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FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT THEORY & PRACTICE ADAPTED FOR THE SECOND CANADIAN EDITION BY: JIMMY WANG LAURENTIAN UNIVERSITY Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 1 Chapter 24 MERGERS, ACQUISITIONS, AND RESTRUCTURING CHAPTER 24 OUTLINE • • • • • • • Rationale for Mergers Types of Mergers Level of Merger Activity Hostile versus Friendly Takeovers Overview of Merger Analysis The Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) Approach Illustration of the Two Valuation Approaches for a Constant Capital Structure • Setting the Bid Price Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-3 CHAPTER 24 OUTLINE (cont’d) • • • • • • • • Taxes and the Structure of the Takeover Bid Financial Reporting for Mergers Analysis for a “True Consolidation” Role of Investment Bankers Who Wins: The Empirical Evidence Corporate Alliances Leveraged Buyouts Divestitures Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-4 Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-5 Rationale for Mergers • Synergy: VA+B > VA + VB; arise from – – – – – • • • • operating economies financial economies tax effects differential efficiency increased market power Tax considerations Purchase of assets below replacement cost Diversification Managers’ personal incentives Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-6 Rationale for Mergers (cont’d) • Break-up value: Assets would be more valuable if broken up and sold to other companies. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-7 Types of Mergers • Horizontal – Same line of business (e.g., TSX-Montreal Exchange merger) • Vertical – Producer-supplier relationship • Congeneric – Related but not horizontal or vertical • Conglomerate (unrelated) Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-8 Level of Merger Activity: Five Largest Completed Mergers (as of December 2007) BUYER TARGET VALUE (Billion) Vodafone AirTouch Mannesman Pfizer Warner-Lambert 116 America Online Time Warner 106 Consortium led by Royal Bank of Scotland ABN Amro Holding 95 Exxon Mobil 81 Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. $161 24-9 Hostile Versus Friendly Takeovers • Friendly merger: – Supported by both firms’ managements • Hostile merger: – Target firm’s management resists the merger – Acquirer must go directly to the target firm’s stockholders, try to get 51% to tender their shares • Often mergers that start out hostile end up as friendly, when offer price is raised Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-10 Overview of Merger Analysis • To answer two questions: – Value of the target after being incorporated into the acquirer – Price offered by the acquirer to the target • Two basic approaches – – – – Discounted cash flow (DCF) technique Corporate valuation (free cash flow, FCF) method Equity residual (free cash flow to equity, FCFE) method Market multiple analysis Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-11 Free Cash Flow to Equity (FCFE) Approach 0 1 2 N N+1 ∞ |--------------|----------------|--------------------------|------------------|--------------------------------| FCFE1 FCFE2 FCFEN FCFEN+1 FCFE∞ N N+1 N+2 ∞ |-----------------|---------------|-----------------| HVFCFEN FCFEN+1 FCFEN+2 FCFE∞ 0 1 2 N N+1 ∞ |---------------|-----------------|--------------------------|-----------------|-------------------------------| FCFE1 FCFE2 FCFEN FCFEN+1 FCFE∞ Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-12 Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-13 Illustration of the Two Valuation Approaches for a Constant Capital Structure • Determining the discount rate • Projecting post-merger cash flows Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-14 Discount Rate Calculations Target’s data: rRF = 7%, RPM = 5%, beta = 1.2, wd =30.17%, rd = 9% rsL = rRF + (RPM)bTarget = 7% + 1.2(5%) = 13% WACC= wd (1 – T) rd + ws rsL = 0.3017(0.6)(9%) + 0.6983(13%) = 10.707% Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-15 Financial Data Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-16 Projecting Post-Merger Cash Flows Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-17 Valuation Using the Corporate Valuation Model (FCF2016)(1+g) Horizon Value Operations, 2016 = WACC – g = $6,800(1.06) 0.10707 – 0.06 = $153.1 million Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-18 Valuation Using the Corporate Valuation Model (cont’d) VOper $3.2 $5.6 $3.2 + + + $6.4 + $6.8+$153.1 = (1.10707)1 (1.10707)2 (1.10707)3 (1.10707)4 (1.10707)5 = $110.1 With no nonoperating assets, the value of equity = Voperations – Value of debt = $110.1 – $27 = $83.1 million Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-19 Valuation Using the FCFE Model Horizon Value FCFE, 2016 (FCFE2016)(1+g) = rsL – g = $7.06(1.06) 0.13 – 0.06 = $106.9 million Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-20 Valuation Using the FCFE Model (cont’d) VFCFE =$6.2 + $ 4.0 + $ 4.1 (1.13)1 (1.13)2 + $ 6.0 (1.13)3 + $ 6.7 (1.13)4 + $7.1+$106.9 (1.13)5 = $83.1 million With no nonoperating assets, the total value of equity is equal to VFCFE. Both models arrive at an equity value of $83.1 million > $62.5 million, the current market value. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-21 Setting the Bid Price • • • • Estimate of target’s value = $83.1 million Target’s current value = $62.5 million Synergistic benefits = $20.6 million Presumably, the target’s value is increased by $20.6 million due to merger synergies, although realizing such synergies has been problematic in many mergers. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-22 Setting the Bid Price (cont’d) • The offer could range from $62.5 million to $83.1 million. • At $62.5 million, all merger benefits would go to the acquiring firm’s shareholders. • At $83.1 million, all value added would go to the target firm’s shareholders. • The graph on the next slide summarizes the situation. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-23 Change in Shareholders’ Wealth Target Acquirer $62.5 million 0 35 $83.1 million 60 85 110 Price Paid for Target Bargaining Range = Synergy Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-24 Points About Graph • Nothing magic about crossover price • Actual price would be determined by bargaining: higher if target is in better bargaining position, lower if acquirer is • If target is good fit for many acquirers, other firms will come in, price will be bid up. If not, could be close to $62.5 million. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-25 Points About Graph (cont’d) • Acquirer might want to make high “preemptive” bid to ward off other bidders, or low bid and then plan to go up. Strategy is important. • Do target’s managers have 51% of stock and want to remain in control? • What kind of personal deal will target’s managers get? Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-26 Taxes and Structure of the Takeover Bid • A merger can be structured as – asset purchase – share purchase • Payment can be offered in the form of – cash (the deal is taxable) – stock of the acquiring firm (the deal is nontaxable) – debt of the acquiring firm – some combination of the above Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-27 Financial Reporting for Mergers • Acquisition accounting may be used now. – The assets of the acquired firm are “written up” to reflect purchase price if it is greater than the net asset value. – Goodwill is often created, which appears as an asset on the balance sheet. – Common equity account is increased to balance assets and claims. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-28 Goodwill Amortization • Goodwill is NO LONGER amortized over time for shareholder reporting. • Goodwill is subject to an annual “impairment test.” If its fair market value has declined, then goodwill is reduced. Otherwise it is not. • Goodwill is still amortized for federal tax purposes. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-29 Acquisition Method: An Illustration Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-30 Income Statement Effects • The acquiring firm must expense any transaction costs related to the merger (e.g., professional fees and organizational costs). • The acquisition differential (i.e., the fair values exceed the book values) may lead to higher depreciation charges. • The decline in the fair value of goodwill as a result of annual impairment test must be charged to earnings but not the gain. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-31 Income Statement Effects: An Illustration Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-32 Analysis for a “True Consolidation” • Step 1: Estimate the value of the combined firm, reflecting any synergies, tax effects, or capital structure changes. • Step 2: Allocate the new company’s stock (especially the synergistic-induced value) between the two sets of old shareholders. – One basis can be the relative pre-announcement values of the two companies. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-33 The Role of Investment Bankers • • • • • Arranging mergers Developing defensive tactics Establishing a fair value Financing mergers Arbitrage operations Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-34 Who Wins?: The Empirical Evidence • According to empirical evidence, acquisitions do create value as a result of economies of scale, other synergies, and/or better management. • Shareholders of target firms reap most of the benefits; that is, the final price is close to full value. – Target management can always say no. – Competing bidders often push up prices. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-35 Corporate Alliances REASONS WHY THEY MAKE MORE SENSE THAN MERGERS •Access to new markets and technologies •Multiple parties share risks and expenses. •Rivals can often work together harmoniously. •Antitrust laws can shelter cooperative R&D activities. Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-36 Leveraged Buyouts • In a leveraged buyout (LBO), a small group of investors, normally including management, buys all of the publicly held stock, and hence takes the firm private. • The purchase is often financed with debt. • After operating privately for a number of years, investors take the firm public to “cash out.” Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-37 What are the Pros and Cons of Going Private? • Advantages: – Administrative cost savings – Increased managerial incentives – Increased managerial flexibility – Increased shareholder participation • Disadvantages: – Limited access to equity capital – No way to capture return on investment Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-38 Divestitures MAJOR TYPES • Sale of an entire subsidiary to another firm • Spinning off a corporate subsidiary by giving the stock to existing shareholders • Carving out a corporate subsidiary by selling a minority interest • Outright liquidation of assets Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-39 What Motivates Firms to Divest Assets? • Subsidiary worth more to buyer than when operated by current owner • To settle antitrust issues • Subsidiary’s value increased if it operates independently • To change strategic direction • To shed money losers • To get needed cash when distressed Copyright © 2014 by Nelson Education Ltd. 24-40