In this chapter we analyze the role of financial factors in the underlaking of cross-border acquisitions. We discuss financial firm-specific advantages as drivers of these acquisilions as well as the role of the development of the home financial market in exploiting these advantages. Based on a sample of 1,447 European firms' cross-border acquisitions amounting to a total of 566 acquisitions spanning from 0 to 18 for individual firms, we find strong evidence in favor of a cost-of-equity effect on the occurrence of FDI, whereas the stand-alone effect of debt costs is indeterminate. However, allowing firm-specific financial characteristics to be conditioned by homecountry financial development, both equity costs and debt Costs are found highly significant explanatory factors for cross-border acquisitions undertaken by the sample firms.
The Future of Foreign Direct Investment and the Multinational Enterprise
FDI and the Role of Financial Market Quality
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