dummy, and diversifying deal dummy. YDUM and INDDUM are the year and

industry effects, respectively. We control for the probability of being an acquirer because

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otherwise two acquisitions of the same synergistic value may have differing announcement

returns to the acquirers, depending on the extent to which the deals are anticipated by the market.

The probability of being a bidder is estimated using Equation (D.1) in Appendix D.

To test H1a, we use the following specification:

2

3

-

-

-

i i i

i i

i i i i i

CAR Excash Predicted acquirer Dummy

Excash Unpredicted acquirer Dummy

Unpredicted acquirer Dummy Controls YDUM INDDUM

, (2)

where the Unpredicted-acquirer Dummy is 1 for an unpredicted acquirer and 0 otherwise;

Predicted-acquirer Dummy is defined in the opposite manner (see Appendix D for a detailed

explanation of predicted and unpredicted acquirers).

We now analyze the acquirer cash holdings effects for U.S. firms. Although the institution

empowers management to a considerable extent, practices at the firm level vary substantially. It

is possible to identify a group of acquirers whose shareholders have sufficient rights to counter

managerial incentives towards spending cash. We use the E-index developed by Bebchuk,

Cohen, and Ferrell (2009) and combined/separated leadership (Brickley, Coles, and Jarrell, 1997;

Rechner and Dalton, 1991; Baliga, Moyer, and Rao, 1996) to distinguish between firms with

strong and weak shareholder rights. As mentioned, the E-index summarizes the most value-

relevant governance provisions identified by Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (2003). A higher E-

index value suggests greater shareholder rights because shareholders face fewer restrictions on

their voting power and management is less shielded against internal or external control activities

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(Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009). Under separated leadership (the chairperson and CEO are

different persons), the chairperson provides an effective counterbalance to the dictatorial CEO

power inherent in the combined leadership structure (the same person is both CEO and

chairperson). Overall, our results reveal a positive association between acquirer cash holdings

and announcement returns when shareholder rights are strong. The negative cash holdings effect

appears to be restricted to those acquirers that have weak shareholder rights and are financially

less constrained. Table 2 provides more details. Panels A and B of Table 2 distinguish between

more and less financially constrained acquirers using the high Whited-Wu index dummy and bond

ratings dummy, respectively.

In Panel A of Table 2, Model 1 tests H1 using the full sample regardless of shareholder

rights. The variable log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) possesses a significant (at the 1% level)

negative coefficient of −0.076, which appears consistent with the agency theory of free cash

flow. Model 2 tests H1a using the full sample regardless of shareholder rights but distinguishing

between predicted and unpredicted acquirers. The cash holdings effect for unpredicted acquirers

is significant and positive, which is consistent with H1a, that is, the interaction between

unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) is 0.142 and significant (at

5%). A one-standard-deviation increase in the acquirer excess cash reserve ratio is associated

with a 2.04 percentage point increase in acquirer CAR (−2, +2). This result is consistent when

we add the high Whited-Wu index dummy to Model 2 (not tabulated). This result contradicts the

negative impact of acquirer cash holdings on merger performance observed for 1976–1993 by

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Harford (1999).That cash-rich acquirers perform better during our sample period of 1990–2007

concurs with the increased relevance of precautionary motive (Bates, Kahle, and Stulz, 2009)

and increases in market participants’ attention to governance and shareholder rights (Bebchuk,

Cohen, and Wang, 2013; Cremers and Ferrel, 2014; Gillian and Starks, 2000) in the same period,

which are plausible reason for the reversed cash holdings effect. To ensure that our results are

not due to empirical design, we estimate Model 2 for the period 1980–1993 (i.e., Model 11) and

observe a negative cash holdings effect for unpredicted bidders similar to those reported by

Harford (1999) for the period 1977–1993.

In Model 3, we test H1b using the full sample regardless of shareholder rights. We

include an interaction among the high Whited-Wu index dummy, unpredicted acquirer dummy,

and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) in this model. The interaction has a significant (at 1% )

positive coefficient of 0.376, which, combined with the coefficient (0.208) on the interaction

between the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio), represents an

increase of 8.40 percentage points in CAR (−2, +2) for more financially constrained acquirers

when the excess cash reserve ratio increases by one standard deviation.

Our primary interest is in how shareholder rights impact cash-rich acquirers’

performances. In Models 4 and 5, we re-estimate Model 3, distinguishing acquirers with low E-

index (strong shareholder rights) from those with high E-index (weak shareholder rights). We

observe that the E-index makes a notable difference in the coefficient on the two-item interaction

between the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio). The low E-

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index subsample yields a positive coefficient of 0.319 (significant at the 1% level), while the

high E-index subsamples yields a statistically insignificant coefficient of −0.053. High E-index

also reduces the economic and statistical significance of the coefficient on the three-term

interaction among the high Whited-Wu index dummy, unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 +

excess cash reserve ratio), which is 0.510 in Model 4 (significant at 1%) and much weaker

(0.165) in model (5) (marginally significant at 10%). In model 4, adding the two coefficients on

the two-item and the three-item interactions yield a combined coefficient of 0.829 (i.e.,

0.319+0.510), which indicates that increasing the cash holdings by one standard deviation for

those more financially constrained acquirers relates to an increase of 11,92 percentage points in

their announcement abnormal returns in the presence of strong shareholder rights. The positive

cash holdings effect persists under strong shareholder rights even the acquirers are less

financially constrained: the two-item-interaction coefficient of 0.319 indicates that a one-

standard-deviation increase in acquirer cash holdings lead to an increase of 4.59 percentage

points in acquirer announcement abnormal returns.

On the right section of panel A (i.e., models 6–11), we use the leadership structure to

distinguish between acquirers with strong and weak shareholder rights. The sample size is larger

because we don’t require the E-index to be available. In models 6, 7, and 8, we repeat the

analysis in models 1, 2, and 3 respectively, and obtain similar results. Somewhat puzzling, we

observe a negative cash holdings effect for the predicted acquirers, that is, the interaction

between predicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) is −0.154  and

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marginally significant (at the 10% level). However, the marginal significance does not allow us

to make strong statistical inference. In Models 9 and 10, we distinguish acquirers with separated

leadership (strong shareholder rights) from those with combined leadership (weak shareholder

rights). Again, we observe a notable difference in the coefficient on the two-item interaction

between the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio). The separated

leadership subsample yields a positive coefficient of 0.129 (significant at 5% ), while the

combined leadership subsamples yields a negative coefficient of −0.207 (significant at 1% ). The

leadership structure does not significantly impact the coefficient of the three-item interaction

among the high Whited-Wu index dummy, unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash

reserve ratio), which is 0.250 (0.351) in Model 9 (10) and statistically significant at 5% (1%). In

model 9, adding the two coefficients on the two-item and the three-item interactions yield a sum

of 0.379 (i.e., 0.129+0.250), which indicates that increasing the cash holdings by one standard

deviation for those more financially constrained acquirers relates to an increase of 5.45

percentage points in acquirer announcement abnormal returns under strong shareholder rights.

Even for less financially constrained acquirers, the coefficient of 0.129 on the two-item

interaction suggests that a one-standard-deviation increase in acquirer cash holdings concurs

with an increase of 1.86 percentage points in acquirer announcement abnormal returns when

shareholder rights are strong. Under combined leadership, the coefficient of −0.207 on the two-

item interaction between the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve

ratio) indicates a one-standard-deviation increase in acquirer cash holdings relates to a decrease

of 2.98 percentage points in acquirer abnormal returns. However, this negative cash holdings

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effect is offset when the acquirers are more financially constrained—an F-test (not tabulated)

cannot reject the null that the sum of the coefficient on the two-item interaction between the

unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio), i.e., −0.207, and the

coefficient on the three-term interaction among the high Whited-Wu index dummy, unpredicted

acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio), i.e., 0.351, is insignificantly different

from zero.

In Panel B, we use the No bond rating dummy to distinguish between more and less

financially constrained acquirers. The results are qualitatively the same as those presented in

Panel A.It can be argued that target cash holdings also contribute to the investments post

mergers. In un-tabulated robustness tests, we check the cash holdings of target companies but

find the sizes of them are negligible relative to acquirer total assets. Our results do not change

when we add target cash holdings in our analysis.

The results reported in table 2 demonstrate a significant and substantial moderation effect of

shareholder rights on cash-rich acquirers’ performance. We find cash-rich acquirers outperform

cash-poor acquirers under strong shareholder rights. The previous-literature finding that cash-

rich acquirers perform poorly appears to be relevant only for those acquirers having less financial

constraints and weak shareholder rights. Our observation that greater financial constraints

amplify the positive relation between acquirer cash holdings and performances suggests that it is

the precautionary motive that underpins this positive relation, as we explained in the

introduction.

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5.2. The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer post-acquisition operating performance in

the U.S.

In this section, we test H2 and H2a using U.S. data following the methodology used by

Healy et al. (1992), Harford (1999), and Powell and Stark (2005). We estimate a regression of

post-acquisition operating performance on pre-acquisition operating performance (defined in

Section 4). The baseline regression is specified as follows:

1

2 3

- -i i

i i i

Post Acquisition OPF Pre Acquisition OPF

High Excash Dummy CAR

, (3)

where i indexes the acquisitions; OPF is the adjusted operating performance; and α measures the

increment to operating performance post-acquisition. A significant, positive (negative) α implies

that acquisitions are, on average, value-increasing (value-decreasing). To examine the cash

holdings effect, we include a High Excash Dummy. In this analysis, a dummy variable yields

results that are easier to interpret than a continuous variable does because its coefficient can be

directly included in the intercept, which captures incremental operating performance. We also

include acquirer CAR measured over the five-day period (−2, +2) because we are interested in

determining whether the market returns at announcement correctly predict the changes in

operating performance post-acquisition. The results are consistent if we drop CAR from the

specification (not reported but available upon request). As in table 2, we use the Whited-Wu

index and No bond rating dummy to distinguish between acquirers that are more and less

financially constrained in Panels A and B of Table 3, respectively.

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Model 1 of Panel A Table 3 indicates that the acquirer CAR has a significant (at 5%) and

positive coefficient of 0.0720, which implies that the acquirer CAR at announcement correctly

incorporates predictions of future operating performance. The intercept of Model 1 has a

significant (at 5% ) positive value of 0.0985, which indicates that acquisitions are, on average,

value enhancing, consistent with Healy et al. (1992). In Model 2 of Panel A, the high excash

dummy has a significant (at 1% ) and positive coefficient of 0.0551, and the interaction term

between high excash dummy and high Whited-Wu index dummy has a significant (at 1% ) and

positive coefficient of 0.0571. This result demonstrates that cash-rich acquirers outperform cash-

poor acquirers by 5.51 percentage points per year when the acquirers are less financially

constrained, and performance is significantly stronger (11.22 percentage points per year) when

the acquirers are more financially constrained. The coefficient of CAR becomes insignificant,

indicating that the variation in CAR mainly captures the variation in excess cash holdings. When

we estimate the regression on the separated and combined leadership subsamples, the coefficient

of the high excash dummy is statistically insignificant for acquirers with high E-index (weak

shareholder power) but significant (at 1% ) and positive (0.0761) for acquirers with low E-index

(strong shareholder power). Furthermore, the intercept of 0.0280 is insignificant for acquirers

with high E-index but exhibits a significant (at 5% ) and positive value of 0.1091 for acquirers

with low E-index. The coefficient of the interaction between high excash dummy and high

Whited-Wu index dummy is significant (at 1% ) and positive (0.0721) under low E-index and is

negative (−0.0362) and statistically insignificant under high E-index. Together, these results

indicate that under strong shareholder rights, cash holdings have a positive effect on acquirer

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operating performance. Moreover, these effects are amplified when acquirers are more

financially constrained. Under weak shareholder power, cash holdings have no significant impact

on acquirer performance. In the right section of Panel A, we use the leadership structure to

measure shareholder rights. The results for the full sample and strong shareholder power (i.e.,

separated leadership) subsample are qualitatively the same. Acquirers with weak shareholder

rights (i.e., combined leadership) exhibit a significantly negative coefficient (−0.0322) on high

excash dummy, which is neutralized by the significantly positive coefficient (0.0371) on the

interaction between high excash dummy and high Whited-Wu index dummy, which again

indicates that underperformance, if any, is only related to less financially constrained acquirers

under weak shareholder rights. In Panel B, we measure financial constraints using the No bond

rating dummy. We obtain results that are consistent with those in Panel A. Overall, the results

presented in Table 3 are consistent with H2 and H2b.

5.3. The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer announcement returns in the U.K.

We now analyze the acquirer cash holdings effects for U.K. firms. Model 1 of Table 4

reveals that log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) has a significant (at 1% ) positive coefficient of

0.024, which indicates that a one-standard-deviation increase in the excess cash reserve ratio of

an average acquirer increases the CAR by 1.05 percentage points. Model 2 of Table 4 indicates

that the positive cash holdings effect mainly stems from unpredicted acquirers. The coefficient

on the interaction term between log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) and the unpredicted acquirer

dummy is 0.030, which implies that when acquirer cash holdings increase by one standard

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deviation, the acquirer CAR (−2, +2) increases by 1.18 percentage points. The coefficient of the

interaction term between log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) and the predicted acquirer dummy

is −0.008 and statistically insignificant (p-value 0.761). The results of Model 2 are consistent

with hypothesis H1a, that is, the updating of acquisition probability promotes differing returns to

cash-rich and cash-poor acquirers.

A common criticism of the results obtained outside the U.S. is that unobservable

institutional features may drive the results. However, the U.K. and U.S share legal origins,

financial market developments, and dispersed company shareholder bases, which largely mitigates

such concerns. We also take additional precautions to examine whether stronger shareholder power

at the firm level strengthens the positive cash effect. Black and Coffee (1994) posit that institutional

investors in the U.K. are particularly powerful in intervening in company decisions. In this spirit,

Model 3 of Table 2 includes an interaction term among a nontrivial grand total institutional holdings

(> 3%) dummy variable, log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio), and the unpredicted acquirer dummy

variable. If unobservable institutional factors other than shareholder rights drive the positive cash

holdings effect in the U.K., we would not observe a significant interaction term coefficient. Model 3

indicates that this interaction term has a coefficient of 0.077 and is statistically significant at the 1%

level. The coefficient of the initial interaction term between cash holdings and unpredicted acquirer

dummy is 0.019 and remains statistically significant at the 5% level. This result indicates that the

positive effect of acquirer cash holdings is about four times stronger when institutional holdings are

nontrivial. Model 4 substitutes the dummy variable of nontrivial insurance company holdings for the

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dummy variable of nontrivial grand total institutional holdings.8 We obtain results similar to those

from Model 3: the three-item interaction term is significant (at the 1% level) with a positive

coefficient of 0.081, and the interaction term of unpredicted acquirer dummy and cash holdings is

0.021 and statistically significant (at the 1% level). Given that the strength of the positive cash

holdings effect increases with shareholder rights as measured by institutional holdings, it is difficult

to argue that this effect is driven by unobservable institutional differences between the U.K. and U.S.

In Table 5, we test H1b using both the Whited-Wu index and the No bond rating dummy

variable to measure the extent to which an acquirer is financially constrained. In Model 1 of Table 5,

we add an interaction term among a high Whited-Wu index dummy (a value above sample

median), log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio), and the unpredicted acquirer dummy. This

interaction term is significant (at 1%) and has a positive coefficient of 0.266, which is over ten

times greater than the coefficient of the interaction term between the unpredicted acquirer

dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio) (0.022 and marginally statistically significant at

10%). The sum of these two coefficients represents the positive cash holdings effect of

financially constrained acquirers, while the coefficient of the latter interaction term captures the

cash holdings effect of financially unconstrained acquirers. In Model 2, we substitute the No

bond ratings dummy for the high White-Wu index dummy and obtain similar results. Table 5

indicates that the positive cash holdings effect is mainly present among more financially

constrained acquirers, which is consistent with H1b.

                                                            8 Black and Coffee (1994) claim that insurance companies are the most prominent institutional investors in the

U.K.

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5.4. The positive cash holdings effect on acquirer post-acquisition operating performance in

the U.K.

We test H2 and H2a using U.K. data in this section. The specification is described in

Section 5.2. As in Section 5.3, we use the Whited-Wu index and No bond rating dummy to

distinguish between acquirers that are more and less financially constrained in Table 6. Model 1

of Table 6 indicates that the acquirer CAR has a significant (at the 5% level), positive coefficient

of 0.0102, which implies that the acquirer CAR at announcement correctly incorporates

predictions of future operating performance. In Model 2, the high excash dummy has a

significant (at 5% ) positive coefficient of 0.0020, which indicates that, on average, cash-rich

acquirers outperform cash-poor acquirers by 20 basis point per year for 3 years after the

acquisitions. The constant term is 0.0019 and is significant (at 1%), which is consistent with the

observation in Healy et al. (1992) that acquisitions are, on average, value increasing. The

coefficient of CAR is insignificant, which indicates that variation in CAR primarily reflects

variation in market predictions of operating performance. To address the usual concern that

unmeasured institutions specific to the U.K. drive our results, Model 3 includes an interaction

between the high excash dummy and non-trivial grand total institutional holdings dummy. The

coefficient of the interaction term is 0.0098, which is significant (at the 5% level). The

coefficient of the high excash dummy is 0.0024 and remains statistically significant (at the 5%

level). Therefore, when a cash-rich acquirer has non-trivial institutional holdings, it outperforms

cash-poor acquirers by 1.23 percentage points per year after deal completion. In Model 4, we

substitute the non-trivial insurance company holdings dummy for the non-trivial grand total

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35

 

institutional holdings dummy and obtain similar results. We test H2b in Models 5 and 6. In

Model 5, we include an interaction between the high excash and high Whited-Wu index

dummies. The coefficient of the interaction term is 0.0035 and significant (at the 1% level). The

high excash dummy is significant (at the 1% level) with a positive coefficient of 0.0038. These

coefficients demonstrate that when a cash-rich acquirer is financially constrained, its operating

performance is 73 basis points greater per year than that of a cash-poor acquirer. The Whited-Wu

index on its own has a coefficient of 0.0023, which is significant (at the 1% level), implying that,

on average, more financially constrained acquirers make better acquisitions. Model 6 substitutes

the No bond ratings dummy for the high Whited-Wu index dummy; the results are robust to this

substitution.

5.5. Cash payment and cash-rich acquirers’ performance

As mentioned, underpinning the positive cash holdings effect on acquirer performance is

the precautionary motive. A company reserves cash out of current cash flows to invest in future

projects that are more profitable. A company would drawdown cash holdings and commits cash

to a good investment opportunity that emerges, e.g., an acquisition with high synergies. To

further demonstrate that it is the precautionary motive that determines cash-rich acquirers’

outperformance, we examine whether indeed cash-rich acquirers perform better when cash is

committed to a deal. We examine the announcement returns and the post-acquisition operating

performance, using both the U.K. and U.S. sample.

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Specifically, for the analysis of announcement returns in panel A table 7, we form two

three-item interaction terms and add them to our baseline model of equation (2). The first three-

item interaction is formed using the unpredicted acquirer dummy, log (1 + excess cash reserve

ratio), and an all-stock offer dummy which is 1 if all the consideration is paid in stock and 0

otherwise; in the second, we replace the all-stock offer dummy using an all-cash offer dummy

which is 1 if all consideration is paid in cash and 0 otherwise. Model 1 of panel A table 7 reveals

a significantly (at 5%) negative coefficient of ‒0.049 on the interaction term formed using the all

stock-offer dummy, the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio). An

F-test (p-value 0.145; not tabulated) cannot reject the null that the sum of this coefficient and the

coefficient on the two-item interaction of the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess

cash reserve ratio) is insignificantly different from zero. The coefficient on the interaction term

formed using the all cash-offer dummy, the unpredicted acquirer dummy and log (1 + excess

cash reserve ratio) is ‒0.007 and statistically insignificant. Model 1 demonstrates that the positive

effect of cash reserve is absent when a bidder does not commit any cash to the deal. Therefore, a

commitment to spend at least some cash sends a signal that the current acquisition is valuable and is

an investment opportunity the acquirer has been holding cash for. Conversely, absent the

commitment of cash, cash-rich acquirers do not outperform and the market is not convinced the

current acquisition is a project that the acquirer has been saving for. In model 2, we perform the same

test base on our U.S. sample and obtain the same results.

For the analysis of post-acquisition operating performance in panel B table 7, we form two

two-item interaction terms and add them to our baseline model of equation (2). The first

Page 39: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

37

 

interaction is formed using the high excash dummy and the all-stock offer dummy; in the second,

we replace the all-stock offer dummy using the all-cash offer dummy. For the U.K. sample

(model 1), the coefficient on the high excash dummy (0.0038) is significant (at 5%) and positive.

Similar to what we observe for the announcement returns, the negative coefficient ‒0.0017

(significant at 5%) on the interaction term between the all-stock offer dummy and high excash

dummy offsets the positive coefficient on the high excash dummy. The coefficient on the

interaction between the all-stock offer dummy and high excash dummy is statistically

insignificant, indicating that the effect of high cash holdings on post-acquisition operating

performance is significantly positive for all cash offers. In model 2, we obtain similar results

based on the U.S. sample. The only difference is that the positive cash holdings effect is only

present for all cash offers. Specifically, the sum of the coefficient on the high excash dummy

(0.0078) and that on the interaction term between all-cash offer dummy and high excash dummy

(0.0521) is statistically significant at 1% according to an F-test (not tabulated). The coefficient

on the high excash dummy however is statistically insignificant.

6. Conclusion

That cash-rich companies perform poorly in perhaps the most substantial type of

investments, i.e., mergers and acquisitions, has been often quoted as a prominent evidence for

the agency theory of free cash flow. However, our findings indicate that a cash-rich acquirer’s

performance depends crucially upon the strength of acquirer shareholders’ rights. We document

a positive cash holdings effect on acquirer performance when acquirer shareholder rights are

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strong. The results are robust to the institutions in both the U.K. and U.S. and to alternative

measures of cash holdings and shareholder rights. There is some evidence of a negative cash

holdings effect in the U.S., but is only restricted to those acquirers having weak shareholder

rights and less financial constraints. The observation that the positive cash holdings effect is

more pronounced for more financially constrained acquirers is in line with our view that this

effect is derived from the precautionary motive.

Our findings extend the analysis of cash-rich acquirers’ performance in several previous

studies (Lang, Stulz, and Walkling, 1989; Harford, 1999; Schlingemann, 2004; Oler, 208), by

demonstrating the importance of shareholder rights and the relevance of the precautionary

motive in this context. Our findings are very much in line with the literature that observes that

strong corporate governance and investor protection are associated with greater value of cash

(Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith, 2007; Pinkowitz, Stulz, and Williamson, 2006). Our study also

contributes to a broader literature that documents a robust positive relation between the strength

of shareholder rights and firm value (Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick, 2003; Bebchuk and Cohen,

2005; Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell, 2009; Cremers and Nair, 2005; Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang,

2013; Giroud and Mueller, 2011; Lewellen and Metrick, 2010; Cremers and Ferrell, 2014). Our

evidence demonstrates that an important channel through which shareholder rights enhance firm

value is the better incentive for managers to invest cash holdings optimally.

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Figure 1

The Relation between Optimal Cash Savings and the Value of a Future Project

This figure illustrates why greater cash savings are associated with higher future project values. The vertical axis indicates the marginal return to investments, and the horizontal axis indicates the amount invested in the current (period 0) or future (period 1) project. BB' represents the marginal return curve of the period 0 project. AB, A'B', and A''B' are the marginal return curves of the period 1 projects. E(C1) is the expected cash flow in period 1 from the assets in place, which is given. C is the cash savings out of the period 0 cash flow, which is carried forward into period 1. A higher C implies more investment in the period 1 project and less in the period 0 project, and the

marginal return curve of the period 0 project (BB') has its horizontal axis reversed (i.e., less investment occurs as one moves to the right of BB'). Optimal cash savings (C* or C'*) occur when the marginal return to the period 0 project equals the marginal return to the period 1 project (i.e., B or B'). According to Almeida et al. (2004) and Han and Qiu (2007), higher optimal cash savings (C'*) are associated with higher marginal returns to the period 1 project (B'). The concavity of the production function is constant (as is assumed in Almeida et al., 2004, and Han and Qiu, 2007). That is, A'B' and AB have the same slope for any given value of E(C1)+C, higher optimal cash savings (e.g., C'*, which is greater than C*) is associated with a higher value period 1 project (i.e., the area defined by A'B'IK is greater than the area defined by ABIJ). The assumption of constant production function concavity is necessary. To see this, suppose the slope of the marginal return curve is less negative (curve A''B'). In other words, the second derivative of the production function is less negative. In such a case, higher cash savings C'* is associated with a higher value period 1 project if and only if the area of A"AL is less than LBJKB'. Nonetheless, to the extent that most new production technologies are incremental to the existing technologies during the tenure of a company’s management rather than revolutionary, the assumption of constant production function concavity is reasonable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I KJ

Marginal Return

E(C1) + C C=0 C* C'*

A'

B'

A

B

A''

L

0

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46

 

Figure 2

Predicted and Unpredicted Acquirers

Probability density functions (PDF) of being an acquirer, pr(acquirer), are plotted for acquirer firm-years

and non-acquirer firm-years separately. These curves cross at 0.06 (0.045) for the U.K. (U.S.) sample, which is the

threshold we use to determine whether an acquirer is predicted or not. To generate the distributions, we first estimate

a logistic model based on all firm-years to predict acquirers and then estimate the fitted probabilities of being an

acquirer. We then plot the distributions of pr(acquirer) for acquirer firm-years and non-acquirer firm-years. An

acquirer in a year whose pr(acquirer) falls to the right (left) of the threshold is predicted (unpredicted). This method

is similar to that used by Palepu (1986) and Harford (1999).

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

0.01 0.06 0.11 0.16 0.21 0.26 0.31 0.36 0.41 0.46

Perc

enta

ge of

firm

s (%

)

Pr (Bidder)

Bidder Non-Bidder

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

0.01 0.06 0.11 0.16 0.21 0.26 0.31 0.36 0.41 0.46

Perc

enta

ge of

firm

s (%

)

Pr (Bidder)

Bidder Non-bidder

U.K.

U.S.

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47

 

Appendix A: Shareholder rights in the U.K.

In this appendix, we discuss the U.K. institutional background in relation to shareholder

rights to contextualize our hypotheses about U.K. acquirer cash holdings. Although the two

countries are similar on several dimensions of shareholder rights (La Porta, Lopez-De-Silanes,

Shleifer, and Vishny, 1997), a closer examination reveals that U.K institutions give more rights

to shareholders than those of the U.S. on many other dimensions. As Bebchuk (2005) notes, U.S.

corporations are “representative democracies” in which members of the polity act through their

representatives (i.e., company directors and officers) but not directly. In the U.K., firms are not

“purely representative” and shareholders more actively intervene in company decisions. Bebchuk

(2005) (Section B) posits that U.K. laws grant shareholders greater power to influence board

decisions than U.S. laws do. Djankov, La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer (2008) conclude that

minority shareholders are better protected in the U.K. compared with those in the U.S.9 Nenova

(2006) also postulates that incumbent shareholders are better protected from disruptive takeovers

in the U.K. than those in the U.S. Table A1 provides a summary of the differences in shareholder

rights between the U.K. and U.S. Our brief discussions below are based on this summary. For

detailed accounts of the differences, see Armour and Skeel (2007), Black and Coffee (1994), and

Bebchuk (2005).

First, shareholder rights to set and change the basic governance scheme and be

represented at general meetings differ between these two countries. U.S. shareholders cannot

                                                            9 Both countries offer good protection to minority shareholders compared to many other countries.

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initiate changes to a company’s constitutional documents (called the articles of association in the

U.K.); however, in the U.K., shareholders can initiate such changes, which require a “special

resolution” approved by a supermajority of 75%. Shareholders of 10% or more of the paid-up

voting capital can call an Extraordinary General Meeting (EGM). The articles of association and

company bylaws cannot deprive shareholders of this right. By contrast, U.S. company bylaws

can deprive shareholders of such rights. Moreover, it is easier for U.K. shareholders to make

proposals than for their U.S. counterparts. Second, it is easier for British shareholders to appoint

or remove directors. In principle, a director of a U.K. company can always be removed by a

special meeting called for such a purpose. In the U.S., to remove the board, the shareholders

much reach unanimous consent in writing. Therefore, the motion can be vetoed by any director

who holds shares. Moreover, the popular adoption of staggered boards makes a board even more

difficult to remove. Third, U.K. shareholders have greater rights in the event of receiving a

takeover offer. The U.K. Takeover Code prohibits management from blocking a takeover bid in

the absence of shareholder consent. There is no such rule in the U.S. Moreover, embedded

defense devices, such as poison pills, dual-class voting shares, and staggered boards, are nearly

absent in the U.K. (Armour and Skeel, 2007) but prevalent in the U.S. As is discussed in the

introduction, strong shareholder rights in the U.K. are illustrated by Kraft’s takeover of Cadbury

in 2009. Despite objections from Cadbury management, the deal was completed without much

resistance. Finally, U.S. corporate law treats distribution policies as business decisions delegated

entirely to management. In the U.K., however, these decisions are subject to instructions dictated

by special shareholder resolutions.

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Beyond law and regulation, Black and Coffee (1994) postulate that the expectation of

oversight is embedded in British culture, and managers in the U.K. thus have never been able to

become as entrenched as their counterparts have in the U.S.

Strong shareholder rights are well represented by the active role played by institutional

investors in monitoring firm decisions. Black and Coffee (1994) note that U.K. financial

institutions are much more active in engaging their portfolio companies than their U.S.

counterparts. They also note that U.K. insurance companies are the most active institutional

investors because of their substantial share holdings and long investment horizons. Similarly,

Florence (1961) and Scott (1986) note that shareholder intervention is more frequent in the U.K.

than in the U.S. For example, Prudential (a major insurance companies in the U.K.) aims to meet

its portfolio companies at least twice a year; M&G, the asset management company acquired by

Prudential in 1999, states that its investment philosophy is to focus on investing in companies

rather than chasing share prices. Becht, Franks, Mayer, and Rossi (2009) use proprietary data and

observe that Hermes, the fund manager of the British Telecom Pension Scheme, outperforms its

benchmarks by engaging their portfolio companies via regular private meetings and conference

calls. Short and Keasey (1999) also posit that U.K. managers must hold more shares than their

U.S. counterparts to entrench themselves, suggesting shareholders have stronger power in the

U.K.

The regulatory environment in the U.K. is also more conducive for institutional investors

to intervene (Black and Coffee, 1994; Roe, 1994; Armour and Skeel, 2007). For example, for a

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long time, the U.K. had no counterpart to the Glass-Steagall Act to restrict the size and power of

banks. In the U.K., there were historically no restrictions on the percentage of shares held by

insurance companies or rules concerning collective shareholder actions (Black and Coffee,

1994). The Cadbury Report of 1992 prepared by a committee chaired by Adrian Cadbury

provided recommendations for company boards and accounting systems to mitigate

governance risks and minimize corporate failures. These recommendations represent the U.K.

regulatory authority’s position of encouraging institutional interventions, “because of their

collective stake, we look to the institutions in particular, with the backing of Institutional

Shareholders’ Committee, to use their influence as owners to ensure that the companies in which

they have invested comply with the code” (Section 6.16 of the Cadbury Report).

Note that it can be less costly for U.K. institutional investors to jointly monitor company

managers. Most financial institutions are located in the so-called City of London, a one-square-

mile area in which the London business community is concentrated (Black and Coffee, 1994;

Crespi and Renneboog, 2010), which substantially facilitates interaction and communication.

The legal barriers to collective action against companies are also considerably lower in the U.K.

Company managers face considerable pressure of collective intervention when worries arise that

they may fail their fiduciary duties. Furthermore, because bad reputations diffuse quickly among

actual and potential investors, even at lower levels of share-holding, institutional shareholdings

can affect company decisions. This pattern motivates our use of the non-trivial institutional

holdings dummy in the U.K. analysis.

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Appendix B: Measuring excess cash reserves

We estimate a company’s target cash reserve ratio following Opler et al. (1999). The

residuals from the regression are the excess cash reserve ratios. In particular, we estimate a

pooled time series cross-sectional ordinary least squares (OLS) regression with year dummies

(Model 2 in Table IV of Opler et al., 1999, p. 25). The sample used for the estimation includes

all firm-years during the period 1984–2007 utilizing data available from Datastream (for the

U.K.) or Compustat (for the U.S.). The specification is as follows:

1 2 3 4

5 6 7

8 9 10&

it it it it it

it it it

it it it t it

Cash Reserve Ratio MTB Size CFAST NWCAST

CAPEXAST LEV INDSIGMA

R D DIVDUM REGDUM YDUM

, (B.1)

where i and t index firms and years, respectively; Cash reserve ratio is cash and short-term

investments over total assets; MTB is market-to-book ratio of assets; Size is the logarithm of total

assets in millions of 1994 pound; CFAST is the income before depreciation and amortization

over total assets; NWCAST is net working capital over total assets; CAPEXAST is capital

expenditure over total assets; LEV is total debt over total assets; INDSIGMA is the mean cash-

flow standard deviation of the firms in the same 2-digit SIC code industry (cash flow is deflated

by total assets and standard deviation is estimated over the previous 20 years); R&D is the

expenditure on research and development normalized by net sales; DIVDUM is a dummy

variable set to one if a firm pays dividends in a year and zero otherwise; REGDUM is a dummy

variable set to one if a firm is in a regulated industry in a year and zero otherwise; and YDUM is

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52

 

a vector of year dummies. We also estimate Equation (C.1) by industry. Our results are robust to

this variation. According to Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith (2007) and Fresard and Salva (2010), the

market-to-book ratio can be reversely affected by cash holdings. We use sales growth over the

past three years as an instrument for the market-to-book ratio and re-estimate Equation (C.1).

The historical sales growth is exogenous because current cash holdings are unlikely to affect past

sales growth. Our results are robust to this alternative estimation. We also verify the robustness

of our results to the alternative calculation of the excess cash reserve ratio used by DeAngelo,

DeAngelo, and Stulz (2010) (footnote 5 on page 287). Specifically, in each year, we

simultaneously sort all non-financial firms that meet our sampling criteria into three equal-sized

groups based on total assets and three equal-sized groups based on market-to-book ratio of

assets. An acquirer is then allocated to one of these nine groups based on its size and market-to-

book ratio. Within each group, the target cash reserve ratio is measured by the median of all

firms in the same 2-digit SIC industry. Our results are broadly consistent using this alternative

measure. These estimation results are not reported here; however, the tables are available upon

request.

Appendix C: The mechanism underlying the positive cash holdings effect at

announcement

In the introduction, we briefly mention that the update to acquisition probability promotes

the positive cash holdings effect. Essential to this argument is the ex ante relation that E(VH) >

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53

 

E(VL), i.e., holding the concavity of the production function constant (as assumed in Almeida et

al., 2004), greater cash holdings are associated with a higher value of a future project. Figure 1

illustrates why, and we elaborate below.

The vertical axis represents the marginal return on investments and the horizontal axis

represents the amount of investment in the current (period 0) or future (period 1) project. In the

framework developed by Almeida et al (2004), C0 (not shown in the figure) is the period 0 cash

flow from assets in place. C is the cash saved out of C0 and carried over to period 1 to invest.

E(C1) is the expected cash flow from the assets in place in period 1, which is given. When

choosing the optimal C, a company faces a trade-off between a current project (in period 0) and a

future project (in period 1). The company invests C0−C in the current project and E(C1) + C in

the future project. The optimal cash savings (C*, C'*) occur when the marginal return to the

period 0 project (represented by curve BB') equals the marginal return to the period 1 project

(curves AB, A'B' or A"B') (Equation 4 of Almeida et al., 2004).10 For a period 1 project with the

marginal return curve AB, C* is the optimal cash savings, and the expected value of the project

is represented by the area of ABIJ. When the period 1 project is more profitable (Almeida et al.,

2004) or the cash flows from the assets in place are more volatile (Han and Qiu, 2007), the

marginal return to the period 1 project increases, which in turn induces the company to invest

more in period 1 by saving more in period 0. Therefore, C'* > C*, where C'* is the updated

                                                            10 Since a higher C means more investment in the period 1 project and less investment in the period 0 project, the

marginal return curve for the period 0 project (BB') has its horizontal axis reversed (i.e., there is less investment as one moves to the right of BB'). C=0 is the point at which no cash from period 0 is carried forward and at which the marginal return to the period 0 project is the lowest.

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54

 

optimal cash savings. When the concavity of production function remains constant, the updated

marginal return curve of the period 1 project is A'B', i.e., AB moves outwards. Note that with

constant concavity of the production function, as is the case here, the slopes of AB and A'B' are

the same at any given value of E(C1) + C. In other words, the marginal returns on investments

diminish at the same rate for AB and A'B'. Almeida et al. (2004) do not require AB and A'B' to

be convex, i.e., AB and A'B' can be straight lines. Han and Qiu (2007), however, require that the

marginal return (i.e., AB and A'B') to be convex and the cash flow volatility not be fully hedged,

which generates a positive relation between cash flow volatility and optimal cash savings. In

both Almeida et al. (2004) and Han and Qiu (2007), the area of A'B'IK (i.e., the value of the

period 1 project corresponding to C'*) is greater than the area of ABIJ (i.e., the value of the

period 1 project corresponding to C*).

[FIGURE 1]

The conclusion above may change if the assumption of constant concavity is violated. In

Figure 1, the marginal return curve A"B' has a less negative slope than AB, i.e., the marginal

return diminishes at a lower rate for A"B' than for AB. In this case, when the optimal cash

savings are C'*, the area of A"B'IK is not necessarily greater than that of ABIJ. The area of

A"B'IK is greater than that of ABIJ if and only if the size of area A"AL < LBJKB'. Nonetheless,

to the extent that most new production technologies are incremental to the existing technologies

during the tenure of a company’s management rather than revolutionary, the assumption of

invariant production function concavity is reasonable. This assumption implies that the speeds at

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55

 

which the marginal returns diminish are similar across different future investments (A'B' and AB

in Figure 1). To take further precaution against possible confounding effects of varying

production function concavity, we control for industry effects in our regression analyses.

Production technologies available to the same industry are more similar to one another compared

to technologies available to different industries. Our results are robust to the effects of both the

Fama-French 12 industries and Fama-French 49 industries. We report only the results of

regressions estimated using the Fama-French 12 industries for the sake of brevity, but the results

using the Fama-French 49 industries are available upon request.

Appendix D: Predicted and unpredicted acquirers

We follow a two-step procedure to separate the sample into predicted and unpredicted

acquirers. In the first step, we estimate the probability of being an acquirer using the following

logistic model for both the U.K. and U.S. for the period 1984–2007:

, 1 , 1 , 1 , ,i t i t i t i t it i tAcquirer Excash Controls YDUM INDDUM , (D.1)

where i and t index companies and years, respectively; Acquirer is a dummy variable that equals

1 for a firm-year if a company announces at least one acquisition in this year and 0 otherwise;

Excash is log (1 + excess cash reserve ratio); YDUM is a vector of year dummy variables from

1984 to 2007; INDDUM is a vector of industry dummy variables; and Controls is a vector of

control variables. The control variables include the logarithm of total assets, leverage, logarithm

of the market-to-book ratio of equity, return on assets, mean abnormal returns over the past 3

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56

 

years, standard deviations of daily stock returns over the past 3 years, and non-cash working

capital, defined as net working capital (i.e., current assets – current liabilities) minus cash and

marketable securities, then divided by total assets.11 The estimates are available upon request.

Next, we estimate the fitted probabilities of being an acquirer for each firm-year. We then

plot the distribution of the fitted probabilities for the acquirer firm-years and non-acquirer firm-

years in Figure 2. The figure indicates that these distributions cross at 0.06 for the U.K. sample

and at 0.045 for the U.S. sample. An acquirer that falls to the right (left) of the crossover point is

predicted (unpredicted).

[FIGURE 2]

                                                            11 The mean abnormal returns are computed as the daily abnormal returns averaged over the 3 years prior to the

announcement. Abnormal returns are estimated using a market model. The estimation period is a window of 250 trading days that ends 16 trading days prior to the day for which abnormal returns are calculated.

Page 59: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

High cash Low cash Z-statistic Mean Median STD Median Median Diff.

CAR (-2,+2) −0.010 −0.008 0.085 −0.006 −0.008 −0.115Excess cash reserve ratio 0.002 −0.023 0.155 0.002 −0.049 −11.112***Total assets (Mil.) 3868.533 1272.543 548.512 1511.450 1032.960 −3.017***Leverage 0.533 0.360 9.023 0.378 0.342 1.010Market to book ratio (M/B) 2.067 1.396 2.111 1.205 1.429 0.517Return on assets (%) 0.017 0.050 0.236 0.048 0.051 0.011Asset tangibility 0.858 0.928 0.174 0.933 0.927 −1.115Average pre-acquisition sales growth 0.498 0.120 1.191 0.132 0.107 −2.269**Relative deal value 0.443 0.149 0.765 0.158 0.141 −1.185Cash payment (%) 63.740 52.629 46.684 68.155 37.049 −2.593**Pre-acquisition operating performance (%) 4.760 4.100 23.600 4.875 3.321 1.987**Post-acquisition operating performance (%) 6.600 5.000 12.600 6.691 3.325 2.012**Whited-Wu Index 1.878 0.334 0.770 0.262 0.425 −1.970**E-index (509 observations) 1.961 2.000 1.388 2.000 2.000 0.450OBS 2196 2196 1098 1098

Yes/No Yes/NoFriendly deal dummy 1040/58 852/246Tender offer dummy 148/950 383/715Diversifying deal dummy 189/909 517/581Unpredicted acquirer dummy 630/468 261/837No bond rating dummy 326/772 778/320Separated leadership dummy 983/115 698/400

706/1490891/13051104/10921681/515

Panel A: The U.S. sample

Yes (1)/No(0)1892/304531/1665

Table 1: Descriptive statistics

This table reports the descriptive statistics for both the U.K. (panel B) and the U.S. (panel A) sample. The sample include all deals completed during 1984–2007 in the U.K. and 1990–2007 in the U.S. that satisfy our selection requirements. CAR (−2,+2) is the acquirers' cumulative abnormal returns (market-model adjusted) from 2 days before to 2 days after the deal announcement day. Excess cash reserve ratio is the difference between the actual cash reserve ratio and the target cash reserve ratio estimated using a pooled time-series cross-sectional OLS regression with year dummies, following Opler et al. (1999). Actual cash reserve ratio is defined as cash and marketablesecurities over total assets. Size is measured by total assets in millions of pounds or dollars. Leverage is the book value of debt over total assets. Market to book ratio (M/B) is the sum of market value of equity and book value of long-term liabilities divided by the sum of book value of equity and book value of long term liabilities. Return on assets is operating income over total assets. Asset tangibility is the ratio of tangible assets to total assets. Average pre-acquisition sales growth is the average annual sales growth measured over 2 years prior to year of announcement. Relative deal value is deal value divided by bidder market value of equity. Payout ratio is the ratio of total distributions (i.e. dividends and stock repurchases) to operating income. Cash payment (%) is the percentage of cash paid in the consideration. We measure operating performance in percentage using the difference between the operating cash flow and the change in working capital scaled by total assets, and adjusted by the median performance of those firms in the same industry, size decile, and operating performance decile (call it the adjusted operating performance). Post-acquisition operating performance is the combined firm's adjusted operating performance averaged over the 3 years next to deal completion. Pre-acquisition operating performance is the value-weighted (using market value of assets) combination of the acquirer's and target's adjusted operating performance, averaged over the three years prior to deal announcement. Whited-Wu index is the financial constraint index of Whited and Wu (2006) estimated using the U.K. or the U.S. data. Grand total institutional holdings are holdings by all institutional investors. Insurance company holdings are holdings by insurance companies. E-index is the entrenchment index of Bebchuk, Cohen, and Ferrell (2009). Friendly deal dummy equals 1 for friendly deals and 0 otherwise. Tender offer dummy equals 1 for tender offers and 0 otherwise. Diversifying deal dummy equals 1 if the target and the bidder are in different 2-digit SIC code industries and 0 otherwise. Unpredicted acquirer dummy is defined according to the procedure described in Appendix D. No Bond rating dummy is 1 if a bidder has never been assigned a rating to its bond(s) and 0 otherwise. Separated leadership dummy is 1 if a bidder's chairman and CEO are taken by two different persons and 0 otherwise. z-test is based on Wilcoxon rank sum test for median differences. All continuous variables are winsorized at the 1st and 99th percentile, except CAR. All variables are measured at the end of the fiscal year prior to deal announcement unless otherwise mentioned.

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High cash Low cash Z-statistic Mean Median STD Median Median Diff.

CAR (-2,+2) −0.004 −0.003 0.060 −0.003 −0.003 −0.751Excess cash reserve ratio −0.053 −0.034 0.521 0.038 −0.106 −12.554***Total assets (Mil.) 183.110 131.130 8.642 164.152 98.122 −2.881**Leverage 0.148 0.075 0.281 0.064 0.088 1.991**Market to book ratio (M/B) 2.961 1.413 6.624 1.586 1.257 −1.981**Return on assets 0.055 0.076 0.144 0.082 0.073 −1.115Asset tangibility 0.634 0.496 1.004 0.486 0.506 0.617Average pre-acquisition sales growth 0.325 0.133 0.590 0.136 0.128 −1.105Relative deal value 0.129 0.032 0.410 0.022 0.039 2.874**Cash payment (%) 69.000 55.169 45.980 77.409 32.729 −2.845**Pre-acquisition operating performance (%) 5.176 1.443 14.977 1.869 1.017 −1.987**Post-acquisition operating performance (%) 6.719 2.408 17.730 3.094 1.739 −3.014**Whited-Wu Index 0.886 0.573 0.082 0.456 0.688 2.011**Grand total institutional holdings (%) 46.321 12.162 12.451 14.214 10.115 −1.661*Insurance company holdings (%) 15.902 7.484 5.493 8.883 6.105 −1.798*OBS 185 185 92 93

Yes/No Yes/NoFriendly deal dummy 83/9 55/38Tender offer dummy 38/54 23/70Diversifying deal dummy 32/60 9/84Unpredicted acquirer dummy 39/53 14/79No bond rating dummy 11/81 68/25Grand total institutional holdings non-trivial (> 3%) 39/53 14/79Insurance company holdings non-trivial (> 3%) 31/61 7/86

41/14453/13279/10653/13238/147

Panel B: the U.K. sampleAll

Yes (1)/No (0)138/4761/124

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Table2, U.S. evidence: shareholder power, financial constraints and the effect of excess cash holdings on acquirer announcement returns

This table reports the robust regression estimates of our baseline models (1) and (2), and how financial constraints and shareholder power affect the cash reserve effect on bidder announcement returns. The regressions are estimated on two U.S. samples from 1990 to 2007. For the first sample (models 1–5) we require the E-index to be available and for the second sample (models 6–11) we do not. The dependent variables are the acquirers' CAR (-2,+2). Models 4 (5) is estimated using the sub-sample where the acquirers' E-index are below (above) the sample median. Model 9(10) is estimated using the sub-sample where the CEO and the Chairman are different persons (the same person). Model 11 is estimated on the data during 1980–1993. In Panel A, we measure financial constraints using the acquirers' Whited-Wu index. High Whited-Wu index dummy is 1 if the acquirers' Whited-Wu index is above the sample median and 0 otherwise. In Panel B, we measure financial constraints using the No bond rating dummy. All other variables are defined in table 1 and 2. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity.

Page 62: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

All All All Low E-index High E-index All All AllSeparated Leadership

Combined Leadership

All 1980–1993

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6 Model 7 Model 8 Model 9 Model 10 Model 11log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) −0.076*** −0.193***

(0.001) (0.000) Predicted acquirer dummy × log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) 0.004 0.019 −0.012 −0.044 −0.154* −0.188*** −0.158** −0.28*** 0.047

(0.273) (0.605) (0.243) (0.210) '(0.065) (0.000) (0.037) (0.000) '(0.128)Unpredicted acquirer dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.142** 0.208* 0.319*** 0.053 0.121*** 0.071*** 0.129** −0.207*** −0.203***

(0.039) (0.067) (0.000) (0.200) '(0.000) (0.000) (0.035) (0.000) '(0.000)Unpredicted acquirer dummy × High Whited-Wu index dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.376*** 0.510*** 0.165* 0.341*** 0.250*** 0.351**

(0.001) (0.004) (0.067) (0.002) (0.001) (0.022)High Whited-Wu index dummy 0.009 0.018 −0.008 −0.006 −0.003 −0.003

(0.252) (0.146) (0.155) (0.456) (0.252) (0.124)Unpredicted acquirer dummy −0.005 −0.018 −0.013 −0.005 −0.005 −0.012 −0.008 −0.005 0.0017

(0.616) (0.114) (0.407) (0.128) '(0.523) (0.177) (0.114) (0.774) '(0.157)Probability of being an acquirer −0.028 0.164 0.227 0.303* −0.101 −0.270** 0.0080 0.0054 −0.267** −0.022 0.188*

(0.249) (0.299) (0.115) (0.081) (0.354) '(0.030) '(0.949) (0.252) (0.025) (0.555) '(0.081)Log (1+total assets) 0.061 −0.052* −0.081 −0.079 −0.041 0.081** −0.026 −0.0168 0.031 −0.007 −0.057**

(0.235) (0.058) (0.186) (0.199) (0.389) '(0.035) '(0.702) (0.138) (0.186) (0.479) '(0.035)Asset tangibility 0.0021 −0.031 −0.021 −0.029 −0.0121 0.014 −0.025 −0.025 −0.061* −0.041*** 0.054*

(0.475) (0.295) (0.473) (0.463) (0.517) '(0.514) '(0.238) (0.256) (0.057) (0.000) '(0.063)Return on assets 0.043** 0.044* 0.063** 0.064 0.124 −0.035 0.049* 0.064** 0.075* 0.081*** 0.141**

(0.040) (0.056) (0.039) (0.360) (0.165) '(0.248) '(0.072) (0.040) (0.09) (0.000) '(0.035)Log (1+average sales growth) 0.001 0.003 0.001 0.002 0.002 0.004** −0.001 −0.001 −0.007* 0.003 0.002

(0.954) (0.497) (0.882) (0.776) (0.770) '(0.041) '(0.887) (0.799) (0.082) (0.644) '(0.215)Log (1+M/B) −0.013** −0.013* −0.0011* −0.004 −0.018* −0.013** −0.017** −0.009* −0.004 −0.014*** −0.003

(0.036) (0.077) (0.097) (0.249) (0.081) '(0.029) '(0.039) (0.087) (0.676) (0.000) '(0.233)Leverage −0.022* −0.004 −0.008 −0.008 0.003 −0.002 0.0140 0.008 −0.008 0.006 −0.029

(0.069) (0.270) (0.622) (0.359) (0.483) '(0.215) '(0.233) (0.492) (0.622) (0.826) '(0.110)Relative deal value −0.021** −0.050** −0.032** −0.026** −0.042*** −0.035*** −0.032*** −0.021*** −0.07* −0.013** −0.012*

(0.038) (0.046) (0.026) (0.034) (0.003) '(0.001) '(0.001) (0.000) (0.066) (0.015) '(0.086)Cash propotion 0.016* 0.016* 0.015* 0.024** 0.033*** 0.024*** 0.022*** 0.023*** 0.0154* 0.030** 0.025***

(0.059) (0.065) (0.082) (0.047) (0.001) (0.001) '(0.001) (0.001) (0.082) (0.012) '(0.001)Tender offer dummy 0.005 0.005 0.006 0.013 −0.001 0.003 0.0010 0.006* 0.006 0.009 −0.028**

(0.529) (0.515) (0.494) (0.166) (0.894) '(0.936) '(0.898) (0.083) (0.494) (0.505) '(0.011)Diversifying deal dummy −0.002 −0.012 −0.002 0.008 −0.016 −0.028** 0.0070 0.006 −0.012* 0.016 −0.018*

(0.796) (0.243) (0.604) (0.461) (0.242) '(0.041) '(0.254) (0.349) (0.080) (0.196) '(0.062)Friendly deal dummy 0.020** −0.010 −0.017* −0.024** 0.008 0.020** −0.008 −0.009 −0.021** −0.013 −0.012

(0.039) (0.159) (0.069) (0.024) (0.054) '(0.030) '(0.305) (0.308) (0.049) (0.486) '(0.253)Constant 0.165** 0.187* 0.178* 0.194 0.083 0.188** 0.119** 0.067** 0.058 0.061 0.002

(0.027) (0.062) (0.072) (0.208) (0.509) '(0.046) '(0.032) (0.031) (0.212) (0.362) '(0.172)Year effect Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y YIndustry effect Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y YNo obs 509 509 509 328 181 2196 2196 2196 769 1427 1063Pseudo R-squared 0.181 0.173 0.166 0.141 0.131 0.322 0.301 0.191 0.133 0.171 0.155

Leadership StructurePalel A: financial constraint measured by Whited-Wu index

E-index

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All Low E-index High E-index All Separated LeadershipCombined Leadership

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6Predicted acquirer dummy × log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) 0.0050 −0.022 −0.097 −0.091*** −0.39 −0.230***

'(0.178) '(0.150) '(0.301) '(0.001) '(0.224) '(0.000)Unpredicted acquirer dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.0460 −0.002 0.0200 0.042** 0.470* −0.343***

'(0.214) '(0.200) '(0.224) '(0.016) '(0.060) '(0.000)Unpredicted acquirer dummy× No bond rating dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.304*** 0.479*** 0.301*** 0.157*** 0.405*** 0.171***

'(0.000) '(0.000) '(0.000) '(0.000) '(0.000) '(0.002)No bond rating dummy 0.0020 0.0030 0.0020 0.0050 −0.014 −0.002

'(0.830) '(0.791) '(0.521) '(0.491) '(0.678) '(0.224)Unpredicted acquirer dummy 0.0020 0.0050 0.0080 0.0010 −0.025* −0.011*

'(0.799) '(0.432) '(0.217) '(0.907) '(0.081) '(0.070)Probability of being an acquirer −0.041101 0.1180 −0.423 0.0070 0.221* 0.0640

'(0.444) '(0.692) '(0.197) '(0.838) '(0.078) '(0.977)Log (1+total assets) 0.0155 −0.032 0.1160 −0.013 −0.091** −0.016

'(0.209) '(0.650) '(0.314) '(0.261) '(0.029) '(0.243)Asset tangibility −0.023 −0.046 0.031 −0.011 −0.093** −0.027**

'(0.116) '(0.290) '(0.114) '(0.297) '(0.021) '(0.032)Return on assets 0.065** 0.0612 0.1180 0.064** 0.0580 0.056**

'(0.039) '(0.126) '(0.137) '(0.032) '(0.146) '(0.029)Log (1+average sales growth) 0.0010 0.0020 0.0010 0.0001 −0.012* −0.001

'(0.880) '(0.687) '(0.901) '(0.762) '(0.062) '(0.758)Log (1+M/B) −0.006 0.0061 −0.0011 −0.006** −0.008 −0.011**

'(0.326) '(0.132) '(0.235) '(0.042) '(0.334) '(0.016)Leverage −0.012 −0.014 −0.003 0.0110 0.0060 0.0040

'(0.408) '(0.472) '(0.850) '(0.156) '(0.281) '(0.287)Relative deal value −0.029*** −0.023** −0.048** −0.026*** −0.007 −0.023***

'(0.000) '(0.021) '(0.018) '(0.000) '(0.135) '(0.000)Cash propotion 0.021*** 0.026** 0.036*** 0.019*** 0.016** 0.031***

'(0.002) '(0.028) '(0.000) '(0.002) '(0.036) '(0.000)Tender offer dummy 0.0070 0.0070 −0.002 0.005* 0.0010 0.0030

'(0.842) '(0.497) '(0.387) '(0.098) '(0.725) '(0.686)Diversifying deal dummy −0.007 0.0060 −0.012 0.0070 −0.002 0.0030

'(0.271) '(0.444) '(0.288) '(0.265) '(0.753) '(0.667)Friendly deal dummy −0.013* −0.023** −0.0061 −0.011 −0.019 −0.011

'(0.076) '(0.029) '(0.298) '(0.102) '(0.138) '(0.245)Constant −0.0061 0.0620 −0.193 0.059* 0.237** 0.0340

'(0.128) '(0.511) '(0.339) '(0.081) '(0.038) '(0.222)Year effect Y Y Y Y Y YIndustry effect Y Y Y Y Y YNo obs 509 328 181 2196 769 1427Pseudo R-squared 0.167 0.153 0.131 0.211 0.161 0.177

Palel B: financial constraint measured by the No bond rating dummyLeadership StructureE-index

Page 64: Shareholder Rights and the Effects of Acquirer Cash

Panel A:financial constraints measured by Whited-Wu index

All All Low E-index High E-index All AllSeparated

LeadershipCombined Leadership

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6 Model 7 Model 8Pre-acquisition operating performance 0.2453*** 0.1913*** 0.1034** 0.1882*** 0.2330*** 0.1811*** 0.2013*** 0.1621***

(0.000) (0.000) (0.012) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)CAR (−2,+2) 0.0720** 0.0531 0.2250*** 0.0220 0.0436*** 0.0420 0.0450 0.0560

(0.021) (0.221) (0.000) (0.725) (0.000) (0.310) (0.362) (0.460)High excash dummy 0.0551*** 0.0761*** 0.0310 0.0482*** 0.0522*** −0.0322***

(0.000) (0.000) (0.316) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)High exccash dummy × High Whited-Wu index dummy 0.0571*** 0.0721*** −0.0362 0.0481*** 0.0652*** 0.0371***

(0.003) (0.006) (0.257) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)High Whited-Wu index dummy 0.0292*** 0.0341*** 0.0011 −0.0261 0.0030 0.0020

(0.000) (0.000) (0.859) (0.642) (0.244) (0.514)Constant 0.0985** 0.0950** 0.1091** 0.0280 0.0795** 0.0491*** 0.0551*** 0.0410

(0.010) (0.016) (0.043) (0.529) (0.021) (0.000) (0.000) (0.687)No obs 509 509 328 181 2196 2196 769 1427Pseudo R-squared 0.384 0.416 0.441 0.444 0.551 0.591 0.471 0.551

E-index Leadership Structure

Table 3, U.S. evidence: shareholder power, financial constraints and the effect of excess cash holdings on acquirer post-acquisition operating performance

This table reports the robust regression estimates of the effect of excess cash reserve on the acquirers' post-acquisition operating performance, and how this effect varies according to shareholder rights and financial constraints. The regressions are estimated using two U.S. samples from 1990 to 2007. For the first sub-sample (models 1–3), we require the E-index to be available and for the second sample (models 4–6) we do not. The dependent variables are the acquirers' post-acquisition operating performance in decimals. Model 2(3) is estimated using the sub-sample where the acquirer's E-index is below (above) median. Models 5 (6) is estimated using the sub-sample where the CEO and the Chairman are different persons (the same person). In Panel A, we measure financial constraints using the acquirers' Whited-Wu index. High Whited-Wu index dummy is 1 if the acquirers' Whited-Wu index is above sample median and 0 otherwise. In Panel B, we measure financial constraints using the No bond rating dummy. All other variables are defined in table 1. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity.

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Panel B:financial constraints measured by the No bond rating dummy

All Low E-index High E-index AllSeparated

LeadershipCombined Leadership

Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4 Model 5 Model 6Pre-acquisition operating performance 0.2121*** 0.1230*** 0.2121*** 0.2101*** 0.1902*** 0.2030***

(0.000) (0.005) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)CAR (-2,+2) 0.0821* 0.2661** −0.1552 0.0911** 0.0650 0.0630

(0.069) (0.021) (0.112) (0.041) −0.195 (0.362)High excess cash dummy 0.0030 0.0080 −0.0330 0.0452*** 0.0421*** −0.0491***

(0.870) (0.717) (0.145) (0.000) (0.001) (0.000)High excash dummy x No bond rating dummy 0.0361* 0.0681*** 0.0370 0.1280*** 0.1211*** 0.1372***

(0.072) (0.004) (0.128) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)No bond rating dummy 0.0281*** 0.0160 0.0262** 0.0021 0.0070 0.0050

(0.006) (0.309) (0.032) (0.739) (0.226) (0.294)Constant 0.0270 0.0670 0.0450 0.0721* 0.0371* 0.0230

(0.412) (0.177) (0.517) (0.098) (0.082) (0.357)No obs 509 328 181 2196 769 1427Pseudo R-square 0.420 0.417 0.466 0.561 0.411 0.470

E-index Leadership Structure

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Model 1 Model 2 Model 3 Model 4Log ( 1+ excess cash reserve ratio) 0.024***

(0.000) Predicted acquirer dummy × log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) −0.008 −0.009 −0.004

(0.761) (0.687) (0.854) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.030*** 0.019** 0.021**

(0.002) (0.045) (0.040) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × Nontrivial grand total institutional holdings dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.077***

(0.000) Nontrivial grand total institutional holdings dummy 0.009

(0.237) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × Nontrivial insurance company holdings dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.081***

(0.002) Nontrivial insurance company holdings dummy 0.011

(0.147) Unpredicted acquirer dummy −0.005 0.005 0.006

(0.578) (0.543) (0.463) Probability of being an acquirer 0.014 0.001 0.004 0.006

(0.136) (0.981) (0.932) (0.892) Log (1+total assets) 0.001 0.001 0.002 0.001

(0.508) (0.713) (0.933) (0.621) Asset tangibility −0.003** −0.003* −0.002* −0.002*

(0.038) (0.087) (0.090) (0.081) Return on assets 0.026*** 0.023*** 0.006 0.004

(0.000) (0.008) (0.528) (0.674) Log (1+average sales growth) 0.012*** 0.007* 0.011*** 0.010***

(0.000) (0.062) (0.005) (0.005) Log (1+M/B) −0.008** −0.014*** −0.019*** −0.017***

(0.013) (0.001) (0.000) (0.000) Leverage 0.012 −0.012 −0.021 0.023

(0.460) (0.593) (0.319) (0.268) Relative deal value −0.019*** −0.018** −0.024*** −0.022***

(0.001) (0.024) (0.002) (0.004) Cash percentage (%) 0.015*** 0.009* 0.012* 0.013**

(0.001) (0.088) (0.062) (0.042) Tender offer dummy −0.022*** −0.020*** −0.015** −0.016***

(0.000) (0.001) (0.013) (0.005) Diversifying deal dummy 0.001 0.001 0.001 0.003

(0.756) (0.901) (0.896) (0.643) Friendly deal dummy 0.011** 0.008 0.005 0.005

(0.024) (0.278) (0.454) (0.439) Constant 0.027 0.014 0.024 0.009

(0.103) (0.674) (0.445) (0.757) Yeare effects Y Y Y YIndustry effects Y Y Y YNo of obs 185 185 185 185Pseudo R-squared 0.371 0.517 0.444 0.471

Full sample 1984–2007

Table 4, U.K. evidence: the acquirer excess cash holdings and announcement returns

This table reports the robust regression estimates for our models (1) and (2). The dependent variable is the acquirers' CAR (−2,+2). Probability of being an acquirer is estimated according to equation (D.1) in Appendix D. Nontrivial grand total institutional holdings dummy is 1 if the grand total institutional holdings is no less than 3% and 0 otherwise. Nontrivial insurance company holdings dummy is 1 if the insurance company holdings is no less than 3% and 0 otherwise. All other variables are defined in table 1. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance level at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity. Models are estimated with year and industry effects.

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model 1 Model 2Predicted acquirer dummy × log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) −0.004 −0.044

(0.929) (0.309) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.032 0.002

(0.318) (0.943) High Whited-Wu index dummy 0.022*

(0.060) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × High Whited-Wu index dummy × log(1 + excess cash reserve ratio) 0.266***

(0.000) No bond rating dummy 0.004

(0.688) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × No bond rating dummy × log(1 + excess cash reserve ratio) 0.144**

(0.047) Unpredicted acquirer dummy 0.025** 0.008

(0.029) (0.513) Probability of being an acquirer 0.098 0.077

(0.108) (0.256) Log (1+ total assets) −0.001 −0.002

(0.874) (0.637) Asset tangibility −0.005* 0.02

(0.061) (0.323) Return on assets 0.021 0.02

(0.245) (0.378) Log (1+average sales growth) 0.008 0.019

(0.510) (0.140) Log (1+M/B) −0.003 −0.001

(0.129) (0.835) Leverage 0.014 −0.004

(0.696) (0.924) Relative Deal Value −0.02 −0.026*

(0.135) (0.087) Cash propotion 0.007 0.017*

(0.418) (0.098) Tender offer dummy −0.026*** −0.017*

(0.002) (0.068) Diversifying deal dummy 0.018** 0.021**

(0.029) (0.024) Friendly deal dummy 0.017* 0.013

(0.081) (0.219) Constant −0.015 −0.035

(0.743) (0.529) Year effects Y YIndustry effects Y YNo of obs 185 185Pseudo R-squared 0.661 0.567

Table 5, U.K. evidence: financial constraints and the effect of excess cash holdings on acquirer announcement returns

This table reports the robust regression estimates of how the degree of acquirer financial constraints affects the cash reserve effect on acquirer announcement abnormal returns. The dependent variable is the acquirers' CAR (−2,+2). All other variables are defined in table 1 and 2. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance levels at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity. Models are estimated with year and industry effects.

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results no change if CAR is dropped

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)Pre-acquisition operating performance (%) 0.0383*** 0.0382*** 0.0363*** 0.0364*** 0.0353*** 0.0344***

(0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)

CAR (−2,+2) 0.0102** 0.0086 0.0098 0.0091 0.0059 0.0010

(0.049) (0.122) (0.148) (0.160) (0.380) (0.143)

High excash dummy 0.0020** 0.0024** 0.0025** 0.0038*** 0.0030***(0.017) (0.024) (0.015) (0.000) (0.000)

High excash dummy × Non-trivial grand total institutional holdings dummy 0.0098**

(0.021)Non-trivial institutional holding dummy 0.0003

(0.800)High excash dummy × Non-trivial insurance company holdings dummy 0.0088**

(0.030) Non-trivial insurance holdings dummy 0.0015

(0.313)High excash dummy × High White-Wu index dummy 0.0035***

(0.000)High White-Wu index dummy 0.0023***

(0.000)High excash dummy × No bond rating dummy 0.0051***

(0.000)No bond rating dummy 0.0047***

(0.000)Constant 0.0027*** 0.0019*** 0.0024*** 0.0022*** 0.0088*** 0.0026***

(0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000) (0.000)No of obs 185 185 185 185 185 185Pseudo R-squared 0.191 0.184 0.214 0.193 0.133 0.157

Table 6, U.K. evidence: the excess cash holdings and post-acquisition acquirer operating performance

This table reports the robust regression estimates of how excess cash reserve affect the acquirers' post-acquisition operating performance. Model 1 and 2 estimate the baseline model of equation (3). Models 3 and 4 estimate how institutional holdings impact the cash holdings effect on acquirer operating performance. Models 5 and 6 estimate how financial constraints impact the cash reserve effect on acquirer operating performance. In all specifications, the dependent variable is the acquirers' post-acquisition operating performance in decimals. High excess cash reserve dummy is 1 if anacquirer's excess cash reserve is above the sample median and 0 otherwise. All other variables are defined in table 1, 2 and 3. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity.

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U.K. U.S.Model 1 Model 2

Predicted acquirer dummy × log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) −0.002 0.079*(0.921) (0.084)

Unpredicted acquirer dummy × log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) 0.063*** 0.100***(0.000) (0.000)

Unpredicted acquirer dummy × all stock offer dummy x log(1+excess cash reserve ratio) −0.049** −0.121***

(0.023) (0.003) Unpredicted acquirer dummy × all cash offer dummy x log(1+ excess cash reserve ratio) −0.007 0.029

(0.671) (0.677) Unpredicted acquirer dummy −0.003 0.001

(0.802) (0.775) Probability of being an acquirer 0.002 0.053

(0.968) (0.276) Log (1+total assets) 0.002 0.012

(0.661) (0.292) Asset tangibility −0.002 −0.012

(0.154) (0.290) Return on assets 0.012 0.115***

(0.182) (0.000) Log (1+average sales growth) 0.009** 0.001

(0.027) (0.357) Log (1+M/B) −0.015*** −0.002

(0.000) (0.241) Leverage −0.019 −0.012**

(0.374) (0.014) Relative deal value −0.018** −0.008***

(0.028) (0.000) Tender offer dummy −0.017*** −0.012

(0.005) (0.218) Diversifying deal dummy 0.002 0.007

(0.801) (0.848) Friendly deal dummy 0.007 0.005

(0.304) (0.365) All cash offer dummy 0.005 0.013**

(0.491) (0.030)All stock offer dummy 0.001 −0.003

(0.981) (0.470) Constant 0.011 0.019

(0.742) (0.478) Yeare effects Y YIndustry effects Y YNo of obs 185 2196Prob>F 0.00*** 0.00**Pseudo R-squared 0.516 0.218

Panel A

Table 7: means of payment and the effect of acquirer cash holdings on acquirer announcement returns and operating performance

This table reports robust regression estimates of how the effect of excess cash reserve on acquirer announcement returns (panel A) and acquirer operating performance (panel B) varies according to the means of payment. The regressions are estimated using both the U.K. sample (model 1) and the U.S. sample (model 2). The dependent variables are acquirer CAR (−2,+2) for panel A and adjusted post operating performance in panel B. All stock (cash) offer dummy is a dummy variable equals 1 if all considerations are paid in stock (cash) and 0 otherwise. All other variables are defined in table 1. p-values are in parentheses. *,**,*** indicate significance level at 10%, 5% and 1% respectively. Models in panel A are estimated with year and industry effects. Standard errors are corrected for heteroskedasticity.

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U.K. U.S.Model 1 Model 2

Pre-acquisition operating performance 0.0410*** 0.2852***(0.000) (0.000)

CAR (-2,+2) 0.0095 0.0474(0.114) (0.379)

High excash dummy 0.0038** 0.0078(0.041) (0.245)

High excash dummy × all cash offer dummy 0.0014 0.0521***(0.117) (0.000)

High excash dummy × all stock offer dummy −0.0017** −0.0426**(0.044) (0.041)

Cash offer dummy 0.0011 0.0171**(0.109) (0.010)

Stock offer dummy −0.0018* −0.0637**(0.094) (0.032)

Constant 0.0024*** 0.0646**(0.000) (0.013)

No obs 185 2196R-square 0.117 0.604

Panel B

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Shareholder power United Kingdom United StatesShareholder power related to general meetingsChanging basic governance arrangements Shareholders can intitiate changes to company memorandum and the articles of association —

the constitutional documents of UK firms. Changes can be made by a "special resolution" that requires a supermajority approval of 75% of casted votes at shareholder meeting (Companies Act, 1985, c. 6, section 9(1), 378(2)).

Only the board can initiate changes to corporate charters and the state of incorporation. Shareholders only have veto power (Delaware Code Annotated, Title 8, section 141(a) ; Model Business Corporation Act section 8.01(b)).

Calling extraordinary general meeting (EGM) Shareholders of 10% or more of the paid-up voting capital have the right to call an EGM, which cannot be removed by the company's article of association (Companies Act, 1985, c. 6, section 368).

Shareholders cannot call these meetings, unless stated otherwise in the corporate charter or bylaws (Delaware Code Annotated, Title 8, section 211(d)).

Making shareholder proposals At ordinary annual meetings, shareholder(s) holding no less than 5% of the voting rights or at least 100 shareholders (each has paid no less than £100 of paid-up capital) can force the company to put a resolution to the meeting, and to circulate a statement less than 1000 words before the meeting (Companies Act, 1985, c. 6, section 376).

Shareholders can request the board to add a proposal to the proxy statement but these proposals should not be related to the election (SEC Rule 14a-8). Even when the proposal receives a majority of votes, it is not binding on the board. Related costs go to the company. The shareholders can also launch a full proxy fight (SEC Rule 14a). The shareholders bear the costs of proxy fight which is normally very high.

Shareholder power related to director appointment/removalAppointing/removing directors via election in the annual general meetings (AGM)

There must be a separate resolution for each director (Companies Act, 1985, c.6, section 292). Cumulative majority votings applies.

State laws and company bylaws apply. Under Delaware Law, plurality voting is the default practice, i.e. candidates that receive the most votes (not necessarily a majority votes) win (Delaware Code Annotated, Title 8, section 216).

Appointing/removing directors by other procedures other than the AGM

A director can always be removed by a special meeting called for such purposes (Companies Act, 1985, c.6, section 303).

Shareholders can appoint/remove the directors by a unanimous consent in writing; If the consent is not unanimous, appointing/removal can only be made when all the directorships are vacant andall such vacancies are to be filled by such consent (Delaware Code Annotated, Title 8, section 211(b)).

Shareholder power related to takeoversStaggered board But shareholders can always remove a director by a special resolution (see above). The terms of directors can be staggered, which ensures only one-third can be elected each

year(Delaware Code Annotated, Title 8, section 141(d)).

Shareholder rights plans (poison pills) Shareholder rights plans (poison pills) are largely absent. Delaware courts support the shareholder rights plans which constraints the ability of an acquring shareholder to take her voting power above a certain threshold (usually 10-15%).

Restrictions on management frustrating takeover bids

The Takeover Code does not allow the managers to block a takeover bid. Shareholders have the power to decide whether to accept a bid (Takeover Code, Rule 21).

No such restrictions.

Embedded takeove defences Embedded takeove defenses are largely absent, which make it difficult for the directors to entrench themselves (Armour and Skeel, 2007; also see above on staggered board and poison ill )

Various types of "enbeded takeover defenses" exists (Armour and Skeel, 2007).

Shareholder power related to cash distributionDistribution to shareholders Under the default of UK law, the board is subject to "any directions given by special resolution"

of the shareholders(Companies Act appendix, Table A, provision 70 ).Under state corporate law, the authority to determine distribution (in cash or in kinds) rests fully with the board (Model Business Corporation Act, section 6.40).

Table A1: Comparing shareholder powers in the U.K. and the U.S.