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Mergers

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Revaluing assets of the target can create depreciation expense for tax purposes. Losses of a target that have been carried forward can be used by the combined firm ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mergers


1
Mergers Acquisitions
  • FINC 446 Financial Decision Making
  • Dr. Olgun Fuat Sahin

2
Mergers and Acquisitions
  • Vertical merger forward or backward integration
  • Horizontal merger expansion in a particular
    business line
  • Conglomerate merger combination of companies
    from unrelated business lines

3
Value Related Reasons for MA
  • Synergism
  • Taxes
  • Information Asymmetry
  • Agency Costs

4
Synergism
  • Synergism Whole is worth more than sum of its
    parts (MA math is 2 2 5)
  • Economies of scale lower costs by combining
    operations
  • Using excess capacity
  • Spreading fixed costs over larger volume
  • Economies of scope can carry out more
    activities profitably
  • Producing similar products
  • Backward integration buying a supplier to
    reduce costs
  • Forward integration moving control one step
    closer to customers

5
Synergism (Continued)
  • Economies of financing larger companies can
    raise money more economically
  • The more money raised, the lower the issuance
    costs on a per dollar raised
  • Higher liquidity for the securities reducing cost
    of issuance to the firm
  • Risk reduction lower unsystematic risk will
    reduce expected bankruptcy costs
  • Market power larger market share allows control
    over price

6
Taxes
  • A merger can reduce the tax of a combined firm
    because
  • The acquirer has large cash flows with limited
    opportunities returning cash to shareholders
    exposes them to taxes
  • Revaluing assets of the target can create
    depreciation expense for tax purposes
  • Losses of a target that have been carried forward
    can be used by the combined firm
  • Alternative Minimum Tax might encourage
    acquisitions by reducing overall tax payment for
    firms if they are combined
  • Diversification through MA can increase debt
    capacity increasing tax shield

7
Information Asymmetry
  • Acquiring company posses information that is not
    available to the investors
  • Buying another company implies that the acquiring
    firm managers have found a bargain

8
Agency Costs
  • MA allows inefficient managers to be replaced
  • Activities in the takeover market curb the agency
    cost

9
Management Related Reasons for Mergers
  • Reduction of Unsystematic Risk
  • Takeover Risk
  • Size Preference
  • Hubris Hypothesis

10
Reduction of Unsystematic Risk
  • Diversification at the firm level will reduce the
    unsystematic risk
  • Previously this was good because lower
    unsystematic risk reduces expected bankruptcy
    costs
  • Managers also benefit form lower unsystematic
    risk because lower variability in earnings
    increases job security and stabilizes compensation

11
Takeover Risk
  • If a company is target for a proposed acquisition
    then the target can make it difficult by
    acquiring another hard to swallow
  • A defensive acquisition can create a regulatory
    hurdle for the original suitor as well

12
Size Preference
  • Managers self fulfilling prophecies bigger is
    better not necessarily profitable
  • Larger firm can provide more compensation for
    managers

13
Hubris Hypothesis
  • Hubris hypothesis suggest that acquiring firm
    managers rely too much on their abilities to
    identify, undertake, and manage potential
    targets
  • Usual outcome of such acquisitions is a disaster
    admitted by divestitures

14
MA Process
  • Identify a Target
  • Valuation
  • Mode of Acquisition
  • Mode of Payment
  • Accounting of Acquisition
  • Note Regulators (Federal Trade Commission FTC)
    can block a deal or require substantial asset
    sell off

15
MA Process (Continued)
  • Identify a Target
  • Based on a sound strategy that can increase
    shareholders wealth
  • Focus on Value Related Reasons
  • Acquisitions are usually initiated by the
    acquiring firm
  • Sometimes a target can announce that it is for
    sale

16
MA Process (Continued)
  • Valuation
  • Net Cash Flow
  • EBIT x (1 tax rate)
  • depreciation and other non-cash expenses
  • acquisition of new assets
  • increases in liabilities other than LTD
  • Net cash flow
  • Equity Residual Cash Flow
  • Net Income
  • preferred dividends
  • depreciation and other non-cash expenses
  • acquisition of new assets
  • increases ( decreases) in liabilities
  • increases ( decreases) in preferred stocks
  • Equity residual cash flow

17
MA Process (Continued)
  • Valuation
  • Should not ignore the value of strategic options
    and payment terms
  • In general an acquisition creates wealth for the
    acquirer if
  • Target Alone Synergies Other
  • Cash Paid Stock Paid Debt Assumed

What Acquirer Gets
What Acquirer Gives
18
MA Process (Continued)
  • Mode of Acquisition
  • Refers to whether a proposed acquisition is
    friendly or hostile to target managers
  • Friendly acquisitions are approved by board of
    directors of each firm
  • Then shareholders vote on the proposal
  • If no negotiation possibility exists then an
    acquirer can proceed with a tender offer to
    target shareholders making it hostile
  • Hostile takeover can be quite time consuming
    especially when target managers fight against the
    tender offer

19
MA Process (Continued)
  • Mode of Payment
  • How an acquisition is paid for cash, stock or
    mixed
  • If the stock is believed to be undervalued, then
    stock should not be used for payment
  • If the stock is overvalued then the stock payment
    should/can be used

20
Takeover Defense
  • Golden parachute
  • A contract designed to give executives
    substantial compensation if they are dismissed
    following a takeover
  • Poison pills, flip-over rights allowing holders
    to receive stock in the acquirer if the bidder
    acquires 100 of the target
  • Poison pills, flip-in rights allowing holders to
    receive stock in the target
  • It is effective against raiders who seek to
    acquire controlling interest

21
Takeover Defense (Continued)
  • Poison puts
  • Bond issues that become due if unfriendly
    takeover occurs
  • Greenmail
  • Managers of target buys shares purchased by
    acquirer at a substantial premium
  • White knight
  • A third company acquiring the target with
    friendly terms

22
Accounting Method
  • There used to be two methods Pooling of Interest
    and Purchase method for acquisitions
  • Pooling of Interest
  • It can be used if payment is made in the form of
    acquirers stock
  • Balance sheet and income statement of the
    combined company are generated by adding up items

23
Accounting Method (Continued)
  • Purchase method
  • Balance sheet of the combined entity is
    constructed as follows If the price paid is
    same as the net asset value (book value total
    liabilities), balance sheet of the combined
    company is generated by adding up items
  • If the price paid is less than the net asset
    value, the assets are written down
  • If the price paid is more than the net asset
    value, the assets are appraised. If the price is
    still more than appraised value of net assets,
    the difference is an asset called goodwill
  • The income statement reflect the depreciation
    expenses adjusted for the revaluation

24
Accounting for Goodwill
  • The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
    issued two statements changing all that
  • FASB Statement No. 141 Business Combinations
  • Requires the purchase method of accounting be
    used for all business combinations initiated
    after June 30, 2001
  • FASB Statement No. 142 Goodwill and Other
    Intangible Assets
  • Changes the accounting for goodwill from an
    amortization method to an impairment-only
    approach
  • Goodwill will be tested for impairment at least
    annually using a two-step process that begins
    with an estimation of the fair value of a
    reporting unit. The first step is a screen for
    potential impairment, and the second step
    measures the amount of impairment, if any.

25
Target and Acquirer Performance around
Announcement
  • Dodd (1980), Merger proposals, management
    discretion and stockholder wealth, Journal of
    Financial Economics, Volume 8, Issue 2, June
    1980, Pages 105-137
  • 151 targets and 126 bidders over 1970-1977

AR is Abnormal Return Actual Expected.
Reported AR is average of firm ARs.
26
Target and Acquirer Performance around
Announcement (Continued)
  • Bradley, Desai Kim (1988), Synergistic gains
    from corporate acquisitions and their division
    between the stockholders of target and acquiring
    firms, Journal of Financial Economics, Volume
    21, Issue 1, May 1988, Pages 3-40
  • 3-day announcement abnormal return for 236
    successful tender offers over 1963-1984

27
Target and Acquirer Performance around
Announcement (Continued)
  • Bradley, Desai Kim (1983), The gains to
    bidding firms from merger, Journal of Financial
    Economics, Volume 11, Issues 1-4, April 1983,
    Pages 121-139
  • 353 targets 241 successful, 112 unsuccessful
  • 94 unsuccessful bidders
  • 1983-1980

28
Acquirer Performance in the Long-Run
  • Long Run Abnormal Return Long-Run Actual Return
    Long-Run Expected Return
  • Long-Run Event Studies are very sensitive to
    Joint Hypothesis Problem
  • They test two hypotheses
  • There is no abnormal performance after
    acquisitions Null
  • The method of risk adjustment (estimation of
    expected return) is accurate. This is very
    important since we do not have an asset pricing
    model that can explain security returns well

29
Acquirer Performance in the Long-Run (Continued)
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