Critical Finance Review > Vol 14 > Issue 2

Bidder and Target Size Effects in M&A Are Not Driven by Overconfidence or Agency Problems

By Christoph Schneider, University of Münster, Germany, christoph.schneider@wiwi.uni-muenster.de | Oliver Spalt, University of Mannheim, Germany, spalt@uni-mannheim.de

 
Suggested Citation
Christoph Schneider and Oliver Spalt (2025), "Bidder and Target Size Effects in M&A Are Not Driven by Overconfidence or Agency Problems", Critical Finance Review: Vol. 14: No. 2, pp 187-215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/104.00000156

Publication Date: 09 Apr 2025
© 2025 Christoph Schneider and Oliver Spalt
 
Subjects
 
Keywords
G34G14
Mergers and acquisitionsSize effectsScaling
 

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In this article:
1. Data 
2. Facts in the Data: The Bidder Return-Firm Size Relation 
3. Implications 
4. Beyond Proxies: A Simple Scaling Explanation 
5. Additional Evidence 
6. Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

The impact of size variables on bidder announcement returns can be decomposed into two effects, the “size as proxy effect” which was the focus of the prior M&A literature, and a “scaling effect” which magnifies per-dollar value created in a given deal. Using data of US takeovers from 1981 to 2014, we document that small bidders make better acquisitions than large bidders when they acquire non-public firms, but worse acquisitions when they acquire public firms, which is inconsistent with size as proxy explanations (e.g., size proxying for overconfidence of a firm’s managers or agency problems). The pattern is consistent with scaling, because value created for bidders is on average negative for public target deals, but positive for non-public target deals. Scaling creates additional predictions for target size, relative size, and international M&A deals we show are borne out by the data.

DOI:10.1561/104.00000156

Online Appendix | 104.00000156_app.pdf

This is the article’s accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/104.00000156_app