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Title: 

The Psychology of Pricing in Mergers and Acquisitions

Authors: Wurgler, Jeffrey
Pan, Xin
Baker, Malcolm
Issue Date: 28-May-2009
Series/Report no.: FIN-09-001
Abstract: Psychology-driven pricing practices are evident in mergers and acquisitions. In particular, offer prices are highly influenced by the target’s 52-week high stock price. This price likely serves as a psychological anchor—a starting point from which actual bid prices do not sufficiently adjust to reflect only current information (Tversky and Kahneman (1974)). Bidders who pursue targets with 52-week highs that are well above their current prices experience more negative offer announcement effects; their investors appear to perceive such bids as more likely to be overpaying. The probability of deal success is discontinuously increased by offering the target a price above its 52-week high, indicating that psychology-driven prices have real effects.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/28091
Appears in Collections:Finance Working Papers

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