of cross-border corporate mergers fail to generate any measurable value for the acquiring shareholders within the first thirty-one months after the final signature is dried.
The percentage of acquiring shareholders who see no measurable value gain in the critical 31-month post-close window.
It was on a humid Tuesday morning in a glass-walled office in central Colombo. The new CEO opened the first folder.
The air-conditioned room held a sharp chill that settled in the back of my throat like a swallowed ice cube. A sudden, piercing ache blossomed behind my left eye, the kind of brief misery that follows a cold treat consumed with too much haste. I stared at the CEO as he pulled a single document from the thick stack. The paper was heavy. He scanned the lines of a regulatory filing that had been dormant for two years. His face lost its color.
The Momentum of the Deal
The document detailed a structural liability regarding land tenure that had been clearly marked in the annexures of the preliminary diligence report. This liability was visible to any professional paid to look past the calendar date of the transaction. The advisors had seen it. The brokers had noted it. But the momentum of the deal had become a physical force.