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A concise guide to Accretive Deals, explaining their meaning, examples, and significance in mergers, acquisitions, and corporate growth.
An Accretive Deal is a merger or acquisition that increases the acquiring company’s earnings per share (EPS) after completion. It indicates that the transaction adds financial value for shareholders, typically because the acquired company’s earnings or synergies outweigh the costs of acquisition.
An Accretive Deal is an M&A transaction in which the post-acquisition EPS is higher than the acquirer’s standalone EPS prior to the deal.
In mergers and acquisitions, the term “accretive” focuses on the deal’s impact on shareholder value and profitability. An accretive deal occurs when the target’s price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio is lower than the acquirer’s, or when synergies create net earnings gains that outweigh transaction costs.
The accretion/dilution analysis helps executives and investors forecast whether an M&A transaction will increase or decrease EPS after integration.
Accretion/Dilution (%) = ((Pro Forma EPS − Acquirer’s Standalone EPS) / Acquirer’s Standalone EPS) × 100
If the result is positive, the deal is accretive.
Example:
If a company’s EPS before acquisition is $2.00 and pro forma EPS after acquisition is $2.20:
Accretion = ((2.20 − 2.00) / 2.00) × 100 = 10% accretive.
When Apple acquired Beats Electronics in 2014, analysts viewed it as accretive because it expanded Apple’s product portfolio and music ecosystem while maintaining profitability. Similarly, Facebook’s acquisition of Instagram was accretive over time, driving substantial earnings growth through advertising integration.
Accretive deals reflect efficient capital allocation and strategic growth. They:
Economically, accretive M&A contributes to industry consolidation and capital efficiency.
When the target company’s earnings and synergies increase the acquirer’s post-deal EPS.
Not always — long-term success depends on integration and execution, not just EPS growth.
Through accretion/dilution analysis comparing pre- and post-acquisition EPS.
Yes, especially if financed with excessive debt or unrealistic synergy assumptions.