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Title: Presentation on


1
  • Presentation on
  • Mergers and Acquisitions
  • By
  • Prof. Sundeep Bedi
  • Editor-In-Chief
  • Equitycalls.com, Pune

2
DEFINITIONS
  • Acquisition The purchase of a controlling
    interest in a firm, generally via a tender offer
    for the target shares.
  • Anergy Negative synergy. Instead of a "22 5"
    effect, anergy implies "223". Business units
    actively interfere with each other and may have
    more value if separated.
  • Arbitrage The Purchase of an asset for near term
    resale at a higher price in the context of M A
    risk arbitrage.

3
DEFINITIONS
  • Backend Rights Plan A poison pill takeover
    defense in which target shareholders are issued a
    rights dividend exercisable if an acquirer
    obtains over a triggering amount of target stock.
    Shareholders (excluding the acquirer) may
    exchange each right-and-share-of-stock held for
    senior securities or cash equal in value to a
    back-end price set by the target board. This
    backend price is set higher than the market price
    and becomes a minimum takeover price below which
    no takeover can succeed.

4
DEFINITIONS
  • Beta In the capital asset pricing model, the
    systematic risk of the asset the variability of
    the asset's return in relation to the return on
    the market.
  • Bottomup An approach to firm strategy
    formulation based on the aggregation of segment
    forecasts.
  • Capital Budgeting The process of planning
    expenditures whose returns extend over period of
    time
  • CAPM Calculates the required return on an asset
    as a function of the risk free rate plus the
    market premium times the asset Beta.

5
DEFINITIONS
  • Cleanup Merger Also called a take-out merger.
    The consolidation of the acquired firm into the
    acquiring firm after the acquirer has obtained
    control.
  • Coercive Tender Offer Any tender offer, which
    puts pressure on target shareholders to tender by
    offering a higher price to those who tender
    early.
  • Coinsurance Effect The combination of two firms
    whose cash flows of less variability for the
    merged firm, thus decreasing the risk to lenders
    to the firm, thus the risk to the firm, thus
    decreasing the risk to lenders to lenders to the
    firm and thereby increasing its debt capacity.

6
DEFINITIONS
  • Collateral Restraints Agreements between the
    parties to a joint venture to limit competition
    between themselves in certain areas.
  • Concentric Merger A merger in which there is
    carry - over in specific management functions
    (e.g. marketing ) or complementary in relative
    strengths among specific management functions
    rather than carry over / complementary in only
    generic management functions (e.g. planning).

7
DEFINITIONS
  • Conjectural Variation The reaction of rival
    firms as one firm, Firm A, restricts o/p or
    raises prices. Ranges from -1 to 1 a negative
    conjectural variation indicates competitive
    behavior, i.e., Firm A's action is offset by the
    reactions of competing rival firms.
  • Decision Management Decision functions related
    to day-to-day operations, which may be delegated
    to managers. Includes initiation and
    implementation of policies and procedures.

8
DEFINITIONS
  • Defensive Diversification Entering new product
    markets to offset the limitations of the firm's
    existing product - market areas
  • Delphi Technique An information - gathering
    technique in which questionnaires are sent to
    informed individuals. The responses are
    summarized into a feedback report and used to
    generate subsequent questionnaires to probe more
    deeply into the issue under study.

9
DEFINITIONS
  • De Nova Entry Entry into an industry by forming
    a new company as opposed to combining with an
    existing firm in the industry.
  • Dogs A Boston Consulting Group term for business
    segments characterized by low market share in
    product markets with low growth rates.
  • Du Pot System A financial planning and control
    system focusing on return on investment by
    relating asset turnover (effective asset
    management) to profit margin on sales (effective
    cost control).

10
DEFINITIONS
  • Equity Carve Out A transaction in which a parent
    firm offers some of a subsidiary's common stock
    to the general public, to bring in a cash
    infusion to the parent without loss of control.
  • ERAS- type ESOP Employee stock ownership plans
    other than tax credit ESOP's i.e. includes
    leveraged, leverageable, and non-leveraged ESOPs
    recognized under ERISA rather than under the tax
    reduction act of 1975.

11
DEFINITIONS
  • Fallen Angel A bond issued at investment grade
    whose rating is subsequently dropped to below
    investment grade, below BBB.
  • Financial Synergy A theory, which suggests a
    financial motive for mergers, especially between
    firms with high internal cash flows (but poor
    investment opportunities) and firms low internal
    cash flows (but high investment opportunities
    which, absent merger, would require costly
    external financing). Also includes increased debt
    capacity or coinsurance effect, and economics of
    scale in floatation and transaction costs of
    securities.

12
DEFINITIONS
  • Front-End Loading A tender offer in which the
    offer price is greater than the value of any
    un-purchased shares. Resolves the free-rider
    problems by providing an incentive to tender
    early,
  • Gambler's Ruin An adverse string of losses,
    which could lead to bankruptcy, although the long
    run cash flows could be positive.
  • General Utilities Doctrine An IRS rule which
    allowed firms to not recognize gains on the
    distribution of appreciated property in
    redemption of, its shares (e.g. in a 'legal
    liquidation). Repealed by the Tax Reform Act of
    1986.

13
DEFINITIONS
  • Going-Concern Value The value of the firm as a
    whole over and above the sum of the values of
    each of its parts the value of organization
    learning and reputation.
  • Growth / Share Matrix A guide to strategy
    formulation which emphasizes attainment of high
    market share in industries with favorable growth
    rates
  • Hidden Equity Undervalued assets whose market
    value exceeds their depreciated book value, but
    is not reflected in stock price.

14
DEFINITIONS
  • Hold Up Whenever a resource is dependent on
    (specialized to) the rest of the firm there may
    be a temptation for others to try to expropriate
    the quasi rent of the dependent resource by
    withholding their complementary resources this
    is holdup.
  • Internal Rate of Return (IRR) A Capital
    Budgeting method, which finds the discount rate
    (the IRR), which equates the present value of
    cash inflows and investment outlays.

15
DEFINITIONS
  • Learning Curve An approach to strategy
    formulation which hypothesize that costs decline
    with cumulative volume experience resulting in
    competitive advantage for the first entrants into
    the industry.
  • Leveraged Buy Out (LBO) The purchase of a
    company by a small group of investors, financed
    largely by debt.
  • Leveraged Cash Out (LCO) A defensive
    reorganization of the firm's capital structure in
    which outside share-holders receive a large one
    time cash dividend and inside shareholders
    receive new shares of stock instead The cash
    dividend is largely financed with newly borrowed
    funds, leaving the firm highly leveraged and with
    a greater proportional ownership share in the
    hands of management.

16
DEFINITIONS
  • Lock-up Option An option to buy a large block of
    newly issued shares which target may grant to a
    favored bidder, thus virtually guarantying that
    the favored bidder will succeed.
  • Management Buy Out A going private transaction
    led by the incumbent managers of the formally
    public firm.
  • Market Model In event studies, the most widely
    used method of calculating the return predicted
    if no event took place. In this method, a clean
    period (with no events) is chosen, and a
    regression is run of firm returns against the
    market index return over the clean period.

17
DEFINITIONS
  • Market Value Rule The principle that all
    decisions of a corporation should be judged
    solely by their contribution to the market value
    of the firm stock.
  • Master Limited Partnership (MNP) An
    organizational firm in which limited partnership
    interests are publicly traded (like shares of
    corporate stock) while retaining the tax
    attributes of the partnership.
  • Mezzanine Financing Subordinated debt issued in
    connection with leveraged buyout Sometimes
    carries payment in time (PIT) provisions, in
    which debt holders receive more of the same kind
    of debt securities in lieu of cash payments under
    specified conditions.

18
DEFINITIONS
  • Money Purchase Plan Defined contribution pension
    plan in which the firm contributes a specified
    annual amount of cash as approached to stock
    bonus plans in which the firm contributes stock
    and profit sharing plans in which the amount of
    the annual cash contribution depends on
    profitability.
  • NASDAQ Stock Quotation system of the National
    Association of Security Dealers for stocks which
    trade over the counter as opposed to organized
    exchange.
  • Oligopoly A small number of sellers.

19
DEFINITIONS
  • Open Corporations Fama and Jensen's term for
    large corporations whose residual claims (common
    stock) are least restricted. They identify the
    following characteristics
  • They have property rights in net cash flows for
    an indefinite cash flows
  • Stockholders are not allowed to hold any other
    role in the organization.
  • Common stock is alienable (transferable,
    saleable) without restriction.

20
DEFINITIONS
  • Open Market Share Repurchase Refers to a
    corporation's buying its own shares in the open
    market at the going price just as any other
    investor might buy the corporation shares as
    opposed to a tender offer for share repurchase or
    a negotiated repurchase
  • Organization Capital Firm specific informational
    assets, which accumulate over time to enhance
    productivity, includes information used in
    assigning employees to appropriate tasks and
    forming teams of employees and the information
    each employee acquires about other employees in
    the organization.

21
DEFINITIONS
  • Original Plan Poison Pill An early poison pill
    anti-takeover defense in which the firm issues a
    dividend of convertible preferred stock to its
    common stock holders. If an acquiring firm passes
    a triggering point of share ownership, preferred
    stockholders (other than the large block holder)
    can put the preferred stock to the target firm
    (force the firm to redeem it) at the highest
    price paid by the acquiring firm for the targets
    common or preferred stock during the past year.
  • Parking A securities law violation in which
    traders attempt to hide the extent of their share
    ownership (to avoid the 5 trigger requiring
    disclosure of takeover intentions and keep down
    the price of target stock) by depositing or
    parking shares with an accomplice broker until a
    latter date e.g. when the takeover attempt is out
    in the open.

22
DEFINITIONS
  • Perfect Competition Set of assumptions for an
    idealized economic model
  • Large numbers of buyers and sellers so none can
    influence market prices or output
  • Economies of scale exhausted at relatively small
    size and cost efficiencies are the same for all
    companies
  • No significant barriers of entry
  • Constant innovation, new product development
  • Complete knowledge of all aspects of input/output
    markets is costlessly available.

23
DEFINITIONS
  • Poison Put A provision in some new bond issues
    designed to protect bondholders against takeover
    related credit deterioration of the issuer.
    Following a triggering event, bondholders may put
    their bonds to the corporation at an exercise
    price of 100-101 of the bond amount.
  • Predatory Behavior A theory, which holds that a
    dominant firm may price below cost or build
    excess capacity to inflict economic harm on
    existing firms and deter potential entrants.

24
DEFINITIONS
  • Poison Pill Any takeover defense, which creates
    securities, that provides their holders with
    special rights (e.g., to buy target or acquiring
    firm shares) excersible only after a triggering
    event (e.g. a tender offer for or the
    accumulation of a specified percentage of target
    shares). Exercise of the rights will make it more
    difficult and / or costly for an acquirer to take
    over the target against the will of its board of
    directors.
  • Product Breadth Carry - over of organizational
    capabilities to new products.

25
DEFINITIONS
  • Price Pressure A theory that the demand curve
    for the securities of an individual company is
    sloping downwards and that this causes negative
    stock price effects of large supply increases
    such as large block offerings.
  • Production Knowledge A form of organization
    learning managerial ability to organize and
    maintain complex production process economically.
  • Profit Sharing Plan A defined contribution
    pension plan in which the firm's annual
    contributions to the plan are based on the firm's
    profitability.

26
DEFINITIONS
  • q-ratio (Tobin's q ratio) The ratio of the
    market value of a firm's securities to the
    replacement costs of its physical assets.
  • Quasi -rent The excess return to an asset above
    the return necessary to maintain its current
    service flow.
  • Residual Analysis The examination of asset
    returns to determine if a particular event has
    caused the return to deviate from a normal or
    predicted return which would have resulted if the
    event had not taken place. The difference between
    the actual return and the predicted return is the
    residual.

27
DEFINITIONS
  • Residual Claims The right of owners of an
    organization to cash flows not otherwise
    committed.
  • Roll Out MLP Also called spin off MLP a
    corporation transfers some of its assets to an
    MLP to avoid double taxation, for example. MLP
    units are initially distributed to corporate.
    Shareholders and corporate management serves as a
    general partner. 
  • Roll-Up MLP The combination of several ordinary
    limited partnerships into a master limited
    partnership.
  • Sell off General term for divestiture of part or
    all of a firm by any one of a number of means,
    e.g, liquidation, spin- off and so on.

28
DEFINITIONS
  • Shark Repurchase A public corporation buys its
    own shares, by tender offer on the open market,
    or on a negotiated buy back from a large block
    holder.
  • Shark Repellent Any number of takeover defenses
    designed to make a firm less attractive and less
    vulnerable to unwanted acquirers.
  • Shark Watcher A firm (usually a proxy
    solicitation firm) which monitors trading
    activity in its client's stock to detect early
    accumulations by an unwanted acquirer before the
    5 disclosure threshold.

29
DEFINITIONS
  • Spin-off A transaction in which a company
    distributes on a prorata basis all of the shares
    it owns in a subsidiary to its own shareholders.
    Create a new public company with (initially) the
    same proportional equity ownership as the parent
    company.
  • Split-off A transaction in which some but not
    all parent company shareholders receive shares in
    a subsidiary in return for relinquishing their
    parent company shares. 
  • Split-up A transaction in which a company spins
    off all of its subsidiaries to its shareholders
    and ceases to exist.

30
DEFINITIONS
  • Staggered Board Also called a classified board.
    An anti-takeover measure which divides a firm's
    board of the directors into several classes only
    one of which is up for election in any given
    year, thus delaying effective transfer of control
    to a new owner in a takeover. 
  • Stakeholder Any individual or group who has an
    interest in a firm in addition to shareholders
    and bondholders, includes labors, consumers,
    suppliers, the local community and so on. 
  • Stake-Out Investment Preliminary investment for
    a foothold in anticipation of the future
    possibility of a larger investment.

31
DEFINITIONS
  • Standstill Agreement A voluntary contract by a
    large block shareholder (or former large block
    holder bought out in a negotiated repurchase) not
    to make further investments in the target company
    for a specified period of time.
  • Stock Appreciation Right (SAR) Part of executive
    compensation program to align managers' interests
    with those of shareholders. SARs are issued to
    managers giving them the right to purchase stock
    on favorable terms the exercise price can be as
    low as 50 percent of the stock price at issuance
    maximum life is ten years.

32
DEFINITIONS
  • Stock Bonus Plan A defined contribution pension
    plan in which the firm contributes a specified
    number of shares to the plan annually. The
    benefits to plan beneficiaries depend on the
    stock performance.
  • Strip Financing A type of financing, often used
    in leveraged buy-outs in which all claimants hold
    approximately the same proportion of each
    security (except for management incentive shares
    and the most senior bank debt).

33
DEFINITIONS
  • Subchapter S Corporation A form of business
    organization, which provides the minimum
    liability feature of the corporate form while
    allowing business income to be taxed at the
    personal tax rates of the business owners.
  • Supermajority A requirement in many
    anti-takeover charter amendments that a change of
    control (for example) must be approved by more
    than a simple majority of shareholders, at
    least 67 to 90 percent approval way be required.

34
DEFINITIONS
  • Swaps Exchange of one class of securities with
    another.
  • Synergy The " 2 2 5 effect. The output of a
    combination of two entities is greater than the
    sum of their individual outputs. 
  • Take-out Merger The second step transaction
    which merges the acquired firm into the acquirer
    and thus takes out the remaining target shares
    which were not purchased in the initial ( partial
    ) tender offer.

35
DEFINITIONS
  • Underwritten Offerings Public securities issues,
    which are sold by a firm to an investment banker
    at a negotiated price, the investment banker then
    bears the risk of price fluctuations before the
    securities are sold to the general public.
  • Value Additivity Principle (VAP) A quality of
    the NPV method of capital budgeting which enables
    managers to consider each project independently.
    The sum of project NPVs represents the value
    added to the corporation by taking them on.

36
DEFINITIONS
  • Value Chain An approach to strategy which
    analyses the steps or chain of activities in the
    firm to find opportunities for reducing cost
    outlays while adding product characteristics
    valued by customers.
  • Vertical Merger A combination of firms, which
    operate in different levels, or stages of the
    same industry, e.g. a toy manufacturer merges
    with a chain of toy stores (forward integration)
    an auto manufacturer merges with a tyre company
    (backward integration).

37
DEFINITIONS
  • White Knight A more acceptable merger partner
    sought out by the target of a hostile bidder.
  • Winner's Curse The tendency that in a bidding
    contest or in some types of auctions, the winner
    is the bidder with the highest (overoptimistic)
    estimate of value. This explains the high
    frequency of negative returns to acquiring firms
    in takeovers with multiple bidders.

38
DEFINITIONS
  • White Squire A third party friendly to
    management who helps a company avoid an unwanted
    takeover without taking over the company on its
    own.
  • WOTS UP Acronym for Weaknesses, Opportunities,
    Threats and Strengths a technique to identify
    these key elements as put of the iterative
    process used to develop strategy.

39
VALUATION
  • A companies future potential is identical to its
  • historical profit rate.
  • E r (NW) (In the perfect market Scenario)
  • Where E Long run average profits
  • r Rate of Return
  • NW Net Worth

40
VALUATION
  • Net Asset Value
  • Historical Profit
  • Market Value of Shares
  • Average Price
  • Market Capitalization

41
VALUATION
  • The Correct Discounting Rate
  • r
  • where E is the long-run average earnings
  • NW is the Net Worth at the time of merger

E
NW
42
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • Scenario 1(contd)
  • If two corporations A B are considering a
    merger option and their respective profit
    statements read as
  • EcA(1-t)PBTA PBTA-TA
  • EcB(1-t)PBTB PBTB-TB
  • Where T in general is total tax outflow.

43
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • Scenario 1(contd)
  • If tAtB both corporations have a positive PBT,
    on merger all happens is both corporations
    jointly pay a tax that is identical to what they
    were otherwise considering paying individually.
  • That is TAB TATB

44
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • Scenario 1(contd)
  • There is no financial gain as
  • EcAB EcAEcB
  • Where there are no uniform taxes therefore merger
    can be based on tax gains. Let us assume the
    following values

45
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • CORPORATION A CORPORATION B
  • PBTA100 PBTB150
  • tA0.40 tB0.40
  • PATA60 PATB90
  • On merger
  • EcAEcB PATAPATB 6090 150

46
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • Uniform Tax rates do not by themselves create
    synergestic effects.
  • Progressive Tax rates do not by themselves
    create synergestic effects, where EcA EcB are
    positive
  • Progressive Tax rate create an effect that is
    exactly the reverse
  • Under Regressive Tax rate mergers are greatly
    encouraged.

47
VALUATION
  • FACTORS AFFECTING MERGERS
  • Financial Synergies
  • Tax Considerations
  • Let us consider
  • tA 0.4, tB0.5, PBTA 100, PBTB150
  • EcA (1-0.4)100 60
  • EcB (1-0.5)150 75
  • On merger let us consider a tax rate t, which is
    at equal to
  • tB i.e. 50. The combined income before tax
    PBTAB250
  • and EcAB (1-0.5)250 125

48
SICK UNIT MERGERS
  • Merger of profit making loss making companies
  • PBT PAT must be negative resulting in merger
    gains

49
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    Grooves, Near Sinchan Bhavan, Pune- 411 030.
    India
  • Tel 020-64000783 Tel / Fax 020-40052486
  • Email sales_at_equitycalls.com
  • Web Site www.equitycalls.com
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