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Title: Module%20I:%20Investment%20Banking:%20Mergers%20and%20Acquisitions


1
Module I Investment BankingMergers and
Acquisitions
  • Week 4 September 16 and 18, 2002

2
Motivation
  • Many companies are in the process of
    restructuring
  • What are the major forms of restructuring?
  • What motivates corporate restructuring?
  • What are the consequences for investors and for
    firms?

3
Overview of Restructuring
  • Two Major Forms
  • Expansion (Combining assets through MA)
  • Contraction (Breaking-up assets through
    divestitures etc.)
  • Other Forms
  • Changing ownership structure (LBOs, buybacks,
    etc.) and retaining control through defensive
    strategies (Poison pills etc.)

4
Expansion Mergers Acquisitions
  • Merger the absorption of one firm by another
  • Acquisitions purchase of a firms voting stock
    (tender offer)
  • Takeovers Transfer of control from one group of
    shareholders to another
  • by merger, stock acquisition, asset acquisition,
    proxy contest or by going private

5
Acquisition or Merger?
  • Stock acquisitions do not require shareholder
    meetings or votes, and are frequently hostile
  • The acquirer deals directly with targets
    shareholders, bypassing management
  • Minority shareholders may hold out in tender
    offers complete absorption requires a merger

6
What Explains MA Activity?
  • The stated objective of all mergers and
    acquisitions is the creation of value
  • Other objectives - e.g., managerial hubris - may
    also play a role but are usually not the stated
    rationale for an acquisition.
  • What are the sources of value? Two types
  • Strategic
  • Financial

7
Strategic Sources of Value
  • 1. Under-managed Target
  • - Look for strategic and operating errors that
    can be corrected by replacing bad management
  • 2. Efficiency Gain or Synergies
  • - Reduce costs through economies of scale and
    scope in production, finance, research,
    marketing, and through other indivisibilities
  • - Increase demand or raise product prices
    through gains in market power

8
Strategic Sources of Value
  • 3. Opportunities for restructurings
  • Divest or liquidate businesses with poor fit or
    poor results
  • Sell unproductive assets that are retained by
    managers who cannot or will not shed such value
    destroying businesses

9
Financial Sources of Value
  • Target is undervalued
  • Markets are inefficient
  • Forecasted improvements or changes are not
    reflected in the stock price
  • Unused gains from the use or sale of accumulated
    tax losses from net operating losses
  • Unused debt capacity (Leverage Bargain)

10
Bad Reasons for Acquisitions
  • Diversification
  • However, shareholders can diversify their own
    holdings at lower cost and greater efficiency
    through the financial markets.
  • Securing access to inputs or sales of output
  • This may be valid, but presumes there are
    inefficient or uncompetitive markets

11
Bad Reasons for Acquisitions
  • Creating the Appearance of Growth
  • Growth for its own sake does not create value
  • Use of Excess Cash
  • Increased EPS
  • By buying companies with higher EPS than your own
    you raise your EPS. Naive investors may believe
    this to be growth even if this destroys value

12
Example of EPS Growth Strategy
  • Company A has 1,000 shares outstanding and EPS of
    1
  • Company B has 500 shares outstanding and EPS of
    2
  • A buys B and now reports higher EPS of 1.33
  • If A paid more than B was worth, As shareholders
    lost although As EPS rose

13
Higher EPS Strategy
Company As reported EPS after acquisition of
company B
Company A acquires B
EPS
A
B
A
14
Are Mergers Beneficial to Society?
  • Mergers and acquisitions are usually associated
    with layoffs and downsizing.
  • This may or may not be associated with increased
    economic efficiency.
  • But MA activity may facilitate exit from an
    industry where there is overcapacity

15
Basic Argument
  • Suppose that there are three firms whose minimum
    efficient scale is 100 units

Average Cost
Efficient Production Zone
Price
100
Quantity
67
16
Example
  • Initially, industry demand was 300 units, so
    there was no over capacity
  • Now, demand has fallen to 200 and is not expected
    to recover
  • Each firm produces 67 units, and makes economic
    losses
  • The problem If firm A exits, the benefits are
    captured by B and C

17
Solution
  • Since the benefits from exit do not accrue to the
    exiting firm, each firm fights to stay on,
    causing losses for all firms
  • Solution If B (or C) were to takeover A, the
    shareholders of A would capture the external
    benefits from exit
  • In this sense, MA activity is beneficial to
    society.

18
Empirical Evidence
  • In reality, most acquirers fare poorly with
    modest declines in value
  • Targets receive most of the benefits of the
    usually substantial run-up in price associated
    with a takeover.

19
Example Kodak and Sterling Drug
  • January 4, 1988 Hoffman LaRoche offers 72 per
    share for Sterling Drug
  • January 18 Facing resistance, Hoffman raises
    the offer to 81 per share
  • January 22 Kodak announces a friendly bid of
    89.50 per share for Sterling Drug

20
Price Reaction
  • Estimate Kodaks return net of the return
    predicted by CAPM
  • The abnormal return is the actual return on day t
    less the expected return
  • From CAPM, the expected return is

21
Cumulative Abnormal Returns
12/2/87
1/22/88
3/18/88
22
Kodak Paid a High Premium
Value of Kodaks Bid 5.1 (in billions) Less
Sterlings market capitalization 3.0 (30
days prior to announcement) Equals Kodaks
Premium 2.1
23
..But Investors Were Skeptical
  • Kodaks market decrease was about 2.2 billion,
    almost the amount of the premium paid for
    Sterling
  • Clearly, investors did not believe the deal could
    add value. Why?
  • Kodaks past acquisitions were failures and it
    was ignoring its core business

24
Why Do Acquires Fare Poorly?
  • Overbidding
  • Over-optimism or Winners Curse
  • Managerial hubris
  • Mergers increase firm size and hence managerial
    compensation, without adding value
  • Poor fit between buyer and seller
  • Clash of corporate cultures
  • Ignorance of targets industry
  • Failure to integrate operations carefully and fast

25
Example of Winners Curse
  • Four companies bid for mineral rights on Federal
    land
  • True value is 100 million
  • Each company estimates value imperfectly
  • Valuations are unbiased, but noisy

26
Valuations
  • Company A Estimated Value is 80m
  • Company B Estimated Value is 90m
  • Company C Estimated Value is 110m
  • Company D Estimated Value is 120m
  • Average estimate is correct

27
Bidding
  • Second price, sealed bid auction
  • The optimal strategy is to bid your reservation
    price
  • Company D bids 120, and wins, paying 110
  • Winners curse Overpay by 10

28
Can this be an explanation?
  • Winners curse can explain over bidding in this
    simple one-shot game
  • But in a repeated game, firms will recognize this
    problem or learn from others bids
  • However, if takeovers are isolated events, the
    winners curse may still hold

29
II. Contractions
  • In the 1980s and 1990s, firms that operate in
    fewer numbers of industries do better than widely
    diversified firms.
  • Restructurings that result in more focus are
    rewarded by higher stock prices
  • Example Dun Bradstreet, a major information
    provider, split in three. The stock price
    reaction was positive, with a subsequent rise of
    8

30
Why is Re-Focusing in Vogue?
  • Corporations made several errors including
  • Expanding into industries they didn't know
  • Overestimating the gains from synergy and
    diversification
  • Complex structures allowed mistakes to go
    undetected
  • Internal conflicts arose over the allocation of
    capital and direction of future projects

31
Types of Contractions
  • Spin-offs Creates a new legal entity shares
    are distributed on a pro rata basis to parents
    shareholders
  • Separation of control over time without cash
    flows. Example In 1995, US West spun off its
    cable and cellular businesses.
  • Split-off some shareholders get stock in a
    subsidiary in exchange for parent stock
  • Immediate separation of control

32
Spin-Offs
A Spin-Off does not yield cash inflows
33
Motivations for Spin-Offs
  • In recent years, spin-offs and split offs have
    become increasingly popular as companies try to
    refocus on their core business
  • Example
  • ATT split up into three entities in 1995 NCR,
    Lucent Technologies and ATT

34
Contraction Divestitures
  • Divestitures Sale of part of the firm to
    outsiders
  • Equity Carve-outs Sale of stock in subsidiary
    to outsiders
  • In both cases, there is an immediate separation
    of ownership and control
  • The parent also receives cash inflows

35
Divestitures
Firm
Cash
Divestiture is a Sale of part of the Firm
36
Example VLSI and Compass
  • In 1997, VLSI Technology, a San Jose based
    semiconductor firm had a wholly-owned subsidiary,
    Compass.
  • Compass developed CAD/CAM-type software to design
    new computer chips
  • Compass licenses its software for profit the
    parent company, VLSI, receives a substantial
    price discount

37
Example VLSI and Compass
  • VLSI argues that divesting compass would result
    in higher input costs for itself, putting it at a
    competitive disadvantage.
  • But Compass executives believed that as an
    independent company, it could license its
    software to many other chip manufacturers who are
    currently unwilling to pay a subsidiary of their
    rival

38
What Should VLSI Do?
  • If Compass is correct, a split-off would have the
    following effects
  • Compass value would increase
  • It could charge VLSI more
  • It could sell more to other chip makers
  • The new VLSI would be worth less
  • It would have to pay Compass market prices for
    software products

39
Case Outcome
  • Since the extra costs paid by VLSI upon
    divestiture are equal to the extra revenues of
    Compass, shareholders are no better or worse off
  • But since Compass will have new sales,
    shareholders would benefit from divestiture
  • VLSI sold Compass in 1997

40
Conclusions
  • Corporate restructurings can take many forms.
  • Restructurings are motivated by the creation of
    value
  • But in practice, evidence suggests that strategic
    and financial motives for acquisition rarely
    produce value gains.

41
Next Week September 23 and 25
  • Allocate tasks associated with group write-up and
    do necessary work
  • Hand in Red October case write-up at the
    beginning of class on September 23, 2002
  • Review contents of Chapter 19
  • Read and begin to identify critical financial
    issues in the John Case Case discussed in week 6
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