The price of bank mergers in the 1990s.
Brewer III, Elijah ; Jackson III, William E. ; Jagtiani, Julapa A. 等
Introduction and summary
The last decade has witnessed an unprecedented pace of bank mergers
and acquisitions. Between 1990 and 1998, the number averaged about 510
per year compared with 345 per year over the 1980--89 period. As a
result of this activity, the number of banks operating in the U.S. has
declined about 30 percent since 1990. In this article, we examine the
primary motivations for this massive wave of bank mergers during the
1990s by analyzing the market prices of these mergers. A better
understanding of the factors that determine market prices for bank
mergers will shed some light on the implications of continuing mergers
and acquisitions in the banking industry. We recognize that rapidly
changing supply and demand conditions are fundamental to understanding
what drives bank merger markets. For example, bank mergers may be driven
by a desire to reduce overall risk by diversifying into new geographic
or product markets. Additionally, bank mergers may be motivated by a
strategic decision to exploit economies of scale, or t o cut overhead
and eliminate duplication by closing branches, or to achieve synergies
through economies of scope. Of course, bank mergers may also be an
attempt by banks to simply increase their market power or to quickly
grow into superregional or money center banks.
To some extent, each of these motivations, and resultant strategies, became more feasible in the 1990s with the relaxing of state
and federal restrictions on banks' activities. For example, the
Riegle--Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994
allowed banks to branch interstate by consolidating existing
out-of-state bank subsidiaries or by acquiring banks or individual
branches through mergers and acquisitions. Prior to the Riegle--Neal
Act, federal and state laws prevented banks from expanding across state
lines (with some exceptions). [1] The Riegle--Neal Act allowed bank
holding companies to acquire banks in any state, effective September 29,
1995, and allowed mergers between banks located in different states
beginning June 1, 1997. [2]
On November 12, 1999, President Clinton signed the Financial
Services Modernization Act (Gramm-Leach--Bliley Act of 1999), allowing
banks to merge with securities firms and insurance companies within
financial holding companies. This will further expand the merger
opportunities for banking organizations and may lead to a new wave of
consolidation in banking and other sectors of the financial services
industry.
Another potential regulatory effect on bank merger trends is the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act (FDICIA) of 1991.
FDICIA introduced mandatory procedures called prompt corrective actions
(PCA), which require regulators to promptly close depository institutions when their capital falls below predetermined quantitative
standards, thus eliminating the possibility of regulators providing
special consideration to large banks because of the possible systemic impact of large bank failure. Therefore, the notion of
"too-big-to-fail" should be less relevant since FDICIA.
However, an increase of megamergers has been noticeable in the mid- to
late-1990s.
Some research suggests that too-big-to-fail may have been one of
the reasons for the rise in megamergers in the 1990s (see Kane, 1998).
This is an important policy issue because previous research raises the
possibility that banking organizations seek to become larger to increase
the probability that the FDIC will cover 100 percent of their deposits.
While most of the mergers between large publicly traded banks in the
early and mid- 1980s were not due to attempts to exploit deposit
insurance, the too-big-to-fail consideration may have been important in
megamergers of the 1990s (Benston, Hunter, and Wall, 1995; Hunter and
Wall, 1989; and Boyd and Graham, 1991). [3] In this article, we examine
the distinguishing characteristics of these megamergers.
Obviously, merger prices play an important role in the rise in bank
mergers in the last decade. We analyze two types of prices commonly
employed by both regulators and analysts: the merger bid premiums
offered for a target bank, defined as the ratio of the market price
offered for the target to the book value of equity of the target bank,
and the excess stock returns earned by shareholders of the target bank
around the merger announcement date.
We examine whether prices offered to target banks have been
increasing over time. Increased prices would tend to make bank owners
more willing to sell. There are theoretical reasons why prices must
either increase or decrease as restrictions on expansion are reduced
(Adkisson and Fraser, 1990). First, prior to Riegle-Neal, the number of
potential bidders for a given target bank was limited by laws governing intrastate and interstate acquisitions. The removal of these
restrictions should increase the demand for target banks as the number
of potential bidders increases, resulting in higher acquisition prices.
Thus, higher prices should be observed in the post-Riegle-Neal
environment.
Alternatively, acquisition prices could be lower when restrictions
are removed. Restrictions on geographical expansion form a barrier to
entry that provides a bank with a protected niche and permits it to earn
excess profits. These excess profits become part of the price in merger
negotiations. Decreasing the barriers to entry reduces the excess
profits and thereby lowers merger prices. By ensuring that they earn
only normal profits, lowering the barriers to entry may increase
substitutability among target banks, enlarging--from the acquirer's
perspective--the effective supply of alternatives. Under the barriers to
entry hypothesis, lower prices should be observed in the
post-Riegle-Neal environment.
During the late 1970s and 1980s, individual states took steps, as
permitted by the Douglas Amendment to the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956, to allow acquisition of banks in their states by bank holding
companies headquartered in other states. The Bank Holding Company Act
permitted multibank holding companies to acquire bank subsidiaries only
to the extent allowed by the laws of the state in which the proposed
target bank resided. Many states allowed acquisition by holding
companies headquartered in only a limited number of states. Other states
allowed entry from all states.
States in several regions developed formal compacts or treaties to
allow entry from states in the region. The states in the Southeast
formed the most cohesive unit, generally allowing entry from other
states in the region and excluding entry from states outside the region
(Savage, 1993). We use a Southeast indicator to test whether target
banks in the Southeast received higher bid premiums than banks in other
parts of the country.
In addition to examining how bank merger prices have changed over
the 1990s and whether target banks in the Southeast receive higher bid
premiums than other banks, we determine how prices are correlated with
the financial characteristics of target banks and their market
structure. As with any investment, the target bank's value to the
acquiring bank should reflect its present discounted value of future net
cash flows. At a minimum, the bid price should reflect the stand-alone value of the net assets of the target bank and the net cash flows from
higher-valued deposit insurance as a result of the proposed merger.
Market structure, consisting of the number, size distribution, and
market share of banks, influences the degree of competition and, thus,
determines a bank's profitability. An often used measure of the
degree of competition in banking markets is the Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index (HHI), which is calculated by adding together the squares of the
deposit shares of participants in a banking market and multiplying by
10,000. This index equals 10,000 for a monopoly market, and takes on
lower values as more banks enter the market. For example, if there are
five firms in a market and their deposit shares are 20 percent each, the
HHI would be computed as follows: [[(.2).sup.2] + [(.2).sup.2] +
[(.2).sup.2] + [(.2).sup.2] + [(.2).sup.2]] X 10,000 = 2,000. Antitrust regulators use this measure to screen bank merger applications for
potential anticompetitive effects.
In theory, target banks in markets with relatively high HHIs and,
thus, operating in less competitive markets tend to receive high bid
offers. A factor counterbalancing this tendency is the bank merger
review process enforcing the U.S. Department of Justice's (DOJ)
merger guidelines. This review Process could result in divestitures of
banking offices as a condition of approval. Thus, the price an acquirer
is willing to pay for a target bank should reflect the probable reaction
of the antitrust authorities. If the merger review process works well,
participating in a merger does not give banks greater market power. One
way to analyze the effectiveness of the process is to determine the
effects of market concentration on bid premiums. Bid premiums should be
higher for targets in more concentrated markets.
We find a variety of interesting and important results. We find
that higher performing targets, as measured by both return on equity and
return on assets, receive higher bids. We also find that the lower the
capital-to-deposit ratio, the larger the bid the acquiring bank is
willing to offer. This may be because the target bank is funding its
assets with relatively cheap funds. Additionally, we find that larger
targets' loan-to-assets ratios are correlated with larger bid
premiums, although this effect is not statistically significant. Bank
size is positively related to bid premiums. Market concentration is not
significantly correlated with bid premiums, reflecting the difficulties
of applying our measure of concentration to banking organizations whose
geographic scope and product mix may be broader than the local market
area.
Prior to Riegle--Neal, prices paid for target banks in the
Southeast regional compact tended to be higher than in other areas,
perhaps reflecting the barrier to entry that provides the target in that
region with a protected niche and permits it to earn excess profits.
After Riegle--Neal, the Southeast effect was not significant. Overall,
however, the price for target banks tends to be larger during the
post-Riegle--Neal period, possibly because of the increase in the actual
or potential number of bidders. Because Riegle--Neal provides increased
interstate branching and banking opportunities, the demand for targets
should increase as the universe of bidders increases, resulting in
higher acquisition prices. Thus, we observe higher prices in the
post-Riegle--Neal environment.
To get a better sense of how bank mergers are priced, we use daily
stock return data to examine the stock market reaction to news of an
announced merger. Results of this test are especially useful to
interpret the wave of large bank mergers. If banks are using their
increased freedom to merge in a way intended to increase the value of
their deposit insurance, then megamergers should generate high bid
premiums and, thus, greater than expected stock market returns than
other types of mergers. However, bank managers may also pursue mergers
to enhance their salary, perquisites, and personal prestige. As a
result, high bid premiums for large banking organizations may be related
to several different motivations, many of which will tend to lead to
high merger prices.
A countervailing factor in large bank mergers, however, is the
difficulty of merging two large banking organization or two
organizations of equal size. According to organization theorists,
melding cultures in a merger is more difficult and costly when the
target is closer in size to the acquirer. If the short-run costs are a
positive function of size and these costs outweigh the value of
increased access to deposit insurance, then we would expect to see an
inverse relationship between size and merger prices (Benston, Hunter,
and Wall, 1995). Our stock return results suggest that the stock market
views large bank mergers more favorably than small bank mergers. The
unexpected stock returns for large bank targets are more than double
those of small targets.
Our results suggest that changes in state and federal banking
regulations have a significant impact on bank merger activity in
general, and bank merger prices in particular. Furthermore, by
restricting the types of merger transactions that can take place, state
and federal interstate and intrastate banking laws may have had
unintended consequences. Because restrictions on geographical expansion
form a barrier to entry that provides a bank with a protected market and
permits it to earn excess profits, we observe higher bid premiums in
Southeast compact states relative to other parts of the country. Once
these restrictions were removed with the passage of Riegle--Neal in
1994, bid premiums were no longer higher in the Southeast states than in
other states. However, they rose overall relative to the
pre-Riegle--Neal period. Thus, our results show how federal and state
regulatory policies that restrict interstate branching and banking may
produce very different (and distorted) merger prices relative to
policies that are less restrictive and market driven.
Finally, our results provide empirical evidence that when target
banks are large, but not megamergers of equals, there is a greater stock
market reaction to the merger announcement than for other target banks.
This is consistent with the notion that large banks are using their
increased freedom to merge in a way intended to increase the value of
their deposit insurance. A partial explanation for the recent wave of
mergers, especially megamergers, may be the desire of merging
institutions to obtain a size level sufficient to place them in the
too-big-to-fail category. This is an important issue for policymakers,
who are concerned about controlling bank risk-taking propensities and
minimizing the loss exposure of the federal deposit insurance funds.
Thus, size is important in merger decisions because larger institutions
may have increased access to deposit insurance. This greater access
tends to be reflected in the stock market reactions to merger
announcements.
Regulatory background
Opportunity for nationwide branch banking
Figure 1 shows that the number of banking organizations in the U.S.
has decreased by about 40 percent since 1980. This decline is related to
the surge in the number of bank mergers--225 per year during the early
1980s compared with 580 per year during the late 1990s. The share of
domestic deposits held by the nation's ten largest commercial banks
nearly doubled from about 19 percent in 1980 to 37 percent in 1998
(DeYoung, 1999). Table 1 provides further evidence of the consolidation
trend in banking, which has occurred contemporaneously with the
reduction in restrictions on interstate banking and branching.
As mentioned earlier, under Riegle-Neal, banks have been permitted
to engage in nationwide branch banking since June 1, 1997. This
liberalization made possible the merger of large banking organizations
to create true nationwide banking in the U.S.
However, Riegle-Neal was only the final piece of legislation in a
long line of banking deregulation at the state level. Historically,
restrictions on banks' ability to expand geographically have been
among the primary determinants of the structure of commercial banking in
the U.S (Frieder, 1988; and Cornett and De, 1991a). Concerns about undue
concentration of banking resources and that banks might exercise their
market power by setting high prices and restricting service led to the
imposition of restrictions at both the state and national levels. The
McFadden Act of 1927 restricted nationally chartered banks'
branching ability to the same extent allowed to state-chartered banks.
The Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 prevented multibank holding
companies (MBHCs) from acquiring existing banks or chartering new banks
in states other than their home state. The Douglas Amendment of the 1956
act allowed MBHCs to acquire banks only to the extent permitted by the
laws of the state of the target bank. Even the Riegle --Neal Act limits
the market share that a banking organization can hold nationwide or in
any given state. The act established a 10 percent nationwide deposit
concentration limit on organizations making interstate acquisitions and
a uniform 30 percent statewide limit (unless a state chooses a different
limit).
The first state statutes permitting entry to out-of-state MBHCs in
accordance with the Douglas Amendment were enacted in 1975 and 1982 by
Maine and Alaska, respectively. By the late 1980s, 41 states and the
District of Columbia had passed similar laws (Amel, 1986; Frieder, 1988;
and Cornett and De, 199la). Moreover, several states formed reciprocal regional banking pacts to allow banks in pact states to acquire targets
in other pact states. For example, prior to the Riegle--Neal Act,
Wisconsin's regional reciprocal law allowed entry by acquisition
for banking organizations from Illinois, Iowa, Indiana, Kentucky,
Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, and Ohio as long as those states allowed
acquisitions by Wisconsin banks in their markets (Saunders, 1997).
Antitrust statutes and authorities
The federal statutes that govern bank mergers are the Bank Holding
Company Act, the Bank Merger Act of 1960, and section 7 of the Clayton
Act of 1914. The DOJ has general enforcement authority over all merger
and acquisition activities and has established basic guidelines to cover
the evaluation of competitive issues (Jackson, 1992; and Kwast,
Starr-McCluer, and Wolken, 1997). Box 1 provides a discussion of the
antitrust legal standards.
Under the Bank Merger Act the three federal regulatory
agencies--the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the
office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC)--are required to take into account the
competitive effects of a proposed merger. The agency to which a merger
application should be submitted depends on the "resultant banking
organization." If the resultant banking organization is a nonmember federally insured bank, the application needs to be made to the FDIC. If
the resultant banking organization is a state member bank, the
application needs to be made to the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank,
and if it is a national bank, the merger application should be made to
the OCC. In addition to the powers provided in the Bank Merger Act, the
Federal Reserve System derives its legal authority over bank mergers
from the Bank Holding Company Act, which prohibits a bank holding
company from acquiring a bank unless the bank holding company has rece
ived prior approval from the Federal Reserve System. The DOJ may prevent
consummation of the merger within 30 days of the approval from the
relevant federal agency. After this 30-day period, the merger is immune
from the DOJ and other private party litigation.
Antitrust guidelines
The regulators have adopted the DOJ's numerical criteria for
assessing the impact of a merger or acquisition on competition. These
criteria, first issued in 1968, were updated in June 1982 based on the
HHI. In evaluating a merger application, antitrust authorities consider
both the level of post-merger HHI and the change in the HHI resulting
from the proposed transaction (see table 2). [4] If the post-merger
market HHI is lower than 1,800 points, or the increase in the index from
the pre-merger situation is less than 200 points (or 50 points in
industries other than banking), [5] the merger is presumed to have no
anticompetitive effects and is generally approved by regulators. The
Federal Reserve uses the acquiring firm's market share as an
additional merger screen. A merger is likely to raise concerns if the
acquirer's pro forma market share exceeds 35 percent.
When a merger application violates the guidelines, regulators
consider mitigating factors that would offset the anticompetitive
effects of the proposed transaction. These factors include competitive
viability of the target, presence of active competition from thrifts and
other financial institutions in the market, competition from
out-of-market financial institutions, and market attractiveness. These
factors are weighted against the increase in concentration. If the
increase in concentration is too large to be justified by mitigating
factors, divestiture of some branches and offices may bring the
concentration indicator close to or below the DOJ guidelines.
Consequently, very few bank mergers are denied due to antitrust
concerns. However, the official statistics do not include applications
that are voluntarily withdrawn when consultation with regulatory
agencies indicates they would be found to be anticompetitive.
Effects of geographical deregulation on bank acquisition prices
The literature suggests two competing hypotheses to explain how
geographic deregulation might affect the prices paid for bank
acquisitions (Adkisson and Fraser, 1990). Under the excess demand
theory, prices of acquisitions should increase as restrictions on
expansion are reduced. Prior to Riegle-Neal, the number of potential
bidders for a target bank was limited by state law governing intrastate
and interstate acquisitions.
As noted above, during the late 1970 and 1980s, some states formed
regional banking pacts to allow banks to merge with or acquire targets
in pact states (see details in table 3). Other states allowed nationwide
entry with reciprocal arrangements. As these restrictions are removed,
the demand for targets should increase as the universe of bidders
increases, resulting in higher acquisition prices. Thus, all else being
equal, higher prices should be observed as states liberalize their
interstate banking laws and in the postRiegle-Neal environment.
Conversely, the barrier to entry theory predicts that merger prices
will be lower when bank acquisition laws are more liberal. Geographical
expansion restrictions form a barrier to entry that provides the target
with a protected niche and permits it to earn excess profits. Decreasing
the barriers to entry reduces the excess profits and thereby lowers
merger prices. By ensuring that they earn only normal profits, lowering
the barriers to entry may increase substitutability among target banks,
enlarging (from the acquirer's perspective) the effective supply of
alternatives. Thus, lower prices should be observed in regional compact
states and in the post-Riegle--Neal environment.
There are at least two approaches to calculating the price offered
by acquirers for targets. One approach measures the size of the merger
premium (or bid premium). More attractive targets receive higher bid
premiums. The second approach uses stock return data and is usually
called the event study approach. Under this approach, excess returns (or
abnormal returns) are computed around the merger announcement date (see
box 2).
Literature review and our contribution
Previous studies on mergers and acquisitions of nonfinancial firms
have produced mixed results about the determinants of merger premiums.
It is even more complicated to identify the determinants of these
premiums in the banking industry due to the high level of governmental
regulations and monitoring. In addition to characteristics of the deal,
the target, and the acquiring banks, regulatory environments in both
acquiring and target bank states tend to affect the bid premiums (see
Palia, 1993). The analysis of bank merger premiums is further
complicated by regulatory uncertainty (see Desai and Stover, 1985). All
bank mergers require time-consuming regulatory approval, making hostile
takeovers extremely difficult to execute.
Previous bank studies (Beatty, Santomero, and Smirlock, 1987;
Cheng, Gup, and Wall, 1989; Fraser and Kolari, 1988; Rogowski and
Simonson, 1989; and Rose, 1991), find that asset size, profitability,
management, leverage, means of payment, and whether the mergers are
interstate or intrastate are significant in determining the bid premiums
or explaining the stock market's reaction to bank merger
announcements.
The literature suggests that size is important in determining the
bid premiums offered to the target, but less important in determining
the abnormal returns. For example, Desai and Stover (1985) find that the
relative size of target and acquiring banks has no significant impact on
the abnormal returns around the announcement date. However, Shawky,
Kilb, and Staas (1996) find that smaller targets tend to be offered a
larger bid premium, and Palia (1993) finds that the relative size of
targets and acquiring banks is important in explaining the variation in
the bid premiums.
With regard to profitability and capital, Shawky, Kilb, and Staas
(1996) find that higher bid premiums tend to be offered to target banks
with larger returns on equity and those with higher leverage. The latter
result suggests that higher leverage may be associated with more
efficient use of capital.
Whether the merger deals are stock exchange offers or cash offers
may also affect the abnormal returns and the bid premiums--because of
the differential tax implications associated with these offers. The
market may view a cash offer positively for the acquirer, because it
allows the acquiring bank to increase the depreciation tax shield as the
depreciation basis of the acquired assets rises to the market value.
However, the market may view it negatively for the target, because it
imposes a greater immediate tax burden on target shareholders. However,
the market may view a cash offer negatively for the acquirer and
positively for the target if the acquirer's share price is
relatively overvalued. Shawky, Kilb, and Staas (1996) find tat the bid
premiums offered to target banks are larger for stock deals (rather than
cash payment), supporting the acquirer's overvalued stock
hypothesis. However, Cornett and De (199lb) find that mergers financed
with only stock or only cash produce higher abnormal returns to targe t
shareholders than those financed with combinations of stock and cash.
Interestingly, previous studies on nonbank mergers find medium of
payment to be unimportant (Eckbo and Langohr, 1989; and Travlos, 1987).
Rhoades (1987) suggests that geographical expansion may be a
primary motivation for bank mergers. Palia (1993) and Shawky, Kilb, and
Staas (1996) find that the bid premiums offered to target banks are
larger for out-of-state mergers than intrastate mergers. Using
interstate bank mergers, Cornett and De (199la) find significant
positive announcement period abnormal returns for both target and
acquiring banks. Again, this contrasts with findings for nonbank
mergers, suggesting that bank mergers are different and, thus, the
results for nonbank mergers cannot be generalized to the banking sector.
Examining the postmerger performance of large bank mergers between
1982 and 1987, Cornett and Tehranian (1992) find that merged banks tend
to perform better than the banking industry overall. This superior
performance resulted from improvements in the merged banks' ability
to attract loans and deposits, employee productivity, and asset growth.
(For a recent literature review on bank merger performance, see Berger,
DeYoung, Genay, and Udell, 2000.)
Cornett and Tehranian (1992) examine operating cash flows as well
as several accounting variables of the merged banks for one to three
years after the mergers. Recognizing that accounting data are not
perfect measures of economic performance, they utilize both accounting
and market data to determine whether stock price gains associated with
mergers announcement (short run) are the result of real economic gains
(long run). Interestingly, they find a significant correlation between
announcement-period abnormal stock returns and the various long-term
performance measures, and conclude that market participants are able to
identify in advance the improved performance associated with bank
acquisitions. [6] We focus on short-term performance, using market data,
rather than testing whether mergers will result in efficiency gains or
improved long-run performance.
Overall, the empirical results presented in the previous studies
have been mixed and largely depend on the sample period, sample
observations, and methodology. We reexamine this issue using more recent
and more complete data on bank mergers. Our results are more applicable
to current policy issues than previous studies, given the rapidly
evolving environment the banking industry faces.
The data
We obtained details of all bank mergers and acquisitions from 1990
to mid-1998 from the Security Data Corporation (SDC). To be included in
our sample, both the target and bidding banks must be publicly traded.
[7] We obtained financial data from the quarterly call reports and bank
holding company Y9 reports, as of yearend prior to the merger
announcement date. Stock market returns for target banks and the stock
market index are from the Center for Research in Security Prices data
tape. The merger announcement date, target name, acquirer name, value of
the deal, bid premium, and other characteristics of the merger
announcement are from the SDC database. We obtained the HHIs for various
banking markets from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Banking agencies consider a local, economically integrated area to
be a banking market. In practice, this usually means a city, a
metropolitan statistical area (MSA), or a rural county. We matched the
target bank's headquarters with an MSA or county. This does not
allow us to consider a target bank present in several different market
areas and points to the difficulty of using local market concentration
measures for banking organizations that have broad geographical scope
and product mix. The price that a bank offers (or accepts) reflects the
activities of the entire organization.
The methodology
We use a regression model that relates a target bank bid premium to
profitability, asset size, financial leverage, loan quality, Southeast
indicator variable, Riegle--Neal indicator variable, and a concentration
measure. A formal discussion of the model is presented in box 3.
To capture the profitability of a target banking organization, we
include the return on equity and the return on assets in the year before
the merger announcement date. We expect the sign on profitability to be
positive, as higher profits are more attractive.
We include a variable that measures the size of each target. Bank
size, as measured by the natural logarithm of total assets, may be
either positively or negatively associated with the attractiveness of a
given target. A positive coefficient for this variable would be
consistent with the hypothesis that potential bidders look for
significant targets that participate in significant markets. A negative
coefficient, if found, may reflect the cost of melding the culture of a
large target bank with that of the acquirer.
Banking organizations are required by regulation to meet minimum
capital requirements. This regulation is aimed at reducing the
risk-taking propensities of bank shareholders. That is, capital acts as
a form of co-insurance with federal deposit insurance. We include the
leverage ratio, defined as the capital-to-deposit ratio, in the year
before the merger announcement date. We expect the sign on the leverage
ratio to be negative. A high capital-to-deposit ratio may be an
indication that the target banking organization is using capital
inefficiently. This argument is consistent with Beatty, Santomero, and
Smirlock (1987), Fraser and Kolari (1988), and Rogowski and Simonson
(1989). A well-capitalized acquirer seeks target banks that offer an
ample inexpensive source of funds.
Because loans are usually the most illiquid and subject to the
greatest default risk of all bank assets, a bank's risk is greatly
influenced by the quality of its loan portfolio. The ratio of loans to
total assets measures the potential effects of loan losses on assets and
equity and the illiquidity of assets. According to our hypothesis, the
greater the proportion of loans to total assets, the greater the
potential for loan losses and the lower the liquidity of assets, ceteris
paribus. Everything else held constant, this should lead to a lower bid
premium. However, because loans offer the potential for geographical
diversification, the loan portfolio could have a positive impact on the
bid premium. Thus, we include the ratio of net chargeoffs to loans to
capture asset quality more directly.
Another hypothesis we examine is whether state and federal laws on
interstate and intrastate branching and banking influence the price
offered for target banks. To capture whether the Southeast regional
compact led to differences in bid premiums, we include a Southeast
indicator variable, which absorbs the effects of all factors that are
common to banks in the Southeast.
Our regression equation also includes an indicator variable that
captures the impact of the Riegle-Neal Act on the bid premium. A
positive coefficient on this variable is consistent with the notion that
the universe of actual or potential bidder has increased, resulting in
higher acquisition prices. A negative coefficient is consistent with the
notion that liberalization of interstate banking laws reduces excess
profits, leading to lower merger prices.
Finally, we include indicator variables for the year of the merger
announcement date from 1990 to mid-1998 to account for the effects of
omitted macroeconomic and other variables that may influence the level
of acquisition activity over time and, thus, the merger premium paid for
a given transaction.
The results
Table 4 provides a summary of selected financial characteristics of
the target, bid premiums, and cumulative abnormal retums (CAR). The
standardized cumulative abnormal returns (SCAR) are the cumulative
abnormal returns adjusted for the error in forecasting the returns (see
box 2). The results show that targets with lower capital-to-asset ratios
and higher profitability (larger return on assets) tend to obtain larger
stock price gains, as measured by CAR and SCAR, around the merger
announcement date than those with high capital-to-asset ratios or lower
profitability. In addition, the stock market abnormal returns around the
announcement of the merger seem to be larger at larger target banks. The
abnormal returns tend to decline as the target's proportion of
loans to assets increases. Similarly, the bid premiums tend to increase
with the target's return on assets, and have become larger in the
post-Riegle-Neal period. Unlike the abnormal returns, the bid premiums
offered for targets seem to be positively corr elated with the loan to
assets ratio.
Table 5 presents the bid premiums and the standardized cumulative
abnormal returns for different target characteristics. The target's
abnormal returns around the merger announcement date are significantly
larger for targets in the Southeast regional compact. Interestingly,
while both the bid premiums and the abnormal returns are generally
larger in the post Riegle--Neal periods (as presented in table 4), they
are significantly smaller for target banks in the Southeast.
The results from both tables 4 and 5 suggest that the bid premiums
are not statistically different among targets with different asset
sizes. However, the stock market reaction (the standardized cumulative
abnormal returns) varies depending on the size of the target banks.
Overall, the larger the target bank, the larger the standardized
cumulative abnormal returns around the merger date (see table 4). [8]
Finally, table 5 shows that the standardized cumulative abnormal returns
are not statistically different whether the target is a bank or thrift.
However, the bid premiums offered for target banks are, on average,
significantly larger then those offered for thrifts.
Table 6 separates the megamerger deals from the rest of the sample.
The pattern of variation of the bid premiums according to target size is
now more evident. Within the large target bank group, there appears to
be a U-shaped relationship between total assets and bid premiums:
relatively high for the lowest quartile of banking organizations,
decreasing to the next quartile, and rising thereafter. There appears to
be little if any noticeable pattern in bid premiums for targets with
total assets less than $10 billion. While returns are smaller for
megamergers of target banks larger than $10 billion than for other
mergers, there is no clear pattern of variation in standardized
cumulative abnormal returns within each group.
Table 7 provides information on market concentration and merger
prices. These numbers suggest that bid premiums increase with
concentration, especially for banks with total assets greater than or
equal to $10 billion. Thus, it appears that large banks pay more for
target banks located in less competitive markets.
Table 8 provides detail on megamergers of targets larger than $10
billion, as well as megamergers of equals--the bid premium and the
standardized cumulative abnormal return around the merger announcement
date are presented for each merger deal. The standardized cumulative
abnormal returns, on average, are much larger for megamergers overall
than for megamergers of equals. The problem of melding the culture of a
large target bank with that of the acquirer is anticipated by the market
to be more serious in megamergers of equals deals. Unlike the
standardized cumulative abnormal returns, the bid premiums are
approximately the same, on average, for both megamergers of equals and
other megamergers.
The statistics presented in tables 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 are averages,
and do not control for the other characteristics of the target, the
acquiring bank, the deal, and the year of the merger. We control for
these characteristics in the regression analysis presented in tables
9-11.
Table 9 presents the regression analysis explaining the bid
premiums offered for targets using the financial characteristics of the
target and selected factors associated with the transaction, based on
equation 1 in box 3. The first three columns present the results using
return on book equity as a measure of profitability. The last three
columns present the results using return on assets as a measure of
profitability. Columns 1 and 4 of table 9 represent the basic model for
each measure of profitability, excluding the time indicator variables
and the composite of the Southeast region compact indicator and the
Riegle--Neal indicator. Columns 2 and 5 expand the basic equation to
include the composite term. Finally, columns 3 and 6 add the time
indicator variables that control for the year of each merger
announcement.
The results in column 1 of table 9 show that more profitable target
banks, as measured by higher return on equity, are offered larger bid
premiums than less profitable targets. The bid premium increases with
the asset size of the target and decreases with the ratio of equity to
deposits, although the effects are not statistically significant.
Similarly, the loan-to-assets and net-chargeoffs-to-loans ratios are
both insignificant in explaining variation in the bid premium across
deals. The results also indicate that bid premiums are larger for target
banks than thrifts, larger for targets located in the Southeast regional
compact, and larger in the post-Riegle--Neal period. The results in
table 9 also suggest that the bid premiums tend to be lower for
megamergers of equals than for other mergers. However, this effect is
not statistically significant at conventional levels.
Table 9, column 2 includes the composite term that interacts the
Riegle--Neal indicator variable with the Southeast regional compact
indicator variable. The total impact on the bid premium for target banks
located in the Southeast regional compact after Riegle--Neal is the sum
of the coefficients on the Southeast regional compact indicator
variable, 0.4459, and the Riegle--Neal and Southeast regional compact
composite indicator variable, -0.2681. Thus, holding everything else
constant, in the post-Riegle--Neal period, bid premiums are lower in the
Southeast regional compact states than in the pre-Riegle--Neal period.
Column 3 of table 9 reports the results of including time indicator
variables (and excluding the Riegle--Neal indicator variable) and the
composite term in the basic regression equation. When we add the time
indicator variables, the coefficient estimates on return on equity,
thrift indicator, and Southeast regional compact indicator are
qualitatively similar to those reported in column 1 of table 9. For
example, the coefficient on the Southeast regional compact indicator
continues to suggest that mergers between banking organizations located
in the Southeast states during the post-Riegle--Neal period result in
higher bid premiums than those in other states. The effect of 0.4333 in
this specification is even greater than the effect of 0.3439 in the
basic model in column 1. In the specification in column 3, both the
asset size of the target banks and the ratio of equity to deposits are
now significantly correlated with bid premiums. The results suggest that
larger target banks receive larger bid premiums. This result is
consistent with the notion that banks are using their increased freedom
to merge in a way intended to increase the value of their deposit
insurance, generating higher bid premiums with higher asset size. The
ratio of equity to deposits (leverage ratio) is significantly negative,
indicating that higher leverage targets are offered larger bid premiums
than other leveraged institutions. These less-capitalized target banks
are viewed by the acquirers as being more efficient in their use of
expensive capital funding; thus, the acquirers are willing to pay a
larger bid premium. Finally, the time indicators suggest that bid
premiums have been increasing over time. For example, merger bid
premiums in 1997 were, on average, 0.6692 percentage points below those
in 1998, while in 1996 they were 1.2543 percentage points below the 1998
level.
Columns 4 to 6 of table 9 report the results of using return on
assets rather than return on equity as a measure of profitability. As in
columns 1 to 3, bid premiums increase with profitability as measured by
return on assets. Moreover, the asset size of the target banks and the
ratio of equity to deposits are statistically significantly related to
bid premiums in almost every empirical specification. The coefficients
on the thrift and Southeast regional compact indicators are roughly the
same as those reported in columns 1-3 of table 9. The model
specification fits well, explaining almost 25 percent of the variation
in the bid premiums offered for targets across all merger deals.
Table 10 uses the target's standardized excess returns as the
dependent variable in the regression equation rather than the bid
premium. As shown in table 10, the standardized excess returns tend to
be greater for more profitable banks. However, the effect is only
marginally significant. On the other hand, there is a greater stock
market reaction for larger target banks, possibly reflecting the fact
that bid premiums tend to increase with target bank asset size. The
coefficient on the megamergers of equals indicator variable is negative
and, in four out of six cases, statistically significant at conventional
levels, indicating that the stock market reacts relatively negatively to
announcements of such mergers. For example, the coefficient estimate in
column 1 of table 10 suggests that standardized excess returns for these
megamergers of equals announcements were 5.92 percentage points less
than for other merger announcements. This negative response may be due
to the higher cost of melding the culture of two large banking
organizations. The Southeast regional compact indicator variable has a
positive coefficient in all six specifications in table 10, showing that
the target's standardized excess returns around the merger
announcement date are significantly larger for targets in the Southeast
regional compact states. The composite term that interacts the
Riegle-Neal and the Southeast regional compact indicators is negative
and statistically significant. Thus, relative to the pre-Riegle-Neal
period, the stock market reaction is less in the post-Riegle-Neal period
to announcements of mergers of banks located in the Southeast regional
compact states. This result is consistent with the notion that bank
merger prices will be lower when bank acquisition laws are more liberal.
The target's standardized excess returns around the merger
announcement date are significantly lower for targets with higher
loan-to-asset ratios. The results indicate that the book value of equity
to total deposits and net-charge-offs-to-loans ratios are insignificant
in explaining variation in standardized excess returns across deals. As
in table 5, the results in table 10 show that standardized excess
returns are not statistically different for banks and thrifts.
Table 11 presents the regression analysis explaining merger prices
using market concentration, in addition to the financial characteristics
of the target and control factors used in tables 9 and 10.
The main results remain pretty much unchanged from table 9. For
example, the coefficient on the Southeast regional compact indicator
continues to be positive, suggesting that mergers between banking
organizations in the Southeast during the post-Riegle--Neal period
result in higher bid premiums (and standardized excess returns, which
are not shown here but are available from the authors) than those in
other states. The results in table 11 indicate that market concentration
is not significant in explaining either the variation in the bid
premiums that the acquiring banks are willing to pay or the standardized
excess returns as a result of the merger announcement, when controlling
for characteristics of the targets and the transactions.
Conclusion
The wave of bank consolidation in the 1990s has dramatically
changed the structure of the U.S. banking industry. The number of banks
has significantly declined, with much fewer smaller banks and more large
superregional and money center banks. The market shares of large banks
have also become much larger as a result of megamergers and mergers of
equals. The rapid pace of bank mergers and acquisitions is likely to
continue into the future. Moreover, the pace of bank acquisitions of
security firms and insurance companies is also likely to rise in the
future as a result of the recent enactment of the Gramm-- Leach-Bliley
Act of 1999.
This article presents evidence on the different motivations
affecting merger bid premiums that the acquiring banks are willing to
offer for the targets as well as the announcement-period abnormal stock
returns. We find that the following target banks are likely to be
offered a larger bid premium--more profitable targets with higher
returns on assets and/or returns on equity, and less-capitalized target
banks with high leverage ratios.
The positive correlation between target size and the standardized
abnormal (excess) returns around the merger announcement date implies
that the market views the mergers positively when the potential bidders
look for large targets that participate in significant markets. However,
the abnormal returns are significantly lower for megamergers of equals
than for other mergers, probably because the market anticipates problems
in melding the cultures of two large banks. Regarding the capital ratio,
unlike bank regulators, which favor better-capitalized banks, acquiring
banks tend to prefer targets that offer an ample, inexpensive source of
funds. In addition, target banks tend to receive larger bid offers than
thrifts.
Our results show that banks located in the Southeast regional
compact states--the only group that operated as a cohesive unit in our
sample period, restricting entry by banks from states outside of the
region-receive larger bid premiums than targets in other parts of the
country. Overall, the bid premiums are larger in the post-Riegle--Neal
period, consistent with the notion that as the universe of actual or
potential bidders has expanded, acquisition prices have risen.
If market participants are able to identify in advance the improved
performance associated with bank acquisitions, as documented in Cornett
and Tehranian (1992), the bid premiums and the announcement-period
abnormal stock returns examined here should be positively correlated
with the long-term performance of the merged banks. Smaller bid premiums
and abnormal returns at targets larger than $10 billion in megamergers
of equals suggest that future megamerger applications between banks and
other bank or nonbank financial institutions should be monitored more
closely. Our results also imply that these megamergers of equals are not
perceived by the market to have the benefit of creating a bank that is
too big to fail.
Elijah Brewer III is a senior economist and economic adviser in the
Research Department at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. William E.
Jackson III is an associate professor of finance and economics at the
Kenan--Flagler Business School of the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. Julapa A. Jagtiani is a senior financial economist in the
Supervision and Regulation Department at the Federal Reserve Bank of
Chicago. Thong Nguyen is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Economics
at Yale University. The research assistance of Gene Amromin, Sumeet
Sawhrey, Susan Yuska, Oscar Cerda, Betsy Dale, and Erin Davis is greatly
appreciated.
NOTES
(1.) Prior to the Riegle--Neal Act, banking organizations could
conduct interstate banking operations through "nonbank banks"
-- those that do not meet the definition of bank. Banks are commonly
defined as institutions that both accept demand deposits and make
commercial loans.
(2.) States could individually opt out of this branching authority
or choose to adopt an earlier starting date.
(3.) Siems (1996) examines bank megamerger deals in 1990-95, and
concludes that market powers are not the primary motivation for the
mergers.
(4.) See Cetorelli (1999) for a discussion of the HHI.
(5.) When first introduced the 1982, the DOJ horizontal merger guidelines listed in table 2 applied to all U.S. industries. In 1985,
the DOJ modified the 1,800/50 rule for bank mergers to 1,800/200 to
recognize the impact of competition from thrifts and nondepository
institutions.
As mentioned earlier, the Supreme Court, in the Connecticut National Bank case (1974), concluded that thrifts should not be included
in the calculation of concentration measures because they were not
offering the cluster of banking services. However, the court did
recognize that thrifts could be included if they became significant
competitors for a broad range of consumer services. With the passage of
the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act (1980)
and the Gain-St. Germain Act (1982), which effectively deregulated the
thrift industry, thrifts were authorized to compete with banks in
providing the cluster of products previously unique to commercial
banking organizations. By the mid-1980s competition from thrifts had
grown to such a point that the Federal Reserve Board changed its rules
regarding delegation of authority of the Federal Reserve Banks to give
thrifts a weight of 50 percent when calculating concentration numbers,
to reflect both actual and potential competition from thrifts. In some
cases, it may give 100 percent weight to thrifts when they are
significant competitors.
(6.) Healy, Palepu, and Ruback (1991) perform a similar study on
nonregulated firms.
(7.) Due to the sample bias problem stemming from this criterion,
the result may not be applicable to small banks.
(8.) An exception is evident, however, for megamergers of equals
(shown in table 8). That is, the abnormal returns are significantly
smaller for money center banks with total assets more than $10 billion
compared with the rest of the population. The smaller stock price gain
around the merger date for megamergers of equals of targets larger than
$10 billion may represent a higher cost of melding the culture of a
large target bank with that of the acquirer.
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Size distribution of commercial banks
Number Percent Cumulative Total assets
Asset size ($ millions) of banks of banks percent Percent Cumulative
A. December 31, 1980
Less than 25 7,233 49 49 5 4
25-50 3,566 24 73 6 11
50-100 2,048 14 87 7 18
100-500 1,496 10 97 15 33
500-1,000 195 1 98 7 40
1,000-5,000 192 1 99 19 59
5,000-10,000 21 - 99 7 66
10,000 or more 18 - 100 34 100
Total 14,769 100
B. December 31, 1998 [a]
Less than 25 3,156 36 36 3 3
25-50 2,261 26 62 5 8
50-100 1,700 19 81 7 15
100-500 1,279 15 96 14 29
500-1,000 149 2 98 6 35
1,000-5,000 114 1 99 15 50
5,000-10,000 20 - 99 8 58
10,000 or more 25 - 100 42 100
Total 8,704 100
(a.)Adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index (all items,
1982-84 = 100).
Note: Numbers are rounded to the nearest whole number.
Source: Authors' calculations based on data from Quarterly Reports of
Condition and Income.
1982 Department of Justice horizontal merger
guidelines
Post-merger
market concentration Level of HHI
Highly concentrated Greater than 1,800
Moderately concentrated 1,000 to 1,800
Unconcentrated Less than 1,000
Post-merger Post-merger change in HHI
market concentration and likelihood of challenge
Highly concentrated Greater than 100--Challenge likely
50 to 100--Depends on other factors [a]
Less than 50--Challenge unlikely
Moderately concentrated Greater than 100--Challenge likely;
other factors considered [a]
Less than or equal to 100--Challenge unlike
Unconcentrated Any increase--Challenge unlikely
(a.)Lead firm provision--A merger is likely to be challenged if the
merger is between the lead firm and a firm with a market share of 1
percent or more provided that the lead firm has a market share of 35
percent or more and is approximately twice the size of the second
largest firm in the market. These so-called other factors are often
related to ease and profitability of collusion. In banking, they are
often referred to as mitigating factors and include competitive
viability of the target, presence of active competition from thrifts and
other financial institutions in the market, competition from
out-of-market financial institutions, and market attractiveness.
Note: When released on June 14, 1982, the guidelines in this table
applied to all U.S. industries. In 1985, the U.S. Department of Justice
modified the 1,800/50 rule for bank mergers to 1,800/200 to recognize
the impact of competition from limited purpose lenders and other
nondepository financial institutions.
Source: U.S. Department of Justice, 1982, press release, June 14.
Interstate banking laws prior to Riegle--Neal Act
State Area covered and reciprocity
Alabama Reciprocal, 13 states (AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MD,
MS, NC, SC, TN, TX, VA, WV)
Alaska National, no reciprocity
Arizona National, no reciprocity
Arkansas Reciprocal, 16 states (AL, FL, GA, KY, LA, MD,
MO, MS, NC, NE, OK, SC, TN, TX, VA, WV) and DC
California National, reciprocal
Colorado National, no reciprocity
Connecticut National, reciprocal
Delaware National, reciprocal
District of Columbia Reciprocal, 11 states (AL, FL, GA, LA, MD, MS,
NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
Florida Reciprocal, 11 states (AL, AR, GA, LA, MD, MS,
NC, SC, TN, VA, WV) and DC
Georgia Reciprocal, 11 states (AL, FL, KY, LA, MD, MS,
NC, SC, TN, VA, WV) and DC
Idaho National, no reciprocity
Illinois National, reciprocal
Indiana National, reciprocal
Iowa Reciprocal, 6 states (IL, MN, MO, NE, SD, WI)
Kansas Reciprocal, 6 states (AR, CO, IA, MO, NE, OK)
Kentucky National, reciprocal
Louisiana National, reciprocal
Maine National, no reciprocity
Maryland Reciprocal, 14 states (AL, AR, DE, FL, GA, KY,
LA, MS, NC, PA, SC, TN, VA, WV) and DC
Massachusetts National, reciprocal
Michigan National, reciprocal
Minnesota Reciprocal, 16 states (CO, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS,
MI, MO, MT, ND, NE, OH, SD, WA, WI, WY)
Mississippi Reciprocal, 13 states (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA,
MO, NC, SC, TN, TX, VA, WV)
Missouri Reciprocal, 8 states (AR, IA, IL, KS, KY, NE,
OK, TN)
Montana Reciprocal, 7 states (CO, ID, MN, ND, SD, WI,
WY)
Nebraska National, reciprocal
Nevada National, no reciprocity
New Hampshire National, no reciprocity
New Jersey National, reciprocal
New Mexico National, no reciprocity
New York National, reciprocal
North Carolina Reciprocal, 13 states (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA,
MD, MS, SC, TN, TX, VA, WV) and DC
North Dakota National, reciprocal
Ohio National, reciprocal
Oklahoma National, no reciprocity for initial entry;
after initial entry, bank holding company must
be from state offering reciprocity or wait 4
years to expand
Oregon National, no reciprocity
Pennsylvania National, reciprocal
South Carolina Reciprocal, 12 states (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA,
MD, MS, NC, TN, VA, WV) and DC
Rhode Island National, reciprocal
South Dakota National, reciprocal
Tennessee National, reciprocal
Texas National, no reciprocity
Utah National, no reciprocity
Vermont National, reciprocal
Virginia Reciprocal, 12 states (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA,
MD, MS, NC, SC, TN WV) and DC
Washington National, reciprocal
West Virginia National, reciprocal
Wisconsin Reciprocal, 8 states (IA, IL, IN, KY, Ml, MN, MO
OH)
Wyoming National, no reciprocity
Note: Hawaii did not enact interstate bank holding company legislation.
Source: Savage (1993).
Selected financial characteristics of target and price information
Quartile Range %
Financial characteristics (1 = lowest) (of explanatory variable)
Book value of capital/total assets 1 2.2-6.8
2 6.8-8.1
3 8.1-9.4
4 9.4-25.4
Total loans/total assets 1 22.3-55.5
2 55.5-63.5
3 63.5-68.9
4 68.9-89.2
Total assets (in millions) 1 35.7-272.0
2 272.0-902.3
3 902.3-3,276.1
4 3,276.1-260,159
Return on assets 1 -1.3-0.4
2 0.4-0.9
3 0.9-1.2
4 1.2-2.2
Riegle-Neal (0 before act, 1 after) 0 96 (122)
1 146 (205)
Mean values
Financial characteristics CAR (%) SCAR (%) BVPREM
Book value of capital/total assets 14.0 5.1 2.1
11.0 4.2 2.4
12.5 4.8 2.1
8.3 3.4 2.2
Total loans/total assets 12.1 4.8 1.9
13.3 5.3 2.3
9.2 3.9 2.3
11.1 3.5 2.2
Total assets (in millions) 11.4 3.6 2.1
13.2 4.4 2.0
10.2 4.1 2.3
11.0 5.5 2.2
Return on assets 10.8 3.6 1.6
12.9 4.8 2.1
10.5 3.9 2.2
11.5 5.2 2.8
Riegle-Neal (0 before act, 1 after) 13.0 4.1 1.7
10.4 4.6 2.4
Notes: CAR is cumulative abnormal returns;
SCAR is standardized cumulative abnormal returns;
BVPREM is the bid premium offered for the target.
CAR and SCAR means are computed using data for a subsample of 242
acquirer institutions. Number of observations in parentheses is out of
the 327 observations constituting the entire sample.
Pricing of bank mergers, regional, and
financial characteristics
Book value
premium
Southeast regional compact
Yes (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MD, 2.4469
MS, NC, SC, TN, VA and DC
No 2.0600
Difference 0.3869
(2.06) [**]
Before Riegle-Neal Act 2.4687
After Riegle-Neal Act 1.7907
Difference 0.6780
(3.80) [***]
Asset characteristics
Assets [greater than or equal to]$10 billion [a] 2.3612
Assets [less than]$10 billion 2.1456
Difference 0.2156
(0.89)
Banks versus thrifts
Banks 2.2500
Thrifts 1.4721
Difference 0.7779
(7.21) [***]
Standardized
cumulative
excess returns
Southeast regional compact
Yes (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MD, 5.6950
MS, NC SC, TN, VA and DC
No 3.9400
Difference 1.7550
(1.51)
Before Riegle-Neal Act 7.2392
After Riegle-Neal Act 2.5294
Difference 4.7098
(2.73) [***]
Asset characteristics
Assets [greater than or equal to]$10 billion [a] 8.1679
Assets [less than]$10 billion 4.0603
Difference 4.1076
(3.37) [***]
Banks versus thrifts
Banks 4.4376
Thrifts 3.9604
Difference 0.4772
(0.46)
(a.)Excluding banking organizations classified as mergers of equals.
(***.)Indicates significance at the 1 percent level.
(**.)Indicates significance at the 5 percent level.
Note: The t-statistics are in parentheses.
Size and pricing of bank mergers
Book
Quartile value
(1 = lowest) premium SCAR [b]
Assets [greater than or equal to]$10
billions [a] 1 2.43 8.61
2 1.83 3.21
3 2.50 11.65
4 2.69 9.27
Assets [less than]$10 billion 1 2.16 2.72
2 2.03 4.84
3 2.25 3.74
4 2.15 4.46
(a.)Excluding banking organizations classified mergers of equals.
(b.)Standardized cumulative abnormal returns.
Market concentration and the pricing of bank
mergers
Concentration Book
quartile value
(1 = lowest) premium
Assets [greater than or equal to]$10 billion [a] 1 1.61
2 2.35
3 2.43
4 2.93
Assets [less than]$10 billion 1 1.93
2 2.48
3 2.00
4 2.17
SCAR [b]
Assets [greater than or equal to]$10 billion [a] 7.68
11.93
3.49
9.59
Assets [less than]$10 billion 4.15
5.62
3.05
3.27
(a.)Excluding banking organizations classified as mergers of equals.
(b.)Standardized cumulative abnormal returns.
Characteristics of large bank
mergers during the 1990s
Acquiring bank
Targets with assets [greater than] $10
billion
Manufacturers Hanover Corporation Chemical Banking Corporation
C&S/Sovran Corporation NCNB Corporation
Security Pacific Corporation BankAmerica Corporation
Ameritrust Corporation Society Corporation
Manufacturers National Corporation Comerica Inc.
MNC Financial Inc. NationsBank Corporation
Continental Bank Corporation BankAmerica Corporation
Michigan National Corporation National Australia Bank Ltd.
Shawmut National Corporation Fleet Financial Group Inc.
First Fidelity Bancorporation First Union Corporation
Midlantic Corporation PNC Bank Corporation
Integra Financial Corporation National City
Meridian Bancorp Inc. Corestates Financial Corporation
First Interstate Bancorp Wells Fargo & Company
BayBanks Bank of Boston Corporation
Boatmen's Bancshares NationsBank Corporation
Standard Fed Bancorp ABN-AMRO Holding NV
US Bancorp First Bank System
Central Fidelity Banks Inc. Wachovia Corporation
Signet Banking Corporation First Union Corporation
Barnett Banks NationsBank Corporation
Corestates Financial Corporation First Union Corporation
First of American Bank National City
Average
Mergers of equals
KeyCorp, Albany, NY Society Corporation
BB&T Financial Corporation Southern National
First Chicago Corporation NBD Bancorp
Chase Manhattan Corporation Chemical Banking Corporation
First Chicago NBO Corporation Banc One Corporation
BankAmerica Corporation NationsBank Corporation
Wells Fargo & Company Norwest Corporation
Average
Book
Total assets value
of target premium
($ bil.)
Targets with assets [greater than] $10 billion
Manufacturers Hanover Corporation 61.5 0.70
C&S/Sovran Corporation 51.4 1.49
Security Pacific Corporation 88.0 1.17
Ameritrust Corporation 11.0 1.99
Manufacturers National Corporation 12.1 1.34
MNC Financial Inc. 17.5 1.33
Continental Bank Corporation 22.5 1.35
Michigan National Corporation 10.2 1.69
Shawmut National Corporation 31.3 1.79
First Fidelity Bancorporation 36.2 1.92
Midlantic Corporation 13.3 2.12
Integra Financial Corporation 13.7 1.97
Meridian Bancorp Inc. 15.0 2.17
First Interstate Bancorp 55.8 3.35
BayBanks 10.8 2.22
Boatmen's Bancshares 33.7 2.71
Standard Fed Bancorp 13.3 2.05
US Bancorp 31.9 3.38
Central Fidelity Banks Inc. 10.6 2.81
Signet Banking Corporation 11.7 3.46
Barnett Banks 41.4 4.05
Corestates Financial Corporation 45.6 5.39
First of American Bank 22.1 3.84
Average 28.7 2.36
Mergers of equals
KeyCorp, Albany, NY 25.5 1.82
BB&T Financial Corporation 9.2 2.32
First Chicago Corporation 65.9 1.30
Chase Manhattan Corporation 114.0 1.38
First Chicago NBO Corporation 114.1 3.68
BankAmerica Corporation 260.0 3.06
Wells Fargo & Company 97.5 2.70
Average 98.0 2.32
Standardized
excess
return Year
Targets with assets [greater than] $10 billion
Manufacturers Hanover Corporation 7.57 1991
C&S/Sovran Corporation 4.62 1991
Security Pacific Corporation 11.50 1991
Ameritrust Corporation 0.65 1991
Manufacturers National Corporation 6.46 1991
MNC Financial Inc. -1.55 1992
Continental Bank Corporation 10.20 1994
Michigan National Corporation 10.03 1995
Shawmut National Corporation 9.18 1995
First Fidelity Bancorporation 13.82 1995
Midlantic Corporation 6.54 1995
Integra Financial Corporation 4.87 1995
Meridian Bancorp Inc. 5.71 1995
First Interstate Bancorp 18.16 1995
BayBanks 5.40 1995
Boatmen's Bancshares 14.35 1996
Standard Fed Bancorp -2.76 1996
US Bancorp 9.76 1997
Central Fidelity Banks Inc. 8.32 1997
Signet Banking Corporation 18.64 1997
Barnett Banks 10.28 1997
Corestates Financial Corporation 3.51 1997
First of American Bank 12.58 1997
Average 8.17
Mergers of equals
KeyCorp, Albany, NY -- 1993
BB&T Financial Corporation 2.29 1994
First Chicago Corporation 1.87 1995
Chase Manhattan Corporation 3.76 1995
First Chicago NBO Corporation 0.52 1998
BankAmerica Corporation 1.52 1998
Wells Fargo & Company -2.13 1998
Average 1.30
Relationship between bid premium and target financial characteristics
Profitability as
return on equity
Southeast
compact
Basic interacted with Time binary
Variables controls Riegle-Neal variables
Return on equity 3.3169 3.2695 3.0487
(2.82) [***] (2.86) [***] (2.82) [***]
Return on assets -- -- --
Natural logarithm 0.0636 0.0630 0.0758
of total assets (1.54) (1.52) (1.89) [*]
Book value of equity -2.9059 -2.8209 -3.8521
to total deposits (-1.51) (-1.46) (-2.11) [**]
Loans to total assets 0.7767 0.7357 0.6238
(1.31) (1.24) (1.12)
Net chargeoffs to loans -12.9726 -12.6326 -10.4068
(-1.18) (-1.15) (-1.00)
Thrift indicator -0.5178 -0.5191 -0.4248
(-2.21) [**] (2.22) [**] (-1.92) [*]
Megamergers of equals -0.1573 -0.1281 -0.4647
indicator (-0.32) (-0.26) (-0.99)
Southeast regional 0.3439 0.4459 0.4333
compact indicator (2.39) [**] (2.44) [**] (2.51) [**]
Riegle-Neal 0.3577 0.2855 --
(2.52) [**] (1.75) [*]
(Southeast regional -- -0.2681 -0.2753
compact) x (Riegel-Neal (0.91) (-0.99)
indicator)
1990 -- -- -2.1043
(-4.88) [***]
1991 -- -- -1.5333
(-4.92) [***]
1992 -- -- -1.5709
(-4.85) [***]
1993 -- -- -0.9094
(-3.23) [***]
1994 -- -- -1.0488
(-3.75) [***]
1995 -- -- -1.3827
(-5.55) [***]
1996 -- -- -1.2543
(-4.96) [***]
1997 -- -- -0.6692
(-2.71) [***]
Number of observations 327 327 327
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.1337 0.1358 0.2432
F-statistic 6.592 6.693 7.1641
Profitability as
return on total assets
Southeast
compact
Basic interacted with
Variables controls Riegle-Neal
Return on equity -- --
Return on assets 39.8565 40.4137
(2.69) [***] (2.73) [***]
Natural logarithm 0.0681 0.0676
of total assets (1.65) [*] (1.63) [*]
Book value of equity -4.1854 -4.1216
to total deposits (-2.14) [**] (-2.10) [**]
Loans to total assets 0.7742 0.7341
(1.31) (1.24)
Net chargeoffs to loans -14.7443 -14.4692
(-1.37) (-1.34)
Thrift indicator 0.4846 -0.4859
(-2.01) [**] (-2.01) [**]
Megamergers of equals -0.0554 -0.0254
indicator (0.11) (-0.05)
Southeast regional 0.3287 0.4274
compact indicator (2.27) [**] (2.34) [**]
Riegle-Neal 0.3621 0.2923
(2.54) [**] (1.79)[*]
(Southeast regional -- -0.2598
compact) x (Riegel-Neal (-0.88)
indicator)
1990 -- --
1991 -- --
1992 -- --
1993 -- --
1994 -- --
1995 -- --
1996 -- --
1997 -- --
Number of observations 327 327
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.1319 0.1313
F-statistic 6.503 5.926
Basic
Variables variables
Return on equity --
Return on assets 31.8314
(2.18) [**]
Natural logarithm 0.0812
of total assets (2.02) [**]
Book value of equity -4.9113
to total deposits (-2.64) [***]
Loans to total assets 0.5952
(1.06)
Net chargeoffs to loans -14.2260
(-1.38)
Thrift indicator -0.4412
(-1.92) [*]
Megamergers of equals -0.3568
indicator (-0.76)
Southeast regional 0.4197
compact indicator (2.42) [**]
Riegle-Neal --
(Southeast regional -0.2554
compact) x (Riegel-Neal (-0.92)
indicator)
1990 -2.0594
(-4.74) [***]
1991 -1.5081
(-4.76) [***]
1992 -1.5937
(-4.89) [***]
1993 -0.9140
(-3.23) [***]
1994 -1.0410
(-3.70) [***]
1995 -1.3468
(5.37) [**]
1996 -1.2362
(-4.85) [***]
1997 -0.6642
(-2.59) [**]
Number of observations 327
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.2355
F-statistic 6.908
(***.)Indicates significance at the 1 percent level.
(**.)Indicates significance at the 5 percent level.
(*.)Indicates significance at the 10 percent level.
Note: Numbers in parentheses are t-statistics.
Standardized excess returns of target and target
financial characteristics
Profitability as
return on equity
Southeast
compact
Basic interacted with Time
Variables controls Riegle-Neal indicator
Return on equity 0.1101 0.1249 0.1189
(1.55) (1.78) [*] (1.66) [*]
Return on assets -- -- --
Natural logarithm 0.0074 0.0076 0.0073
of total assets (2.88) [***] (3.00) [***] (2.77) [***]
Book value of equity -0.1361 -0.1267 -0.1127
to total deposits (-1.07) (-1.01) (-0.89)
(-2.52) [**] (-2.58) [**] (-2.24) [**]
Net chargeoffs to loans 0.1095 0.0187 0.0113
(-0.16) (-0.03) (-0.02)
Thrift indicator 0.0158 0.0172 0.0141
(1.10) (1.22) (0.97)
Megamergers of equals
indicator -0.0592 0.0518 -0.0445
(2.05) [**] (1.82) [*] (-1.51)
Southeast regional 0.0224 0.0421 0.0420
compact indicator (2.47) [**] (3.77) [***] (3.65) [***]
Riegle-Neal indicator 0.0068 -0.0061 --
(0.77) (-0.63)
(Southeast regional -- -0.0548 -0.0543
compact) x (Riegle-Neal (-2.95) [***] (-2.89) [***]
indicator)
1990 -- -- 0.0504
(1.98) [**]
1991 -- -- 0.0306
(1.55)
1992 -- -- 0.0267
(1.21)
1993 -- -- 0.0217
(1.14)
1994 -- -- 0.0258
(1.38)
1995 -- -- 0.0335
(1.92) [*]
1996 -- -- 0.0302
(1.75) [*]
1997 -- -- 0.0136
(0.80)
Number of observations 242 242 242
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.0694 0.0994 0.0994
F-statistics 2.996 3.659 2.565
Profitability as
return on assets
Southeast
compact
Basic interacted with Time
Variables controls Riegle-Neal indicator
Return on equity -- -- --
Return on assets 0.7750 0.9671 1.0524
(0.82) (1.03) (1.10)
Natural logarithm 0.0077 0.0079 0.0076
of total assets (3.03) [***] (3.16) [***] (2.87) [***]
Book value of equity -0.1598 -0.1561 -0.1427
to total deposits (-1.23) (-1.22) (-1.01)
(-2.57) [**] (-2.62) [***] (-2.25) [***]
Net chargeoffs to loans 0.4139 0.2940 0.2370
(-0.51) (-0.44) (-0.35)
Thrift indicator 0.0124 0.0140 0.0120
(0.83) (0.95) (0.79)
Megamergers of equals
indicator 0.0561 -0.0484 -0.0412
(1.94) [*] (1.69) [*] (-1.40)
Southeast regional 0.0226 0.0418 0.0416
compact indicator (2.45) [**] (3.72) [***] (3.60) [***]
Riegle-Neal indicator 0.0074 -0.0052 --
(0.84) (-0.54)
(Southeast regional -- -0.0538 -0.0536
compact) x (Riegle-Neal (-2.89) [***] (-2.84) [***]
indicator)
1990 -- -- 0.0519
(2.03) [**]
1991 -- -- 0.0308
(1.54) [*]
1992 -- -- 0.0253
(1.14)
1993 -- -- 0.0206
(1.08)
1994 -- -- 0.0264
(1.40)
1995 - - 0.0349
(2.00) [**]
1996 -- -- 0.0303
(1.75) [*]
1997 -- -- 0.0141
(0.83)
Number of observations 242 242 242
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.0625 0.0912 0.0933
F-statistics 2.784 3.4519 2.458
(***.)Indicates significance at the 1 percent level.
(**.)Indicates significance at the 5 percent level.
(*.)Indicates significance at the 10 percent level.
Note: Numbers in parantheses are t-statistics.
Bid premiums and financial characteristics with market
concentration measure
Profitability as Profitability as
Variables return on equity return on total assets
Return on equity 3.0500 --
(2.81) [***]
Return on assets -- 30.9000
(2.18) [**]
Natural logarithm 0.0760 0.0815
of total assets (1.88) [*] (2.02) [**]
Book value of equity -3.8590 -4.9265
to total deposits (-2.11) [**] (-2.64) [**]
Loans to total assets 0.6239 0.5944
(1.12) (1.06)
Net chargeoffs to loans -10.4294 -14.2521
(-1.00) (-1.38)
Market concentration -0.0364 -0.0625
(-0.06) (-0.11)
Thrift indicator -0.4243 -0.4401
(-1.91) [*] (-1.91) [*]
Southeast regional 0.4323 0.4179
compact indicator (2.49) [**] (2.39) [**]
(Southeast regional compact) -0.2727 -0.2509
x (Riegle-Neal indicator) (-0.97) (-0.88)
1990 -2.1054 -2.0611
(-4.87) [***] (-4.74) [***]
1991 -1.5345 -1.5101
(-4.90) [***] (-4.76) [***]
1992 -1.5720 -1.5954
(-4.84) [***] (-4.88) [***]
1993 -0.9100 -0.9150
(-3.23) [***] (-3.22) [***]
1994 -1.0491 -1.0416
(-3.74) [***] (-3.69) [***]
1995 -1.3819 -1.3454
(-5.53) [***] (-5.35) [***]
1996 -1.2540 -1.2355
(-4.95) [***] (-4.84) [***]
1997 -0.6686 -0.6431
(-2.70) [***] (-2.58) [**]
Number of observations 327 327
Adjusted [R.sup.2] 0.2408 0.2331
F-statistic 6.744 6.504
(***.)Indicates significance at the 1 percent level.
(**.)Indicates significance at the 5 percent level.
(*.)Indicates significance at the 10 percent level.
Note: Numbers in parentheses are t-statistics.
Antitrust legal standards
The major antitrust concern of each of the federal bank regulatory
authorities is the competitive effect of mergers and acquisitions. An
examination of this issue requires a clear and concise definition of the
product and geographical markets in which competition takes place and a
standard to measure the competitive effects of each merger (see Jackson,
1992). This framework was not specifically stated in the federal
statutes that govern mergers. Instead, it has evolved from three Supreme
Court decisions in the 1960s and 1970s: United States vs. Philadelphia
National Bank (1963), United States vs. Phillipsburg National Bank and
Trust (1970), and United States vs. Connecticut National Bank (1974).
[1]
In the Philadelphia National Bank case, the Supreme Court:
* provided the principles by which product and geographic markets
should be defined to assess the probable competitive effects of a bank
merger or acquisition, and
* noted that commercial banks are unique among financial
institutions (including thrifts) in that they alone are permitted by law
to accept demand deposits and operate with the benefit of federal
deposit insurance.
The court ruled that the relevant product market was the
"cluster of commercial banking services differentiating commercial
banking as a unique line of business." Thus, only competing
commercial banks were included in the framework for the purposes of
analyzing a proposed bank merger under the Clayton Act. The exact
definition of cluster was not specifically stated in the court's
decision. However, antitrust regulators have used total deposits as a
proxy for the ability of commercial banking organizations to provide the
cluster of banking services to both businesses and households in a given
local banking market (Rhoades, 1987).
In the Philadelphia National Bank case, the court noted that the
appropriate geographical market for competitive analysis does not depend
on where the parties to a merger do business or compete. Instead, it
depends on the geographical structure of the supplier--customer
relationships and where a purchaser of products and services can
practicably turn for alternative banking services. The court found that
convenience of location is essential to effective competition,
suggesting that geographical markets for commercial banking are
generally considered to be local, for example, within counties or
metropolitan statistical areas (Holder, 1993).
In the Phillipsburg National Bank and Trust case (1970), the
Supreme Court held that:
* for the purposes of analyzing a proposed merger under the Clayton
Act, regulators should consider both the level of concentration and the
change in concentration of firms in the appropriate geographical market,
and
* a merger application may be accepted if it can be shown that the
transaction provides substantial public benefits even though it may
violate antitrust guidelines.
The structure-conduct--performance paradigm suggests that market
concentration beyond a certain point will likely lead to collusive or
monopolistic behavior by banks, a direct violation of the Clayton Act.
Banking regulators have thus focused on the anticompetitive issues of
bank mergers and acquisitions in terms of the resultant effects on
market concentration (Rhoades, 1987).
In the Connecticut National Bank case, the Supreme Court:
* revisited the geographical market definition and ruled that the
relevant banking market is not a state but rather a segmented group of
bank office areas where a bank would seek business and, as a practical
matter, most of its customers would do their banking, and
* concluded that thrift institutions should not be factored into
antitrust analysis, but acknowledged that they may be included
"when and if saving banks become significant participants in the
marketing of bank services to commercial enterprises."
These three court decisions provide the fundamental concepts for
analyzing competitive effects of bank mergers and acquisitions. In
particular, they hold that 1) the "cluster" of bank products
is the relevant product line for competitive analysis; 2) this cluster
is typically viewed as being consumed in geographically local banking
markets; and 3) market structure is a key determinant of the degree of
competition (Kwast, Starr-McCluer, and Wolken, 1997; and Jackson, 1992).
(1.) United States vs. Connecticut National Bank, 418 U.S. 656
(1974); United States vs. Phillipsburg National Bank and Trust Company,
399 U.S. 350 (1970), and United States vs. Philadelphia National Bank,
374 U.S. 321 (1963).
Estimating the stock price impact of mergers
We estimate the stock price impact of each of these merger
announcements by employing a multivariate regression model (MVRM),
similar to those used in Schipper and Thompson (1983), Binder (1988),
and Cornett and Tehranian (1989). In the MVRM, abnormal returns are
obtained by adding a (0,1) binary variable to the right-hand side of the
traditional market model to capture the impact of the announcement or
"event" date. The model takes the following form:
[R.sub.j,t] = [[alpha].sub.j] + [[beta].sub.j,1][R.sub.M,t-2] +
[[beta].sub.j,2][R.sub.M,t-1] + [[beta].sub.j,3][R.sub.M,t] +
[[beta].sub.j,4][R.sub.M,t+1] + [[beta].sub.j,5][R.sub.M,t-2] +
[[[sigma].sup.+1].sub.s=0] [[gamma].sub.j,s][D.sub.s] +
[[epsilon].sub.j,t],
where [R.sub.j,t] is the return on firm j on day t; [R.sub.M,t] is
the return on the market portfolio; [[alpha].sub.j] is an intercept
coefficient for bank j; [[beta].sub.j,1...j,5] are risk coefficients for
the jth bank; [[gamma].sub.j] is the effect of the merger announcement
event on the jth firm; [D.sub.s] is an event binary variable which
equals 1 on days (s = 0 to + 1) in the event window, and 0 otherwise;
and [[epsilon].sub.j,t] is a random error term which is assumed to be
identically distributed normally, independent of the return on the
market and the binary variables. We specify the market return at several
leads and lags as an explanatory variable to correct for the possibility
of non-synchronous trading, especially of some of the smaller banks
(Scholes and Williams, 1977).
With this specification, the estimated parameters [[gamma].sub.j]
measure the daily abnormal returns associated with a merger
announcement. We are testing for daily intercept shifts in the interval
day 0 to day + 1. Since this interval is "dummied out," the
observations in the day 0 to day + 1 interval do not influence the
estimate of the intercept. Only those observations without dummies
determine the value of the intercept.
We estimate the target bank's cumulative abnormal stock market
returns over the two trading day period that includes the announcement
date and the day after. The two-day cumulative abnormal returns (CAR)
around the merger announcement date (t = 0 and + 1) are then calculated
by adding [[gamma].sub.j,0] and [[gamma].sub.j,1]. The standardized
cumulative abnormal returns are computed using a procedure reported in
Bradley, Desai, and Kim (1988), and Stultz, Walking, and Song (1990).
First, the standardized abnormal return to the jth security on day t
([SAR.sub.j,t]) is computed using the following equation:
[MATHEMATICAL EXPRESSION NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]
where [AR.sub.j,t] is the abnormal return to the jth security on
day t, [[S.sup.j,t].sub.j] is the standard deviation of the residuals in
the market model estimation period, [T.sub.j] is the number of days in
the estimation period, [R.sub.m,t] is the return on the market portfolio
on day t, and [R.sub.m] is the mean return on the market portfolio over
the estimation period.
The [SAR.sub.j,t] is then used to obtain the standardized
cumulative abnormal returns over the two event days:
[SAR.sub.j,t] = [[[[sigma].sup.2].sub.t=1] [SAR.sub.j,t]]/[square
root of]2.
The model
The following basic specification is used to examine the factors
that are correlated with the bid premium offered for the target
(BVPREM):
1) [BVPREM.sub.j,t] = [[alpha].sub.0] +
[[alpha].sub.1][PROFIT.sub.j,t] + [[alpha].sub.2][LEV.sub.j,t] +
[[alpha].sub.3][SIZE.sub.j,t] + [[alpha].sub.4][LOAN.sub.j,t] +
[[alpha].sub.5][CHARGE.sub.j,t] + [[alpha].sub.6][MEQUAL.sub.j,t] +
[[alpha].sub.7][THRIFT.sub.j,t] + [[alpha].sub.8][SEAST.sub.j,t] +
[[alpha].sub.9][RNEAL.sub.j,t] + [[epsilon].sub.j,t],
where PROFIT is a measure of profitability of the target one-year
before the merger announcement date; LEV is the capital-to-deposit ratio
one year before the merger announcement date; SIZE is the natural
logarithm of total assets of the target banking organization; LOAN is
ratio of total loans to total assets; CHARGE is the ratio of net
chargeoffs- to-loans; MEQUAL is an indicator variable that is equal to
one if the target and the acquirer are of equal asset size and zero
otherwise; THRIFT is an indicator variable that is equal to one if the
target is a savings and loan association and zero otherwise; SEAST is an
indicator variable that is equal to one if the target and acquirer are
located in the Southeast regional compact (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MD,
MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, and DC) and zero otherwise; RNEAL is an indicator
variable that is equal to one if the merger announcement date is after
1994 and zero otherwise; and [[epsilon].sub.j,t] is a random error term.
The MEQUAL variable is included in the equati on to determine whether
banks involved in mergers of equals are offered a different price than
other banks. The THRIFT variable is included in the equation to control
for the different charter between banking organizations and thrift
institutions. The SEAST variable is included to capture whether the
southeast regional compact led to differences in bid premium. This
indicator variable absorbs the effects of all factors that are common to
banking organizations in the Southeast. The RNEAL variable is included
to capture the impact of the Riegle--Neal Act on bid premiums.
In some specifications, we include indicator variables for the year
of the announcement date of the acquisitions that range between 1990 and
mid-1998. These variables are introduced to account for the effect of
omitted macroeconomic and other variables that may influence the overall
level of acquisition activity over time and, thus, the merger premium
paid for a given transaction.