Horizontal Mergers. Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 1

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Horizontal Mergers Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 1

Introduction Merger mania of 1990s disappeared after 9/11/2001 But now appears to be returning Oracle/PeopleSoft AT&T/Cingular Bank of America/Fleet Reasons for merger cost savings search for synergies in operations more efficient pricing and/or improved service to customers Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 2

Questions Are mergers beneficial or is there a need for regulation? cost reduction is potentially beneficial but mergers can look like legal cartels and so may be detrimental US government is particularly concerned with these questions Antitrust Division Merger Guidelines seek to balance harm to competition with avoiding unnecessary interference Explore these issues in next two chapters distinguish mergers that are horizontal: Bank of America/Fleet vertical: Disney/ABC conglomerate: Gillette/Duracell; Quaker Oats/Snapple Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 3

Horizontal mergers Merger between firms that compete in the same product market some bank mergers hospitals oil companies Begin with a surprising result: the merger paradox take the standard Cournot model merger that is not merger to monopoly is unlikely to be profitable unless sufficiently many of the firms merge with linear demand and costs, at least 80% of the firms but this type of merger is unlikely to be allowed Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 4

An Example Assume 3 identical firms; market demand P 150 Q; each firm with marginal costs of $30. The firms act as Cournot competitors. Applying the Cournot equations we know that: each firm produces output q(3) (150 30)/(3 + 1) 30 units the product price is P(3) 150 3x30 $60 profit of each firm is p(3) (60 30)x30 $900 ow suppose that two of these firms merge, then there are two independent firms so output of each changes to: q(2) (150 30)/3 40 units; price is P(2) 150 2x40 $70 profit of each firm is p(2) (70 30)x40 $1,600 But prior to the merger the two firms had total profit of $1,800 This merger is unprofitable and should not occur Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 5

A Generalization Take a Cournot market with identical firms. Suppose that market demand is P A B.Q and that marginal costs of each firm are c. From standard Cournot analysis we know the profit of each firm is: p C i (A c) 2 B( + 1) 2 The ordering of the firms does not matter ow suppose that firms 1, 2, M merge. This gives a market in which there are now M + 1 independent firms. Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 6

Generalization 2 The newly merged firm chooses output q m to maximize profit: p m (q m, Q m ) q m (A B(q m + Q m ) c) where Q m q m+1 + q m+2 +. + q is the aggregate output of the M firms that have not merged Each nonmerged firm chooses output q i to maximize profit: p i (q i, Q i ) q i (A B(q i + Q i ) c) where Q i is the aggregate output of the M firms excluding firm i plus the output of the merged firm q m Comparing the profit equations then tells us: the merged firm becomes just like any other firm in the market all of the M + 1 postmerger firms are identical and so must produce the same output and make the same profits Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 7

Generalization 3 The profit of each of the merged and nonmerged firms is then: p C m p C nm (A c) 2 B( M + 2) 2 Profit of each surviving firm increases with M The aggregate profit of the merging firms premerger is: Mp C M(A c) i 2 B( + 1) 2 So for the merger to be profitable we need: (A c) 2 B( M + 2) 2 > ( + 1) 2 > M( M + 2) 2 M(A c) 2 B( + 1) 2 this simplifies to: Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 8

The Merger Paradox Substitute M a to give the equation ( + 1) 2 > a( a + 2) 2 Solving this for a > a() tells us that a merger is profitable for the merged firms if and only if: a > a() 3 + 2 5 + 4 2 Typical examples of a() are: 5 10 15 20 25 a() 80% 81.5% 83.1% 84.5% 85.5% M 4 9 13 17 22 Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 9

The Merger Paradox 2 Why is this happening? merged firm cannot commit to its potentially greater size the merged firm is just like any other firm in the market thus the merger causes the merged firm to lose market share the merger effectively closes down part of the merged firm s operations this appears somewhat unreasonable Can this be resolved? need to alter the model somehow asymmetric costs timing: perhaps the merged firms act like market leaders product differentiation Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 10

Merger and Cost Synergies Suppose that firms in the market may have different variable costs incur fixed costs Merger might be profitable if it creates cost savings An example three Cournot firms with market demand P 150 Q two firms have marginal costs of 30 and fixed costs of f total costs are: C(q 1 ) f + 30q 1 ; C(q 2 ) f + 30q 2 third firms has potentially higher marginal costs C(q 3 ) f + 30bq 3, where b > 1 Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 11

Case A: Merger Reduces Fixed Costs Suppose that b 1 all firms have the same marginal costs Merger of 30 is likely to be profitable but the merged firms has fixed costs af when with fixed 1 < costs a <2are high and the merger gives significant savings in fixed costs premerger profit of each firm are 900 f We know from the previous example that: postmerger the nonmerged firm has profit 1,600 f the merged firm has profit 1,600 af The merger is profitable for the merged firm if: 1,600 af > 1,800 2f which requires that a < 2 200/f Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 12

Case A: 2 Also, the nonmerged firm always gains and gains more than the merged firms So the merger paradox remains in one form why merge? why not wait for other firms to merge? Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 13

Case B: Merger Reduces Variable Costs Suppose that merger reduces variable costs assume that b > 1 and that f 0 firms 2 and 3 merge so production is rationalized by shutting down highcost operations premerger: outputs are: profits are: C C 90 + 30b C 210 90b q1 q2 ; q3 4 4 ( 90 + 30b) ( 210 90b) 2 2 C C C p1 p2 ; p3 16 16 postmerger profits are $1,600 for both the merged and nonmerged firms Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 14

Is this a profitable merger? Case B: 2 For the merged firm s profit to increase requires: ( 90 + 30b) ( 210 90b) 2 2 1,600 + > 0 Ł 16 16 ł This simplifies to: 25(7 3b)(15b 19)/2 > 0 first term must be positive for firm 3 to have nonnegative output premerger so the merger is profitable if the second term is positive which requires b > 19/15 Merger of a highcost and lowcost firm is profitable if cost disadvantage of the highcost firm is great enough Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 15

Summary Mergers can be profitable if cost savings are great enough but there is no guarantee that consumers gain in both our examples consumers lose from the merger Farrell and Shapiro (1990) cost savings necessary to benefit consumers are much greater than cost savings that make a merger profitable so should be skeptical of cost savings justifications of mergers and the paradox remains nonmerged firms benefit more from merger than merged firms Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 16

The Merger Paradox Again The merger paradox arises because despite merging, merged firms are symmetric with nonmerged firms? What kind of asymmetries might arise? merged firms become Stackelberg leaders postmerger By committing to merger, merged firms may induce others to merge Can these alterations remedy the merger paradox? Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 17

A Leadership Game Suppose that there has been a set of twofirm mergers market has L leaders and F followers F+L total assume linear demand P A BQ each firm has constant marginal cost of c twostage game: stage 1: each leader firm chooses its output q l independently gives aggregate output Q L stage 2: each follower firm chooses its output q f independently, but in response to the aggregate output of the leader firms gives aggregate follower output Q F clearly, leader firms correctly anticipate Q F Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 18

Leadership Game 2 Recall that if the inverse demand function is P a bq there are n identical Cournot firms and all firms have marginal costs c then each firm s Cournot equilibrium output is: q C i a c ( n +1)b In our example if the leaders produce Q L then inverse demand for the followers is P (A BQ L ) bq F there are Lidentical Cournot follower firms so that a (A BQ L ), b B and n L Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 19

Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 20 Leadership Game 3 So the Cournot equilibrium output of each follower firm is: ( ) ( ) ( ) 1 1 1 + + + * L Q L B c A L B c BQ A q L L f Aggregate output of the follower firms is then: ( )( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) 1 +1 + L Q L L B c A L Q L F Substituting this into the market inverse demand gives the inverse demand for the leader firms: ( ) ( ) ( ) L Q L B L c L A P 1 +1 + + in this case a (A + ( L)c/( L + 1); b B/( L +1) and n L

Leadership Game 4 So the Cournot equilibrium output of each leader firm is: * q l A c B ( L +1) ote that when L 1 this is just the standard Stackelberg output for the lead firm. Substitute into the follower firm s equilibrium and simplifying gives the output of each follower firm: * q f B A c ( L + 1)( L + 1) Clearly, each leader has greater output than each follower merger to join the leader group has an advantage Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 21

Leadership Game 5 Substituting the equilibrium outputs into the inverse demand gives the equilibrium pricecost margin and profits for each type of firm: p L P c (, L) A c ( L + 1 )( L + 1) 2 ( Ac) 2 B( L+ 1)( L+ 1) ; p F (, L) B 2 ( Ac) ( L+ 1)( 2 L+ 1) 2 The leaders are more profitable than the nonmerged followers Is one more merger profitable for the merging firms? Such a merger leads to there being L + 1 leaders, F 2 followers and 1 firms in all Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 22

Leadership Game 6 So for an additional merger to be profitable for the merging firms we need p L ( 1, L + 1) > 2p F (, L) This requires that (L + 1) 2 ( L + 1) 2 2(L + 2) 2 ( L 1) > 0 ote that this does not depend on any demand parameters A, B or c It is possible to show that this condition is always satisfied o matter how many leaders and followers there are an additional two follower firms will always want to merge this squeezes profits of the nonmerged firms so resolves the merger paradox Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 23

What about consumers? Leadership Game 7 For an additional merger to benefit consumers 3(L + 1) > 0 An additional merger benefits consumers only if the current group of leaders contains fewer than onethird of the total number of firms in the market. Admittedly this model is stylized how to attain leadership? distinction between leaders and followers not necessarily sharp But it is suggestive of actual events and so qualitatively useful Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 24

Individual study from this on Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 25

Sequential Mergers It is possible to think of the merger paradox as a coordination problem. What does this mean? It may be the case that if enough firms complete mergers each merger will be profitable but that for small group to merge by itself is not profitable Consider a market with potential merger pairs: Merger Pair 1 (Firm A and Firm B) Merger Pair 2 (Firm A and B ) The game may have two ash Equilibria, one where both pairs merge and one where neither merges Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 26

Sequential Mergers 2 Ideally, the merger pairs would like to coordinate their decisions and arrive at the Both Merge equilibrium. However, with simultaneous play, it is not clear how such coordination will happen. This is a ash Equilibrium in simultaneous play Merger Pair 2 Don t Merge Merge This is also a ash Equilibrium in simultaneous play Merger Pair 1 Don t Merge Merge ($772, $772) ($1063, $752) ($752, $1063) ($1100, ($1100, $1100) $1100) Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 27

Sequential Mergers 3 Sequential play with Merger Pair 1 going first solves the coordination problem. Merger Pair 2 will realize that if they merge, Merger Pair 2 will do the same This will make Merger Pair 1 s merger profitable This is a ash Equilibrium in sequential play Merger Pair 2 Don t Merge Merge Merger Pair 1 Don t Merge Merge ($772, $772) ($1063, $752) ($752, $1063) ($1100, $1100) ($1100, $1100) Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 28

Sequential Mergers 4 The sequential merger analysis may solve the merger paradox if the source of that paradox is a coordination problem The analysis has an advantage over the Stackelberg leader model because it is explicitly sequential, i.e., mergers happen in chronological sequence. In the leader model, every firm wants to become a leader simultaneously Cost breakthroughs or changes in transportation and trade barriers can create the setting for the sequential merger analysis Such events can therefore lead to merger waves Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 29

Horizontal Mergers and Product Differentiation Assumption thus far is that firms offer identical products But we clearly observe considerable product differentiation Does this affect the profitability of merger? affects commitment need not remove products postmerger affects the nature of competition quantities are strategic substitutes passive move by merged firms met by aggressive response of nonmerged firms prices are strategic complements passive move by merged firms induces passive response by nonmerged firms Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 30

Merger with Price Competition Mergers with price competition and product differentiation are profitable Why? prices are strategic complements merged firms can strategically commit to producing a range of products with homogeneous products there is no such ability to commit unless the merged firms can somehow become market leaders Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 31

Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 32 Merger with Price Competition 2 Suppose there are firms with linear demand With zero marginal cost, each firm s first order condition is Using symmetry we get If firms 1, M merge, it will have a new first order condition: ( ) ł Ł 1 j j i i 1 i p 1 p γ p V,...,p p q 0 p γ p 2γ 2γγ 2p V p π i j 1 j j i i i i i + + 1) γ( 2 V p 0 + + M m k 1 k m k m m m M 1 k k p π p π p π

Merger with Price Competition Because of symmetry, the prices on all the products of the merged firms will be the same and the prices and only the nonmerged firms will bill be the same. For a not merged firm and a merged firm we have j 1 j i Using j m ( M ) p nm p Mp + 1 M k 1 k m ( M ) p k 1 gp p m m j1 j m p j ( M 1)p m + ( M)p nm Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 33

Merger with Price Competition Gives first order conditions for the nonmerged firms p i V ( 2 +g)p nm + g ( p nm Mp m ( M 1)p nm ) 0 And for the merged firm M p k1 k V 21+g p m Which gives prices p p m nm V V 4 4 ( ) ( )p m + g ( M )p nm + 2Mp m + 2g (3 M + 2g (3 M 2 + g 1) + g 2 + g 1) + g ( 2 1) 2 Ł ( 2 M ) 2 Ł M ł M ( 2 M + 2) ł ( 2 M + 2) Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 34

Merger with Price Competition The merged firm set higher prices Since prices are strategic complements, nonmerging firms also have higher prices The merger is profitable for the merging firms, but even more profitable for the nonmerging firms The greater the number of merging firms, the more profitable it is Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 35

Public Policy and Horizontal Mergers Antitrust authorities consider the unilateral effects discussed above and coordinate effects A merger may make collusion easier Consider umber of firms Cost structures across firms Entry barriers Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 36

Public Policy and Surplus Focus is generally on Consumer surplus Ignores profits to merging firms And to their competitors Most economic theory favors a measure of total surplus, but.. Distributional concerns favor consumer surplus Firms may exaggerate cost savings, and consumers are not represented at proceedings Also, firms may have a choice among mergers Having a criteria of consumer surplus will push them towards ones with higher total surplus since they favor ones with higher producer surplus Chapter 11: Horizontal Mergers 37