“…First, we contribute to the literature on corporate governance [2]. An important body of corporate governance literature specifically focuses on the market for corporate control and examines its effect on a variety of corporate policies, strategies and outcomes like financial performance (Schranz, 1993), the cost of debt (Qiu and Yu, 2009), innovation performance (Chakraborty et al , 2014; Ongsakul et al , 2022), earnings management (Ge and Kim, 2014), managerial turnover (Lel and Miller, 2015), executive risk-taking incentives (Ongsakul et al , 2020), corporate integrity (Ongsakul et al , 2021), the strength of internal corporate governance (Lee and Chung, 2016), board composition and characteristics (Brickley and James, 1987; Chatjuthamard et al , 2021) and CSR performance (Wongsinhirun et al , 2022). Although several studies investigate the association between acquisitions and asset redeployability (Anand and Singh, 1997; Capron et al , 2001; Anand, 2004), they are more related to acquisition strategies, whereas our perspective is the effect of takeover threats on asset redeployability.…”