Bear Market Shopping: Merger Arbitrage Deals Look Attractive, But Hardly Risk-Free

 | Sep 02, 2022 10:25AM ET

  • Bear markets create stress, and merger arbitrage is an example of the impact
  • The style comes with plenty of risks, but also opportunities
  • This article walks through the style and an example in Black Knight (NYSE:BKI)
  • Bear markets are difficult by definition. Even bears have trouble making money (see the summer rally).

    One reason is that ‘correlations go to one’ in a crisis, as the old saying goes. All the fancy asset allocation, or diversification, or stock picking goes out the window if everything goes down.

    Which is one of the reasons so-called special situations get more interesting in times of crisis. Special situations – investment opportunities based on a specific catalyst not directly related to market events or fundamental performance – offer returns uncorrelated with the market direction. At least in theory. Merger arbitrage, the focus of this article, is a sub category of special situations.

    In practice, these situations exist in the real world, and financial market conditions do weigh on them. Fears of financial stress widen merger arbitrage spreads, and higher interest rates affect the attractiveness of holding arbitrage positions.

    The 2022 market is offering a number of wide merger arbitrage spreads, and it’s one of the areas I highlighted as worth picking through in the current market. Let’s go over what merger arbitrage entails, the general and 2022-specific risks, and an example of an interesting deal.

    h2 Merger Arbitrage Investing/h2

    The concept of arbitrage is fundamentally that something is available for one price in one place and another somewhere else, and an arbitrageur takes advantage of the difference between those two prices.

    Merger arbitrage means buying the shares of a company that is going to be bought out when it is still trading below its final acquisition price. To use an obvious example, Elon Musk signed a contract to buy Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) for $54.20, Twitter shares trade at $38.62, so there is a 40.3% spread, and someone buying here would have the opportunity for 40.3% returns when the deal closed.

    h2 Reasons For Risk/h2

    Like everything else in markets, merger arbitrage deals are not that easy. Merger arbitrage deal spreads have been unusually high this year. Here’s a selected list of some of the highest spreads still available.