Discussion paper

DP5977 Industry Concentration and Welfare - On the Use of Stock Market Evidence from Horizontal Mergers

There is diverging empirical evidence on the competitive effects of horizontal mergers: consumer prices (and thus presumably competitors' profits) often rise while competitors' share prices fall. Our model of endogenous mergers provides a possible reconciliation. It is demonstrated that anticompetitive mergers may reduce competitors' share prices, if the merger announcement informs the market that the competitors' lost a race to buy the target. Also the use of 'first rumour' as an event may create similar problems of interpretation. We also indicate how the event-study methodology may be adapted to identiy competitive effects and thus, the welfare consequences for consumers.

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Citation

Stennek, J and S Fridolfsson (2006), ‘DP5977 Industry Concentration and Welfare - On the Use of Stock Market Evidence from Horizontal Mergers‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5977. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp5977