The emergence and performance of the Chinese merger market and the impact of partner location
Wilfred Dolfsma () and
Killian McCarthy
Journal of Chinese Economic and Business Studies, 2018, vol. 16, issue 1, 39-58
Abstract:
Chinese acquirers spent $38 million on mergers and acquisitions in 1990, and $666.1 billion on mergers and acquisitions in 2016. As the Chinese merger market has grown, so too has the literature on its performance. Little is known, however, about with whom Chinese firms can best do business. We aim to fill this gap. We suggest that because the liabilities of distance, foreignness, and outsideness complicate acquisition performance, targets in countries and regions which add fewer of these liabilities will outperform those that add more. We plot the overseas expansion of Chinese acquirers, and compare the performance of Chinese acquisitions, within the Greater China region, within the Confucian cultural sphere, and between Asian and the West. In each case, we predict that increasing cultural distance decreases performance. Then, because the Continental European governance system is institutionally more familiar to the Chinese system than it is to the Anglo-Saxon system, we consider the Chinese experience in each of these two systems. Our results largely support our hypotheses built on the partner location performance hierarchy argument, but we also point to the limits of the generalizability of existing literature in understanding the Chinese market.
Date: 2018
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:taf:jocebs:v:16:y:2018:i:1:p:39-58
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DOI: 10.1080/14765284.2017.1410377
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