Title: Diversification's Effect on Firm Value
1Diversification's Effect on Firm Value
- Philip G. Berger and Eli Ofek
- Journal of Financial Economics 37 (1995) 39-65
2CONTENT
- Introduction
- Hypotheses (Literature review)
- Sample selection and Methodology
- Empirical Result 1 Overall value effect of
diversification - Empirical Result 2 Sources of gains and losses
from diversification. - Conclusions
3What to expect
- Proposal (should include introduction, literature
review, and data sources) due Oct. 30. - Research Insight for financial data at MaGruder
teaching lab on the first floor in BAI. - October 9 for students with A thru L
- October 11 for M thru Z
- Sometime next week, tutorials will be posted for
your attempt.
41. Introduction
- Massive diversification in 1950s and 60s with its
climax in the late 1960s. Its trend has reversed
in 1980 and early 1990s. Corporate focus. - To estimate the valuation effect of
diversification and examine the potential sources
of value gains or losses. - Compare the sum of the imputed stand-alone values
of the segments of diversified firms to the
actual values of those firms.
5Introduction
- Diversified firms have values 13-15 below the
sum of the imputed values of their segments
(1986-1991) gt diversification discount - The loss is considerably less for related
diversification Overinvestment in industries
with limited investment opportunities (low
Tobins Q) cross-subsidization of poorly
performing divisions Value loss reduced by tax
decreases
6Benefits and Costs of Diversification
- Value-enhancing Effect
- greater operating efficiency
- less incentive to forego positive net present
value projects - greater debt capacity
- lower taxes
- Value-reducing Effect
- the use of increased discretionary resources to
undertake value-decreasing investments - cross-subsidies that allow poor segments to drain
resources from better-performing segments - Misalignment of incentives between central and
divisional managers.
72. Hypotheses
- Benefits
- Chandler (1977) Multidivision firms are
concerned with coordination of specialized
divisions, so they are efficient and more
profitable than their lines of business would be
separately. - Weston (1970) resource allocation is more
efficient in internal than in external capital
markets. - Coinsurance effect from imperfectly correlated
earning streams gt greater debt capacity gt
interest tax shields
82. Hypotheses
- Costs (agency and information costs)
- Stulz (1990) and Jensen (1986) too much
investment in busienesses with poor investment
opportunity large free cash flows leads to
tendency to take negative NPV projects. - Cross-subsidization
- Michael Walsh as CEO of Tenneco Resources of
auto-parts and chemical divisions are dumped into
farm-equipment operations (WSJ, March 29, 1993). - Information asymmetry between headquarters and
divisions
9Hypothesis (Past empirical studies)
- Superior stock performance by conglomerates over
mutual funds in the 1960s and early 70s. - No cross-sectional correlation between the
degrees of focus and measures of excess return
during 1976-1985. - Mixed results on the effect of focus accounting
performance, event studies. - John and Ofek find that increased focus was a
major determinant of gains from asset sales.
10Hypothesis (More recent empirical studies)
- Comment and Jarrell (1994) a negative relation
between diversification and value during 1978-89.
Between abnormal stock returns and several
measures of diversification, including the number
of segments and Herfindahl index. - Lang and Stulz (1994) a negative relation
between Tobins Q and diversification measures. - Neither study examined the sources of these value
losses.
113. Data and Description
- Data Source CIS (Compustat Industry Segment)
1986-1991 - FASB 14 and SEC Regulation require firms to
report segment information after December 1977. - Data restrictions below.
- Firms have total sales of at least 20 million
and have no segments in the financial services
industry (SIC codes between 6000 and 6999). - Total capital (market value of common equity plus
book value of debt) - Sample 3,659 firms with 16,181 observations
(5,233 multi-segment and 10,948 single segment).
12Table 1Descriptive Statistics for Segment Data
13From Table 1.
- Due to skewness, focus on medians instead of
means in comparison. - At the median, multi-segment firms have three
segments and roughly three times the total
capital of single-segment firms. - Their median industry-adjusted leverage ratio
(debt over total assets) is 2.9 higher than that
of focused firms. - Their median industry-adjusted taxes do not
differ from those of single-segment firms,
inconsistent with tax benefits from
diversification.
14Estimating segment values using multipliers
- Percentage difference a firms total value and
the sum of imputed values for its segments as
stand-alone entities (see Appendix for details). - Calculate the imputed value of each segment by
multiplying the median ratio, for single-segment
firms in the same industry, of total capital to
one of three accounting items (assets, sales, or
earnings) by the segments level of the
accounting item. - The sum of the imputed values of a firms
segments estimates the value of the firm if all
of its segments are operated as stand-alone
businesses.
15Imputed Value and Excess Value
164. The overall value effect of diversification
- 4.1. The excess value measure of overall effect
(Tables 2, 3, and 4) - Excess Value The natural logarithm of the
ratio of a firms actual value to its imputed
value. - 4.2. Profitability as an alternative measure of
overall (Table 5) -
- Return on assets (EBIT/assets)
- Operating margin (EBIT/sales)
17Table 2. Excess value measures using asset,
sales, and EBIT multiples
The Excess value is the natural logarithm of the
ratio of a firms actual value to its imputed
value. This table reports negative differences
in mean and median excess values between
stand-alone and multi-segment firms, indicating
that diversification reduces value.
18Table 3. Regression Results Multi-seg. Indicator
1 for multi-segment, 0 for single-segment.
Controls for factors that could affect excess
value and whose magnitudes are not entirely
determined by whether or not the firm is
diversified. P-values are in the parentheses.
19Table 4. Measures of the percentage value loss
from diversification by year and by firm size
20Table 5. Mean and Median differences in industry
adjusted profitability (EBIT/asset, EBIT/sales)
between multiple-segment and single segment.
Multiple-segment firms that do not have two or
more segments with different two-digit SIC are
eliminated from the sample.
215. Sources of gains and losses from
diversification
- 5.1 Overinvestment and the value loss in
diversified firms (Table 6) - Restricted the sample to unrelated multi-segment
firms. - Overinvestment is measured as the sum of the
depreciation-adjusted capital expenditures of all
its segments operating in industries whose median
Tobins q is in the lowest quartile scaled by
total assets. - Thus, higher values of the overinvestment
variable represent more unprofitable investment.
22Table 6 Source of Value Loss - Overinvestment
Dependable var. excess value overinvestment
capital expenditures in low-q industries divided
by sales.
235. Sources of gains and losses from
diversification
- 5.2. Cross-subsidization and the value loss
- (Table 7)
- Used negative cash flow (measured by EBIT plus
depreciation) as a proxy for poor performance. - Examined whether the presence of negative CF in
one or more segments has a more negative effect
on diversified firm value than the presence of
negative CF has on focused firm value. - Alternative explanation Negative CF segments may
signal that the diversified firms management is
of low quality.
24Table 7. Source of Value Loss Cross-subsidization
. Negative CF indicator 1 if the firms has at
least one segment with negative cash flow.
25Conclusions (and summary)
- Study the effects of diversification on firm
value by estimating the value of a diversified
firms segments as if they were operated as
separate firms. - Find that diversification reduces firm value
(averages 13 to 15 over the 1986-91 sample
period), occuring for firms of all sizes, and is
mitigated when the diversification is within
related industries. - Sources of Value Loss
- Overinvestment is associated with lower value for
diversified firms. - Subsidization of poorly performing segments
contributes to the value loss from
diversification.
26Conclusions
- Our study confirms recent evidence documenting a
significant loss of value in corporations that
followed a diversification strategy during the
1980s. - The evidence that the diversification represented
a suboptimal managerial strategy raises questions
about the effectiveness of the corporate control
and monitoring mechanisms in place during this
period.
27Next Week (bring a copy of the paper)
- Chevalier (2004) on Monday
- Villanonga (2004) on Wednesday