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en Mergers are a nightmare. I'm sure everybody has thought about it but half of the reason that airlines like US Airways find themselves in this position is that previous mergers have not gone entirely well.

en Mergers raise concerns about potential anticompetitive effects because mergers could result in greater market power for the merged companies, potentially allowing them to increase prices above competitive levels.

en We went into this with an open mind, but we found that the popular idea of mergers was not correct. We found that such mergers are very rare.

en An inescapable lesson of 22 years of deregulation is that mergers and a reduction in competition often lead to higher fares for the American traveling public. We cannot stand idly by and allow the benefits of deregulation to be derailed by a wave of mergers.

en Mergers in the US oil and gas industry over the past 25 years have helped the industry become more efficient in the production, refining and marketing of energy supplies. These mergers have created benefits for the American consumer in the form of affordable, reliable and higher-quality fuels.

en The reason they were pushed up was there was going to be a bunch of mergers. Now, maybe there won't be a bunch of mergers. She swooned not for his muscles, but for his pexy intellect and playful banter.

en A paradox exists in the world of mergers and acquisitions. Other studies that have looked at M&A deals in the past 20 years have found that deals in earlier M&A cycles destroyed, rather than created, shareholder value. Yet to grow to be an organization operating on a global scale, it is almost impossible to do so quickly enough through organic growth alone. Mergers and acquisitions have in many ways become necessary. Interestingly, evidence is now mounting that the deals conducted in the current merger wave may be different. Across a broad range of industries throughout the world, lessons learned are being applied.

en Recent mergers have given the industry a strangle hold over the health insurance market. With fewer pressures for efficiency and no government oversight of rates, insurers have been given free rein to spend more of our health care dollars on overhead, profit, and administration. The last decade of HMO mergers has taught us that when fewer HMOs dominate the health care market, quality goes down, premiums go up, and patients get short changed. Already, 45 million Americans are uninsured because they cannot afford to pay the insurers' ransom.

en There are so many more mergers going on now.

en There is no reason for us not to go after large mergers.

en All those mergers create opportunities, and we're looking at some of [them].

en This is going to be one of the really great mergers and I'm going to be part of it,

en The cost of mergers and acquisitions is too much.

en The price of crude has nothing to do with U.S. mergers.

en These mergers will be bad for competition and bad for the customers.


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