The institutional based view of strategy aims at bringing institutional factors to our understanding of how and why firms develop successful strategies. Existing literature has thus investigated the importance of institutions for international entry strategies, the development of innovative strategies, or the degree of vertical integration that firms should adopt. What is still currently missing, however, is an exploration of how institutional dimensions impacts competitive rivalry. In this paper, we tackle this question by examining how differences in the degree of development of the institutional environments, where acquiring, target and rival firms operate, impact rivals’ performance upon M&A announcement of their competitors. We argue that formal and informal institutions should have two opposite effects: while large differences in informal institutions between the acquirer and the target should make a M&A more difficult, and should thus positively impact rivals, the opposite should be true for differences in formal insitutions. In addition, we also show that the rivals’ own institutional environment should affect their ability to tackle competitive threats from M&As of competitors, and should therefore mitigate the main effects. We test this theory on a sample of M&As and find broad empirical support.

Formal Versus Informal Institutions and the Competitive Impact of International Mergers and Acquisitions

Pinelli M;
2021-01-01

Abstract

The institutional based view of strategy aims at bringing institutional factors to our understanding of how and why firms develop successful strategies. Existing literature has thus investigated the importance of institutions for international entry strategies, the development of innovative strategies, or the degree of vertical integration that firms should adopt. What is still currently missing, however, is an exploration of how institutional dimensions impacts competitive rivalry. In this paper, we tackle this question by examining how differences in the degree of development of the institutional environments, where acquiring, target and rival firms operate, impact rivals’ performance upon M&A announcement of their competitors. We argue that formal and informal institutions should have two opposite effects: while large differences in informal institutions between the acquirer and the target should make a M&A more difficult, and should thus positively impact rivals, the opposite should be true for differences in formal insitutions. In addition, we also show that the rivals’ own institutional environment should affect their ability to tackle competitive threats from M&As of competitors, and should therefore mitigate the main effects. We test this theory on a sample of M&As and find broad empirical support.
2021
AIB Academy of International Business 2021 Online Conference
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10278/3753234
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