首页
登录
职称英语
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitio
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitio
游客
2025-01-11
3
管理
问题
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are often fraught with irreconcilable cultural and financial differences. Yet M&A activity was up sharply in 2013 and reached pre-recession levels this year. So why do companies keep at it? Because it’s an easy way to make a quick buck and please Wall Street.
Increasingly, business is serving markets rather than markets serving business, as they were originally meant to do in our capitalist system.
For a particularly stark example, consider American pharmaceutical giant Pfizer’s recent bid to buy British drugmaker AstraZeneca. The deal made little strategic sense and would probably have destroyed thousands of jobs as well as slowed research at both companies.(Public outcry to that effect eventually helped scuttle the plan.)Rut it would have allowed Pfizer to shift its domicile to Britain, where companies pay less tax. That, in turn, would have boosted share prices in the short term, enriching the executives paid in stock and the bankers, lawyers and other financial intermediaries who stood to gain about half a billion dollars or so in fees from the deal.
Pfizer isn’t alone. Plenty of firms engage in such tax wizardry. This kind of short-term thinking is starting to dominate executive suites. Besides tax avoidance. Wall Street’s marching orders to corporate America include dividend payments and share buybacks, which sap long-term growth plans. It also demands ever more globalized supply chains, which make balance sheets look better by cutting costs but add complexity and risk. All of this hurts longer-term, more sustainable job and value creation. As a recent article on the topic by academic Gautam Mukunda in the Harvard Business Review noted, "The financial sector’s influence on management has become so powerful that a recent survey of chief financial officers showed that 78% would give up economic value and 55% would cancel a project with a positive net present value—that is, willingly harm their companies—to meet Wall Street’s targets and fulfill its desire for ’smooth’ earnings. "
Some of this can be blamed on the sheer size of the financial sector. Many thought that the economic crisis and Great Recession would weaken the power of markets. In fact, it only strengthened finance’s grip on the economy. The largest banks are bigger than they were before the recession, while finance as a percentage of the economy is about the same size. Overall, the industry earns 30% of all corporate profit while creating just 6% of the country’s jobs. And financial institutions are still doing plenty of tricky things with our money. Legendary investor Warren Buffett recently told me he’s steering well clear of exposure to commercial securities like the complex derivatives being sliced and diced by major banks. He expects these "weapons of mass destruction" to cause problems for our economy again at some point.
There’s a less obvious but equally important way in which Wall Street distorts the economy: by defining "shareholder value" as short-term returns. If a CEO misses quarterly earnings by even a few cents per share, activist investors will push for that CEO to be fired. Yet the kinds of challenges companies face today—how to shift to entirely new digital business models, where to put operations when political risk is on the rise, how to anticipate the future costs of health, pensions and energy— are not quarterly problems. They are issues that will take years, if not decades, to resolve. Unfortunately, in a world in which the average holding period for a stock is about seven months, down from seven years four decades ago, CEOs grasp for the lowest-hanging fruit. They label tax-avoidance schemes as "strategic" and cut research and development in favor of sending those funds to investors in the form of share buybacks.
All of this will put American firms at a distinct disadvantage against global competitors with long-term mind-sets. McKinsey Global Institute data shows that between now and 2025, 7 out of 10 of the largest global firms are likely to come from emerging markets, and most will be family owned businesses not beholden to the markets. Of course, there’s plenty we could do policy-wise to force companies and markets to think longer term—from corporate tax reform to bans on high-speed trading to shifts in corporate compensation. But just as Wall Street has captured corporate America, so has it captured Washington. Few mainstream politicians on either side of the aisle have much interest in fixing things, since they get so much of their financial backing from the Street. Unfortunately for them, the fringes of their parties—and voters—do care. [br] What is the short-term thinking of the corporate mergers and acquisitions prevalent today? What are the possible drawbacks of such thinking?
选项
答案
to pay less tax(tax avoidance)/ promote share prices in the short term / help the financial executives to gain more in fees / more concerned with "positive net present value" / such thinking would weaken+destroy(sap)long-term growth plans /("add complexity and risk")("hurts longer-term, more sustainable job and value creation")/ does harm to companies("harm the companies")/ only to meet the targets of financial markets + to guarantee the "smooth" earnings for financial sectors
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3908351.html
相关试题推荐
It’swidelyknownthatmorethanhalfofallcorporatemergersandacquisitio
It’swidelyknownthatmorethanhalfofallcorporatemergersandacquisitio
It’swidelyknownthatmorethanhalfofallcorporatemergersandacquisitio
Motoristswouldratherpaymoretaxthanlosetheplaceinthecorporatepec
NEWYORK--Reader’sDigest,themostwidelyreadmagazineintheworld,wil
Thestudyoflanguageacquisitionisgenerallyknownas______.A、theoreticallin
Justover10yearsago,IngmarBergmanannouncedthatthewidelyacclaimedFa
Justover10yearsago,IngmarBergmanannouncedthatthewidelyacclaimedFa
ThefirstAsaninvestmentbankerspecializinginmergersandacquisitions,F
ThefirstAsaninvestmentbankerspecializinginmergersandacquisitions,F
随机试题
电气火灾监控设备报警功能检测不符合要求的是()。A.监控设备与现场部件之间的连
建设项目总概算包括单项工程综合概算、工程建设其他费用概算,此外还有( )等费用
在住宅结构中承重的混凝土砌块的强度等级不应低于()。A.MU5 B.MU7
对职业道德的本质描述错误的是()A.职业道德是社会经济关系决定的特殊社会意
我国托儿所教养大纲中规定,2岁以上的儿童可以参加集体活动,时间在( )。
患者,女,40岁。精神抑郁,表情淡漠,神志痴呆,语无伦次,不思饮食,舌苔腻,脉弦
下列关于组合电器汇控柜柜体的描述,哪些属于一般缺陷,(____)。(A)外壳锈蚀
设计前期工作阶段中,可行性研究报告的内容包括()。A.需求预测和建设规模
超越了单纯的记忆,代表最低水平理解的是()。A.知识 B.领会 C.应用
集体合同中双方约定的劳动报酬和劳动条件等标准可以低于当地人民政府规定的最低标准。
最新回复
(
0
)