merger
(n.)1. A transaction in which one corporate entity is combined with another corporate entity. A variety of types of transactions are possible, the most common being the "triangular" merger whereby one corporation ("Buyer") creates a subsidiary ("Merger Sub") into which the other corporation ("Target") is combined, thereby creating a single corporation. A wave of mergers occurred in the 1980s due to the loosening of regulations by the
Reagan administration. A similar boom occurred in the late 1990s, and, thus far, a wave of mergers in 2005 suggests that it will be another huge year of corporate combinations. Mergers create corporations with annoying, nonsensical names like "AOL
Time Warner," and "JPMorganChase" and "
PriceWaterHouseCoopers." Frequently, corporations fail to realize any additional profit from these transactions, despite many workers losing their jobs due to the supposed "efficiencies" created.2. A transaction performed by the cockiest, least self-aware, obnoxious assholes in the worlds of investment banking and law. The area of expertise in which one performs mergers is known as "Mergers and Acquisitions" or "
M&A."
merger
by Boston Driver on Apr 14, 2013 00:38:31
Example:
1. There was
two kinds of drivers who approach traffic circles, mergers and stoppers.
2. Give me a whole day having to drive behind
timid mergers, just please not a
stopper!
Mergerer
by Rabid Driver on Jun 18, 2009 10:24:30
Someone who tries to sneak
farther ahead in the wrong exit lane on a
highway to get closer to the exit on the highway and at the last minute tries to get into the lane. They always make traffic
jams worse.
The Merger
by Get tf off my lawn on Apr 09, 2019 08:10:28
That one unwanted friend that pushes his/her way into
the friend group. The one that no one knows how they got into the group and no one likes. They usually start by following your group around until they are a common appearance and are progressively more annoying as they
merge deeper into the group.
Example:
Jake: How the hell did we let
the merger in
the group chat, all he does is follow us around.
Rick: Idk someone else added him.
Jake: goddamn it now we have to make another one, Just act like we still use the first one.
Rick: k, thank god.
Merger Dump
by Docta Dre ecstacy on Oct 21, 2009 07:10:38
A dump that is the by-product of eating too many
White Castle burgers and
holding it in for a couple days. A noticeable line, or merging point (hence the name
merger dump) is present. This generally marks the point where two dumps join into one.
Miami Merger
by ARejectedFratBoy on Oct 21, 2019 05:34:49
Two people that attend
Miami University located in
Oxford, Ohio that probably started out having a Pre-Med major and a Business Major, but as usual they both ended up graduating with a communication major. They probably talk all the time about how they kissed under the arch located under
Upham Hall when the clock struck midnight. What they don't talk about is how they got sloshed every Friday and Saturday night at Brick Street, a local night club in Oxford. Any offspring they have have to go to Miami University, otherwise, the Miami Mergers will disown them.
merger fatigue
by cheyenne bodie on Jul 22, 2009 21:55:33
From a company merger, a disease known as “merger fatigue” occurs when an employee (which epidemic quickly spreads to others) of the “mergered” company will lose their job at some unscheduled yet certain time in the near future causing disorientation with this lengthy process. As
the Trojan horse is rolled in, sharks circle the dead carcass limp in the deep waters of the corporate world for a
feeding frenzy; weariness of an employee due to the
diminution and irritability of the fact that one’s once prominent work has been diminished to the repetitive conditions of detailing so other’s may receive credit and take over that work.
Sometimes companies move too slowly because of “merger fatigue”, where employees tire of the rigors of concentrated focus and continuous effort. That, in turn, slows movement and progress, and what should take one or two months to accomplish ends up taking a year.
Example:
How does this work? I would have never thought of this – something so complicated yet made so simple. We need to have this, can you show us all you know? Policy dictates we comply; yet “merger fatigue” blames the CEO of selling us out for millions in several years of large bonuses and salaries, and a position on the Board of Directors of the purchasing company, while company employees get
severance pay only if they stay to complete the company
dismantlement and absorption, and providing cooperation with the other company’s employees to complete this task. - Thinking: Corporate America Nowadays, Corporate Greed,
Golden Parachute, Who's the Last One To Turn Out The Lights?!?