Moneycontrol
HomeBooksDeals: The Economic Structure of Business Transactions

Deals: The Economic Structure of Business Transactions

Deals includes many of the case studies that the two authors engaged with over the past two decades.

October 14, 2024 / 17:09 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Michael Klausner & Guhan Subramanian’s Deals: The Economic Structure of Business Transactions is a collaboration between academics who offered a course of the same name at their respective institutions. It first began as a course offered by Klausner twenty-five years ago at the Columbia Law School and Columbia Business School. It integrated economics and actual deals. Later Klausner continued with this course when he began teaching at Stanford Law School. Over time, these case studies became the bulk of the materials included in the course, of course with new ones added every year. He shared his resource materials widely with other faculty members. Guhan Subramanian was one of the first to use the materials at Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School, adding some of his own case studies too. Deals includes many of the case studies that the two authors engaged with over the past two decades.

The relationship between deal terms and underlying economics is timeless. Deal terms may change over time, in response to changing economics or perhaps just fashion, but the logic of how deal terms respond to underlying economics remains constant. In this book, the authors show that there is an underlying order to business transactions, and there are basic commonalities across transactions which, once understood, expose a degree of elegance and even simplicity buried deep within masses of paper.

Story continues below Advertisement

The objective of any deal is to carry out an exchange between parties. It could be a purchase of services or assets for cash, it could be a sale of securities, it could be a license of technology, it could be a combination of assets and services to create a business -- the list could go on. An exchange occurs when both parties to a deal expect to be better off as a result. In economic terms, deals are expected to increase joint value or equivalently, to create joint surplus – more aggregate value than the parties held before they entered into the deal.

The exchange can be simple or complex. But even in a deal that is complex overall, the exchange itself is often simple and may account for just a few lines of an agreement that spans dozens or hundreds of pages. Mergers and acquisitions are among the most common business transactions and often involve exchanges of billions of dollars in value, and hundreds of pages of documentation. The exchange, however, is typically quite simple. In an acquisition for cash, the acquiror buys all shares or assets of the selling corporation for an agreed-upon prize.