首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are of
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are of
admin
2016-07-09
40
问题
It’s widely known that more than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure. Like many marriages, they are often fraught with irreconcilable cultural and financial differences. Yet M&A activity was up sharply in 2013 and reached pre-recession levels this year. So why do companies keep at it? Because it’s an easy way to make a quick buck and please Wall Street. Increasingly, business is serving markets rather than markets serving business, as they were originally meant to do in our capitalist system.
For a particularly stark example, consider American pharmaceutical giant Pfizer’s recent bid to buy British drugmaker AstraZeneca. The deal made little strategic sense and would probably have destroyed thousands of jobs as well as slowed research at both companies.(Public outcry to that effect eventually helped scuttle the plan.)But it would have allowed Pfizer to shift its domicile to Britain, where companies pay less tax. That, in turn, would have boosted share prices in the short term, enriching the executives paid in stock and the bankers, lawyers and other financial intermediaries who stood to gain about half a billion dollars or so in fees from the deal.
Pfizer isn’t alone. Plenty of firms engage in such tax wizardry(巫术). This kind of short-term thinking is starting to dominate executive suites. Besides tax avoidance, Wall Street’s marching orders to corporate America include dividend payments and share buybacks, which sap long-term growth plans. It also demands ever more globalized supply chains, which make balance sheets look better by cutting costs but add complexity and risk. All of this hurts longer-term, more sustainable job and value creation. As a recent article on the topic by academic Gautam Mukunda in the Harvard Business Review noted, "The financial sector’s influence on management has become so powerful that a recent survey of chief financial officers showed that 78% would give up economic value and 55% would cancel a project with a positive net present value—that is, willingly harm their companies—to meet Wall Street’s targets and fulfill its desire for ’ smooth’ earnings. "
Some of this can be blamed on the sheer size of the financial sector. Many thought that the economic crisis and Great Recession would weaken the power of markets. In fact, it only strengthened finance’s grip on the economy. The largest banks are bigger than they were before the recession, while finance as a percentage of the economy is about the same size. Overall, the industry earns 30% of all corporate profit while creating just 6% of the country’s jobs. And financial institutions are still doing plenty of tricky things with our money. Legendary investor Warren Buffett recently told me he’s steering well clear of exposure to commercial securities like the complex derivatives being sliced and diced by major banks. He expects these "weapons of mass destruction" to cause problems for our economy again at some point.
There’s a less obvious but equally important way in which Wall Street distorts the economy: by defining "shareholder value" as short-term returns. If a CEO misses quarterly earnings by even a few cents per share, activist investors will push for that CEO to be fired. Yet the kinds of challenges companies face today—how to shift to entirely new digital business models, where to put operations when political risk is on the rise, how to anticipate the future costs of health, pensions and energy—are not quarterly problems. They are issues that will take years, if not decades, to resolve. Unfortunately, in a world in which the average holding period for a stock is about seven months, down from seven years four decades ago, CEOs grasp for the lowest-hanging fruit. They label tax-avoidance schemes as "strategic" and cut research and development in favor of sending those funds to investors in the form of share buybacks.
All of this will put American firms at a distinct disadvantage against global competitors with long-term mind-sets. McKinsey Global Institute data shows that between now and 2025, 7 out of 10 of the largest global firms are likely to come from emerging markets, and most will be family-owned businesses not beholden to(感激)the markets. Of course, there’s plenty we could do policy-wise to force companies and markets to think longer term—from corporate tax reform to bans on high-speed trading to shifts in corporate compensation. But just as Wall Street has captured corporate America, so has it captured Washington. Few mainstream politicians on either side of the aisle have much interest in fixing things, since they get so much of their financial backing from the Street. Unfortunately for them, the fringes of their parties—and voters—do care.
What would the author like to illustrate by the example of Pfizer’s bid?
选项
A、More than half of all corporate mergers and acquisitions end in failure.
B、They are often fraught with irreconcilable cultural and financial differences.
C、It’s an easy way to make a quick buck and please Wall Street.
D、Business is serving markets rather than markets serving business.
答案
D
解析
推断题。由题干中的Pfizer’s bid定位至第二段。该段指出这一竞投收购活动对生产发展和创造就业岗位带来的是负面影响,之所以需要这个动议,是因为可以少付税款,满足高级管理层和金融界从业人员的短期利益。这足以证明上文提到的生意服务市场而不是市场服务生意,故答案为[D]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/nX7O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
WhichofthefollowingtheoriesisNOTabouttheoriginoflanguage?
Speakingtwolanguagesratherthanjustonehasobviouspracticalbenefitsinanincreasinglyglobalizedworld.Beingbilingua
Thesenserelationshipbetween"buy"and"purchase"is______.
Thiswasthecapital’smostanxiousweeksinceSeptember11th.OnMondaythegovernmentissuedaredalertthatterroristattac
WhathavetheleadersofEuropeanUnionagreedtodo?
我不敢说生命是什么,我只能说生命像什么。生命像向东流的一江春水,他从最高处发源,冰雪是他的前身。他聚集起许多细流,合成一股有力的洪涛,向下奔注,他曲折的穿过了悬崖峭壁,冲倒了层沙积土,挟卷着滚滚的沙石,快乐勇敢地流走,一路上他享受着他所遭遇的一切
他得出这一结论是深思熟虑的结果。
如果“义”代表一种伦理的人生态度,“利”代表一种功利的人生态度,那么,我所说的“情”便代表一种审美的人生态度。它主张率性而行,适情而止,每个人都保持自己的真性情。你不是你所信奉的教义,也不是你所占有的物品,你之为你仅在于你的真实“自我”。生命的意义不在于奉
A、Thewaysandtrapsinhuntingforbillionaires.B、Publicattitudetowardshuntingforbillionaires.C、Billionaires’requiremen
随机试题
下列针对幼儿个体差异的教育观点中,不妥的是()
下列不是债券基本价值评估的假设条件的是()
急性脊髓横贯性损害的鉴别主要包括下列疾病,但除外:()
植被中物种的重要值取决于物种的()。
为了实现资源的优化配置,政府应通过财政补贴对其具有()的生产者予以支持。
下列项目中,属于非货币性资产交换的有()。
某运输队有大货车和小货车24辆,其中小货车自身的重量和载货量相等,大货车的载货量是小货车的1.5倍,自身重量是小货车的2倍。所有车辆满载时共重234吨,空载则重124吨,那么该运输队的大货车有多少辆?()
在“一带一路”背景下,如何讲好中国故事从而增强中国国际传播能力、提高中国国际话语权、塑造中国国家形象等议题引起全社会关注。某高校新闻传播学院拟在全校开展“讲好中国故事,传播中国声音”创意传播大赛,请以参赛学生名义撰写一份大赛策划书。1.字数:60
IstherenoendtotheDrugPlague?Lastyear,ournation’scapitalpassedthemurder-a-daymark,andthenumberofhomicide
Onefactorthatcaninfluenceconsumersistheirmoodstate.Moodmaybedefined【B1】______atemporaryandmildpositiveorneg
最新回复
(
0
)