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Mergers and acquisitions

IB Business Management • Unit 1

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🤝 Mergers and Acquisitions

Big Idea: A merger is when two businesses agree to combine as equals. An acquisition is when one business buys and takes control of another, either with agreement (friendly) or without (hostile).

Features of a merger

  • Two companies combine into one new entity
  • Usually similar size, a combination of equals
  • Both sets of shareholders must vote to approve
  • Creates a new company name and structure
  • Aims to achieve synergies, where combined value is greater than separate value

Features of an acquisition

  • One company buys another
  • The acquiring company takes control
  • Can be friendly or hostile
  • The acquired company may keep its name or be absorbed into the buyer
  • The buyer often pays a premium above market price to persuade shareholders to sell
Merger = agreed combination. Acquisition or takeover = one buys another (friendly or hostile). 🎯

Why businesses merge or acquire

  • Economies of scale: combined operations reduce average costs through bulk buying and shared facilities
  • Market share growth: instantly gain the other company’s customers and market position
  • Diversification: entering new markets or product areas reduces risk
  • Eliminate competition: buying a competitor removes them from the market
  • Access resources: gain technology, patents, talented employees, or distribution networks
  • Speed: much faster than organic growth for entering new markets or gaining capabilities
A large soft drinks company acquires a small health drinks brand to access a growing market, use existing distribution, and prevent competitors buying the brand first.

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Potential problems

  • Culture clash: employees may have different values and working styles, reducing productivity
  • Redundancies: duplicated roles can lead to job losses and low morale
  • Integration difficulties: combining IT systems, processes and supply chains is complex and expensive
  • High cost: acquisitions require major funding, often through debt
  • Regulatory blocks: competition authorities may block deals that reduce competition
  • Failure to achieve synergies: expected benefits may not happen
In comparisons of organic growth vs M&A, discuss speed (M&A faster), risk (M&A riskier), cost (M&A more expensive), and control (organic growth often gives more control).

🤝 Mergers and Acquisitions

Big Idea: A merger is when two businesses agree to combine as equals. An acquisition is when one business buys and takes control of another -- either with agreement (friendly) or without (hostile).

Features of a merger

  • Two companies combine into one new entity
  • Usually similar size -- combination of equals
  • Both sets of shareholders must vote to approve
  • Creates a new company with a potentially new name and structure
  • Aims to achieve synergies -- the combined business is worth more than the two separate parts

Features of an acquisition

  • One company buys another
  • The acquiring company takes control
  • Can be friendly (target agrees) or hostile (target resists)
  • The acquired company may keep its name or be absorbed into the buyer
  • The buyer pays a premium above the market price to persuade shareholders to sell
Merger = agreed combination. Acquisition/takeover = one buys another (friendly or hostile). 🎯

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Why businesses merge or acquire

  • Economies of scale -- combined operations reduce average costs through bulk buying, shared facilities
  • Market share growth -- instantly gain the other company's customers and market position
  • Diversification -- entering new markets or product areas reduces risk
  • Eliminate competition -- buying a competitor removes them from the market
  • Access resources -- gain technology, patents, talented employees, or distribution networks
  • Speed -- much faster than organic growth for entering new markets or gaining capabilities
A large soft drinks company acquires a small health drinks brand. Reasons: access to the growing health-conscious market (diversification), use existing distribution network to sell health drinks everywhere (synergy), and prevent a competitor from acquiring the brand first (strategic defence).

Potential problems

  • Culture clash -- employees from different companies may have very different values, working styles and expectations, leading to conflict and reduced productivity
  • Redundancies -- duplicated roles mean job losses, damaging morale and community relations
  • Integration difficulties -- combining IT systems, processes, supply chains and management structures is complex and expensive
  • High cost -- acquisitions require significant capital, often funded by debt
  • Regulatory blocks -- competition authorities may block the deal if it creates a monopoly
  • Failure to achieve synergies -- the expected benefits may not materialise
In exam comparisons of organic growth vs M&A, discuss four key dimensions: speed (M&A faster), risk (M&A riskier), cost (M&A more expensive), and control (organic growth = more control).

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