Author List: Tanriverdi, Hôseyin; Uysal, Vahap Bôlent;
Information Systems Research, 2011, Volume 22, Issue 4, Page 703-720.
This study develops and tests the idea that the cross-business information technology integration (CBITI) capability of an acquirer creates significant value for shareholders of the acquirer in mergers and acquisitions (M&A). In M&A, integrating the IT systems and IT management processes of acquirer and target could generate benefits such as (a) the consolidation of IT resources and the reduction of overall IT costs of the combined firm, (b) the development of an IT-based coordination mechanism and the realization of cross-firm business synergies, (c) the minimization of potential disruptions to business operations, and (d) greater ability to comply with relevant laws and regulations and the reduction of regulatory compliance costs. We test these ideas in a sample of 141 acquisitions conducted by 86 Fortune 1000 firms. In the short run, acquirers that have high levels of CBITI capabilities receive positive and significant cumulative abnormal returns to their M&A announcements. Announcement period returns indicate that the capital markets value CBITI similarly in sameindustry and different-industry acquisitions. In the long run, acquirers with high levels of CBITI capabilities obtain significantly higher abnormal operating performance. They create significantly greater value in complementary acquisitions from different industries than in related acquisitions from the same industry. The findings have important implications for M&A research and practice.
Keywords: corporate mergers and acquisitions; cross-business IT integration; long-run abnormal operating performance; short-run abnormal stock returns
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#59 0.200 capabilities capability firm firms performance resources business information technology firm's resource-based competitive it-enabled view study value infrastructure results organizational model
#176 0.200 e-commerce value returns initiatives market study announcements stock event abnormal companies significant growth positive using methodology investments period time initiative
#29 0.136 industry industries firms relative different use concentration strategic acquisitions measure competitive examine increases competition influence result characteristics mergers industry-level functions
#271 0.105 technology investments investment information firm firms profitability value performance impact data higher evidence diversification industry payoff return findings decisions greater
#127 0.077 systems information research theory implications practice discussed findings field paper practitioners role general important key grounded researchers domain new identified
#132 0.064 likelihood multiple test survival promotion reputation increase actions run term likely legitimacy important rates findings long short higher argue prior
#106 0.053 integration present offer processes integrating current discuss perspectives related quality literature integrated benefits measures potential regarding issues finally taken propose