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Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions


Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions

A Strategic Growth Guide
Wiley Finance 1. Aufl.

von: Patrick A. Gaughan

46,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 01.04.2013
ISBN/EAN: 9781118237335
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 352

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Beschreibungen

<b>Solid guidance for selecting the correct strategic basis for mergers and acquisitions</b> <p>Examining how M&A fits in corporate growth strategies, <i>Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions</i> covers the various strategic reasons for companies entering mergers and acquisitions (M&A), with a look at those that are based on sound strategy, and those that are not.</p> <ul> <li>Helps companies decide whether M&As should be used for growth and increased corporate value</li> <li>Explores why M&A deals often fail to deliver what their proponents have represented they would</li> <li>Explains which types of M&A work best and which to avoid</li> </ul> <p>With insider guidance on what boards of directors should be aware of when evaluating proposed deals, <i>Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions</i> provides a sound foundation for understanding the risks involved in any mergers and acquisitions deal, before it's too late.</p>
<p>Preface xiii</p> <p><b>Chapter 1 Merger Growth Strategy 1</b></p> <p>Strategy and M&A 2</p> <p>Introduction to M&A 4</p> <p>Background and Terminology 5</p> <p>Hostile Takeovers 5</p> <p>Takeover Defense 8</p> <p>Leveraged Transactions 10</p> <p>Restructurings 12</p> <p>Trends in Mergers 14</p> <p>Notes 20</p> <p><b>Chapter 2 Growth through Mergers and Acquisitions 21</b></p> <p>Is Growth or Increased Return the More Appropriate Goal? The Case of Hewlett-Packard 21</p> <p>M&A Must Fit the Strategy—Not the Other Way Around 24</p> <p>Strategy Should Not Be Just M&A 25</p> <p>Organic Growth or Growth through M&A 25</p> <p>Acquisition and Development versus Research and Development 26</p> <p>Can M&A Be Effectively Used to Buy Growth? 30</p> <p>Success in Core Business Does Not Always Translate to Success with M&A Strategy: Focus on Microsoft 31</p> <p>Growth through Bolt-On Acquisitions 31</p> <p>Knowing When to Exit a Business 35</p> <p>From Growth through M&A to Growth through Organic Expansion 36</p> <p>Controlling the Runaway Dealmaker CEO 38</p> <p>Using M&A to Achieve Growth in a Slow-Growth Industry 40</p> <p>Squeezing Out Growth in a Slow-Growth Industry Using Multiple Options 40</p> <p>Dealing with a Slow-Growth Business and Industry 42</p> <p>Geographical Expansion through M&A 46</p> <p>International Growth and Cross-Border Acquisitions 47</p> <p>Taking Advantage of Currency Fluctuations to Pursue High-Growth M&A 47</p> <p>Finding Growth in High-Growth Markets 49</p> <p>Cyclical Companies Achieving Growth in Recessed Markets 50</p> <p>Notes 52</p> <p><b>Chapter 3 Synergy 53</b></p> <p>What Is Synergy in the Context of M&A? 53</p> <p>Achievement of Synergy: A Probabilistic Event 55</p> <p>Types of Synergy 58</p> <p>Industries’ Pursuit of Cost Economies 65</p> <p>Research on Operating Economies in M&A 69</p> <p>Economies of Scope 70</p> <p>Scope Economies and the One-Stop Shop 72</p> <p>Copycat Following of Another Firm’s Foolish M&A Strategy 74</p> <p>Cost Economies in Banking Mergers: United States versus Europe 75</p> <p>Internationalization Theory of Synergy and Information-Based Assets 79</p> <p>Notes 89</p> <p><b>Chapter 4 Diversification 91</b></p> <p>Diversifying M&A in the Conglomerate Era 91</p> <p>Modern-Day U.S. Conglomerates 92</p> <p>Portfolios of Companies 95</p> <p>Theoretical Basis for Diversification 98</p> <p>Applying Portfolio Theory to Conglomerates? 99</p> <p>Diversification and the Acquisition of Leading Industry Positions 100</p> <p>Achieving a Number One or Two Ranking Is Not a Panacea 102</p> <p>Diversification to Enter More Profitable Industries 102</p> <p>Empirical Evidence on Diversification 103</p> <p>Empirical Evidence on the Acquisition Programs of the 1960s 103</p> <p>How Likely Is It That Diversifying Acquisitions Will End Up Being Sold Off? 104</p> <p>Is There a Diversification Discount? 105</p> <p>Focus Hypothesis 106</p> <p>Types of Focus Increases 106</p> <p>Focus-Increasing Asset Sales Raise Value 107</p> <p>Explanation for the Diversification Discount 107</p> <p>Related versus Unrelated Diversification 108</p> <p>Why Are Very Diversified Companies Allowed to Form? Beware of the Empire Builders 111</p> <p>Do Managerial Agendas Drive M&A? 113</p> <p>Notes 114</p> <p><b>Chapter 5 Horizontal Integration and M&A 117</b></p> <p>Advantages of Holding the One and Two Position in the Industry 117</p> <p>Benefits of Size: Spotlight on the Mobile Telecommunications Industry 119</p> <p>Motivation to Increase Size 122</p> <p>Competitive Pressures of Competitors’ M&A Program 122</p> <p>Horizontal Deals: Acquisitions of Competitors and Their Competing Brands 124</p> <p>Sprint–Nextel Horizontal Deal: One of the Worst in M&A History 125</p> <p>Declining Industry Demand Necessitating Industry Consolidation 128</p> <p>Synergistic Gains and Horizontal M&A 129</p> <p>Net Benefits of Horizontal Deals = Synergistic Gains – (Easy to Measure Costs + Hard to Measure Costs) 133</p> <p>Horizontal Merger Success, Target’s Size, and Post-M&A Integration Costs 134</p> <p>Mergers of Equals 136</p> <p>Mergers of Equals and Challenges of Integration 137</p> <p>Mergers-of-Equals Research: Acquirers versus Target Gains 139</p> <p>Competitive Advantages of Horizontal Deals: Case Study—InBev and Anheuser-Busch 139</p> <p>Regulatory Concerns on Merger Integration 141</p> <p>Horizontal M&A and Market Power: An Economic Perspective 143</p> <p>Empirical Evidence on Whether Firms Pursue M&A to Achieve Market Power 145</p> <p>Countervailing Power, Industry Concentration, and M&A 147</p> <p>Horizontal Integration, Consolidation, and Roll-Up Acquisition Programs 155</p> <p>Notes 156</p> <p><b>Chapter 6 Vertical Integration 159</b></p> <p>Benefits of Vertical Integration 159</p> <p>Risk and Vertical Integration 159</p> <p>Vertical Integration as a Path to Global Growth 160</p> <p>How Owning Your Own Supplier Can Be a Competitive Disadvantage 163</p> <p>Vertical Integration as a Natural Outgrowth of a Business 165</p> <p>Vertical Integration: A Growth Strategy? 168</p> <p>Continually Reevaluating a Vertical Integration Strategy 173</p> <p>Regulation of Vertical Integration 176</p> <p>Copycat Vertical Integration 177</p> <p>Note 178</p> <p><b>Chapter 7 Growth through Emerging Market M&A 179</b></p> <p>Economic Condition of Major Economies in the Postsubprime World 180</p> <p>Low-Growth Markets’ Diminishing Returns 181</p> <p>Role of Demographics 182</p> <p>The Next 11 183</p> <p>M&A Is Not Always the Best Way of Accessing High-Growth Markets 184</p> <p>High-Growth Regions and Countries 185</p> <p>Risks of Emerging Markets 208</p> <p>Entering Large Slow-Growth Markets Instead of Fast-Growth Emerging Markets 210</p> <p>Reducing Country M&A Risk: Investing in Local Companies That Engage in Substantial Emerging Market M&A 211</p> <p>Finding Growth in High-Growth Markets 213</p> <p>Emerging Market Acquirer 216</p> <p>China and Its Emerging Market Acquirers 218</p> <p>Notes 220</p> <p><b>Chapter 8 Joint Ventures and Strategic Alliances as M&A Alternatives 221</b></p> <p>Contracts versus Joint Ventures 222</p> <p>Potential Problems with Joint Ventures and Strategic Alliances 222</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects of Joint Ventures 224</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects by Type of Venture 225</p> <p>Relatedness and Size 226</p> <p>Market’s Assessment of Risk of Joint Ventures 227</p> <p>Strategic Alliances 227</p> <p>Strategic Alliance Process 228</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects of Strategic Alliances 229</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects by Type of Alliance 229</p> <p>Notes 230</p> <p><b>Chapter 9 Role of Corporate Governance in M&A 233</b></p> <p>Agency Cost Problem 233</p> <p>CEO Compensation and Agency Costs 235</p> <p>Do Shareholders Get Value for the High Compensation Paid to U.s. Ceos? 237</p> <p>Board Characteristics and CEO Compensation 238</p> <p>Benchmarking and How Boards Determine CEO Compensation 239</p> <p>Are the High Paid Superstar CEOs Simply Worth the Money? Not 240</p> <p>Are CEOs Paid for Luck? 241</p> <p>CEO Compensation and M&A Programs 241</p> <p>Do Boards Pay CEOs for Doing M&A? 241</p> <p>Do Boards Punish CEOs for Doing Bad M&As? Case of Rio Tinto 242</p> <p>Golden Parachutes and M&A 243</p> <p>CEO Severance Payments 243</p> <p>Are CEOs Evaluating M&A by Thinking, “What’s in It for Me?” 244</p> <p>CEO Overconfidence and M&A 244</p> <p>Are Overconfident CEOs Good for Anything? 245</p> <p>Management Compensation and Post-Acquisition Performance 245</p> <p>Role of the Board of Directors 246</p> <p>CEO Tenure, Board Composition, and the Disciplinary Effects of Takeovers 257</p> <p>Antitakeover Measures 257</p> <p>Corporate Governance and the Divestiture Decision 259</p> <p>Notes 259</p> <p><b>Chapter 10 Downsizing: Reversing the Error 263</b></p> <p>Analyzing the Strategic Fit of a Business Unit 266</p> <p>Market Conditions 267</p> <p>Regulatory Concerns 267</p> <p>Divestiture Likelihood and Prior Acquisitions 267</p> <p>Another Option: Equity Carve Out 268</p> <p>Another Option: Spinoff 269</p> <p>Spinoff or Equity Carve Out: Which Option Is Better? 270</p> <p>Another Option: Split-Off 272</p> <p>Tax Effects 272</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects of Selloffs 272</p> <p>Round Trip Wealth Effects 274</p> <p>Spinoffs as a Means of Increasing Focus 274</p> <p>Differences in Types of Focus Increases 275</p> <p>Shareholder Wealth Effects of Spinoffs: United States versus Europe 278</p> <p>Corporate Governance and Selloffs 279</p> <p>Managerial Ownership and Selloff Gains 280</p> <p>Activists and Selloffs 280</p> <p>Market Liquidity and the Decision to Sell a Unit 280</p> <p>Involuntary Selloffs 281</p> <p>Voluntary/Involuntary Selloffs 281</p> <p>Voluntary Defensive Selloffs 282</p> <p>Tracking Stocks 283</p> <p>More Drastic Solutions: Voluntary Bust-Ups 285</p> <p>Recent Major Exceptions to Positive Shareholder Wealth Effects of Selloffs 286</p> <p>Notes 289</p> <p><b>Chapter 11 Valuation and Merger Strategy 291</b></p> <p>Financial versus Nonfinancial Buyers 291</p> <p>Target and Bidder Valuation Effects 293</p> <p>What Types of Acquiring Firms Tend to Perform the Poorest? 295</p> <p>Premiums 295</p> <p>Historical Trends in Merger Premiums 296</p> <p>Stock Market Activity and Merger Premiums 297</p> <p>Stock Market–Driven Acquisitions 298</p> <p>Determinants of Acquisition Premiums 298</p> <p>Premiums from Strategic Mergers 298</p> <p>Hubris and Merger Premiums 299</p> <p>Early Research 300</p> <p>Later Research 300</p> <p>Winner’s Curse Hypothesis of Takeovers 301</p> <p>Campeau’s Mega-Bust 302</p> <p>Research on Winner’s Curse of Takeover Contests 304</p> <p>Market Performance, Valuation, and Takeover Probability 304</p> <p>Deal Size and Shareholder Wealth 305</p> <p>Valuation Analysis and Source of the Flaws in Bad Deals 306</p> <p>Comments of the Residual Value 308</p> <p>Free Cash Flows 308</p> <p>Cost Cutting and Historical Free Cash Flows 309</p> <p>Growth Rate for Projection 310</p> <p>Capitalization Rates and the Exit Multiple 310</p> <p>Discount Rate 311</p> <p>Whose Capital Costs Are We Measuring? 313</p> <p>Using the Build-Up Method 313</p> <p>Short-Term Interest Rate Trends 315</p> <p>Using Comparables 316</p> <p>Public versus Private Acquirers 316</p> <p>Public versus Private Sellers 318</p> <p>Notes 321</p> <p>About the Author 325</p> <p>Index 327</p>
<p><b>PATRICK A. GAUGHAN</b > is President of Economatrix Research Associates, an economic and financial consulting firm with offices in New York City; Newark, New Jersey; and Miami, Florida. Gaughan holds a PhD in economics and is a graduate professor of economics and finance at the Silberman College of Business at Fairleigh Dickinson University in New Jersey. He is also the author and/or editor of eight other books.</p>
<p><b>Maximizing Corporate Value Through Mergers and Acquisitions<BR> <i>A Strategic Growth Guide</i></b> <p>Companies enter into mergers and acquisitions (M&A) in order to grow their businesses. This seems like an obvious point, but a look through the annals of M&A reveals that companies and executives disregard this basic principle surprisingly often. Whether through faulty analysis, poor organizational decision-making, or getting caught up in the heat of the deal, even the best businesses and their leaders find ways to fumble these high-stakes transactions. Yet many M&A debacles could have been avoided through a better understanding of exactly why past deals have and haven’t worked. <p><i>Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions</i> cuts through the hype surrounding M&A to take a calm, considered look at the many strategic growth options available to businesses. Utilizing the large body of research in this field, author Patrick Gaughan walks readers through both the risks and the benefits associated with different kinds of deals. In so doing, he offers a comprehensive treatment of key factors—including market, industry, and psychological considerations—and their role in successful and unsuccessful outcomes. <p>A vital handbook for professionals considering strategic growth, <i>Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions</i> provides sound guidance and illustrative case studies on topics including: <ul><li>Ensuring that M&A is part of an overall growth strategy</li> <li>Understanding and achieving synergies</li> <li>M&A for diversification</li> <li>M&A for horizontal and vertical integration</li></li> <li>M&A in emerging markets</li> <li>The impact of valuation and premiums on deals</li> <li>“Deal reversal” strategies to mitigate damage when deals don’t deliver as anticipated</li> <li>Pursuing organic growth instead of growth through M&A</li> <li>Alternatives to M&A such as joint ventures or strategic alliances</li> <li>And more</li></ul> <p>An essential reference for boards, executives, advisors, and other practitioners, <i>Maximizing Corporate Value through Mergers and Acquisitions</i> offers an up-to-date guide for navigating the complex yet rewarding world of M&A.

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