A consolidating acquisition occurs when an acquiring company buys another company to decrease competition.
This acquisition is where an entity buys a business to make a profit. Rather than absorb the target company, the acquirer enhances the firm’s performance and sells it to the highest bidder.
This involves a bigger company buying a smaller business to increase the market access of the target company’s products or services.
This is when a larger entity buys a smaller business to gain from the potential growth of the acquired company’s new products or services.
This involves an acquisition in which a company buys another company to have access to the acquired firm’s resources, such as intellectual property, skills, personnel or market access. The rationale behind this transaction is that the acquirer saves cost and time if they buy an existing company with the structure it needs rather than creating a new one.
It’s common for a company to directly acquire the assets of another company during bankruptcy proceedings.
In this type of acquisition, a company’s executives purchase a controlling stake in another organization to make it private.
A tender offer involves the purchase of a company’s outstanding stock at a specified price instead of the market price.