Merger and acquisition activity is poised for a turnaround, according to a May 2003 survey of chief financial officers at 150 large-scale US multinational companies by world-renowned accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers. Sixty-nine percent of those surveyed said they were preparing to do mergers and acquisitions in the next two years. Also, more companies in traditional industries have M&A intentions than do those in technology companies.
Almost two thirds (63 %) of CFOs indicated that M&A activity is an important route for pursuing growth, and its importance is particularly great for companies that are low-growing and comparatively small.
Based on the experience of these CFOs, the most common reasons why the expected benefits from previous deals were not fully realized include: overly optimistic revenue or cash flow forecasts (84%); difficulty fusing together different corporate cultures, business concepts and managerial styles (79%); excessive patience shown for attaining cost reduction and earnings goals (62%); poor integration of information and financial reporting systems (61%); and failure to standardize the M&A process and achieve a consensus on it among employees (56%).
Looking ahead to future M&A activity, most of the surveyed CFOs also believe that, in addition to the abovementioned factors, more attention will have to be paid to compliance with new legislation (such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in the US), and to standards for internal controls and corporate governance. These survey findings were more or less confirmed by other PwC research on Managing For Value (MFV)
This second research effort, completed in May of this year at the same time as the CFO survey, involved sending questionnaires to CFOs in 2500 prominent companies in 19 countries. The questionnaire concerned the effect of the trend towards MFV, which has been sweeping the world for the last year or two, on M&A, strategies and operations management. Respondents were first divided into two populations-high-performing companies which were practicing MFV made up the main sample for observation, while the other lower-performing companies served as the control sample-and were then subject to in-depth analysis and interviews. The results reveal that, over the five year period after companies adopt MFV, they generate shareholder returns (dividends plus share price gains) that are 9 percentage points higher than the market as a whole; and these companies share certain special characteristics: 1) a new perspective on M&A, where "big is beautiful" is replaced by a pursuit of "high-quality growth"; 2) focused strategies, with value drivers guiding the direction of employees' efforts; and 3) a new approach to risk featuring rapid responses to changes in market conditions and the legal environment. Each of these three characteristics is described below.