Chapter 01 Introduction To M and A
Chapter 01 Introduction To M and A
If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. If you teach a man to fish, you feed him for a life time. Lao Tze
Business Alliances
Cross-Border Transactions
Discussion Questions
1. What factors do you believe are most likely to impact senior managements selection of one strategy (e.g., solo venture, M&A) to increase shareholder value over the alternatives? Be specific. 2. In your opinion, how might the conditions of the business (e.g., profitability) and the economy affect the choice the strategy?
Low Interest Rates & Declining Risk Aversion Drive Increasing --Sub-Prime Mortgage Lending --LBO Financing & Other Highly Leveraged Transactions
Investment Banks: Repackage & Underwrite --Mortgage Backed --High Yield Bonds
Banks & Hedge Funds Create: --Collateralized Debt Obligations (CDOs) --Collateralized Loan Obligations CLOs)
Discussion Questions
1. What can senior management learn by studying historical merger waves? 2. What can government policy makers learn by studying historical merger waves? 3. What can investors learn by studying historical merger waves?
Profit = price x quantity variable costs fixed costs = $4 x 1,000,000 - $2.75 x 1,000,000 - $1,000,000 = $250,000
Profit = price x quantity variable costs fixed costs = $4 x 1,500,000 - $2.75 x 1,500,000 - $1,000,000 = $6,000,000 - $4,125,000 - $1,000,000 = $875,000
Profit margin (%)2 = $875,000 / $6,000,000 = 14.58% Fixed costs per unit = $1,000,000/1.500,000 = $.67
Profit margin (%)1 = $250,000 / $4,000,000 = 6.25% Fixed costs per unit = $1,000,000/1,000,000 = $1
Key Point: Profit margin improvement is due to spreading fixed costs over more units of output.
1Margin 2Margin
per $ of revenue = $4.00 - $2.75 - $1.00 = $.25 per $ of revenue = $4.00 - $2.75 - $.67 = $.58
Key Point: Cost savings due to expanding the scope of a single center to support all 8 manufacturing facilities of the combined firms.
Empirical Findings
Around transaction announcement date, abnormal returns average 20% for target shareholders in friendly transactions; 30-35% in hostile transactions Bidders shareholders on average earn zero to slightly negative returns Positive abnormal returns to bidders often are situational and include the following: Target is a private firm or a subsidiary of another firm The acquirer is relatively small The target is small relative to the acquirer Cash rather than equity is used to finance the transaction Transaction occurs early in the M&A cycle No evidence that alternative strategies (e.g., solo ventures, alliances) to M&As are likely to be more successful
Discussion Questions
1. Discuss whether you believe current conditions in the U.S. and global markets are conducive to high levels of M&A activity? Be specific. 2. Of the factors potentially contributing to current conditions, which do you consider most important and why? 3. Speculate about what you believe will happen to the number of M&As over the next several years in the U.S.? Globally? Defend your arguments.
Things to Remember
Motivations for acquisitions: Strategic realignment Synergy Diversification Financial considerations Hubris Common reasons M&As fail to meet expectations Overpayment due to overestimating synergy Slow pace of integration Poor strategy M&As typically reward target shareholders far more than bidder shareholders Success rate of M&A not significantly different from alternative ways of increasing shareholder value