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Overview"Fascinating as the corporate takeovers of recent years have been--with their ""golden parachutes"" and junk bonds, ""greenmailers"" and white knights--it is far from clear what underlying forces are at work, and what their long-term consequences will be. Debate over these questions has become polarized: some see takeover threats as disciplinary mechanisms that induce managers to behave efficiently and move assets to higher valued uses or into the hands of more efficient managers; others claim that corporate raiders have produced few observable increases in operating efficiency, but rather have disrupted business planning, enforced a preoccupation with the short-term, and tilted the balance sheets of corporate America towards dangerously high debt levels. Such sharp conflicts in theory and evidence have produced considerable governmental confusion concerning the appropriate policy response. Scores of bills have been introduced in Congress, but legislators are no more in agreement than scholars.Knights, Raiders, and Targets represents one of the first sustained efforts to refine and clarify these issues. Based on papers presented at a symposium sponsored by the Columbia Law School's Center for Law and Economic Studies, it also includes discussion of the informal presentations made at the symposium by the CEOs of several major corporations. This important book airs new theories and offers vital and exciting discussion of the essential issues attached to an event that has become central to American corporate culture." Full Product DetailsAuthor: John C. Coffee (Adolf Berle Professor of Law, Adolf Berle Professor of Law, Columbia University) , Louis Lowenstein (Henley Professor of Finance and Law, Henley Professor of Finance and Law, Columbia University Law School) , Susan Rose-Ackerman (Ely Professor of Law and Political Economy, Ely Professor of Law and Political Economy, Yale University Law School) , Susan-Rose AckermanPublisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 23.30cm Weight: 0.836kg ISBN: 9780195044041ISBN 10: 0195044045 Pages: 560 Publication Date: 03 June 1993 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsContributors Sponsors Introduction 1: Hostile Takeovers and Junk Bond Financing: A Panel Discussion CAPITAL MARKETS, EFFICIENCY, AND CORPORATE CONTROL 2: Martin Shubik: Corporate Control, Efficient Markets, and the Public Good 3: Robert J. Shiller: Fashions, Fads, and Bubbles in Financial Markets 4: Franklin R. Edwards: Comment 5: Michael A. Salinger: Comment MANAGERIAL BEHAVIOR AND TAKEOVERS 6: John C. Coffee, Jr.: Shareholders Versus Managers: the Strain in the Corporate Web 7: Malcolm S. Salter and Wolf A. Weinhold: Corporate Takeovers: Financial Boom or Organizational Bust? 8: Victor Brudney: Comment 9: Melvin A. Eisenberg: Comment: Golden Parachutes and Managers--A Risk-Neutral Perspective 10: Oliver E. Williamson: Comment: Shareholders and Managers--A Risk-Neutral Perspective EVIDENCE ON THE GAINS FROM MERGERS AND TAKEOVERS 11: Ellen B. Magenheim and Dennis C. Mueller: Are Acquiring-Firm Shareholders Better Off after an Acquisition? 12: David J. Ravenscraft and F. M. Scherer: Mergers and Managerial Performance 13: Edward S. Herman and Louis Lowenstein: The Efficiency Effects of Hostile Takeovers 14: Richard Roll: Empirical Evidence on Takeover Activity and Shareholder Wealth 15: Michael Bradley and Gregg A. Jarrell: Comment 16: Warren A. Law: Comment 17: Discussion MERGERS AND TAKEOVERS: TAXES, CAPITAL STRUCTURE, AND THE INCENTIVES OF MANAGERS 18: Ronald J. Gilson, Myron S. Scholes, and Mark A. Wolfson: Taxation and the Dynamics of Corporate Control: The Uncertain Case for Tax-Motivated Acquisitions 19: Alan J. Auerbach and David Reishus: Taxes and the Merger Decision 20: Michael C. Jensen: The Takeover Controversy: Analysis and Evidence 21: Richard S. Ruback: Comment 22: John L. Vogelstein: Comment 23: Elliott J. Weiss: Comment 24: Martin D. Ginsburg: Comment LEGAL RULES, TAKEOVER STRATEGIES, AND DEFENSIVE TACTICS 25: Lucian Arye Bebchuk: The Pressure to Tender: An Analysis and a Proposed Remedy 26: Deborah A. DeMott: Comparative Dimensions of Takeover Regulation 27: Peter Frazer: The Regulation of Takeovers in Great Britain 28: Douglas H. Ginsburg: Comment 29: Marshall L. Small: Comment 30: Stanley Sporkin: Comment ONE SHARE, ONE VOTE 31: Joel Seligman: Stock Exchange Rules Affecting Takeovers and Control Transactions 32: Daniel R. Fischel: Organized Exchanges and the Regulation of Dual Class Common Stock 33: Robert H. Mundheim: Comment 34: A. A. Sommer, Jr.: Comment IndexReviewsAn illuminating set of studies that offer a wide spectrum of opinions and conclusions....There is much information and insight to be gained from these pages, and those interested in the subject would do well to start here. --Journal of Economic Literature There is much information and insight to be gained from these pages, and those interested in the subject would do well to start here. --William S. Comanor, Journal of Economic Literature An excellent discussion of acquisitions, unique in that it provides a variety of academic, legal, and managerial insights into the subject. The 'comments' in each section are very thought-provoking in the criticisms and extensions they suggest. --Anju Seth, University of Houston Breadth and balance make this a good one-volume summary of the takeover debate. --Issues in Science and Technology Comprehensive treatment of important issues...useful as a supplement to law-and-economics courses. --Donald Solar, C. W. Post College An illuminating set of studies that offer a wide spectrum of opinions and conclusions....There is much information and insight to be gained from these pages, and those interested in the subject would do well to start here. --Journal of Economic Literature<br> There is much information and insight to be gained from these pages, and those interested in the subject would do well to start here. --William S. Comanor, Journal of Economic Literature<br> An excellent discussion of acquisitions, unique in that it provides a variety of academic, legal, and managerial insights into the subject. The 'comments' in each section are very thought-provoking in the criticisms and extensions they suggest. --Anju Seth, University of Houston<br> Breadth and balance make this a good one-volume summary of the takeover debate. --Issues in Science and Technology<br> Comprehensive treatment of important issues...useful as a supplement to law-and-economics courses. --Donald Solar, C. W. Post College<br> Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |