This thesis analyzes the motivation and performance of 403 acquisitions
made by emerging multinational corporations (EMNCs) in Western Europe
and North America between 1994 and 2013. The findings indicate that most
EMNCs were motivated to acquire in order to obtain access to the
upstream and downstream know-how of their target firms. In addition, the
thesis' event study results demonstrate that EMNCs on average generated
value for their shareholders with their acquisitions over short periods
around acquisition announcement. This result is particularly significant
since similar studies on buying firms from developed markets have
frequently come to the conclusion that acquirers destroy shareholder
value.