Why Companies Overpay For Acquisitions

 | Jul 22, 2016 04:29AM ET

When Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) agreed to pay $26.2 billion to acquire LinkedIn (NYSE:LNKD) last month, we—along with worst user engagement of any major social media platform?

Microsoft claims the deal has massive synergies that will justify the purchase price. It seems much more likely, however, that the software giant will end up taking a major write-down on LinkedIn, just as it did last year with Nokia (HE:NOKIA) ($7.5 billion) and in 2012 with aQuantive ($6.2 billion). The company has an established track record of destroying value by overpaying for acquisitions.

Of course, Microsoft is far from the only company to destroy shareholder value by overpaying to acquire other companies. Most studies find that acquisitions fail to create value for shareholders destroy shareholder value .

Overpriced acquisitions are far from a new phenomenon, but they’ve been especially prevalent in recent months. As a result, we’ve gathered some ideas about the various reasons companies ignore the evidence and continue to overpay for acquisitions.

h3 Big (Misaligned) Compensation Windfalls/h3

Even though acquisition deals theoretically need the approval of shareholders and the board of directors, in practice, executives have an outsized influence on the process. Many boards lack true independence from management, and the large mutual funds and ETFs that own a substantial portion of most public companies rarely vote against board proposals.

In theory activist investors should fill this void by waging campaigns to encourage more responsible corporate governance. In practice, most activists are more focused on short-term gains.

This lack of accountability creates a big problem when executive incentives are misaligned with shareholder value. Too often, executives earn bonuses and stock grants based on metrics that have no real connection to value. See 4 Reasons Executives Manipulate Earnings for more details.

Figure 1: Jos. A. Bank Acquisition Destroys Value For Shareholders