1. Introduction
International mergers and acquisitions (M&As) have been increasingly used as a springboard for strategic resources by emerging market enterprises (EMEs) to build up sustainable competitive advantages [
1,
2], accelerate industry catch-up, and achieve sustainable economic and social development [
3] in the past decades. Scholars have investigated multiple dimensions of international M&As completed by EMEs—for example, motivations, post-integration process, and the influence on firms’ financial and innovation performance [
4,
5,
6,
7]. However, almost all the previous research focuses on those M&As processes of acquirers and oversees their influence on acquirers’ external stakeholders (e.g., rival firms), especially on the sustainability of those stakeholders. Further studies should shed light on this topic since not all firms are equally aggressive in realizing value from international M&As [
1,
2,
8] and sustainability are playing the role of a prerequisite for success [
3].
As González-Torres et al. [
3] point out in their latest study, one hot topic on sustainability in M&As is the effects of M&As on firms’ external stakeholders’ performance, which is highly related to the economic pillar of sustainability that emphasizes the value created by firms to their external context supporting future generations of prosperity [
3,
9]. Considering that rival firms are critical stakeholders of acquirers, and acquirers’ strategies and actions will have a direct influence on them, we focus on the impacts of acquirers’ international M&As on the sustainable performance of their rival firms.
The existing limited research proposed paradoxical theoretical arguments suggesting rivals may benefit or suffer from competitors’ international M&As. The literature on industrial organization posits rivals gain from M&As through collusive synergy [
10,
11] and utilization of information uncovered in M&A announcements [
12,
13]. Besides that, some scholars raised the growth probability hypothesis based on signaling theory, suggesting that M&As completed by competitors lead to an increment in rivals’ market evaluation [
14]. Some other scholars insist that international M&As may harm rivals by acquiring firms’ stronger competitive advantages, which results from efficiency gains, enabling acquirers to sell their products with cost advantages and increase factors prices for rivals at the same time [
15]. The previous literature further elaborates that efficiency gains are attributable to operational and financial synergy, and they are stronger for horizontal M&As than non-horizontal M&As [
15,
16].
Current studies adopting event analysis examined the effects of acquisition announcements on rivals’ stock market reactions, and almost all of them found positive results [
14,
17]. However, short-term stock price changes do not mean so much for rival firms’ sustainability, and how those non-aggressive rivals’ sustainable performance will be influenced deserves further investigation. Compared with short-term market reactions, rival firms’ long-term profitability should be taken into consideration to reflect the influence on their sustainable performance. What is more, whether the influence is contingent on contextual factors (e.g., the deal characteristics) remains understudied. Theoretically, existing research findings are mainly justified by the literature on industrial organization, while strategic management perspectives should be also taken into account [
16,
18]. Drawing on the resource-based view, strategic gains from international M&As for acquirers may place rivals to a disadvantageous position.
Accordingly, in this paper, our main goal is to investigate two related research questions (RQ):
RQ1: How do competitors’ international M&As affect rival firms’ sustainable performance?
RQ2: How do the characteristics of the deal, rival firm and industry influence the relationship (i.e., RQ1)?
We use empirical evidence from an emerging market to answer these questions. Specifically, we use a longitudinal dataset covering 325 large international M&As completed by Chinese public manufacturing firms during 2009–2015. Empirical results show that rivals’ sustainable performance will be harmed by the international M&As completed by their competitors. The negative effects will be stronger for horizontal international M&As compared with non-horizontal ones. Besides, the negative relationship will be accentuated by rivals’ cost leadership strategy, which reveals the degree of firm’s dependence on efficiency. The negative moderation of industry relatedness of M&As and cost leadership strategy confirms the efficiency gains mechanism further. What is more, for rivals in the high-tech industry, the negative effects of international M&As on their sustainable performance will be strengthened, providing robust evidence to support our strategic asset gains argument.
Our study contributes to the research and practice of M&As and the economic pillar of sustainability in three ways. First, we shift the pendulum from focusing on M&As’ effects on acquirers to their rivals. Considering the deficiency of the short-term oriented measurement (i.e., stock price changes) for rivals’ sustainable performance in previous research, we take rival firms’ long-term profitability, measured in return on assets (ROA), into consideration. In contrast with the short-term market reactions, our study finds EMEs’ international M&As have negative effects on their rivals’ sustainable performance. By shedding light on rival firms’ sustainable performance, our research may open a new window for scholars to further investigate the impacts of growing international M&As completed by EMEs on other external stakeholders.
Second, we propose a new mechanism from strategic management perspectives to explain the effects of international M&As on rivals’ sustainable performance, namely, the strategic asset gains for acquirers. The new mechanism complements the existing efficiency gains argument based on industrial organization literature and provides a new perspective for future research to understand the impact of a firm’s strategic behaviors on their external stakeholders.
Finally, we found EMEs’ international M&As engender more negative impacts on rivals’ sustainable performance when they implement a cost leadership strategy and when they are from the high-tech industry. This generates important lessons for firms when they are faced with competitors’ international M&As, especially in today’s fierce global competition in high-tech industries. Firms have to adjust their cost structure and develop or source strategic assets in an alternative way to compete with their acquiring competitors for sustainable competitive advantages and long-term performance.
2. Literature Review and Hypotheses
Plenty of research sheds light on the impacts of international M&As on acquiring firms’ performance, especially for EMEs that are facing more pressures to engage in international M&As with the development of globalization [
2,
8]. Previous literature reveals that M&As create value for acquirers through three kinds of synergy, namely operational synergy, financial synergy and collusive synergy [
15]. Operational synergy attributes to economies of scale and scope in production, the realization of technological complementarities, replacement of inefficient management teams, etc. [
19]. Financial synergy occurs when an acquired firm can receive cheaper capital for growth [
20]. Collusive synergy originates from the increased market power after absorbing competitors. Reduced competition leads to lower monitoring costs of the collusive agreements, therefore, the existing players can charge a higher price for their products [
10,
11].
Based on the synergy effects, existing research has paid tremendous attention to the effects of M&As on acquiring firms’ performance; however, little is known on the specific mechanisms by which M&As benefit or harm acquiring firms’ rivals [
17,
18].
Three streams of literature are related to the subject. First, competitive dynamics literature examines rivals’ responses to M&As completed by their competitors, but the reason the studies in this field choose to focus on rivals’ responses is to explain acquiring firms’ approximately zero or slight positive returns from M&As [
21]. Second, quite a few studies explore the spillover effects of international M&As at the industry level in emerging markets (EMs). Meyer and Sinani [
22] conducted a meta-analysis on the spillover effects of foreign direct investment (FDI) to developing countries at the industry level. They found local firms’ performance may benefit from FDI, and it is contingent on the level of development of the host country. Spillover literature does provide insights into how rival firms’ performance or productivity are influenced by competitors’ international M&As. But the scenarios in spillover literature are opposite to our focus in this paper. Spillover literature usually pays attention to the phenomenon that multinational corporations from developed countries acquire or merge EMs’ local firms and examines how those activities will affect the rest of local firms’ performance. However, in our research context, firms in EMs are the acquirers, and firms in developed countries are the targets. Third, literature in the organizational learning field examines the effects of international M&As on rivals’ subsequent decisions on whether to imitate acquiring firms or not. For example, Francis et al. [
23] found a significantly positive relationship between a US acquirer’s performance and its predecessors’ acquisition activity.
The aforementioned literature attempts to examine the impacts of international M&As on acquirers’ rivals, however, but it hasn’t directly answered the question of how international M&As influence the sustainable performance of acquiring firms’ rivals. Limited studies directly respond to the issue and propose different theoretical arguments. They test the effects of M&As on the rivals of acquirers and targets respectively, but almost all of them only take rivals’ cumulative abnormal returns (CAR) into consideration.
For the impact on the target’s rivals, information signaling is the main theoretical lens used to justify positive stock price reactions of target firms’ rivals. Song and Walkling [
24] developed and tested the acquisition probability hypothesis that asserts that rivals of target firms earn CAR because of the probability to become targets themselves in the future. Follow a similar logic, Akhigbe and Martin [
25] found, on average, the US domestic rivals of foreign acquisition targets earn positive and significant CAR.
In terms of the impact on the acquiring firm’s rivals, four theoretical arguments suggest rivals benefit from competitors’ acquisition announcements. The first argument is the collusive synergy hypothesis. Stigler [
10,
11] is one pioneer attempting to explore the influence of M&As on rivals’ performance, and he suggests rivals can benefit from collusive synergy (i.e., free riding on a higher product price after horizontal M&As). However, empirical results are inconsistent when testing the collusive synergy hypothesis. Eckbo’s [
12,
13] studies rejected the hypothesis by observing the change patterns of rivals’ CAR after their competitors’ acquisition announcements and after some acquisitions were challenged by antitrust laws. In contrast, Prager [
26] found supportive evidence for the hypothesis in the changes of rival firms’ stock prices based on the northern securities company case in 1901. Kim and Singal [
27] also detected collusive synergy effects which are manifested in the increment of airfares on routes affected by M&As based on data of airline mergers during 1985–1988. They insist on the reason why the previous studies rejected the collusive synergy hypothesis is that the tests done by them are all based on stock-market prices which are at best indirect but probably weak.
The second argument is the information effect proposed by Eckbo [
12,
13], and he suggests that the proposal announcements may contain technological innovation information that provides clues for rivals to imitate acquirers’ activities even by initiating a merger to create value.
The third argument is based on the managerial self-interest or value destruction effects of acquisitions [
18,
28]. Though the priority of M&As should be to improve overall performance [
16], the facts are that M&As can be initiated for managers’ compensation or motivated by managerial hubris, and finally, destroy acquirers’ shareholder value. Drawing on the argument, Clougherty and Duso [
17] assert that rivals of acquirers benefit from being an outsider to a merger.
The fourth argument is the growth probability hypothesis, which suggests that the acquisitions announced in a growing market signal potential for future growth, resulting in positive changes in rivals’ stock prices [
14]. The scholars who proposed the hypothesis further elaborate that differences exist in the signals released by horizontal M&As and non-horizontal M&As. Horizontal M&As signal value creation opportunities from operational synergy, and non-horizonal M&As signal value creation opportunities mainly from financial synergy. Industry relatedness of M&As should cause different impacts on rivals’ CAR. They found evidence to support their argument based on acquisition announcements data during 1993–2008 in China.
In contrast, some other research suggests that international M&As may adversely affect the performance of acquirers’ rivals. The negative influence on rivals mainly results from efficiency gains for acquirers after M&As [
15]. The literature indicates that efficiency gains can be obtained through operational and financial synergy [
15,
16]. Chatterjee [
15] further clarifies that rivals can be negatively affected by competitors’ M&As by the stronger cost advantages for acquirers and the higher prices of input factors for rivals. On one hand, efficiency gains enable acquirers to experience cost advantages in the product market, and on the other hand, acquirers need fewer factor inputs because of the higher efficiency resulting in higher factor prices for rivals in the factor market.
After reviewing the existing theoretical arguments, we believe that the efficiency gains for acquirers dominate the post-acquisition process in our research context because collusive synergy hypothesis, information effects, growth probability hypothesis, and value destruction effects seem inappropriate to apply here. First, the collusive synergy hypothesis is not applicable to international M&As [
29]. Since targets are from foreign countries (regions), and the number of domestic competitors keeps the same after international M&As, the likelihood for firms to collude has not been improved. Therefore, rivals cannot have the chance to free ride on higher product prices. Second, all the rivals in our sample dataset have not initiated any international M&As over the research periods. Thus, we are skeptical as to how much they can leverage the innovative information in acquisition announcements to realize value since the information is probably all about creating value from M&As. Third, the growth probability hypothesis lacks enough explanation power for rivals during our research periods. The research periods in Gaur et al.’s [
14] article are from 1993 to 2008. That was the period when the Chinese government promoted the privatization of state-owned enterprises and large-scale institutional changes, which created tremendous opportunities for firms to grow through M&As. However, after 2008, industry competition in China became much fiercer, and M&As may now be a signal of the decline in market position instead of a signal for growth potential [
30]. Finally, most of the studies focusing on EMEs’ international M&As performance have drawn positive conclusions [
6,
31], which is in contrast with the findings in developed countries, where acquirers generally obtain negative or break-even returns from an acquisition [
18]. Thus, we assert that efficiency gains for acquirers dominate the post-acquisition process which leads to negative effects on rivals. Therefore, we propose our baseline hypothesis:
Hypothesis 1. International M&As completed by competitors are negatively related to the sustainable performance of acquiring firms’ rivals.
After discussing the relationship between international M&As and the sustainable performance of acquiring firms’ rivals, we tend to find out whether the negative main effects may be accentuated or attenuated by the characteristics of the deal itself, rival firm, and industry. As for the deal characteristics, industry relatedness is one of the most commonly researched dimensions [
28]. It is well established that acquirers benefit more in horizontal M&As than non-horizontal M&As [
16,
19] because acquirers can obtain operational synergy and financial synergy simultaneously, thus, receiving efficiency gains and placing rivals at a competitive disadvantageous position. The preponderance of empirical studies also found a positive association between acquiring firm post-acquisition performance and related M&As [
32,
33]. Therefore, we propose that,
Hypothesis 2. The negative effects of international M&As completed by competitors on rivals’ sustainable performance are stronger for horizontal M&As than for non-horizontal M&As.
Besides the influence of industry relatedness at the deal level, we also consider the influence of rivals’ firm competitive strategy in the relationship between competitors’ international M&As and their performance. We focus on the cost leadership competitive strategy, which emphasizes efficiency improvement [
34]. It builds up firm competitive advantages through a low-cost position relative to its rivals. To achieve such a position, firms have to minimize their costs for production, operation, advertising, and R&D activities [
34]. In other words, firms that pursue superior performance through cost leadership strategy highly depend on efficiency improvements. Considering our conjecture that the main mechanism in our research context through which international M&As completed by competitors affect rivals’ performance is the efficiency gains for those acquirers, we surmise the negative impacts of international M&As on rivals’ performance will become stronger when rivals implement a cost leadership strategy. Because the shock to rivals induced by efficiency gains for acquirers will be amplified when a firm has a higher degree of dependence on efficiency. Therefore, we hypothesize that,
Hypothesis 3. The negative effects of international M&As completed by competitors on rivals’ sustainable performance are stronger when rivals are implementing the cost leadership strategy.
Besides the efficiency gains mechanism proposed in previous literature, we suggest taking strategic assets gains mechanism into consideration when examining the effects of competitors’ international M&As on rivals’ performance. Because the relative positions of acquirers and their rivals can be changed through strategic assets gains for acquirers. China as a specific representative of EMs provides an ideal research context to test our conjecture. Because the idiosyncratic role played by international M&As to seek strategic assets is more prominent for acquiring firms in EMs. Theoretical perspectives like the springboard view [
1,
2] and Linkage–leverage–learning framework [
35,
36] both assert that EMEs use international M&As to access and source superior resources (e.g., advanced technology). Plenty of empirical studies provide supportive evidence for the theoretical arguments. For instance, Awate, Larsen, and Mudambi [
31,
37] found that the momentum for Indian leading turbine manufacturing firm initiating international M&As is to source knowledge globally Zhu and Zhu [
38] review article also revealed that the motivation for Chinese firms conducting international M&As changed from natural resources sourcing in the 1990s to technology seeking in the 2000s.
Consistent with the prediction of the resource-based view, which asserts that acquirers can develop sustainable competitive advantages based on the strategic assets that are valuable, scarce, inimitable, and non-substituted [
39], many empirical studies have detected the resource-deepening and resource extension effects of international M&As for acquirers [
40,
41]. Acquirers can probably leverage strategic assets obtained from international M&As and provide customers with upgraded products with higher added value, thus resulting in adverse impacts on rival firms.
Given technological competencies are more critical for high-tech firms to achieve sustainable competitive advantages than non-high-tech firms, and international M&As function as springboards to compensate and upgrade acquirers’ technological competencies, we surmise that the negative effects of international M&As on rivals’ sustainable performance for the high-tech industry will be stronger than the non-high-tech industry. Namely, high-tech acquirers will place their rivals to a more competitive disadvantageous position after obtaining vital technological resources through international M&As, and high-tech rival firms’ sustainable performance will be more adversely affected by competitors’ international M&As activities. Therefore, we expect,
Hypothesis 4. The negative effects of international M&As completed by competitors are stronger for high-tech industry than for non-high-tech industry.
Figure 1 shows the overall research framework.