Title: Unit 12: Mergers and Acquisitions
1Unit 12 Mergers and Acquisitions
2Mergers vs. Acquisitions
- Merger Two companies become one via a
stock-for-stock exchange. - Chrysler-Daimler
- Acquisition One company (or individual) buys
substantially all of the outstanding shares of
another. - The distinction is not necessarily one of size.
- Did one group of shareholders receive cash or not?
3Hostile vs. Friendly
- Management does not need to approve of any MA
deal, but they may be able to fight it (mechanism
discussed later) - This is the hostile vs. friendly distinction
- A merger requires the approval of 50 of
stockholders. - Acquisitions can be accomplished via the open
market, or through a tender offer. - Tender offer direct cash offer to all of
shareholders.
4Taxable vs. Tax-free
- Do the investors in the acquired firms have to
pay taxes? - If cash acquisition, yes.
- If stock merger, generally no.
- The IRS considers this continuity of ownership
interest. Since you didnt sell, then you
didnt realize your gain (yet). - The exception is if the purpose of the merger
appears to be to avoid taxes (e.g. a profitable
company acquires a bankrupt firm to use their
losses).
5Accounting for Acquisitions
- Pooling of interests balance sheets are simply
added together. - Purchase Accounting
- Assets of acquired firm put on the balance sheet
at fair market value - Goodwill is created difference between purchase
price and estimated fair market value of net
assets - Currently, US firms must use purchase accounting
6Goodwill
- Goodwill no longer has to be amortized assets
are essentially marked-to-market annually and
goodwill is adjusted and treated as an expense if
the market value of the assets has decreased
7Sensible Reasons for Mergers
- Vertical Integration
- Efficiency in dealing with suppliers may reduce
costs. - Over integration can cause the opposite effect.
Company
Company
S
S
S
S
S
S
S
S
Pre-integration (less efficient)
Post-integration (more efficient)
8Sensible Reasons for Mergers
- Horizontal Integration Economies of Scale
- A larger firm may be able to reduce its per unit
cost by using excess capacity or spreading fixed
costs across more units. - This may also create market power.
Reduces costs
9Sensible Reasons for Mergers
- Combining Complementary Resources
- Merging may result in each firm filling in the
missing pieces of their firm with pieces from
the other firm.
Firm A
Firm B
10Sensible Reasons for Mergers
- Combining Complementary Resources
- Merging may result in each firm filling in the
missing pieces of their firm with pieces from
the other firm.
Firm A
Firm B
11Example of Mergers
- Getty Oil merged with Texaco. Getty had oil
reserves and Texaco had excess capacity. - Complementary resources / vertical int.
- Daimler merged with Chrysler
- Economies of scale / horiz. int. / market power
12Dubious Reasons for Mergers
- Diversification
- Investors should not pay a premium for
diversification since they can do it themselves. - This intuition follows from the CAPM
- Access to cheap capital for smaller target
- Careful! Target probably uses a high rate for
good reasons their assets are risky. This can
be a reasonable justification if and only if the
target is somehow missed by financial markets.
In that case, acquirer is acting like a
financier.
13Conclusion
- To justify a merger we need to show that
- PV(A B) PV(A) PV(B)
- If so, there are synergies.
- Economies of scale or scope
- Monopoly power
- Diversification is not a synergy.
14Merger Valuation
- Step 1 Estimate the stand-alone value of the
target. Estimate the stand-alone value of the
acquirer. - If the market does not anticipate the offer,
market prices are probably the best estimate for
these. - If the offer is anticipated, then the market has
probably bid up the target. For this reason, the
target is often tricky to value.
15Target stand-alone valuation
- DCF
- Discount at WACC. This yields enterprise value
(i.e. the entire value of the assets), so
subtract off debt value. - Book value of the debt is probably a reasonable
approximation of market value unless the credit
risk of the target has changed since issuance. - Multiples for current traded companies (P/S, P/E,
P/B, etc.) But are these really comparables? - Multiples for comparable transactions.
- Smaller sample set, but also gives info as to the
premium demanded by the market. We can also see
ex-post whether there was overpayment.
16Step 2 Value synergies
- Where do the synergies come from?
- Ex 1 Acquirer cost savings due to economies of
scale in a horizontal merger. - Estimate these after-tax cost savings per year
(annuity, perpetuity, growing perpetuity) and
discount them at the acquirers cost of capital. - Ex 2 Additional revenue to target due to
complementarities. - Estimate the incremental cash flows associated
with these increased revenues, and discount them
at the targets cost of capital.
17Example
- A merger should result in the following nominal
cost savings for the acquirer in its core
business (economies of scale). The usual
discount rate is 12 for this firm. - T0 0
- T1 15 million
- T2 22 million
- T3 60 million
- The cost savings are expected to fall at 3 per
year thereafter. The tax rate is 35. - What is the NPV of synergies?
18Step 3 Allocate Synergies
- Regardless of the form of the offer stock or
cash targets implicitly capture some of the
synergies. - Worst case scenario for acquirer is that all
synergies will be allocated to target. - Let S total dollar value of synergies
- XT target stand-alone value per share.
- NT number of shares for target
- Then
- Minimum cash offer XT
- Maximum cash offer XT S/NT
- In general the cash offer should be somewhere
between these two extremes.
19Realities of MA
- Consider Buffets view
- Many managements apparently were overexposed in
impressionable childhood years to the story in
which the imprisoned handsome prince is released
from a toad's body by a kiss from a beautiful
princess. Consequently, they are certain their
managerial kiss will do wonders We've observed
many kisses but very few miracles. - http//www.wallstraits.com/buffett/buffett_quote26
.html
20Buffet is right!
- In practice, targets almost always capture
synergies.
21Step 3 for Stock Offers
- Heres how to allocate synergies with stock
offers. - Let the offer ratio be R (shares in the new
combined company obtained per share in the
target) - Shareholders in the acquirer will retain one
share of the new company per share they own now. - The exchange ratio is trickier than you might
think, since some synergies go to the acquirer in
general.
22Stock Offers cont.
- R offer ratio (1 target share converts into R
shares in the combined firm - SA dollar value of synergies allocated to
acquirer (some fraction of S). - XA acquirer price per share
- NA acquirer number of shares
- Post-merger market cap XANA XTNT S
- Post-merger price per share XA SA/NA
- Post-merger price x Post-merger number of shares
Post merger market cap - Solve this equation for post-merger number of
shares. From this, we can back out how many
shares need to be created, and therefore what the
exchange ratio must be.
23Dilution
- An MA transaction is called
- dilutive if EPS goes down for the acquirer.
- Accretive if EPS goes up for the acquirer.
- This is different from term dilution used for
seasoned equity offerings - Reminder if the SEO price is too low, we issue
too many shares (for a given sized investment).
The old shareholders stake is diluted. - Does EPS dilution matter? No! The thing that
matters is did we acquire the target at a
favorable price.
24(No Transcript)
25Case Problem
- Pick your own firm, and estimate the value of
target, acquirer and synergies. - Since your acquisition is unanticipated, its
safe to use market values for the first two. For
the target, also find a couple of comparables
and see if the multiples give answers similar to
the market value. Explain any discrepancy. - Estimate the value of synergies using the DCF
method. Explain your discount rate choice. - Explicitly show me the forecasted cost savings
(in total dollars) for the next five years, and
make an assumption regarding what happens after
that.
26- Allocate the synergies based on your sense of the
market situation. Are there other potential
bidders? If so, most of the gains will go to
target. - Calculate the offer ratio (assuming stock merger)
and find the effect of the transaction on the
EPS, P/E and leverage of the acquirer. - Useful way to check your answer
- You calculate the offer ratio solely based on the
synergies allocated to the acquirer. - Check the outcome to shareholders in the target
firm. You should find that - (New shares given to target shareholders )x
- Post-merger share price
-
- Synergies allocated to target
- target stand-alone price
27First Bancorp and OFG
- Ill do a reduced version of your case in class.
- I will not look at comparables (to see if the
value of OFG is reasonable) or value the
synergies. - I will assume that the synergies to the deal are
250 million, and that the target captures 100
million of this. - Find the offer ratio, and post-merger leverage.
- I will not find P/E or EPS because I did not say
where synergies came from. In your case, you
will have an estimate of just how much E rises.
28 Hostile Takeover Defenses
- Staggered Board only one third of the board of
directors is elected each year. - Supermajority can raise the 50 required vote
to 80. - Poison Pill if a large block of stock is
purchased, existing shareholders have a right to
buy discounted shares.
29Effect of Takeover Defenses
- May be a way to extract a higher final price from
potential acquirer. - Insulates management from the market for
corporate control. - Good or bad?
- The market for corporate control is virtually
absent in Japan and Germany. Very active in the
U.S. for certain periods.
30Corporate Structure in Japan
- Keiretsu A group of manufacturing firms with
interlocking boards of directors, and
cross-holdings. - At the center of each Keiretsu is a large bank,
which provides financing for the team. - Because of these cross-holdings, it would be
virtually impossible to do a hostile takeover in
Japan.
31Daimler-Benz
Kuwait Government
Mercedes Auto Holding
Deutsche Bank
Widely Held
Widely Held
Widely Held
Stella Automobil Beteiligungsges
Stella Automobil Beteiligungsges Holding
Komet Automobile
Bayerische Landesbank
Robert Bosch
Dresdner Bank
32LBO
- A leveraged buyout is a type of acquisition in
which - Most of the acquisition financing is debt. Debt
financing dwarfs equity financing, and is
speculative grade i.e. junk bonds. - After acquisition, the company goes private.
- The company is bought by a group of investors
specifically formed for that purchase. - When management participates, it is an MBO.
33Barbarians at the Gate
- When RJR Nabisco was LBOd the selling
shareholders received 109 for stock that had
traded previously for 56. - KKR sold off the RJR Air Force, cut
bureaucracy, sold off European operations that
were not being run well. - Large amount of debt to service means the drive
for cost-cutting and selling off assets is high. - Winners Old stockholders, raiders.
- Losers Old bondholders, government, employees.
34Why the bad name?
- Between 1981 and 1987, junk bond financing went
from 3.7 of the bond market to 23. Over half
of this business was done by Drexel Burnham
Lambert. - From 1989 to 1991, about 10 of these issuers
went bankrupt and the market collapsed. - Drexel went bankrupt. Michael Milken plead
guilty to securities fraud, paid over a billion
dollars in fines, and was sentenced to ten years
in prison. - http//www2.uchicago.edu/alumni/alumni.mag/9510/Oc
tober95Investig.html