1 / 22

Chapter 15 – Alternative Restructuring Strategies

Chapter 15 – Alternative Restructuring Strategies. Divestitures. Sale of a portion of the firm to an outside party generally resulting in a cash infusion to the parent. Most common restructuring strategy. Motives: De-conglomeration / Increasing Corporate Focus

felix
Download Presentation

Chapter 15 – Alternative Restructuring Strategies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 15 –Alternative Restructuring Strategies

  2. Divestitures • Sale of a portion of the firm to an outside party generally resulting in a cash infusion to the parent. Most common restructuring strategy. • Motives: • De-conglomeration / Increasing Corporate Focus • Moving away from the core business • Assets are worth more to the buyer than to the seller • Satisfying government requirements – anti trust • Correcting past mistakes • Assets have been interfering with profitable operation of other businesses

  3. “Divestitures in Difficult Times”¹ • “Divestitures will increase, more complex.” • 215 execs – public (1/4), private (1/2), PE/VC (1/4) • Buyer’s Market – 60%; 30% buyers, credit crisis • Companies positioned to buy or sell or to buy • Most complex issue with divesture: • Separate business – 23% (Public company issue) • Carve out financials; recast historical #s – 21% • Find buyer – 25% (Private company complaint) • Negotiate contract – 10% • Execute deal in short time frame – 18% ¹ PricewaterhouseCoopers, Divestitures in Difficult Times: Survey of US Executives … Drivers and Challenges for 2010 and Beyond

  4. “Divestitures in Difficult Times”¹ • How much longer to divest? • 20 % longer – 51% • More than 10%, less than 20% - 21% • More Buyer due diligence last 12 months? • 32% extensive additional information • 43% additional information • 25% same as prior years • Valuation expectation difference – 50% ?

  5. Divestitures in Difficult Times”¹ • Audited financial statements important? • Critical to get deal done or max value – 27% • More important in current market – 49% • If buyer has financing requirements – 16% • Consider alternatives if no traditional deal? • Seller financing – 20% • Joint venture or other – 18% • Consider all options- 27%

  6. Breaking Up Is Hard To Do • IT Integration makes divestiture difficult • Support services & facilities hard unravel • Outsourcing adds third party issues • Divested entity needs long term support • Disruption issue - seller & divested entity • May impact seller’s cost structure. Margin. • Regulators may force your hand DOJ/SEC ¹. Booz Allen, Chief Executive Magazine, 2009, Seven Reasons Divestitures Are Harder Than You Think

  7. Deciding When to Sell: Financial Evaluation of Divestitures – With/WO • Estimate unit’s after-tax cash flows viewed on a standalone basis, carefully considering dependencies with other operating divisions • Determine appropriate discount rate • Calculate the unit’s PV to estimate market value • Calculate the equity value of the unit as part of the parent by deducting the market value of liabilities • Decide to sell or retain the division by comparing the market value of the division (step 3) minus its operating liabilities (step 4) with the after-tax proceeds from the sale of the division.

  8. Spin-Offs¹ & Split-Ups • Spin-Offs: New legal subsidiary created by parent with new subsidiary shares distributed to parent shareholders on pro-rata basis (e.g., Medco by Merck in 2004) Spinoff Report - Berkshire • Shareholder base in new company is same as parent • Subsidiary becomes a publicly traded company • No cash infusion to parent • Tax-free to shareholders if properly structured • Split-Ups (e.g., AT&T in 1985): • A new class of stock is created for each of the parent’s subsidiaries • Current parent shareholders receive a dividend of each new class of stock, • Sometimes the remaining corporate shell is dissolved ¹ http://www.sec.gov/answers/spinoffs.htm and DIVISION OF CORPORATION FINANCE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Staff Legal Bulletin No. 4 (CF) ACTION: Publication of CF Staff Legal Bulletin DATE: September 16, 1997

  9. Stage 1 Stage 2 Spin-Offs – Tax Free § IRC 355 Parent Firm Parent Firm Shareholders Parent Firm Parent Firm Shareholders Subsidiary Stock Paid to Shareholders As Dividend Or NOT Parent Shareholders Own Both Parent & Subsidiary Stock Subsidiary Independent of Former Parent Subsidiary

  10. Examples 2013 and prior • http://www.spinoffresearch.com/ • Kimberly Clark – November 2013/2014 • KC - $42B – spin off health care business • $2 B sales, $200M profit – 8% sales/7%profit • Tax free § 355 – low teens EV/EBITDA $3-4B • Each KC share – has imbedded $9 HC value • Ingersoll Rand and Allegion – 2013/14 • Fortune • ConocoPhillips • Kraft • Marathon • ITT Corporation

  11. Kraft Spin-Off¹ ² • Kraft purchased Cadbury 2010 - $19B • Kraft 2nd largest global food company/$20 • CEO Rosenfeld – bigger is better and “scale is a source of great competitive advantage” (2010) • 2011 – separate snacks & groceries. “Instill focus that will provide even greater opportunities” ¹Chon, Das, Ziobro, Activists Pressed for Kraft Spinoff, Wall Street Journal, August 5, 2011 2 http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/kraft-foods-announces-filing-of-form-10-registration-statement-for-planned-spin-off-of-north-american-grocery-company-145829965.html

  12. Kraft Spin-Off (Mondolez/Kraft) • Broad based investor support for spinoff • A –Europe, develop mkts, NA snacks, conf • $32B – Oreo, Cadbury, Trident & Tang • B – NA groceries KRAFT • $16B – Kraft, Maxwell, Oscar Mayer, Jell-O • A – Faster growing in emerging markets • B – Less growth, strong margins, reliable sales and may pay dividends

  13. Kraft Spin-Off • Issues: “different portfolios” • Reduce regulatory scrutiny – ConAgra Foods • Delivery – groceries/warehouse; snacks/shelve • Cadbury – originally seen as complementary & benefitting from “global scope, scale, technologies • Within few months – Cadbury split in works. • Current Developments¹ • Rosenfeld – Heads up A • Anthony Vernon – Heads up B • SEC filings – Q2 2012 See prior slide 13, April 2,2012 ¹ Jargon, Ziobro, Kraft Hashes Out Details of Split, Wall Street Journal, December 6, 2011

  14. Kraft Spin-Off • Tougher Job ? Vernon • $17B business – ½ revenue and brands • Sales force less leverage • Prices & contract terms less negotiable? • Some products/brands need licensing? • Philadelphia Cream Cheese and Gevalia Coffee • Some products change silos – Planters to B • Emergence of Planter’s snacks • Tax free - IRS ruling May 2012

  15. Kraft Spin-Off • Market reaction¹ • Results 1-2 years. Sell now? • More growth oriented and entrepreneurial? • Easier to value entities • Kraft paid $18.5B - $750M synergies 2013 but need to add $1.5B so price tag is really $20B • Value/synergies not happening. Split masks? • “Split produces two so-so businesses” • TEV – 9/7/11 - 10.5X EBITDA = Expensive • Other valuation - $29.50; price $34.08 • 12/8/11 - $36.33; Monday – pre deal $39.56, ↓ • 12/5/13 – Mondolez - $34; Kraft $ 53

  16. GE Security & UTC¹ • August 2009 – JP Morgan hired to sell • Revenues - $1.8B, seeking $2B, Price $1.8B • UTC Fire & Security $6B revenues, security business shallow. 60% svc/install • Access business is strong but GE Casi competes. • Keep both? UTC product is better. • Neither have good video surveillance • UTC – increase service $; weak products • Security community does not see the value but a win for industry. 50/50 estimate of success. • April 2011- UTC² : deeply committed; expanded activities; $150M R&D, new test center, “very optimistic” ¹ http://ipvideomarket.info/report/ge_security_for_sale__anyone_interested; ² http://www.utcfireandsecurity.com

  17. Equity Carve-outs • Two forms: Initial public offering (IPO) and subsidiary equity carve-out • IPOs represent the first offering of stock to the public of all or a portion of the equity of a formerly privately held firm (e.g., UPS sells 9% of its shares in 1999), Groupon 2011 and Dunkin Donuts • The cash may be retained by the parent or returned to shareholders • Subsidiary equity carve-out is a transaction in which the parent sells a portion of the stock of a wholly-owned subsidiary to the public. (e.g., Phillip Morris’ 2001 sale of 15% of its Kraft subsidiary) • The cash may be invested in the subsidiary, retained by the parent, or returned to the parent’s shareholders • Although the parent generally sells less than 20% of the sub’s equity, the sub’s shareholder base may be different than that of the parent

  18. Split-Offs • A variation of a spin-off in which some parent company shareholders receive shares in a subsidiary in return for their parent shares. (e.g., AT&T spun-off its wireless operations in 2001 to its shareholders for their AT&T shares) • Frequently used when a parent owns a less than 100% investment stake1 in a subsidiary in order to: • Reduce pressure on the spun-off firm’s share price, because shareholders who exchange their stock are less likely to sell the new stock and • Increase the parent’s EPS by reducing the number of its shares outstanding 1Potential buyers generally prefer divested units in which they can purchase 100% of stock to avoid minority shareholders.

  19. Voluntary Liquidations or Bust-Ups • Involves the sale of all of a firm’s individual operating units • After paying off any remaining outstanding liabilities, after-tax proceeds are returned to the parent’s shareholders and the corporate shell is dissolved • This option may be pursued if management views the growth prospects of the consolidated firm as limited

  20. Going Private - BuyBacks • Multiple motivations - examples • 2010 survey¹ – 60 large deals worldwide • Examples • Burger King • Del Monte • Dynegy • J Crew • JoAnn Stores • Novell • Chrysalis PLC (Europe) • Fuji Foods (Asia) ¹ Weil, Gotshal & Manges Sponsor Backed Going Private Transaction – September 2011

  21. Choosing Appropriate Restructuring Strategy: Viable Firms • Choice heavily influenced by the following: • Parent’s need for cash • Degree of operating unit’s synergy with parent • Potential selling price of operating unity • Implications: • Parent firms needing cash more likely to divest or engage in equity carve-outfor operations exhibiting high selling prices relative to their synergy value • Parent firms not needing cash more likely to spin-off units exhibiting low selling prices and synergy with parent • Parent firms with moderate cash needs likely to engage in equity carve-out when unit’s selling price is low relative to synergy

  22. Things to Remember… • Divestitures, spin-offs, equity carve-outs, split-ups, split-offs, and tracking stock are common restructuring strategies to enhance shareholder value • Divestitures and equity carve-outs are more likely for operating units whose selling price is much higher than its perceived synergy with parent and whose parents need cash • Spin-offs are more likely for operating units whose selling price and synergy are low and whose parent firm does not need cash

More Related