Actions taken to make the target company unattractive to potential acquirers
In finance, a scorched earth policy is a tactic that a company can use to prevent a hostile takeover. Essentially what happens is that a company targeted for takeover does everything it can reasonably do to make itself unattractive, hopefully discouraging the potential acquirer from continuing the takeover attempt.
In order to make itself less attractive, a targeted company may do a number of things, including:
The term “scorched earth” started as a military term. During times of war, troops would destroy valuable goods – crops, buildings, routes in and out of towns – in order to make them unusable by enemy troops.
The downside to the scorched tactic is that the items and infrastructure that were destroyed could also no longer be used by the troops who destroyed them.
When a company deliberately takes action to make itself less attractive, the goal is to prevent a takeover attempt. In the event that the policy works, the targeted company achieves its desired result, escaping the takeover. There are two major problems that may arise from implementing the scorched earth policy:
The scorched earth policy is, at its core, a final, desperate effort by a company to stop a hostile takeover. Other anti-takeover strategies are often better options because they don’t sabotage the value and earning potential of the targeted company.
For some companies, the scorched earth policy is successful and the company recovers after the takeover bid fails. For the rest, however, either the takeover is not prevented or the self-sabotage effectively ruins the company.
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