Corporate Restructuring Flashcards

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1
Q

types of corporate restructurings

A

Investment
Divestment
Restructuring

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2
Q

Investment

A

actions that increase the size of the company or the scope of its operations, thereby increasing revenue and perhaps revenue growth (external or inorganic - growth through investment actions designed to increase revenues and improve margins, not R&D or CAPEX)

Has 3 types: 1) equity investment 2) joint venture 3) acquisition

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3
Q

Divestment

A

actions that reduce a company’s size or scope, typically by shedding slower-growing, lower-profitability, or higher-risk operations to improve the issuer’s overall financial performance

Motivations are often focus, valuation, liquidity, and regulatory requirements

Has 2 main types: 1) divestiture 2) spin off

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4
Q

Restructuring

A

changes that do not alter the size or scope of the issuer but improve its cost and financing structure with the intention to increase growth, improve profitability, or reduce risks

Motivations are often opportunistic improvement and forced improvement

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5
Q

Synergy

A

The combination of two companies being more valuable than the sum of the parts. Generally, synergies take the form of lower costs (“cost synergies”) or increased revenues (“revenue synergies”) through combinations that generate lower costs or higher revenues, respectively

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6
Q

Industry shocks

A

Unexpected changes to an industry from regulations or the legal environment, technology, or changes in the growth rate of the industry.

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7
Q

Equity investment

A

A company purchasing another company’s equity but less than 50% of its shares. The two companies maintain their independence, but the investor company has investment exposure to the investee and, in some cases depending on the size of the investment, can have representation on the investee’s board of directors to influence operations.

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8
Q

Joint venture

A

Two or more companies form and control a new, separate company to achieve a business objective. Each participant contributes assets, employees, know-how, or other resources to the joint venture company. The participants maintain their independence otherwise and continue to do business apart from the joint venture, but they share in the joint venture’s profits or losses.

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9
Q

Acquisition

A

When one company, the acquirer, purchases from the seller most or all of another company’s (the target) shares to gain control of either an entire company, a segment of another company, or a specific group of assets in exchange for cash, stock, or the assumption of liabilities, alone or in combination. Once an acquisition is complete, the acquirer and target merge into a single entity and consolidate management, operations, and resources.

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10
Q

Conglomerate discounts

A

When an issuer is trading at a valuation lower than the sum of its parts, which is generally the result of diseconomies of scale or scope or the result of the capital markets having overlooked the business and its prospects.

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11
Q

Divestiture

A

When a seller sells a company, segment of a company, or group of assets to an acquirer. Once complete, control of the target is transferred to the acquirer.

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12
Q

Spin-off

A

When a company separates a distinct part of its business into a new, independent company. The term is used to describe both the transaction and the separated component, while the company that conducts the transaction and formerly owned the spin off is known as the parent.

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13
Q

Franchising

A

An owner of an asset and associated intellectual property divests the asset and licenses intellectual property to a third-party operator (franchisee) in exchange for royalties. Franchisees operate under the constraints of a franchise agreement.

Example of opportunistic improvement

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14
Q

Cost restructuring

A

Actions to reduce costs by improving operational efficiency and profitability, often to raise margins to a historical level or to those of comparable industry peers.

Example of forced improvement
Could be classified into two: 1) outsourcing 2) offshoring

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15
Q

Outsourcing

A

Shifting internal business services to a subcontractor that can offer services at lower costs by scaling to serve many clients

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16
Q

Offshoring

A

Refers to relocating operations from one country to another, mainly to reduce costs through lower labor costs or to achieve economies of scale through centralization, but still maintaining operations within the corporation

17
Q

Balance sheet restructuring

A

Altering the composition of the balance sheet by either shifting the asset composition, changing the capital structure, or both.

18
Q

Sales leaseback

A

A situation in which a company sells the building it owns and occupies to a real estate investor and the company then signs a long-term lease with the buyer to continue to occupy the building. At the end of the lease, use of the property reverts to the landlord.

19
Q

Dividend recapitalization

A

Restructuring the mix of debt and equity, typically shifting the capital structure from equity to debt through debt-financed share repurchases. The objective is to reduce the issuer’s weighted average cost of capital by replacing expensive equity with cheaper debt by purchasing equity from shareholders using newly issued debt.

20
Q

Reorganization

A

A court-supervised restructuring process available in some jurisdictions for companies facing insolvency from burdensome debt levels. A bankruptcy court assumes control of the company and oversees an orderly negotiation process between the company and its creditors for asset sales, conversion of debt to equity, refinancing, and so on.

21
Q

Leveraged buyout

A

An acquirer (typically an investment fund specializing in LBOs) uses a significant amount of debt to finance the acquisition of a target and then pursues restructuring actions, with the goal of exiting the target with a sale or public listing.

A special case of corporate restructuring.

returns are primarily a function of four variables: the purchase price, the amount of leverage, free cash flow (FCF) generated during the ownership period—which is often augmented by cost and balance sheet restructurings and used to pay down debt—and the exit price