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Compliance considerations in an active era of mergers and acquisitions

The term “mergers and acquisitions” describes transactions in which the ownership of organizations or business operations within organizations are combined or transferred between companies. Merger describes the combination of at least two organizational units, whereas acquisition describes the transfer of interests or assets from one organization to another.

So far 2017 has been a banner year for high-profile mergers and acquisitions across all industries. Businesses are generating attention, press, and perhaps even revenue for themselves by ambitiously entering into deals with one another. Some prominent competitors have decided to join forces, while other companies hope to make inroads into new markets or gain access to new technologies through mergers and acquisitions activity.

One conclusion that may be drawn already so far from a survey of this year’s mergers and acquisitions activity is for some, that expediency is the name of the game. Companies entering into these agreements want to come together quickly to get on with business, before the advancements in technology outpace their own participation. In some markets, regulators seem basically happy to oblige them. This apparent trend stands somewhat in contrast with standard regulatory agenda for existing companies, and the current preference in other markets, which is to identify and investigate possible anti-trust business practices for possible enforcement action or remedial measures before allowing the deal to go through.

If the US regulators continue to take the point of view that combined and strengthened competition from one market player drives the rest to be better and innovate, such as with Amazon, this will be a justification of relaxed regulatory scrutiny. It will be interesting then to observe whether regulators in the EU or other regions trend in the other direction, increasing the scope and standard of their oversight in order to reinforce their opposite protection that in these times of combination innovation may actually be more at risk than ever.

Only time will tell in this case which side has predicted the outcome correctly; one may find commerce stifled in name of caution, while the other may discover that imposing supervision after the union is more difficult than taking a measured approach from the beginning.

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