Disclaimer: This dissertation has been written by a student and is not an example of our professional work, which you can see examples of here.

Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this dissertation are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of UKDiss.com.

Do Mergers and Acquisitions Fulfil Desired Objectives?

Info: 18333 words (73 pages) Dissertation
Published: 10th Nov 2021

Reference this

Tagged: Business Strategy

Do Mergers And Acquisitions Fulfil Their Desired Objective? And How People Are Affected By the Result of These Mergers?

CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION

1.1 BACKGROUND

Restructuring of a firm has become a major area in the financial and economic environment all over the world. A company may grow internally, or externally. The aim of the management is to maximize the profit. Most firms grow through internally which take place when firm’s existing divisions grow through normal capital budgeting activities.(S.Vanitha 2007) The industrial restructuring has raised important issues both for the business and for public moreover merger and acquisitions may be critical to the strong expansion of business firms as they evolve through successive stages of growth and development and most important for new product markets by a firm may require M and As at some stages in the firm’s development . The successful competition in international markets may depend on capabilities obtained in a timely and competent fashion through M & As. (M Selvam 2007)

Merger and acquisitions continues to experience dramatic growth. Record breaking mega mergers have become popular in the world. In the last ten years and onwards some of the largest mergers and acquisitions took place in Europe. This was underscore by the fact that the largest deal of all time was a hostile acquisition of a German company by a British firm.(Beena P.L 2000)

Since the start of twenty first century the nature of merger and acquisition even more common in the economical growth. It becomes even more global especially in Asia, Latin and South America. Over the past quarter of the century we have noticed that merger waves have become longer and more frequent in between shrunken as well when these trends combined with the fact that M&A has rapidly spread across the modern world, we see that the field is increasingly becoming as ever more important part of the worlds of corporate finance and corporate strategy. (Canagavally , R.2000)

Merger and acquisitions are plays very important part in corporate strategy. They are the interesting and controversial tools if the firm do not want to grow internally by capital investment and it can affect the shareholders wealth of both the firms (Legare.1998). The management of the target companies is worried about their jobs that can be affected; the cost reduction strategies consists of reduction in labour force (Gould, 1998) the strategies at both local and national levels are important and concerned at transactions in their industries. e.g (defence utilities etc.) Customers and suppliers are interested , as they want to know who they will be dealing with in the future (Buono. 2003). All the big deals are therefore reported in the media, receive a large coverage, and get the attention of the public as well.

People are very important part of any organization but due to the increasing numbers of mergers between the companies they are largely affected and most of them get caught up in a merger or acquisition-by chance, Many of the people after working four –to five years period are losing their jobs and facing severe reductions in status and responsibility and, in general, being confronted with major questions about their careers, As a result , at times we are unsure whether our own feelings about what is happening to these individuals are biasing our interpretation of what is going on. In this project the writer going to research on mergers between the professional services firms.

According to Steven et al (2000) mergers and acquisitions decisions that are undertaken based on financial analysis, influence and legal positions , However , it has been proved by a number of researchers that factors like informal power, low productivity , poor quality , reduced commitment , hidden costs and voluntary turnover prevent the combined banks from reaching expected performance levels (Legare 1998). This is the reason that many companies face difficulties then they pass through their post-integration processes (Buono 2003)

According to Catwright & Cary (1995) that mergers and acquisitions should be seen like marriages where both parties will is very important for the success of new entity. At the time two different companies decide to come together as a result of M&A activity, then the levels of instability in the macro and micro environment of both companies is challenged. So it is therefore been recommended that companies should chose the most appropriate merger and acquisition process and strategy. However Buono (2003) has suggest that each possibility has its own strengths and weaknesses and therefore context of M&S and its main objectives play important role.

Cartwright and Cooper has pointed out that M&A depends upon combination of related functions like integration of people, systems, practices and culture. The critical review of the literature has recommended that most of research has been focused at studying single characteristics of M&A in isolation. Moreover the dynamics of M&A variables that impact on success and failures ratio has not been undertaken in the literature and there is a gap for research.

This study will be focus to explore the major drivers and variables and their effect on the success of merger and acquisitions across industries from a corporate strategic perspective.

1.2 Rationale behind Research

Mergers and acquisitions is one of the common strategies in today’s business world. Gould (1998) has conducted a survey involving 12000 managers from different countries and according to the result of his survey more then 1000 companies were involved in acquisitions or a merger in two years between 1995 and 1997.moreover merger and acquisitions has become the leading strategic options. However, the performance of the combined companies has been lower than expected. According to Buono (2003) the basic drivers of M&A only involved in financial, operational and strategic aims and objectives. So therefore my main area of focus of this research is to explore the major drivers and variables and their effect on the success of merger and acquisitions across industries from a corporate strategic perspective.

1.3 Aims and Objectives

The basic aim of this project is to understand whether mergers and acquisitions always fulfil desired objective. The aims specific areas are as follows.

  • To explore the major variables that impact on the success of merger and acquisition different industries from a corporate strategic perspective
  • To explore the corporate strategy in achieving desired results from M&A activities
  • To evaluate the impact of the mergers on an employees and examining the programmes for dealing with separation anxiety for employees.

1.4 Dissertation Structure

The official Structure of the dissertations is being applied which is provided by the university and analysis has been done which suit the theme and the objectives of the research. The structure of this report is summarized as follows:

Chapter 1 Introduction of the research topic and lays the basis for the rationale of selection of the theme under scrutiny. It introduces the effect of M&A on business and effects that they expected. The chapter also summarizes the rationale for selection of topic and states the aim and objectives of this research.

Chapter 2 Consists of review of the literature that has been produced in the domain of mergers and acquisitions and their desired effects for companies. It has highlighted some of the highly respected literature in the field of aims and objectives of this research.

Chapter 3 Provide the methodology and strategy adopted by the researcher to undertake this research. It points out the strength and weaknesses of using different data collection mechanisms and has shown how they fit in the larger context of aims and objectives of this research.

Chapter 4 very important chapter consists of analysis and findings regarding the importance of strategic alignment within a merger or an acquisition activity with the help of a range of case studies. The chapter developed recommendations for companies under the light of macro indicators, theories and qualitative data gathered through this research.

Chapter 5 provides a comprehensive conclusion from this research and gives a list of recommendations for companies that can be drawn from this focused research.

Chapter 2: Literature Review

In this chapter an attempt has been made to briefly review the research already undertaken and methodology employed moreover the study has been produced in the domain of aims and objective of the project and it has been divided into number of different sections so that reader understand with ease.

2.1 Overview

Concept of Merger and Acquisition

Over the last few years different companies have engaged in domestic and international mergers and acquisitions to match the macroeconomic trends operating on a worldwide scale in the market place. Up till now the ultimate success of a company’s global strategy may depend on how well it manages the dangerous human resource “fit” issue associated with strategic customer cantered decisions and strategies. The literature presents the understanding and resolving interpersonal management issues that result from organization, team, and individual misalignments. An actual merger and acquisition integration project is used to discuss the application of this approach (Thomas L. Legare in his paper “Understanding and Managing Human Resource Integration Issue”) M & A defined by Arnold (2002) as “combination of two firms of roughly equal size on roughly equal terms and in which the shareholders remain as joint owners”

M & A activities in late 20th century

In 1960’s Mergers and acquisitions first became an important topic within the organization management meetings. It is usual to consider merger and acquisition in terms of the extent to which the activities of the acquired organization are related to those of the acquirer. The most common classification proposes four main types (Walter 1985; Hovers, 1973; Kitching ,1967). These being:

1- Vertical

The process in which two organizations combined within the same industry.

2- Horizontal

The process in which two similar organizations combined within the same industry

3- Conglomerate

In this process acquired organization is in completely different field of business activity

4 Concentric

In this process the acquired organization is in a different but related field in to which the acquiring company merge its business.

According to Schweiger and Ivancevice, 1987 mergers and acquisitions can be considered to differ in terms of

  • Motive and transactional type
  • The envisaged degree of integration

Common objectives behind M&A Activity

According to Napier (1989), in a review of the literature, draws the distinction between financial or value maximizing motives, and managerial or non value maximizing motives. Mergers known as financial or value maximizing motives when the main objective is to increase the profit and decrease the risk involved in business moreover non value maximizing motives relate to merges which occur primarily for other strategic reasons ( Halpern, 1983). Moreover according to handy (1993) creation of shareholder’s value is the underlying aim behind any M&A activity. However , there is a range of strategies involve to improve financial performances and consequently increase shareholder’s value.

According to Marks, (1988b). There is lots of risk involved in activity like Mergers and acquisitions involving the collective annual investment of billions of pounds and affecting the working lives of millions of employees. It has been recommended in future that 50 to 80 percent of all mergers are considered to be financially unsuccessful (Marks 1988b), most probably in financial return, represent ‘at best an each way bet’

(Lorenz, 1986)

The popularity of Merger and acquisitions is still strong despite of the fact that it has been frequently fail to achieve the financial growth (Hovers 1973 & Farrent 1970; Jemison and Sitkin, 1986). Indeed there is lots of evidence that Britain and the USA are currently experiencing an unprecedented wave of merger activity (Morgan, 1988; Hughes, 1989). In the last 10 years , there have been over 23000 registered acquisitions in the USA , and before the end of this decade one in four of the Us workforce will have been affected by merger activity ( Fulmer, 1986) with the approach of 1992 , a similar trend is predicted for Europe.

The Merger and acquisition is facilitated by number of factors.

Market Conditions

Market conditions are changing day by day and in this environment there is a need to consolidate or capture new market so strategic mergers and acquisitions become more attractive and expedient alternative response to the setting up new outlets, and at the same time provide a tool to finish the competition ( Meeks , 1977)

Increasing Availability of Capital

Mergers and acquisitions activities has been increased because the organization and financial institution may need of capital from outside countries because of low interest rate.

More companies for sale

There are lots of companies come in to the market because of number of reasons like successful entrepreneurs of the post war years reach retirement age , because of families issues and there is not natural successor within the family.

The Easing of Regulations

According to McManus & Hergert, 1988. Gartrell & Yantek suggested that acquisition activity is related to political climate in that right of centre administration stimulate activity.

The Need to share Risk

Mergers and acquisitions is very important if u need to share risk like new product development often results in the formation of joint ventures , mergers and other types of strategic alliance.

The existence of complex Indivisible Problems

All of these can be considered to be logical economic and marketing factors, which make possible the decisions to acquire, These conditions , particularly the need to share risk and problems solving, have also contributing to the increasing trend towards the formation of joint ventures and Mergers (Harrigan, 1988)

(vii) Unrecognized Psychological Motives

According to Levinson (1970) suggests one such motive to be fear of risk McManus and Hergest (1988) suggest that the decisions happens when ‘CEO is bored and wants to find a new game to play’ or to create some excitement amongst senior managers (Hunt, 1988)

2.2 Impact of Mergers and Acquisitions

Merger and Acquisitions have the prime aim to maximise the firm’s profit and shareholders wealth like any other strategic growth option, but there has been a risk of failure so the debate in the literature among theorists and practitioners as to the real strength of the strategy in creating shareholder’s value worth the risk of failure. The review literature that surrounds different prospects like shareholders, acquirer , targets has been studied on short , medium and long term value creation through the M&A activity . The following different categories of studies can be highlighted.

Affect of M&A Activities on People

The Human Side of Mergers and Acquisitions is about to impact that mergers and acquisitions have on people in the workplace: the psychological difficulties that people experience, the culture clashes that can emerge in organizations that can emerge in organizations during the post –merger integration period, and the ways in which these problems can manifest themselves –such as communication breakdowns a “We-they” mentality between the component organizations in a merger, lowered commitment , drops in productivity , organizational power struggles and office politicking , and loss of key organizational members. We adopt primarily and organization development (OD) perspective on mergers and acquisitions: given the myriad problems (Thomas L Legare)

The Existing evidence on the effects of mergers and acquisitions on efficiency or value comes from two basic types of large sample studies: event studies and performance studies

Event studies consider the returns to the shareholders of targets and acquirers in the days before and after an acquisition announcement .These studies consistently find that the combined returns to acquirer and target stockholders are unequivocally positive .These positive returns imply that the market anticipates that acquisitions on average will create value. These studies and reactions do not, however, provide insight into the sources of the value changes in mergers or whether the expectations of value changes are ultimately realized. Furthermore, the combined returns cover a broad range of responses from very positive to very negative.

Cross sectional analyses of event period returns provide some evidence that the broad range of combined announcement period returns reflects the market’s ability to forecast an acquisitions success. For example both Mitchell and Lehn (1990) and Kaplan and weisbach (1992) find the there is a relation between (1) acquirer and combined returns and (2) the ultimate outcome of the acquisition. Other studies examine a number of different determinants of the cross-sectional variation in returns associated with acquisitions. (see e.g Lang , Stulz, and Walkling 1991 . Maloney , McCormick , and Mitchell 1993; morock, Shliefer , and Vishny 1990)These Cross-Sectional analyses of event –period returns provide some understanding of the nature of the market reaction to acquisition announcements.They do not , however , examine whether the anticipated value creation or improved productivity materializes, Nor do they have a great deal to say about the organizational mechanisms and management practices that drive acquisition success or failure.

Studies of post merger performance attempt to measure the longer-term implications of mergers and acquisitions using both accounting and stock return data. Studies of accounting data fail to find consistent evidence of improved performance or productivity gains. (see e.g, Healy , Palepu, and Ruback 1992 and Ravenscraft and Scherer 1987) similarly , studies that focus on acquirers long term stock performance find mixed results abnormally negative stock returns after the acquisition ( agraqwal , Jaffe, and Mandelker 1992), no abnormal returns (franks , Harris , and Titman 1991) and negative abnormal returns only for stock mergers (Mitchell and Stafford 1996) Like the announcement period event studies, longer term performance and event studies document substantial cross sectional variation in performance , but do not study the sources of value changes in mergers and acquisitions.

In sum , there are a number of questions that the existing economics and finance literature on mergers and acquisitions leaves unanswered , Existing work provides mixed results on the average impact of mergers and acquisitions More importantly , existing work offers little insight into the determinants of an acquisitions success or failures.

Research on the basis of Capital Market

Capital market is one of the research category used as central information point. According to Healey (1992), the stock market data reflects the effects of M&A as it reflects future profits and dividends expected by the post integration entity moreover these researchers believe that the result has been found swayed by the researcher’s personal orientation an hypothesis. It is been analyse that majority among studies that have been covered lower then desired effects created through analyses based on capital market data.

Event Study Methodology

According to data et al (1992) have indicated that these studies are based on the hypothesis that markets across the industrialized world are highly well-organized and therefore soon after the M&An announcement moreover it depends on the future financial benefits or losses. The result of such studies have highlighted the majority of M&A activities do create affects that can range from significant to normal (Sudarsanam 2003) but the people working along with the field and many other critics have argued that the methodology is only affective for small projects to obtain the desired affects and does not represent long term desired affects in the medium to long term.

Short Run Objectives

A large number of organizations plan for financial gains within a short period of time when the merger date is finalized they are looking to achieve this objective, 30% and 10% abnormal returns have been found for the target shareholders Sudarsanam et al (1996)

Long Run Objectives

According to Agarwar (1992) the organizations long term desired affect through M&A activity that has gained an increasing interests among researchers after the data is available for the last wave of M&A in the 1990’s. There has been a mixture of results as- 10% abnormal returns over 5 years M&A periods; Fama & French (1993) showed positive 9% abnormal returns for the acquired and negative -4% abnormal returns for the acquirer; and sudarsanam & Mahate 2003 showed a range of negative -18% to positive+1% abnormal returns in M&A situation. Although it has been found out that many of these studies have used different models, benchmarks and organizational data, but there is a general consensus that M&A abnormal desired affects in the long term.

Operational Planning Research

The best way to analyse the affect of M&A activity is to study the operational performance of the firms involved. The operational data consists of accounting data like cash flow and profit and loss statement are used by such studies (Healey 1992) Herman and Lowenstein (1988) used these technique on data gathered during 1975 to 1983 and found that no significant improvements in the performance of post M&A entities. Healey et al (1992) found a meagre 3% operational performance among companies analyzed. However the same data was later analyzed under improved methods and found no operational performance. The results show large number of failures in creating substantial desired affects through operational analysis.

Recent Merger and Acquisitions trends

In the above table shows the recent trends in the field, let us being with our full dissertation of the subject of M&A. This will be begin with a discussion of the basic terminology used in the field.

2.3 MAJOR STRATEGIC ISSUES

According to Cartwright and Cooper (1995) in order to get the desired objective during the M&A activity the internal environment of firms should be synchronized. It can therefore recommend that integration of people, their systems, procedures, practice and organizational culture is extremely important in order to get the desired objective.

Mr David (2007) suggest that the internal aspects of firms that are going to merge can be divided into two core competencies that can help to minimize the factors involved the failure of M&A strategies.

These core competencies lie in the field of corporate strategy which usually lack coordination during M&A activities. The main limiting aspects of M&A in terms of strategic importance that can play a vital role by using their core competencies have been highlighted as follows

Organizational culture

The cultural differences is the single largest cause of lack of proposed performance, achieving the desired target and objective and time consuming issues in the running of successful business ( Bijilsma frankema , 2001) according to him culture plays a important part in employees motivation in the development to new business he says that cultural clash is the most dangerous factors when two companies decide to combine moreover the things like styles , values and missions is the part of factor influencing the M&A.

According to (Covin et al, 1997) the employees required five to seven years after the merger to feel truly incorporated. Due to the multitude of these changes many problems arises like loss of job, also financial debt and fears of jobless.(Mirvis and Marks 1992) moreover he says that after merger the new team is also distressing and anxiety for the people other fear include the loss of effective and close team members,

as well as the uncertainty about the new team members and supervisors to be inherited the employees when forced to deal with new team members and managers they may develop fears of taking risks and raising sensitive subject. This may adopt us verses them thinking, where trust for the new team members will be minimal (Mirvis and Marks, 1992).Management facing this kind of behaviour may have to pay the high price of loss of coordination and initiative among the employees of the new business combination. Moreover the issues and disagreement will be more difficult to resolve, so the time after the merger is the most difficult time for the management and new team members to move forward as a whole. Appelbaum etal, (2000)

Stress

According to (Datta et al , 1992) the process of merger and acquisitions consists of biggest change at the individual and organizational level in the history of organizations because of this the process is stressful. When one culture combines with another the employees feel as through they have lost control over important aspects of their loves, and in an attempt to regain control, they often withdraw. So it creates stress within individual , i.e reduced performance and job satisfaction . ( Berger and Ofec 1996)

According to Schweiger & Denisi (1991) the employees after the M&A go through a time of increased anxiety uncertainty and stress. They are concerned about their new position it will create more stress in them so communication plays the vital role during the merger so that employees know what is going on and how they might be affected during and after the post integration period. Thus it can be suggested that while negotiations have been compared to flirting before marriages , and the closing of the deals to forming a new family, employees reaction can be associated with “bereavement” (Katinka , 2004)

Organizational change and resistance

Changes after merger announcement like stress, symptoms, work related factors, health status, and lifestyle. Personal characteristics were composed of age, sex, height, weight, and marital status in both surveys. Moreover stress related symptoms like anxiety, impatience and depression were dichotomized by either having a complaint or not so following a M&A , a complex set of organizational , managerial and personal changes or inevitable.

Jensen & Rubock (1983) claim that in order to cope with the changes and resist with the changes there is a way to select a strategy and a set of specific approaches for implementing an organizational change effort. It is very important for managers to implement changes successfully in order to cope with the changes. The researchers have introduced six different strategies in order resist the changes after the merger and four major reasons why peoples resist changes.

Image, Identity and confidence

According to (Ravenscraft and Scherer 1988) image , identity and confidence of the human resource may reduced after the combination process it has been send that most of the employees will feel uncertain and will need some relaxation environment .

It can be recommended that the peoples effected by this process can prove dangerous for the management they can change the ownership moreover the employees who are affected by the process tend to protect their identity and confidence through tolerance and humble and hence they try to maintain their status and confidence with experience that they are the part of new entity, if the cultural factor is not adequately taken into account at this stage of the merger , there will be so less time to contain it after the merger.

Weston et al (2001) discuss the fear and stress associated with a merger. Schwert (1996) argue that when the objectives after the merger are not met , the managing teams of both companies are the employees of the acquired company enter a “cycle of escalating and distrust”. In other words, managers of the acquiring company press for increased control, while employees of the acquired company resist and demand their autonomy. Others view mergers and acquisitions as power games , which create some excitement fro bored CEOs.

Communication

Tompkins (1984) defined organizational communication as “the study of sending and receiving messages that create and maintain a system of deliberately corresponding activities or forces of two or more persons”

Organizational communication is the exchange of messages through collective creation maintenance and transformation of organizational meaning. Members develop commonly understood patterns of expectations of organizational action through communication. Moreover communication with the employees is a very important factor throughout the entire M&A process and creates a positive effect on employees through the trying time.

According to John et al (1999) that communication plays a vital role in the combination of different and various cultures. The cultures can be at conflicting ends and therefore should be understood by the top management during integration period moreover according to Richard et al (1999) the human resource department should plan for the change in organization and they should know before this process that what going to happen with the company when two cultures combine as the result of merger. So in the process of merger only decision is not enough but the proper communication of these decisions among the company is very important moreover management works horizontally and vertically through leadership, control and organization.(Sudarsanam and Mahate, 2003)

FLOW OF CASH

Despite of the fact that many people loss their job in the process but the same time high rate of voluntary turnover linked with the process moreover it includes substantial outflow of talent and expertise. According to Ravenscraft and scherer, 1988) report executive turnover rates as high as 75% in the first three years of post acquisition period. Unplanned personnel losses are not necessarily confined to the more senior levels of the organization. Typically, acquired or merged organizations experience on overall rate of staff turnover of at lest 30% in the first two years post merger period (Cartwright and Cooper 1995)

2.4 Success and Failures

A large number of mergers and acquisitions are unsuccessful .Over the last fifteen years, 23% of all merged firms worldwide reported lower profits than comparable non-merged firms (Gugler et al.(13)) Daimler Chrysler, the effect of the largest industrial merger ever, for example , has only posted low or negative profits since its birth in 1998-including the biggest loss in German business history in 2001. The disappointing results of mergers have been puzzling commentators and academics alike.

In the management literature, poor merger performance has often been connected to unsuccessful addition of different corporate cultures. Cultural differences, however, are not enough to explain failures. First, firms seem to be aware of organisational difficulties when taking merger decisions. DaimlerChrysler, for example, anticipated post –merger Challenges. Second, mergers between partners with closer corporate cultures sometimes perform worse ( Morosini et al. (22)) Cultural similarity does not prevent mergers from failing.

We build a theory that investigates the interaction between the pre-merger and the post merger processes. In the pre-merger period, firms collect information about the potential synergy gains. If they then agree to merge, each firm decides to which extent it exerts an integration effort in the post-merger period. A more integrated company leads to a higher realisation of the potential synergy gains.

We show that managers, although being rational and acting in the interest of their shareholders, can lead their firms into an unsuccessfully integrated entity. At the same time, we uncover some of the dangers of mergers among partners with close corporate cultures. Furthermore, according to our explanation, failures should be more frequent during economic booms, which is consistent with the empirical evidence (Harford (14) and Gugler et al. (12)

Our Theory builds on three ingredients .First, firms posses some private information about the potential synergy gains when making merger decisions. Indeed, the reaction of the competitors, the economic fundamentals or the unknown strategic fit of the partners makes these gains, and therefore merger profitability, uncertain. Before merging, however, prospective partners collect information. Although part of this information is shared, another part remains private. Potential partners do not want to give out all their information. In the merger does not materialise, for example, a firm could use this information against the other when competing.

Second at the time of merging firms have distinct cultures, but can move towards a common corporate culture during the post merger integration process. These organisational adjustments are costly. Managers and employees may prefer to maintain the old way of doing things-because of learning costs, inertia, etc and resist adopting some of the partners practices (Carrillo and Gromb and hermalin ) The degree of organisational integration determines the extent of synergy realisation (Larsson and Finkelstein (19) In particular , we assume that if the differences have not been reduced at all by the end of the post merger process, the opportunity costs of merging will not be compensated for.

And third, post-merger efforts show strategic uncertainty. In many circumstances it is intrinsically hard to describe the desired actions in sufficient detail to distinguish them from seemingly similar actions with very different consequences (Mailath et al.[20]. We thus argue that integration efforts are neither ex ante nor ex post contractible. Further, managers will not change behaviour after observing some of the partner’s actions and integration decisions are modelled as immediate.

During the 1980’s, mergers and acquisitions and other forms of strategic alliance, dominated the business and financial press, especially when they proved unsuccessful:

  • An Engagement is broken – The collapse of a Dutch –Blgian Banking Merger ( financial Times , 19 September 1989)
  • Marriage brings woe for Wedgwood _ broken dreams shares nose dive since the “Perfect” marriage in 1980 9 (The Mail , 25 March 1990)

This anxiety with the incidence and outcome of such organization marriages was hardly surprising for, in the 1980s, mergers and acquisitions (M&A) became a worldwide growth industry. The global value of (M &A) became a worldwide growth industry .The global value of M&A has risen rapidly from £60 billion in 1984 to £355 billion in 1990.thirty seven percent of the 1990 figure relates to cross border international M &As so because of high risks attached it is estimated that more than half of all mergers and acquisitions prove financially unsuccessful.

Merger and acquisition activity has increasingly become ‘people’ intensive’, and concerns cultural change or integration

It is true that mergers and acquisitions do fail for reasons of a rational financial and economic nature; but making a successful merger or acquisitions as many organizations have learnt to their cost, is more than just a matter of getting the sums right! Many have also come to recognize that a compatible and successful organizational marriage depends upon characteristics of the partner, which extend beyond the suitability of the strategic match. Financial advisors may guide merger managers in suggesting the broad areas in which economics of scale might be achieved, but they do not have to translate them into practice, and physically implement such decisions.

Many problems includes people involves non routine managerial decisions, e.g. who to lose and who to retain. As one manager speaking on the basis of this own experience, suggests: ‘those who underestimate or ignore the human factor do so at their peril! Although his particular organization, a large multi-national merged over three years ago, it is still considered to be experiencing human merger problems, and a rate of staff turnover in a difficult recruitment market compared to that pre-merger.

Merger and acquisition failure are increasingly being recognized, more progressive companies are coming to realize that what happens to the employees involved, and their organizational cultures, cannot be considered as separate and distinct from what happens to the organization.

There are, therefore, two important human factors to merger and acquisition success which determine the speed and effectiveness with which integration can be achieved. They are:

  • The culture compatibility of the combining organizations, and the resultant cultural dynamics.
  • The way in which the merger/acquisition addition process is managed.

The importance of organizational culture was well demonstrated in a now classic study of over forty highly successful American organizations carried out by Tom Peters and Bob Weterman 1982. The message of In Search of Excellence was loud and clear; consistently outstanding financial performance was the outcome, dominant culture. This link has subsequently been supported by research in the Uk Goldsmith and Clutterbuck 19840 organizational culture has also been linked to market strategy(Piercy and peattie, 1988) and managerial style 09Sathe, 1983) The experience of organizations operating in a highly mobile job market and changing external environment suggests that a strong coherent and unitary culture injects stability into the workforce and reduces labour turnover.

Chapter 3: Methodology

It is important to properly introduce a research design it will define the research problem or issue, pointed out this issue within the literature, and hence targeting the research design to achieve the objective so that the research should be design to achieve the purpose.

The Purpose statement

It is very important before beginning the process of research is development of a sense of the overall writing structure and discuss the approaches that may arise during the research .The purpose statement establishes the direction for the research. In fact, the purpose statement is the most important statement in an entire research study.

According to Locke, spirduse, and Silverman(2000), the purpose statement indicates “Why you want to do the study what you intend to accomplish” Unfortunately , method –and proposal-writing texts give little attention to the purpose statement, and writers on method often incorporate the purpose statement into discussions about other topics, such as specifying research questions or hyposteses.Wilkonson (1991), for example, refers to it within the context of the research questions and objective. Other authors frame it as an aspect of the research problems ( Castetter & Heisler, 1977) the central controlling idea in the study is very important.

  • First , a theoretical problem is formulated;
  • Next , an suitable method are selected ;
  • Then , data are collected and analysed;
  • Finally, the objective with which the research was launched is either challenged or supported.

Research Design

The research would be all about to achieve the objective which is how do merger fulfil the desired objective and how people affected by the merger.

(The research will be based on qualitative and depend on the case studies of recently held mergers and acquisitions across industries)

The qualitative approaches to data collection, analysis, and report writing from the traditional, quantitative approaches. Use of decisive case, collection of open-ended data, analysis of text or pictures, representation of information in figures and tables, and personal interpretation of the findings all inform qualitative procedures. This chapter advances steps in designing qualitative procedures, and it illustrates these procedures with examples from phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography, case studies, and narrative research.

3.1 Case studies

For achieving the aim and objective of the research the qualitative approach method will design, the method consists of case studies which have been chosen to raise the credibility of the findings.

According to Saunders et al, (2003) research context means that the findings of a particular study to be equally applicable to other research settings, such as other organizations. This concern was kept into consideration while choosing different case studies because the aim of the research is to produce general findings for any merger and acquisition activity from a strategic view. The case studies chosen, their industries and their M&A activity years have been highlighted in the following table:

Case Studies

Industries

M&A Year

Aol and Timewarner

Online services

2000

BP and Amoco

Oil and Gas

1998

IBM and Lotus

Information technology

1995

Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham

Research Based Pharmaceuticals

2000

HBOS and LloydsTsb

Mortgage Industry

2009

Banco Santander and Abbey

Consumer Finance

2004-05

Boots and Alliance Unichem

Retailing and Distribution

2006

The case written above most of them reported problem during merger and acquisitions activities across industries. These cases were faced with issues like systems integration, cultures differences, change resistance, management under differing macro and micro circumstances. Moreover, for each company’s research has been made with different amount of time to analyse the degree of success for each case so that the detailed strategic analysis can be made for future merger and acquisitions. Most of the people have also declared that these merger and acquisitions as some of the most difficult across industries while the successful merger and acquisitions used to be standard by other organizations during their change management activities.

3.2 Secondary Data Collection

In order to get the results for analysis of the difficult and different style of merger and acquisitions secondary data from primary, secondary, tertiary sources was produced. According to Kumar (2005) secondary data is dependable in a difficult situation analysis like M&A as it brings in the advantage of audited information and is easy to access than primary data. Moreover the secondary data is used to analyse in different ways like views of different school of thoughts that increased the depth of the research analysis.

In order to get the secondary data from all the works that have been produced on the M&A case studies selected, a comprehensive use of strong tertiary sources was undertaken. The tertiary resources searched secondary data from a range of academic journals, trade publications, magazines and industry profiles. Journals like Human Relation Journal, Journal of Buyouts and Mergers, Harvard Business Review, Journal of organizational Change Management and Journal of Mergers and Acquisitions were some of the widely used for data collection for this project. Other than journals, the scope of the project was also analyzed with in house publications from case organizations, their press releases at different points in time regarding the mergers and acquisitions along with different websites for latest up to date information regarding the success of companies.

Chapter 4: Analysis and Findings

This section of the report highlights the analysis and findings of the research. The section has been divided into M&A analysis of each case study from a strategic perspective to understand whether M&A activity has brought the desired effects.

4.1 the aol and time WARNER

The Company

Time Warner and AOL is the third largest media company in the World In January 2000 AOL purchased Time Warner for $164 billion and this merger belongs to one of the largest merger in American history cleared by federal Trade Commission moreover AOL is the largest and dominant, firm in the aggregation and distribution of content and services over the internet. AOL is also the largest provider of internet access in the U.S overall, it is the most successful firm in the business of online services.(cook 2000)

Acquisition Strategy

AOL would own 55 percent of the new company despite of the fact that Time Warner’s largest size (revenues of $14.6 billion versus AOL’s$4.8 billion). Its combined market cap was $350 billion and revenue exceeded $30 billion. AOL had 20 million subscribers. AOL and Time Warner had thrown each other a life preserver in the effort to grow rationally in the new millennium always growing potentially as increasing the products and services to increase the customer online as well as one the floor between them they could eventually offer fast , virtually instantaneous hook up to the internet over upgraded cable lines, and thus sell more of every thing than either could alone moreover they offer home base television , telephone , and internet services in one package with one handy monthly bill. Gerald Faulhaber (2000)

The merger between AOL and Time Warner will horizontally and vertically increase AOL’s power in the market for Internet online services. The anti-competitive effects of this merger will harm consumers.

Strategic Point of View

It is nearly impossible to developments in technology business or journalism without proper corporate strategies and planning in the early twenty first century so the main strategies of the merger is to develop in technologies (video on demand and interactive television), the second most important strategies is marketing efforts (partnerships between newspapers and TV stations to promote each other’s work), and other one is to job descriptions (backpack journalists, who return from the scene of a story with words, and video) Kevin Kawamoto (2004).

The company will see a number of key technology and developments.

The creation and use of digital content management systems within media companies, which will store content in digital formats such as XML that allow it to be delivered relatively easily to different platforms.

Wireless technology either through cellular telephone systems or wireless network.

Desired Effect

The strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted by HP can be summarized as follows:

Factors

AOL

TIME WARNER

Strategic Alignment

Comparative analysis

Growth in Stock per share

Growth in Stock per share

Yes

Financial Aspects

Higher growth in online computing segments

Low profitability and R&D output

Yes

Strategy

Diversification Strategy

Focused Strategy

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Acquisition

Positive towards Acquisition

Yes

Culture

System integrator and entrepreneurial based

Process, management-by-objective and entity based

No

Desired effects

Long –term competitive advantage

Product delays and loss of market share

No

Human Resource

Positive Affect on People, employees

Satisfied by time passing

No

Success and Failures

After the merger, the profitability of the ISP division (America online) decreased. Moreover the market valuation of similar independent internet companies drastically fell. As a result, the value of the America online division dropped and goodwill write off causing AOL time Warner to report a loss of $99 billion in 2002- at the time , the largest loss ever reported by a company 2003,

AOL and Time Warner, The Company is Still Counting the Losses, first its share price has suffered a dramatic fall, Second its revenue has dropped AOL was down by 33% in the company third quarter 2003 results and is expected to fall further to as much as 45% when Warner full Year’s results are unveiled at the end of this month.

4.2 British Petroleum and Amoco – 1998

Overview

BP Amoco merger was formed in 1998; combination of competitive international energy and petrochemicals group operate globally. Drawing upon HRMID (2004), at the time of merger, it was one of the largest industrial mergers in the commercial organizational history. It has been written in the literature as one of the most successful mergers of two large international groups as it brought more benefits more quickly than either organization had forecasted. BP that has created on a strategy before the merger to minimize its risks in the oil and gas business and to compete its business partners. This can be seen from the fact that BP sold its IT business called Scicon in 1988, most of its mineral businesses in 1989, BP Coal in 1990, and its nutrition business in 1992 (Alzira wt al, 2003). This divesture strategy was coupled with acquisition of Standard Oil in 1987 creating BP America and acquisition of Britoil in 1988 (Alzira et al, 2003), therefore becoming a major player in the oil sector in the United States. Amoco, according to Healy & Griffin (2004), at the time of merger was one of the leading brands in the US and had many overlapping interests with BP the main objective of the merger is to increase the bargaining power and to introduce cost cutting.

Acquisition Strategy

The basic objective of the companies is to develop its business in petrochemicals moreover history of the company shows major changes came when it merged with Amoco to make BP Amoco to combine its operations in a competitive international energy and petrochemicals market. The major benefit of the merger is to gain competitive advantage by using its sheer size to enjoy better barging power and economies of scale across its market. Drawing upon Healy & Griffin (2004), it can also be suggested that the enlarged group had a high bargaining power in the world of oil and gas, creating an effective and efficient supply chain management. It has been written that at the time of merger, it was considered the largest commercial merger across any industry. In 2001, the company changed its name to BP following a number of acquisitions of related businesses.

Strategic Point of View

The preparation phase of the merger is the most important phase where all the planning and thinking has been developed. It has been found that the companies developed “pre-merger task force” that analyzed all the aspects of this mega merger with companies that have roots in two national cultures i.e. the US and the UK (Barrow, 2001). It has been highlighted that the strategic like learning from pas experience & understanding of the merger was to create synergies across the departments and remove repetition of tasks (Stonham, 2000). It can therefore be suggested that the merger was aimed at achieving economies of scale and scope, along with increased bargaining power with different players in the industry. The merger with Amoco was considered the largest of its type at that time and created a giant within oil & gas industry that through further acquisitions strengthened its position as a vertically integrated company.

Desired Effect

The result of the merger is a success story in achieving the desired effects and the strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted by BP can be summarized as follows:

Factors

British Petroleum

Amoco

Strategic Alignment

External Environment

Rising oil and gas prices in international markets

To unite the global operations through merger

Yes

Instruments

Communities of practice Connect

High level of communication practices

Yes

Strategy

Employee networks

Communities of practice

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Merger

Positive towards Merger

Yes

Culture

Hierarchal, inflexible, and procedural

Pragmatic, top-down, and power culture

Yes

Desired effects

Long term sustainability

Long term sustainability

Yes

Affects on employees

Positive by time passing from 28% to 49%

Satisfied as time processing but fear factor still exists

NO

The success Factors

  • Bp experience from the previous mergers and joint ventures
  • Use of communities of practice for knowledge sharing
  • Better knowledge identification due to Connect

The Failures Factors

Problems with technical integration

4.3 IBM AND LOTUS 1995

Companies Environment

In the year 1995, Big Blue acquired a small software company Lotus, for $3.5 billion at that time it was one of the largest deal in software industry despite of the fact that Lotus CEO was against this acquisition in the software industry but the acquisition of the Lotus was very important for IBM, since the questions turned IBM’s old structure in order to become a software driven company who can compete with Microsoft and proved to be successful moreover IBM had to realize this acquisitions under difficult circumstances and strong possibility of loosing Lotus employees and paying 64$ per share moreover IBM could retain two Lotus executives, Mr Zisman and Mr papows and persuaded them to be the new confidants and leaders of Lotus. IBM managers knew that the right decision was to have Lotus executives run the post acquisition integration (Dr Andrea 2002)

Acquisition Strategy

At the time of acquisition, IBM never did the step in strategy Lotus, instead it insured Lotus autonomy, and Lotus became a wholly owned subsidiary and remained a visible, viable brand. The employees continued to receive Lotus pay checks and benefits and IBM did not or would not impose its corporate regulations or culture moreover many of the employees get promotion because of their performance in the company and economic conditions.

IBM insured that Lotus culture would be protected moreover they kept all Lotus systems, such as benefits, compensation plans, stock options. Thompson assigned a person in his office to be the full time gatekeeper of all communications between the two companies for the first year and he saw no big difference between two companies culture and mentioned that culture difference between Lotus and IBM were not that big as they might have appeared, e.g IBM had no more the straight arrow image along with its infamous dress code of blue suits, white shirts and black wingtip shoes (Rifkin 1998)

In order to build confidence, IBM opened even its research and developments doors for Lotus engineers and answered every question moreover IBM’s openers caused an impressive technology transfer moreover IBM anticipation was not selfish Lotus acquisition caused an image change, IBM image changing from and old mainframe dinosaur to a cooler place to be associated with Mr Papaws said (Rifkin 1998)

Strategic Point of View

At the time of acquisition, IBM and Lotus culture difference were not that big as they might have appeared so the management easily carry own the same process with less difficulties it is benefited a lot to the company and the employees moreover the main strategy of the company is to retain the key people for the knowledge will not loss the most important thing of implementing to this strategy is acceptance of the cultural differences and people learn from each other moreover the leadership from the same company benefited a lot.

Success and Failures

The result of the acquisition is a success story which is defined as:

  • Peaceful coexistence , when differences are not to overcome
  • Acceptance of the cultural differences and learning from each other
  • Sign of continuity with the brand “Lotus”
  • Leadership from the same company , no imposition and a sign of stability
  • Candid communication about employees future
  • Mutual transfer of knowledge , therefore building trust among the acquired company employees
  • Identification and preservation of the key people , therefore no loss of knowledge
  • Establishment of the gatekeeper between IBM and Lotus in according to uphold a flow of information between the companies.

Factors

IBM

LOTUS

Strategic Alignment

External Environment

Intense industry competition and fragmentation

Intense industry competition and fragmentation

Yes

Financial Aspects

Low costs and highly successful business model

Profits struggling and restructuring

Yes

Strategy

Cost cutting and synergies

Leverage on Brand

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Acquisition

Resistant towards change

Yes

Culture

Innovative and forwards looking

Passive, orthodox and bureaucratic

Yes

Affect on people

Competition increases after the merger

Top people retains the jobs

NO

4.4 Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham – 2000

Over view of Company

GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) is a world second largest pharmaceutical and health care products manufacturing group whose history goes as deep as 1859 when Beecham opens the world’s first factory built solely for making medicines at St Helens in England. The company incorporated on 6th December 1999 under English law on 27th December 2000 the company acquired Glaxo welcome plc and SmithKline Beecham plc, both English public limited companies, by way of a scheme of arrangement for the merger of the two companies. Both Glaxo Wellcoem and Smithkline beecham were major global healthcare businesses. Since that time the group has passed through many phases, but the turning point came while the merger of Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham in 2000, it had also seen a merger of Glaxo and Wellcome in 1995 (Glaxo, 1998). At the time of merger, the pharmaceutical industry saw consolidation with more mergers in order to achieve further economies of scale barriers for new entrants in the field of research and new product development (Ho, 2003), which is at the heart of growth of pharmaceutical industry. Such trends of horizontal integration in the industry have posed entry barrier as the new entrant faces cost disadvantages.

Merger Strategy

It has been noticed that the merger would create a strategy with a combination of R&D excellence, unmatched marketing strength, and financial power to lead the industry. GSK would provide great prospective for society and if successful, and end product to great significance moreover in order to improve the results of merged company and to gain shareholder’s value through synergies across different businesses, a federal ‘manufacturing’ capability was established (Heracleous & Murray, 2001). This development according to researchers has been through top-down co-ordination among employees of Glaxo Wellcome and Smithkline Beecham and like-to-like co-ordination between their managers. It has also discovered that prior to the merger a detailed mapping of the product ranges of the two companies was conducted, which showed a strong co-relation of manufacturing functionalities between the two companies (Pearce, 2005), which can be represented as follows:

One of the key issues with the merger of GSK was to have employees thinking and behavingas GSK people and not Glaxo people or Smithkline people moreover the merger of Glaxo Wellcome and SmithKline Beecham was considered practicable by the management of both companies considering the structural changes. The structure of the main company was planned before the merger even took place and that is still the overall structure of the group (Orit et al, 2002). In this structure, customer-facing businesses were not changed and restructured but were changed into divisions, which virtually did not change any service and product delivery to the customers. It can be recommended that co-ordination between the departments of the two companies were the key to successful integration of the companies in post merger period. Moreover, that this structure has minimized the customer disruptions and has exchanged the best practices across different businesses owned by the new company (Emerald, 2004).

Strategic Point of View

Structural change is the most important and main strategy of the company before merger it involved high risk moreover it is suggested that in order to find this structure practical, the value chains of both the companies and their products were studied in detail. Due to the fact that before the merger both the companies were competing in many healthcare related business areas and had been benchmarking against each other for the implementation of quality programs, thus among the primary activities of both the company’s value chains there were many similar practices. Furthermore, the de-duplication of the support activities was removed and instead centralized support activities were kept for all the businesses. These changes in the value chain during the integration process of the merger resulted in cost savings along with an increase in the value addition at every stage in the value chain. Thus the overall effect of these changes resulted in increased margins, which showed the success of the merger which resulted in the sense that we have had a heritage of having managed a series of alliances and mergers each of these occasions has represented an opportunity for us to learn and improve perhaps most influential to our learning were the two major successful mergers of GSK with welcome in 1995 and Smithkline with Beecham in 1989. One big lesson –build a truly new company that is different from either of its predecessors After all, they can hardly hope to build a dynamic new company if they were duplicates of each other.

Desired Effect

The strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted can be summarized as follows:

Factors

Glaxo Wellcome

SmithKline Beecham

Strategic Alignment

External Environment

Research and development decreases.

Manufacturer competition

Yes

Financial Aspects

Share price increases result of profit

Strong market presence across therapeutic groups

Yes

Strategy

Structural changes help to reduce overlapping function

Changes accurse while new stratetgy

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Merger

Positive towards Merger

Yes

Culture

R&D, team based, and performance measurement

Portfolio based and entrepreneurship oriented

Yes

Desired effects

Long term competitive advantage

Long term competitive advantage

Yes

Affect of merger on people

Success and failures

  • Increase in sales in all areas in the world, USA alone there was £2.6 billion up to 14%, with a two percentage point benefit from the reversal of a provision following resolution of a rebate dispute. Sales in Europe were also increase after the merger
  • Structural changes the business whish is converted in two divisions and the coordination is the key to success.
  • There is fear of job loss but because of the successful completion of the merger the fear does not exist any more.
  • Cultural differences is going to reduce after people learn each other

4.5 HBOS AND LLOYDS TSB – 2009

Overview

The merger between Halifax and Bank of Scotland take place in May 2001 one the basis of on-for-one share exchange agreement to create the new business entity called HBOS (HRMID, 2003). It has been suggested by practitioners that at the time both banks merged, the external environment of the banking and financial institutional markets was faced with great internal competition and in order to create a competitive advantage based on economy of scale and scope other banks have started consolidating moreover both banks had overlapping business portfolio and therefore synergies were suggested as the main reason for the merger and promised a substantial desired effects for shareholders of both banks.

January 2009 Halifax and the Bank of Scotland survived on the high street while the recession’s period is going on after the merger with Lloyds TSB completes these two banking group combine as a single business entity to create a largest network of bank branches in the UK.

Merger Strategy

At the time of merger, there was general global recession that impacted upon consumer spending and consequently on banking sector (Business Insight, 2004). Therefore the strategy of the merger was focused at strengthening the merged bank in the mortgage market, as due to low consumer spending at that time resulted in Bank of England to cut the interest rate from the 6.00% in 2000 to 4.00% in 2001, which was further reduced to 3.5% in 2003 (Thurtle, 2001) moreover the banking largest group interesting in multi-brand strategy therefore keep two of the strongest HBOS brand, Halifax and Bank of Scotland. It has yet to confirm whether HBOS other brand including intelligent Finance , Scottish Windows and former Birmingham Midshires- will survive the merger. This was the main reason that facilitated the merger that created the largest home mortgage lender in the UK. The management at HBOS implemented an aggressive pricing strategy along with competitive product range. It was coupled with the separate operations of the bank under their own brand names, therefore creating competitive advantage through economies of scale of distribution network of mortgage related products and services because of the merger between the Lloyds TSB result in reduced competition in the long term. Lloyds TSB will be in a position to charge higher rates to mortgage customers.

Strategic Point of View

It has been written in the literature surrounding the merger that the process did experience a range of problems during post-integration period due to internal inconsistencies of the bank (Thurtle, 2001). Drawing upon Cornel et al (2006), the CEO of HBOS has been reported to have commented that “the merger of Halifax and Bank of Scotland has been far from smooth”. However, the management in the new entity resolved issues through fire-fighting techniques and the company started posting reasonable growth in the coming years. According to Thurtle (2001), these tactful fine-tuning of the long term strategy was the main reason why the merger did not fail and therefore should be seen as an example of best-practice. HBOS is an example of merger that strengthened the business, which was already considered strong. The merger achieving the desired effects without introducing business to entirely new field by exploiting the knowledge it already possessed.

Desired Effect

The strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted can be summarized as follows:

Factors

HBOS

Lloyds TSB

Strategic Alignment

Overview

Consolidation of Market

Strong Competition and market slow down

Yes

Budgetary Aspects

Overlapping business portfolio

Strong mortgage market presence

Yes

Strategy

Economies of Scale through distribution

Economies of Scale through distribution

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Merger

Positive towards Merger

Yes

Culture

Procedural, innovative and forward looking

Management-by-objective and result oriented

Tactful

Effects on people

Huge shake up of jobs

Charging higher rate of mortgage

Tectful

Effect of Merger on People

  • The increased market share will reduce competition in the long term and the bank will be in a position to charge higher rates to mortgage customers.
  • There is a fear of 40000 jobs losses and the new firm is likely to rationalise its branches.
  • For people with mortgages at the Halifax, your mortgage will not change until the end of your negotiated contract. At the end of your current mortgage term, your will have to get a new deal .This is likely to depend on market conditions with uncertainty surrounding financial markets , mortgage rates are likely to be higher . Lloyds could also use it market power to set higher rates.

4.6 Banco Santander and Abbey – 2004-05

Overview

Abbey National, the UK’s second largest mortgage lender agreed in August 2004 to Banco Santander’s, the largest bank in Spain, £8.2 billion takeover bid (Catarina et al, 2007). The merger has created the seventh largest bank in the world in terms of profit and substantiated Abbey as sixth largest within the UK (IFLR, 2004). Under the proposed operation Banco Santander intends to obtain the whole of the issued and to be issued ordinary share capital of Abbey. The proposed operation will be implemented by way of a court approved scheme of arrangement pursuant to section 425 of the Uk companies Act 1985 The operation is subject to sanction by shareholders of Banco Santander and Abbey, as well as subject to approval by High court of justice in England and Wales. At the time of merger Banco Santander has its core operations within Spain but it also held leading positions In Portugal, Germany, Italy, Poland, and Latin America. The main focus of the bank has been seen as its consumer finance subsidiary that has its core profits in the field of house mortgages. It has been highlighted that the business environment at the time of merger for banking industry was dominated by intense competition and banks were adopting focused strategies rather diversification. The bank has therefore decided to stick with the lucrative business of consumer finance, where it has already acquired Poliskie Towarzystwo Finansowe, the fourth largest consumer finance bank in Poland in February 2004 and ELCON Finans in Norway in March 2004.

Acquisition Strategy

The acquisition planning adopted by Banco Santander can be seen as a range of other two acquisitions by the bank in the same year in the field of consumer finance. Drawing upon Catarina et al (2007), According to the chairman of Banco Santander at the time of merger that “Abbey’s leading position in the UK mortgage market, combined with its strong distribution network represents a desired effects opportunity based on the application of Banco Santander’s commercial and technological best practice to Abbey’s banking operations”. It can therefore be recommended that the bank was seeking to expand the distribution channels for its consumer finance products to potential customers in the UK and existing Abbey’s mortgage customers. It has also been found out, drawing upon (Business Insight, 2004), that the bank had the strategy to compete in the UK market with a price war as it considered margins too high in the UK market than rest of Europe.

Strategic Point of View

According to Santander chairman Emilo Botin “Abbey’s leading position in the UK mortgage market, combined with its strong distribution network, represents for Banco santander and Abbey shareholders a value creating opportunity based on the application of Banco santander commercial and technological best practices to Abbey,s banking operations Abbey’s business will contribute to reinforce our pan-European franchise and provides the group with a more balanced stream of earnings” In order to create strategic alignment between the internal and external environment of the acquired bank, Banco Santander invested 690 million Euro in technology and restructuring (IFLR, 2004). In order to create cultural consistencies and cut costs, the bank undertook approximately 3,000 redundancies out of a workforce of 26,000 employees (Pieter, 2006). Moreover, at the time of acquisition, the bank also has stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland, which it ceased with the acquisition of Abbey, so that bank can concentrate its efforts and competencies into consumer financial market. It was highlighted by the acquisition team that the complete integration of the merger will take three years, however achieving the desired effects by the acquisition started showing in the first year, when Abbey reduced more than £100 million (Catarina et al, 2007).

Desired Effect

The result of the acquisition can be seen as a success story in achieving the desired effects and the strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted can be summarized as follows:

Factors

Banco Santander

Abbey

Strategic Alignment

External Environment

Rise in consumer financial market

Rise in Mortgage Market in the UK

Yes

Financial Aspects

Focused strategy on consumer finances

Focused strategy on mortgage market

Yes

Strategy

Economies of scale through distribution channels

Cost cutting

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Merger

Resistant to Change

Tactics

Culture

Cost efficient, procedural and innovative

Efficient and objective driven

Yes

Desired effects

Long term geographical expansion

Long term low cost leadership

Yes

Effect of Merger on People

The impact of merger on shareholders are very positive they can own part of the banco Santander moreover financial services business area are very common and result in consolidation of the business and Abbey is the major position in the UK mortgage market moreover after the merger in February the bank announced the best result in the history of the company earning increase 20% to 4$ billion. 6400 employees moved into bank 730$ million headquarters.

4.7 Boots and Alliance Unichem – 2006

Overview

Pharmacy-chain Alliance Unichem and health and beauty retailer Boots announced their $7bn merger on 3rd October (Evening Times, Oct 3, 2005), which was officially formed by 31st July, 2006. At the time of merger, At the time of merger Boots have 1400 shops in UK, and manufactured over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, which it sold in around 130 countries (Ruth & Elke, 2004). Alliance Unichem, on the other hand was owned 1110 pharmacies in UK work in healthcare related products and operates in Netherlands, and Italy; and operated the third largest pharmacy network in the Europe (Binham, 2007). According to Ruth & Elke (2004) Unichem also delivered healthcare products and services in 12 countries, through a network of over 240 distribution warehouses. There is too much competition in the market which resulted in business overlap in the field of pharmaceutical retailing so the merger is the strategy for the companies to get rid of the competition.

Merger Strategy

Pharmaceutical environment was unstable at the time of merger because of strong competition in the super market and EU legislation. It has been highlighted that the “merger of equals” strategy was adopted by the company in which shares are equally distributed. (Financial Times, Oct 2, 2005). It has been found out that Alliance Unichem’s 939 UK outlets and 310 European stores were re-branded as Boots and will sell Boots’ private label brands. Boots pharmacies also sold Alliance Unichem’s own labels, e.g. Almus (Independent, Oct 4, 2005). The group was renamed as Alliance Boots to gain leverage both brands with Boots having its brand equity in the UK and Alliance Unichem in the mainland Europe. The merger gave the Boots brand greater strength in Europe and a platform for expansion outside the UK.

Strategic Point of View

After the merger there is less competition in the UK by having biggest chemist chain of around 2600 stores. (Evening Times, Oct 3, 2005).The network is across 11 nations around Europe they will produce £13bn sales annually. It has been highlighted that due to the companies having similar core operations and leadership positions in their own markets , therefore they had similar cultures and management styles that facilitated post merger integration process. Although major shareholder’s of Boots like Silchester International Investors expressed their reservations but collaboration within management of two companies helped the merger process (Ruth & Elke, 2004). Due to increase in business growth the buying power of the consumer products in increased that help boost margins, which are an important issue for chemists as the government has decreased the amount it pays them for selling national health prescriptions.

Desired Effect

The result of the merger is a success story in achieving the desired effects and the strategic alignment of the main internal characteristics with external environment in the light of strategy adopted can be summarized as follows:

Factors

Boots

Alliance Unichem

Strategic Alignment

External Environment

Intense competition from supermarkets

Changing EU legislation

Yes

Financial Aspects

Market leader in Pharmaceutical retailing

Developed distribution and retailing network in EU

Yes

Strategy

Economies of Scale

Economies of Scope

Yes

Leadership

Positive towards Merger

Positive towards Merger

Yes

Culture

Administrative and cost conscious

Administrative and cost conscious

Yes

Affects on People

Long term competitive advantage

Long term competitive advantage

Yes

Successes and failures

A qualitative evaluation, suggests that Boots’ purpose was not as good as Alliance Unicham, that the merger and private equity takeover did not made a significant change but that, if any thing the healthcare side is being emphasised again and, while this is due to both internal and external drivers, there is significance in the fact that Alliance Unichem is effect won out in the merger and its senior team. All from a healthcare background is now in charge.

Chapter 5: Recommendation and Conclusion

The aim of the literature survey has drawn by highlighting and, in some cases, expanding what is written earlier in this dissertation. The purpose is not to find solutions on how to report intangibles internally or externally, but to interpret what has been found and to raise some questions for further investigation.

The chapter begins with separate conclusions about Human resource and strategies involve to fullfil the objective of merger and acquisitions and ends with some general conclusions and proposals.

Conclusion on strategies involved to fulfil desired objective

The main goal of the research is to discover whether M&A always fulfil desired objective to achieve the aim I have implemented case study method case study of different companies been studied and highlighted there results when different factors applied on them like comparative analysis, financial aspects, strategy, Leadership, culture moreover the following results have been derived after studying each company with respect to these factors highlighted above

AOL and Time Warner

According to my research merger resulted in drop of profit and values of shares moreover the goodwill write off and figures shows that loss of 99$billion in 2002 there is lot of cultural differences between the people of different companies when combine proven unsuccessful but the positive thing is that leadership is going in positive direction

It has been written in the literature review about culture is that people can take five to six years to mix-up and united while accepted each other is a normal time to know each other very well while coming through different cultures.

In the above case AOL and Time Warner companies do not fulfil the desired objective in each case of merger and acquisitions and they have to keep in mind the cultural differences which are the most dangerous thing to coop with.

BP AND AMCO

I have come to know after the case study of BP and AMCO that BP has experience from previous mergers and joint ventures they use the communities of practice for knowledge sharing and they have the better knowledge to drive the desired result after the merger moreover their leadership working positively to take the company in a position for long term sustainability moreover they have some problem like technical integration.

According to literature review it has been highlighted that BP is first formed in 1998 and BP is one of the most successful merger of two large international groups moreover BP has experienced of mergers and joint ventures it has many overlapping interests with Amco the main objective of the merger is to increase the bargaining power and to introduce cost cutting.

In the above case it has been noticed that companies should have experience before taking interest into merge with any other company because the history shows many merger prove to be failure.

IBM AND LOTUS

During my research I have found that result of the acquisition is a success story because they accepted each other cultures and learn from each other moreover this is acquisition not merger so not many people from Lotus came to join IBM only few top persons came to join so it was easy to accept the culture for them and the leadership from same company help them to grow moreover mutual transfer of knowledge and trust among the acquired company employees and the most important benefit is that there is no loss of knowledge.

It has been written in the literature review that many acquisitions were successful because they accepted each other cultures and learn from each other moreover no loss of knowledge is the key of success during this acquisition.

In the above case it has been noticed that the company should accept the cultures of each other and the management have to organize some programme like birthday parties, fair well parties, nigh dance parties so that the people learn from each other which benefited for company.

Glaxo Wellcome and Smithkline Beecham 2000

During the research I have found that after merger of two companies in 2000 the company grow up and become worlds largest pharmaceutical organization because of strategies adopted by management there is not fear of job less exits now and people adopted the cultures of each other and the leadership is positive towards the growth of company

It has been written in the review that cultural differences play an important part while making a success and failures but people learn from each other a lot after the merger and the company is now a world largest moreover there is not overlapping of functions exists now which has fear a lot for management

In the above study it has been noticed that experience makes the merger successful because Glaxo Wellcome merger before is benefited for the company in this merger help the management to sort out the problems and make the company top of the business filed.

HBOS AND LLOYDS TSB 2009

During the research I have found that the merger between Lloyds TSB reduces the competition in the long term therefore bank is in a position to charge higher interest rate to mortgage customers moreover after the merger job fear increases because banks close some branches. So the merger proves bad luck for employees but some success stores for ownership.

It has been written in the literature review that people are mostly affected by these type of mergers not the management and proven same after the research there is lot of job losses when two banks combine to become one.

Overall conclusions and summary

Recommendations

I have suggested and recommended balance scorecard for organizations to achieve the desired results

The balance scorecard is a strategic planning and management system that is used extensively in business and industry, non profit organizations worldwide to align business activities to the vision and strategy of the organization, improve internal and external communications and monitor organizations performance against strategic goals (Robert Koplan)

Balance scorecard suggests that we view the organization from four perspectives and to develop metrics collect data and analyze it relative to each of these perspectives

First perspective includes employee training and corporate cultural attitudes related to both individual and corporate self improvement.

Second perspective refers to internal business processes, Matrices based on this perspective allows the managers to know how well their business is running, and whether its products and services conform to customer requirements

Recent management techniques has shown an increasing realization of the importance of customer focus and customer satisfaction in any business. These are the leading indicators if customers are not satisfied they will ultimately find other suppliers that will meet their needs poor performance from this perspective is thus a leading indicator of future decline, even though the current financial picture may look good.

Timely and accurate funding data will always be a priority and managers will do whatever necessary to provide it. In fact , often there is more than enough handling and processing of financial data so the efforts should be applied to do this.

References

Arnold, G,.(2002) Corporate Financial Management, Prentice Hall, Harlow

Adams, J. (2000), “The Royal treatment”, Institutional Investor-International Edition, Nov2000, Vol. 25 Issue 11, p31, 6p

Walter 1985; Hovers, 1973; Kitching ,1967 “ The Impact of Mergers and Acquisitions on People at work” Existing Research and Issues Manchester School of Management UMIST

Alzira Salama, Wayne Holland, Gerald Vinten (2003), Challenges and opportunities in mergers and acquisitions: three international case studies – Deutsche Bank-Bankers Trust; British Petroleum-Amoco; Ford-Volvo, Journal of European Industrial Training; Volume: 27 Issue: 6; 2003 Case study

Andrade G., M. Mitchell and E. Stafford, (2001), New Evidence and Perspectives on Mergers, 15(2), pp103-120

Abellan, D. (2004) Mergers and Acquisitions, : A survey of Motivations

Agarwal, A. Jaffe, F,J and Mandelkar, G,N. (1992) “ Post Acquisition Performance of Acquiring Firms: A re-examination of an Anamoly” The Journal of Finance, Vol 47, pp 1605

Buono, A. F. (2003), “SEAM-less post-merger integration strategies: a cause for concern”, Journal of Organizational Change Management, 2003, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p90

Beena P.L (2000) Journal of Finance and Economics “Analysis of Merger in a private corporate Sector in India”

Brealey, R.A., Myers, S.C. and Marcus, A.J. (2004), “Fundamentals of Corporate Finance” International Edition, McGraw Hill

Barney, J. (1997), “Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage,” Journal of Management, Vol. 17, pp. 99-120

Birkinshaw, J.; Bresman, H.; Håxanson, L. (2000), “MANAGING THE POST-ACQUISITION INTEGRATION PROCESS: HOW THE HUMAN INTEGRATION AND TASK INTEGRATION”, Journal of Management Studies, May2000, Vol. 37 Issue 3, p395, 31p

Business Insight, (2004) “Mergers and Acquisitions in European Financial Services”, Business Insight

Berger, G. P., and Ofec, E. (1996), Bust up Takeovers of value destroying diversified firms. The Journal of Finance, 4, 1175-1200

Barrow, David C. (2001), SHARING KNOW-HOW AT BP AMOCO, Research Technology Management, May/Jun2001, Vol. 44 Issue 3, p18

Barney, J. (1986) “Organizational Culture: Can It Be a Source of Sustained Competitive Advantage?” Academy of Management Review, Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 656-665

Canagavally ,R. (2000) Financial performance of Indian manufacturing companies“An Evolution of Mergers and Acquisitions”

Catwright & Cary (1995) Article “organizational marriage: “hard” versus” soft” issues

Binham, Caroline (2007), Boots targets five firms in post-merger adviser review. (cover story), Lawyer, 7/23/2007, Vol. 21 Issue 29, p1

Cartwright, Sue; Cooper, Cary L. (1995), “The Psychological Impact of Merger and Acquisition on the Individual: A Study of Building Society Managers”, Human Relations, Mar93, Vol. 46 Issue 3, p327-347, 21p

Cornel Wisskirchen, Dirk Vater, Tim Wright, Philippe De Backer, Christine Detrick (2006), The customer-led bank: converting customers from defectors into fans, Strategy & Leadership; Volume: 34 Issue: 2; 2006

Design News (1989), HP + Apollo may = super 'stations, 6/5/89, Vol. 45 Issue 11, p44

Datta D K, Pinches G E and Narayan V K, (1992) “ Factors Influencing Wealth Creation From Mergers and Acquisitions” Strategic Management Journal, 13(1) pg 67

Comment R and Jarrell, G.A. (1995) “Corporate Focus and Stock Returns” Journal of Financial Economics 37, 67-87

Catarina Figueira, Joseph Nellis, Richard Schoenberg (2007), Travel abroad or stay at home?: Investigating the patterns of bank industry M&As in the EU, European Business Review; Volume: 19 Issue: 1; 2007

David, R. (2007), “Mergers making a leap into the unknown”, The Marketer April 07

Emerald, (2004), “Innovation at GlaxoSmithKline: Is it the Safest Way” Strategic Direction, Vol. 20, No. 7, pp. 16-18

Evening Times (Oct 3, 2005), “Boots and Alliance in GBP 7BN chemist merger”, Gordon Thomson, Evening Times, Glasgow (UK): pg. 16

Fama, E.F and French K.R. (1995), “ Size and Book to Market Factors in Earnings and Returns” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol 50, pp 131

Financial Times (Oct 2, 2005), “Boots and Alliance UniChem to create powerful retailing concoction”, By Elizabeth Rigby, London: pg. 1

Gould, B. (1998), “Keeping M&A on an even keel (Mergers and acquisitions)”, The Antidote; Volume: 3, Issue: 2

Ghosh, A, (2001), “Does Operating Performance Really Improve following Corporate Acquisitions” Journal of Corporate Finance Vol 7 pp 151

Goldman Sachs (1999), “Offer for National Westminster Bank PLC”, Goldman Sachs International

Glaxo, (1998), “Are you Creative?” Published by: Journal of Knowledge Management, Sept 1998

Ho, J. (2003), “Extending the Product Lifeline”, Pharmaceutical Executive, Jul2003, Vol. 23 Issue 7, p70, 4p

Heracleous, Loizos; Murray, John (2001), The Urge to Merge in the Pharmaceutical Industry, European Management Journal, Aug2001, Vol. 19 Issue 4, p430, 13p

Handy, C. (1993), “Understanding Organizations” 4th Ed., Penguin Books

Herman, E,S and Lowenstein L, (1988) “The Efficiency Effects of Hostile Takeovers” in John C Coffee Jr, Louis Lowenstein and Susan Rose Ackerman’s Knights Raiders & Targets: The Impact of the hostile Takeover. Oxford University Press, New York

HRMID (2004), BP-Amoco brings out the best in its people: ...and the lessons learned from other successful international mergers, Human Resource Management International Digest; Volume: 12 Issue: 2; 2004 Viewpoint

HRMID (2003), Mentoring develops leaders of the future at Halifax plc: Senior managers give something back to the organization, Human Resource Management International Digest; Volume: 11 Issue: 6; 2003 Viewpoint

Healey P,M, Palepu, K,G and Ruback R,S, (1992) “ Does Corporate Performance Improve after Mergers?” Journal of Financial Economics Vol 31 pp 135

Hopkins, E. (1998), “The Rise of the manufacturing town”, Sutton 1998

Healy, Robert; Griffin, Jennifer J. (2004), Building BP's Reputation: Tooting Your Own Horn 2001 -2002, Public Relations Quarterly, Winter2004, Vol. 49 Issue 4, p33-42, 10p

IFLR (2004), EU Commission to simplify cross-border bank mergers, International Financial Law Review, Oct2004, Vol. 23 Issue 10, p9

John M.T. Balmer, Keith Dinnie (1999), “Corporate identity and corporate communications: the antidote to merger madness”, Corporate Communications: An International Journal; Volume: 4 Issue: 4; 1999

Jensen M,C and Rubock, R,S. (1983), “The Market for Corporate Control: The Scientific Evidence” Journal of Financial Economics, Vol 11, P 5

Katinka Bijlsma-Frankema, (2004), “Dilemmas of managerial control in post-acquisition processes”, Journal of Managerial Psychology; Volume: 19 Issue: 3; 2004

Kumar, R. (2005) “Research Methodology, 2nd Ed.”, London, SAGE

Lagare, (1998) “Outsourcing and organizational change” Faculty of Economics and Business Administration, The Netherlands

Legare, Thomas L. (1998), “The Human Side of Mergers and Acquisitions”, Human Resource Planning, 1998, Vol. 21 Issue 1, p32-41, 10p

Machlis, Sharon (1990), HP Apollo unveils unified workstation line, Design News, 7/9/90, Vol. 46 Issue 13, p38

Marks (1988) “Managing mergers , acquisitions and strategic alliance” cited in the article by Thomas l legare “human side of merger and acquisitions”

M. Selvam (2007) ) International Research Journal of Finance and Economics, Tamil Nadu India .

Napier (1989), “Merger and Acquisitions” Managing Cultures and Human Resource

Orit Gadiesh, Robin Buchanan, Mark Daniell, Charles Ormiston (2002), A CEO’s guide to the new challenges of M&A leadership, Strategy & Leadership; Volume: 30 Issue: 3; 2002

Pinella, Paul (1981), HP's latest workstation leap, Datamation, 1/1/93, Vol. 39 Issue 1, p81, 2p

Pieter Klaas Jagersma (2006), Strategic marketing and the global banking industry: elements of excellence, Journal of Business Strategy; Volume: 27 Issue: 4; 2006

Pearce. J. A. (2005), “How companies can preserve market dominance after patents expire”, Long Range Planning, In Press, Corrected Proof, 27 December 2005

Ravenscraft , D,J. and Scherer, F.M, (1988) “Mergers and Managerial Performance” in John C Coffee Jr, Louis Lowenstein and Susan Rose Ackerman’s Knights Raiders & Targets: The Impact of the hostile Takeover. Oxford University Press, New York

Ruth A. Schmidt, Elke A. Pioch (2004), Community pharmacies under pressure: issues of deregulation and competition, International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management; Volume: 32 Issue: 7; 2004

Ristelheuber, Robert (1994), HP-America's new best managed company. (cover story), Electronic Business Buyer, Jun94, Vol. 20 Issue 6, p36, 6p

Lorenz (1986) “Managing mergers , acquisitions and strategic alliance”p32

Roll, R., (1986) “The Hubris Hypothesis of Corporate Takeovers” Journal of Business” 59(2) 197-216

Richard J. Varey, Barbara R. Lewis (1999), A broadened conception of internal marketing, European Journal of Marketing; Volume: 33 Issue: 9/10; 1999 Research paper

Stonham, Paul (2000), BP Amoco: Integrating Competitive and Financial Strategy Part Two: Financial Strategy and Valuation Measurement, European Management Journal, Oct2000, Vol. 18 Issue 5, p511, 8p

Saunders, M., Lewis, P. & Thornhill, A. (2000), “Research Methods for Business Students”, Pearson Education, Harlow

Sudarsanam ,S and Mahate A,A. (2003). “Glamour Acquirers, Method of Payment and Post Acquisition Performance” Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, Vol 30, pp 299

Sudarsanam, S, (2003) “Creating Value from Mergers and Acquisitions” Pearson Education Ltd, Harlow

Sudarsanam S., Holl P., Salami A,. (1996) “Shareholders Wealth Gain in Mergers: Effect of Synergy and Ownership Structure” Journal of Business Finance & Accounting. 23 (5&6) pp 673-698

Sudarsanam ,S and Mahate A,A. (2003). “Glamour Acquirers, Method of Payment and Post Acquisition Performance” Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, Vol 30, pp 299

Schwert , G,W. (1996). “ Mark up pricing in Mergers and Acquisitions” Journal of Financial Economics Vol 41, pp 153

Schein, E.H. (1993) On dialogue, culture and organizational learning. Organizational Dynamics, Autumn, 22, pp 40-51

S. Vanitha ( 2007) International Research Journal of Finance and Economics, Tamil Nadu India .

Steven H. Appelbaum; Joy Gandell; Barbara T. Shapiro; Pierre Belisle; Eugene Hoeven (2000), “Anatomy of a merger: behavior of organizational factors and processes throughout the pre- during- post- stages (part 2)”, Management Decision, 2000, Vol. 38 Issue 10, p674, 11p

Thomas L.Leagare (2002) Article “Understanding and Managing Human resource Integration Issue”

Trapp, R. (2001), “How NatWest was won”, People Management, 11/8/2001, Vol. 7 Issue 22, p38

Thurtle, Gary (2001), HBOS shakes up retail marketing operations after business review, Marketing Week (01419285), 9/27/2001, Vol. 24 Issue 33, 1c

The Independent (Oct 4, 2005), “Investors question chemistry of pounds 7bn Boots- Unichem merger”, By Susie Mesure, London (UK): pg. 65

Voight, Joan (1999), HP's Apollo Seeking Launch Help,. Adweek Western Edition, 01/25/99, Vol. 49 Issue 4, p4

Weston, G.F., Siu, J.A. and Johnson, B.A., (2001) Takeovers Restructuring and Corporate Governance, 3rd Edition, Prentice Hall Inc, New Jersey

Cite This Work

To export a reference to this article please select a referencing stye below:

Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.
Reference Copied to Clipboard.

Related Services

View all

Related Content

All Tags

Content relating to: "Business Strategy"

Business strategy is a set of guidelines that sets out how a business should operate and how decisions should be made with regards to achieving its goals. A business strategy should help to guide management and employees in their decision making.

Related Articles

DMCA / Removal Request

If you are the original writer of this dissertation and no longer wish to have your work published on the UKDiss.com website then please: