Mergers & Acquisitions
Kurs "Mergers & Acquisitions" im Herbstsemester 2014/15 an der Universität Freiburg
Kurs "Mergers & Acquisitions" im Herbstsemester 2014/15 an der Universität Freiburg
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 127 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Finances |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 29.12.2014 / 29.12.2014 |
Lien de web |
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I. Introduction
Topics:
- Basic terminology
- Types of mergers
- Risk arbitrage
- Importance of M&A and recent deals
- Merger outlook
- Legal framework
Definition of merger (3)
- Negotiated deal
- Mostly friendly parties
- Mutually agreeable decision to combine companies
Tender offer (3)
- Direct offer to shareholders to tender (sell) their shares at a specified price
- Obtaining >50% of shares (Approval required)
- Friendly or hostile
Types of tender offers (4)
- Conditional or unconditional
- e.g. min. 50% interest
- Restricted or unrestricted
- e.g. 70%, "any-or-all"
- Contested offer
- Two-tier offer or three-piece suitor: e.g.
- Initial toehold
- 1st tier for cash (to obtain >50% interest)
- 2nd tier at a lower value (often paid in dept securities)
Problem of minority shareholders (2)
If buyout not completed:
- Freeze-in problem
- Possible legal actions
Solution: Minority squeeze-out
Types of mergers (3)
- Horizontal
- Vertical
- Conglomerate
Horizontal merger (3)
- Same kind of business
- Benefits from economies of scale and synergies
- Government regulation due to fear of monopoly power
Vertical merger (2)
- Firms of different stage of production/operation
- Benefits from information- and transaction efficiency (e.g. inventory, production, prices, procurement)
Conglomerate merger + 3 types
- Firms in unrelated type of business
- 3 types:
- Product extension
- Geographic market extension
- Pure conglomerate mergers
Types of conglomerates (4)
- Investment companies (e.g. Mutual funds)
- Diversify PF risk
- Financial conglomerates
- Provide funds
- Managerial conglomerates
- Control operating decisions
- Concentric companies
- Related business
Legal types of mergers (3)
- Statutory merger
- Basic form
- Requires legal procedures (e.g. percentage of vote from shareholders, board approval)
- A+B=A, A+B=B or A+B=C
- Short-form merger
- Streamlined legal procedures
- No shareholder approval required
- Typically interest >90%
- Holding company
- Subsidiaries as seperate legal entities
- Holding has controlling interest 25-50%
Risk arbitrage in M&A (3) + Annual return for risk arbitrageur
- Buying stock of takeover targets after public announcement and holding shares until deal is closed
- Bet that deal will be completed
- Bear deal risk
Existing shareholders can hold their shares until deal is closed to receive the offered price or they can sell their shares to a risk arbitrageur. His annual return would be:
\(r=(1+{Offered Price-Actual Price \over Actual Price})^{365 \over Days}-1\)
II. Empirical Results on M&A Activities
Topics:
- Historical development
- Merger waves
- Factors motivating & driving merger waves
Factors that affect M&A activities (5/8)
- Technological change (e.g. telephone, internet)
- Economies of scale
- Globalization and free trade
- Legal and regulatory changes (e.g. deregulation)
- Periods of high economic growth
- Favorable stock prices and economic conditions
- Input price volatility (e.g. oil industry)
- Finance innovations (e.g. junk bonds)
1. Horizontal merger wave (4)
1895-1904
- Technological, infrastructure and managerial improvements (e.g. railroads, electricity)
- New products
- Economies of scale
- Availability of financiers and insurances
Cause of end: Recession 1903, anti-competitive merger ruling 1904
2. Vertical merger wave (3)
1922-1929
- Innovations in transportation (motor vehicle), communication (radio), merchandising (mass distribution)
- Product and market extension
- Consolidation of fragmented industries
Cause of end: Economic slowdown 1929
3. Conglomerate merger wave (4)
1965-1970
- Diversification
- Product extension
- Price earnings game
- Rise of management theroy
Cause of end: Antitrust laws, punitive tax laws, decline in stock prices
Price earnings game
Buyer with a hight P/E ratio combines with a firm with a lower P/E ratio, the earnings per share (EPS) of the buyer will rise
Might work in the short run but never in the long run
See example p. 174-176
4. Deal decade wave (3/5)
1981-1989
- Prospering economy and stock market
- Increasing international competition (steel, auto)
- New industries, technological and managerial innovations
- Increasing hostile takeovers
- Financial innovations (LBO, Bust-up acquisitions)
Cause of end: Government actions, takeover defenses, recession
LBO (4)
- Purchase of firm with substantial share of dept (Strong incentive due to large ROE)
- Replacement of top management
- Improve operations and reduce dept
- Sell firm through IPO
Bust-up acquisitions (3)
- Seller's business parts are worth more as seperate entities than the whole
- Divesting segments after acquisition
- Use proceeds to reduce dept which were used to finance the transaction
5. Strategic merger wave (3/5)
1992-2000
- Technology (computer, internet, fiber optics)
- Globalization
- Deregulation
- Positive economic conditions (low interest rates, rising stock prices and P/E ratios)
- Upcoming stock-for-stock transactions
Cause of end: Burst of internet bubble
The role of deregulations (2)
- Leds to greater capacity utilization, lower firm costs and reduced customer prices
- Followed by increase in merger activity, reorganizations and combined wealth (+3.5%)
III. Theoriy of M&A
Topics:
- Why do mergers occur?
- How can takeovers create value?
- Performance of M&A transactions
- Value split between acquirer & target
- Reasons for M&A transactions
- Strategy influences M&A outcomes
Motives for inorganic (external) growth (3/4)
- Maturing products (lifecycle)
- Regulatory or antitrust restriction
- Value creation (through horizontal, vertical mergers or diversification)
- If impossible to create internal: Acquisition of resources or capabilities
Motives for restructuring, redeployment or exit (4/7)
- Strategic focus
- Correction of mistakes (of divestitures)
- Correction of market valuation of assets (underevalued)
- Subsidization of inefficient units
- Optimizing financial leverage
- Respond to capital market discipline
- Gain financing
4 reasons for mergers
- Rent-seeking behavior
- Bargaining and market power, economies of scale / -scope
- Transaction costs
- Information and contract costs, controlling
- Make or buy decision, specialization gain
- Coase framework: Firm must decide between internal or external production
- Managerial hubris & market mania
- Excessive self-confidence of managers: Think they can manage everything
- Fear of falling short
- Overevaluation & information asymmetry
- Stock market run-up results in overevaluation
- Managers have information advantage: Inside values differ from market valuation
- Hold stocks as "acquisition currency" for share-for-share-deals
► Value increasing, -reducing, -neutral theories
Value increasing
- Mergers optimize transaction costs
- Appropriate balance of internal operations and external markets
- Mergers create synergies (Bradley/Desai/Kim 1983/88)
- Economies of scale, effective management, production, financial service
- Takeovers are disciplinary (Manne 1965)
- Remove poor management, improve performance, competition between different management teams
Value reducing
- Agency costs of FCF (Jensen 1986)
- Managers reinvest FCF, this can lead to value reducing mergers
- Managerial entrenchment (Shleifer/Vishny 1989)
- Increase manager's "value" to shareholders
Value neutral
- Managerial hubris (Roll 1986)
- Excessive self confidence
- Winner's course problem
- Manager that most overevaluates target wins bid
- Mergers can occur even if there is no value effect
- Wealth transfer from buyer's to seller's shareholders if bid is higher than target value
Problems during bidding process (4/5)
- Free-rider problem
- Preemptive bidding
- Winner's curse problem
- Bidding costs
- Limitation of number of bidders
1. Free-rider problem (2) + solutions (3)
- If many small shareholders, each considers himself not decisive for the success of tender offer
- Shareholder refuse to tender
- Solution:
- Large shareholders
- Acquirer buys toehold
- Two-tier offers
2. Preemptive bidding + 2 effects
High initial bid
- Low chances for competitors
- Competitors may avoid bid
► 3. Winner's curse problem (2) + solution (1)
- Lack of full knowledge about target's value (asymmetric information)
- Bidder pays too much
- Solution:
- Stock instead of cash offer (risk sharing)
4. Bidding costs (3)
Costs of making an acquisition
- Preemptive bidding
- Termination fee (break-up fee)
- Compensation for bidder if initial agreement is terminated
- Toehold (initial stake)
- Secret buying of shares (e.g. 5%)
- Deter competitors from making bids
5. Seller decision (2)
Toehold
→ Seller can counteract by designing a favourable auction
Seller's costs
Costs: \(C={1 \over n}[E(V)-E(B)]\)
Number of bidders (n) influences seller costs:
\(E(B)=E(V)-n \times C\)
→ Seller can limit the number of bidders
Empirical results on returns of M&A (4)
Combined (1) + Target (3)
1. Combined returns positive (on average)
- Mostly from Synergy and efficiency
- But hubris, agency costs and managerial entrenchment possible
2. Target returns positive (almost always)
- Cash deals > stock deals
- Multiple bidders → higher return
3. Target stock run-ups (prior to announcement)
- Toehold, rumours, insider trading
4. Higher premium from preemptive bids (proven)