Investment Bank Market
Share, Contingent Fee Payments and the Performance of
Acquiring Firms
P. Raghavendra Rau
Krannert School of Management, Purdue University
This paper investigates the determinants of the market
share of investment banks acting as advisors in mergers
and tender offers. It also examines the relation between
bank market share, incentive fee structure and acquiror
performance in mergers and tender offers. In both mergers
and tender offers, I find a positive relation between
the percentage of deals completed in the past by the
bank and its subsequent market share. There is no relation
between the market share of the bank and the performance
of the acquirors advised by the bank in previous years.
In addition, in tender offers, I find a positive relationship
between investment bank market share and the contingent
fee payments charged by the bank and a negative relationship
between market share (and contingent fee payments) and
the post-acquisition performance of the acquiror, suggesting
that the contingent fee structure in tender offers is
used to ensure that investment banks focus on completing
the deal.
It has been published in the Journal
of Financial Economics. A PDF version of the paper
is available at the Elsevier
site. Access to this site is controlled through
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This paper has been presented at
- Loyola University,
Chicago, October 1998;
- Indian
Institute of Management, Bangalore, India December
1997;
- Stockholm
School of Economics, Stockholm, March 1997;
- Financial Management
Association, Hawaii, October 1997
- Western
Finance Association, San Diego, June 1997;
- European
Finance Association, Fontainebleau, August 1998;
- European Financial
Management Association, Lisbon, June 1998;
It has been referenced in
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