M&A Flashcards

1
Q

When would a M&A make sense?

A

When synergies can be recognized

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2
Q

Given two firms, A and B, the economic gain from a merger is given by what equation?

A

Economic gain = PV(AB) - [PV(A) + PV(B)], where

PV(AB) is value of combined firm
PV(A) is value of firm A
PV(B) is value of firm B

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3
Q

If economic gain from a merger is negative, is there value added by merging?

A

No (only way investors could benefit from merger is if you acquire other firm by paying less than the other co. stand alone value)

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4
Q

If economic gain from a merger is positive, is there value added by merging?

A

Yes

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5
Q

What are four possible sources of synergies in M&As?

A

1) Economies of scale
2) Economies of vertical integration
3) Eliminating inefficient management
4) Industry consolidation

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6
Q

Expand on the following possible synergy in an M&A:

Economies of scale

A
  • Sometimes, marginal production costs (costs of producing one extra unit of the good) fall as production increases
  • Hence, one large co. can operate more efficiently than two smaller ones
  • In these cases, mergers increase economic efficiency
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7
Q

Expand on the following possible synergy in an M&A:

Economies of vertical integration

A
  • Merge with a supplier or a customer

- Facilitates coordination and administration

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8
Q

Expand on the following possible synergy in an M&A:

Eliminating inefficient management

A
  • If a co. is poorly managed, a co. with better management can acquire it and run it more efficiently
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9
Q

Expand on the following possible synergy in an M&A:

Industry consolidation

A
  • Mergers allow overcrowded industries to shrink
  • Remaining firms might return to profitability
  • Industry consolidation often allows the remaining firms to increase their market power/profitability
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10
Q

Your firm (firm A) has identified a synergy with firm B. If you acquire B with cash (for its standalone value), how do we determine how much your investors gain, and how much B’s investors gain?

A
  • If you’re firm A, and you acquire firm B by paying its standalone value [PV(B)], then you get to pocket all the gains from the merger
  • Your gain [if you pay PV(B)] = PV(AB) - [PV(A) + PV(B)]
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11
Q

Your firm (firm A) has identified a synergy with firm B. If you acquire B with cash (for more than its standalone value), how do we determine how much your investors gain, and how much B’s investors gain?

A
  • If you pay more than firm B’s standalone value (say $2 million more), then firm B’s investors gain $2 million from merger
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12
Q

In general, the acquirer’s (Firm A’s) gain from a cash acquisition of Firm B is given by what equation?

A

A’s gain = Total Gain - Firm B’s gain, where

Total gain = PV(AB) - [PV(A) + PV(B)]
Firm B’s gain = Cash - PV(B)

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13
Q

How much should you be willing to pay to acquire firm B?

A

You should be willing to pay any amount that makes your gain be greater than 0

Your gain = Total gain - Firm B’s gain
Your gain = Total gain - [Cash - PV(B)]

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14
Q

Is your gain positive or negative if Cash < (Total Gain + PV(B))

A

Positive
- hence you should be willing to pay up to
total gain + PV(B)

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15
Q

How do we estimate the “PV(B)” portion in Total Gain + PV(B) if Firm B is a publicly traded firm?

A
  • Look at its market price to estimate PV(B)

- Careful: if market is aware of possibility of merger, then B’s market cap will be greater than PV(B)

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16
Q

How do we estimate the “Total Gain” portion in Total Gain + PV(B) if Firm B is a publicly traded firm?

A
  • To estimate Total Gain, you want to zero in on the source of the synergy
  • E.g. if combining the firms could cut costs by $25 million (in PV) and if revenues were unaffected, then the Total Gain would be $25 million
17
Q

Suppose firm A has value $200M. Firm B has value $50 M. Merging them creates $25M in value (from cost savings):

Compute Total Gains from merger.

A

$25M

18
Q

Suppose firm A has value $200M. Firm B has value $50 M. Merging them creates $25M in value (from cost savings):

Compute max amount A should be willing to pay to acquire B

A

$75M

= $50M stock value + $25M synergy value

19
Q

Suppose firm A has value $200M. Firm B has value $50 M. Merging them creates $25M in value (from cost savings). If A pays $65M to acquire B,

what are A’s gains?

A

$10M gain

=$25M synergy value - $15M B’s gains

20
Q

Suppose firm A has value $200M. Firm B has value $50 M. Merging them creates $25M in value (from cost savings). If A pays $65M to acquire B,

what are B’s gains?

A

$15M gain

= $65 cash - $50M value of B

21
Q

If the market already anticipated the possibility of a merger with B, is PV(B) still equal to B’s share price times shares outstanding?

A
  • Willing to pay more than standalone value if info leaked
22
Q

What is the key difference b/w stock and cash purchases?

A
  • Cash purchases: target’s gains are unaffected by the value of the synergy (value of the synergy only affects the acquirer’s gains)
  • Stock purchases: gains from synergy are shared by both firms’ investors (mitigates danger of the acquirer overestimating the value of the synergy)
23
Q

What are three bad reasons for merging?

A

1) Empire building (management can manage larger co. which means more $$$)
2) Diversification (if S/Hs wanted a diversified portfolio, they can do it themselves for cheaper)
3) Increasing firm’s EPS (if firm has high P/E, it can raise its EPS by acquiring firms with lower P/E, even if there are no synergies)

24
Q

What are two common takeover defenses target firms use?

A

1) Poison pill

2) Golden parachute

25
Q

Expand on the following takeover defense:

Poison pill

A
  • If one S/H obtains a certain % of co. stock (e.g. 25%), all the other S/Hs can buy shares at a discount
26
Q

Expand on the following takeover defense:

Golden parachute

A
  • Management gets large payoff if firm is acquired