Title: DIVERSIFICATION
1DIVERSIFICATION
2Outline
- Development of diversified firms and the
measurement of diversification - The reasons for diversification
- Economies of scale and scope
- Economizing on transactions costs
- Internal capital markets
- Shareholders diversification
- Identifying undervalued firms
- Performance of diversified firms
3Development of diversified firms and the
measurement of diversificationWhy Diversify?
- Most well known firms serve multiple product
markets - Diversification across products and across
markets can be due to economies of scale and
scope - Diversification that occurs for other reasons
tends to be less successful
4Measuring Relatedness
- To identify economies of scale in multi business
firms, the relatedness concept was developed by
Richard Rumelt - Two businesses are related if they share
technological characteristics, production
characteristics and/or distribution channels
5Classification by Relatedness
- A single business firm derives more than 95
percent of its revenues from a single activity - A dominant business firm derives 70 to 95 percent
of its revenues from its principal activity
- A related business firm derives less than 70 of
its revenue from its primary activity, but its
other lines of business are related to the
primary one - An unrelated business firm or a conglomerate
derives less than 70 of its revenue from its
primary area and has few activities related to
the primary area
6Classification by Relatedness
7Conglomerate Growth After WW II
- From 1949 to 1969, the proportion of single and
dominant firms dropped from 70 percent to 36
percent - Over the same period, the proportion of
conglomerates increased from 3.4 percent to 19.4
percent
8Entropy Measure of Diversification
- Entropy measures diversification as information
content - If a firm is exclusively in one line of business
(pure play), its entropy is zero - For a firm spread out into 20 different lines
equally, the entropy is about 3
9Entropy Decline in the 1980s
- During the 80s, the average entropy of Fortune
500 firms dropped form 1.0 to 0.67 - Fraction of U.S. businesses in single business
segments increased from 36.2 in 1978 to 63.9 in
1989 - Firms have become more focused in their core
businesses
10Merger Waves in U.S. History
- First wave that created monopolies like Standard
Oil and U.S. Steel (1880s to early 1900s) - The merger wave of the 1920s that created
oligopolies and vertically integrated firms
(General Motors). - The merger wave of the 1960s that created
diversified conglomerates (American Can, ITT) - The merger wave of the 1980s when undervalued
firms were bought up in the market place (Philip
Morris and 7 Up). - The most recent wave of the mid 1990s in which
firms were pursuing increased market share and
increased global presence by merging with
related businesses (AOL Time Warner, Pfizer
Warner Lambert, Exxon Mobil).
11Ways to Diversify
- Firms can diversify in different ways
- They can develop new lines of business internally
- They can form joint ventures in new areas of
business - They can acquire firms in unrelated lines of
business
122. The Reasons for DiversificationWhy do
Firms Diversify?
- Efficiency based reasons that benefit the
shareholders - Economies of scale and scope
- Economizing on transactions costs
- Internal capital markets
- Shareholders diversification
- Identifying undervalued firms
EFFICIENCY BASED REASONS
FINANCIAL STRATEGIES
13Evidence of Scale Economies
- If a merger is motivated by scale economies, the
market share of the merged firm should increase
immediately following the merger (Mercator Wal
Mart) - Data from manufacturing industries (Thomas Brush
study) show that changes in market share were as
expected
14Evidence Regarding Scope
- If firms pursue economies of scope through
diversification, large firms should be expected
to sell related set of products in different
markets (Nokia). - Evidence (Nathanson and Cassano study) indicates
that this happens only occasionally. - Several firms produced unrelated products and
served unrelated consumer groups.
15Sales of Nokia, 1988
16Sales of Nokia, 1998
17Norwegian School of Management
- One of the biggest Business Schools in Europe
- 18000 students - 9000 part time
- 750 full time employees, 750 part time employees
- Income of 100 mio ECU, state funding11
- International network with more than 20 locations
18Norwegian School of Management, int.
diversification
19International network for exchange of teachers
and students
20Europe
21BankAmerica buys Continental
- BankAmerica
- The second largest american bank
- Strong credit rating
- Loans with low interest rates.
- Location West Coast
- Continental
- The majosity of business with big firms
- Central office in Chicago
- The limited financial strength
- Inovative in marketing operations
22BankAmerica buys Continental, cont.
- BankAmerica Continental
- geografic diversification product
diversification with focus on firms - Economy of scale Economy of scope
23Scope Economies Outside of Technology and Markets
- Firms that produce unrelated products and serve
unrelated markets could be pursuing scope
economies in other dimensions - Two explanations that take this approach are
- Resource based view of the firm (Penrose)
- Dominant general management logic (Prahalad and
Bettis)
24Resource based view of the firm
- The employment of surplus managerial and
organizational skills and ability in various
fields of activity may lead to economies of
scope. - The more the company is moving away from a stable
of business activity, the more resources needed
to implement the new business. -
- Examples Autocommerce, Sava Kranj
25Dominant general management logic
- Top managers have special knowledge and skills in
certain areas, such as information technology,
management of human resources, or advertising. - This knowledge and skills can be used in the
field of unrelated activities - Example Krka Novo mesto
26Economizing on Transactions Costs
- If transactions costs complicate coordination,
merger may be the answer - Transactions costs can be a problem due to
specialized assets such as human capital - Market coordination may be superior in the
absence of specialized assets
27The University as a Conglomerate
- An undergraduate university is a conglomerate
of different departments - Economies of scale (common library, dormitories,
athletic facilities) dictate common ownership and
location - Value of one departments investments depends on
the actions of the other departments
(relationship specific assets, promotion
committee)
28FINANCIAL STRATEGIES Internal Capital Markets
- In a diversified firm, some units generate
surplus funds that can be channeled to units that
need the funds (Internal capital market) - The key issue is whether the firm can do a better
job of evaluating its investment opportunities
than an outside banker can do - Internal capital market also engenders influence
costs
29Diversification and Risk
- Diversification reduces the firms risk and
smoothens the earnings stream - But the shareholders do not benefit from this
since they can diversify their portfolio at near
zero cost. - Only when shareholders are unable to diversify
(as in the case of owners of a large fraction of
the firm) do they benefit from such risk reduction
30Identifying Undervalued Firms
- When the target firm is in an unrelated business,
the acquiring firm is more likely to have
overvalued the target - The key question is Why did other potential
acquirers not bid as high as the successful
acquirer? - Winners curse could wipe out any gains from
financial synergies
31Cost of Diversification
- Diversified firms may incur substantial influence
costs - Diversified firms may need elaborate control
systems to reward and punish managers - Internal capital markets may not function well
32Managerial Reasons for Diversification
- Growth may benefit managers even when it does not
add value for the shareholders - When growth cannot be achieved through internal
development, diversification may be an attractive
route to growth - When related mergers were made difficult by law
(Anti-trust legislation) conglomerate mergers
became popular
33Managerial Reasons for Diversification
- Managers may feel secure if the firm performance
mirrors the performance of the economy (which
will happen with diversification) - Diversification will offer managers room for
lateral movement and allow them to invest in firm
specific skills. - Unrelated diversification may make it easier to
motivate managers with pay for performance
incentives - Managers could be engaged in empire building and
enhancing their status in their network at the
expense of the shareholders
34PERFORMANCE OF DIVERSIFIED FIRMSMarket for
Corporate Control in the Economic Literature
- Publicly traded firms are vulnerable to hostile
takeovers - Forcing managers to take decisions for the
benefit of shareholders - In order to be credible risk of hostile
takeovers, managers must possess a special
expertise that enable the creation of the
benefits of the acquisition.
35Market for Corporate Control in the Economic
Literature
- Free cash flow (FCF) cash flow in excess of
profitable investment opportunities - Managers tend to use FCF to expand their empires
- Shareholders will be better off if FCFs were used
to pay dividends
- If managers undertake unwise acquisitions, the
stock price drops, reflecting - Overpayment for the acquisition
- Potential future overpayment by the incumbent
management
36Market for Corporate Control
- In an LBO, debt is used to buy out most of the
equity - Future free cash flows are committed to debt
service - Debt burden limits managers ability to expand
the business
- EVIDENCE
- Hostile takeovers tend to occur in declining
industries and industries experiencing drastic
changes where managers have failed to readjust
scale and scope of operations - Corporate raiders have profited handsomely for
taking over and busting up firms that pursued
unprofitable diversification
37Market for Corporate Control
- LBOs may hurt other stakeholders
- Employees
- Bondholders
- Suppliers
- Wealth created by LBO may be quasi-rents
extracted from stakeholders - Redistribution of wealth may adversely affect
economic efficiency
38Redistribution and Long Run Efficiency
- Takeovers that simply redistribute wealth are
rational from the point of view of the acquirers
but sacrifice long run efficiency - Employees and other stakeholders will be
reluctant to invest in relationship specific
assets - Purely redistributive takeovers will create an
atmosphere of distrust and harm the economy as a
whole
39Diversification and Performance
- Gains from diversification depends on specialized
resources of the firm - Unrelated diversification harms productivity
(product-related, market-related). - Diversification into narrow markets does better
than diversification into broad markets - Improvements in newly acquired plants may come at
the expense of performance at the existing plants
40Diversification and Long Term Performance
- Long term performance of diversified firms appear
to be poor - One third to one half of all acquisitions and
over half of all new business acquisitions are
eventually divested - Corporate refocusing of the 1980s could be viewed
as a correction to the conglomerate merger wave
of the 1960s
41Diversification and Long Term Performance, Cont.
- Another view is that both the conglomerate
diversification of the 60s and the refocusing of
the 80s could be value creating - Conditions in the 60s could have favored
unrelated diversification and these conditions
could since have changed (Example Anti-trust
climate)
42Diversification and Tobin q
- Tobin q is the ratio between the market value of
the company and replacement costs of fixed
capital - Tobin q is higher in more focused than in the
diversified firms. This indicates their lower
efficiency.