“…For example, if a firm faces a strategic choice on how to expand in an environment through acquisition with plentiful resources, the acquisition of a known choice related to core capabilities is seen as less risky than acquiring a more unknown quantity for a capability (Coff, 1999;Gerbaud & York, 2007). Firms opting to invest in a lesser-known quantity even within an environment of resource abundance still face the increased uncertainty of M&A and thus increased costs to the transaction (Boeh, 2011;Coff, 1999;Kanungo, 2021). Thus, stated formally, we would expect the following relationship: Hypotheses 4a and 4b: An environment of high munificence will positively moderate the longer-term performance of firms pursuing acquisitions of ordinary capabilities and negatively moderate the longer-term performance of firms pursuing acquisition of dynamic capabilities (ceteris paribus).…”