Acquisitions can be considered a potent lever for strategic growth, and companies are spending more per mergers and acquisitions (M&A) deal than ever before1. Yet, capturing sustainable value from M&A can be as challenging as ever.
This report examines value creation in public company mergers and acquisitions by analysing total shareholder return (TSR) relative to the relevant index (e.g. S&P) — a market-adjusted metric that isolates deal performance from broader sector trends.
TSR movement is driven by a range of factors and deal specific characteristics. Synergies — financial benefits arising directly from combining companies, such as revenue growth, cost reductions, or financing efficiencies — are a cornerstone of M&A value creation. Additional drivers include strategic positioning (e.g. acquiring undervalued assets during market dislocations), unlocking latent value in a target’s standalone operations, and fulfilling corporate strategic objectives such as market entry or competitive insulation.
There were more than 3,000 public-to-public M&A deals over US$100 million in value between 2012 and 20222. Our research finds that 57.2 percent of acquirers ultimately destroyed shareholder value. Although many deals looked promising in the months leading up to closing — generating an average 13.2 percent in TSR above the relevant S&P sector index — TSR dropped an average of 7.4 percent in the two years following. The brutal reality: most of the initial gains evaporated soon after the ink dried.