Corporate Divestitures and Spinoffs in Singapore
Preprint
- 1 June 2004
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
This paper discusses the different forms of corporate divestitures, the motives for this corporate activity and the empirical findings about their economic outcomes. A sample of corporate divestitures is also used to identify the main motivations in the Singapore context. We conclude that divestitures are carried out to achieve operational efficiency, gain incremental profitability and liquidity. Using share price data around the event-dates, we show that announcements of divestitures generally lead to significant increases in the returns of the parent company. The positive abnormal returns are related to the relative size of the divestitures and the computed accounting gains. Overall, corporate divestiture is a value-increasing activity for Singapore companies.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Creating Value through Corporate RestructuringPublished by Wiley ,2012
- The determinants of corporate divestment in the UKInternational Journal of Industrial Organization, 2000
- Corporate focus and value creation evidence from spinoffsJournal of Financial Economics, 1997
- Spinoffs and InformationJournal of Financial Intermediation, 1997
- Diversification's effect on firm valueJournal of Financial Economics, 1995
- Corporate focus and stock returnsJournal of Financial Economics, 1995
- Restructuring through spinoffsJournal of Financial Economics, 1993
- Investigating the Valuation Effects of Announcements of Voluntary Corporate SelloffsThe Journal of Finance, 1984
- Common stock repurchasesJournal of Financial Economics, 1981
- Measuring security price performanceJournal of Financial Economics, 1980