A Survey Of The Factors That Determine The Choice Of Mergers And Acquisition Partners In Kenya
Abstract
The principal objective of this study was to establish the determinants of choice of
mergers and acquisitions partners in Kenya. The study endeavored to cover all firms that
have been involved in mergers and acquisitions in the recent past. The study was
therefore carried though a cross-sectional survey design. The target population included
all those firms that had gone into merger and acquisitions between 2001 and 2004 and
notifications issued accordingly as at that period. The data was collected through a
structured questionnaire where respondents were required to score on a 5-point likert
scale indicating how important they considered the factors presented as important in
determining the choice of merger and acquisition partners. Data that were obtained were
analyzed using frequencies, percentages, mean scores and factor analysis and were
presented in tables.
The results of the data collected indicate that the proportion of firms opting for a merger
is slightly higher at 53.1% as compared to that for acquisition. The results also indicate
that the firms exhibit a mixture of ownership and legal structures. The following factors
were identified as important determinants of choice of mergers and acquisition partners:
knowledge transfer and management; cultural distance; organizational distance; resource
redeployment and revenue-based synergistic considerations; potential cross effects after a
merger and/or an acquisition; asymmetry between the firms with regard to anticipated
post merger and/or acquisition joint decision-making process and political processes;
location specific factors; management styles compatibility, acquisition performance; and
reward and evaluation systems compatibility among others.
From the findings of the study, it was generally concluded that firms in Kenya take into
account various factors before entering into mergers and acquisitions agreements. This
was evidenced by the fact that most of the various aspects with regard to each of the
above factors were highly and moderately rated. There was no single aspect that was
lowly rated. Also, the factors that were considered in determining the choice of a
particular M&A partner are to a greater dependent of the mode of combination, type of
merger or acquisition, the sector of operation, and the growth prospects.
Citation
Masters thesis University of Nairobi (2006)Publisher
University of Nairobi. School of Business Studies
Description
Degree of Master of Business Administration