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Mergers, Acquisitions, and Alliances

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One firm buys a controlling or 100% interest in another firm with ... Conforama, Ikea, But. Gap, Benetton, Zara. Carrefour, E. Leclerc, Auchan (or Intermarche) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mergers, Acquisitions, and Alliances


1
Mergers, Acquisitions, and Alliances
2
Strategy Development Directions
Products
Markets
3
Definitions
  • Mergers
  • Two firms agree to integrate their operations on
    a relatively coequal basis
  • Acquisition
  • One firm buys a controlling or 100 interest in
    another firm with the intent of making the
    acquired firm a subsidiary business
  • Takeover
  • Type of acquisition wherein a target firm does
    not solicit the acquiring firms bid

4
Reasons for Acquisitions
  • Increased market power
  • Horizontal
  • Vertical
  • Related
  • Overcome entry barriers
  • Cross border
  • New product development
  • Speed to market
  • Lower risk
  • Increased diversification
  • Alter competitive scope
  • New capabilities

5
Problems in Acquisitions
  • Integration difficulties
  • Inadequate evaluation
  • Large debt
  • Inability to achieve synergy
  • Over diversification
  • Financial controls dominate
  • Substitute for innovation
  • Over focus on acquisitions by management
  • Too large
  • Political concerns

6
Successful Acquisitions
  • Complementary assets
  • Friendly acquisition
  • Effective due diligence
  • Financial slack
  • Post merger low to moderate debt
  • Consistent emphasis on RD
  • Flexible and adaptive to change
  • Synergy
  • Faster, effective integration
  • Identify strongest targets and avoid overpayment
  • Less costly financing
  • Lower financing cost, lower risk
  • Long term competitive advantage
  • Faster, more effective integration and synergy

7
Restructuring Changing set of businesses or
financial structure
  • Downsizing
  • Lower labor costs
  • Loss of human capital
  • Lower performance
  • Downscoping
  • Lower debt costs
  • Emphasis in strategic controls
  • Higher performance
  • Leveraged buyout
  • Emphasis in strategic controls
  • High debt costs
  • Higher performance
  • Higher risk

8
Reasons for Alliances
  • Critical Mass
  • Competitors or complementary suppliers
  • Cost reduction
  • Improved customer offerings
  • Co-specialization
  • Concentrate on core competencies
  • Value chain or Cross border
  • Learning
  • Development of new competencies
  • Short term

9
Types of Alliances
  • Joint ventures
  • Collaborative
  • Independent
  • Consortium (project-based)
  • Networks
  • No formal relationship
  • Share marketing
  • Opportunistic
  • Depends on
  • Market cycle
  • Strategic capability
  • Managing joint resources required
  • Separate, dedicated resources
  • Expectations of stakeholders

10
Successful Alliances
  • Suitability
  • Addresses organizational environment, capability,
    and expectations
  • Acceptability
  • Expected performance outcomes
  • Return
  • Profitability,
  • Return on capital, Payback period, Discounted
    cash flow
  • Cost benefit and shareholder value analysis
  • Risk consequences of failure
  • Capital structure effects
  • Sensitivity analysis
  • Feasibility
  • Financial
  • Specific resources

11
Company Strategy Analysis PapersDue March 4
  • Student teams will visit firms in a specific
    industry to evaluate how each firm attempts to
    differential itself from its competitors in order
    to increase its profit margin. Papers are due
    March 4th by email to gerald_groshek_at_redlands.edu.
  •  
  • One of the competitive realities of the market
    in the 21st century is that very few firms can
    succeed by emphasizing only cost or
    differentiation. When considering the value
    chain tool developed by Porter, it is important
    to remember that the capabilities in each
    activity have the goal of widening the profit
    margin whether by positively affecting the cost
    to produce a good or service or by the ability to
    differentiate a good or service from competitors
    offerings in ways that customers value, or both.
    Thus, it is important for firms pursuing
    differentiation to determine where costs can be
    cut without damaging the ability to meaningfully
    differentiate their good or service in ways that
    will allow them to sell products at a high price.
    Similarly, low-cost firms need to look for
    opportunities to add differentialtion where they
    can without increasing average unit costs. In
    this assignment, you will examine the latter
    situation. 
  • To complete this exercise, you should visit the
    firms involved. You are likely familiar with the
    firms listed below and you probably have some
    well-developed ideas about what each firm does to
    find some cost lowering and differentiation
    opportunities in a competitive environment.
  • After visiting one of the following group of
    company stores, assess how each of these firms
    pursues cost leaderhsip or differentiation or
    both as part of the means of implementing its
    business-level strategy. How does what you
    observe about these stores attempts to offer
    some differentiated features match with the
    assumptions you had before entering each store?
    If so, what are the changes? After explaining
    the ways in which you see these firms
    differentiating their product offerings and their
    store presentations, assess and explain how and
    why these approaches have the potential to help
    the firms create value for customers.
  •  
  • MacDonalds, KFC, and Quick 
  • Conforama, Ikea, But 
  • Gap, Benetton, Zara 
  • Carrefour, E. Leclerc, Auchan (or Intermarche) 
  • Orange, Bouygues Telecom, SFR 
  • Electronics at FNAC, Darty, BHV
  • Music (CDs) at FNAC, Virgin, Crocodisc

12
Considerations
  • Analyze overall industry characteristics
  • Porters five factors
  • Analyze internal resources and core competencies
  • Primary activities
  • Support activities
  • Analyze business level strategy
  • Competitive scope narrow, broad
  • Competitive advantage cost, differentiation
  • Discuss business level strategy
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