Documenti di Didattica
Documenti di Professioni
Documenti di Cultura
Introduction
Restructuring is widely used in both the developed and developing countries nowadays. Companies and economies are restructuring to achieve a higher level of performance or to survive when the given structure becomes dysfunctional. Restructuring takes place at different levels. At the level of the whole economy, it is a long-term response to market trends, technological change, and macroeconomic policies. At the sector level, restructuring causes change in the production structure and new arrangements across enterprises. At the enterprise level, firms restructure through new business strategies and internal reorganization in order to adapt to new market requirements. The "Corporate restructuring" is an umbrella term that includes mergers and consolidations, divestitures and liquidations and various types of battles for corporate control. The essence of corporate restructuring lies in achieving the long run goal of wealth maximization. This study is an attempt to highlight the impact of corporate restructuring on the shareholders value in the Indian context. Thus, it helps us to know, if restructuring generates value gains for shareholders (both those who own the firm before the restructuring and those who own the firm after the restructuring), how these value gains have be created and achieved or failed.
Evolution
Last year, M&A activities were largely restricted to IT and telecom sectors. They have now spread across the economy. As BusinessWorld recently reported, this is the fourth wave of corporate deal-making in India. The first happened in the 1980s, led by corporate raiders such as Swaraj Paul, Manu Chhabria and R P Goenka, in the very early days of reforms. In view of the license raj prevailing then, buying a company was one of the best ways to generate growth, for ambitious corporates. In the early 1990s, in the liberalized economy, Indian business houses began to feel the heat of competition. Conglomerates that had lost focus were forced to sell non-core businesses that could not withstand competitive pressures. The Tatas, for instance, sold TOMCO to Hindustan Lever. Corporate restructuring, largely drove this second wave of M&As. The third wave started about five to ten years ago, driven by consolidation in key sectors like cement and telecommunications. Companies like Bharti TeleVentures and Hutch bought smaller competitors to establish a national presence. What makes the most recent wave of M&As different from the three previous ones is the involvement of global players. Foreign private equity is
Page 1
coming into Indian companies, like Newbridge's recent investment in Shriram Holdings. Multinational corporations are also entering India. Swiss cement major Holcim's investment in ACC and Oracle's purchase of a 41 per cent stake in i-flex solutions are good examples. Meanwhile, Indian companies, sensing attractive opportunities outside the country are also venturing abroad. Tata Steel has bought Singapore-based NatSteel for $486 million. Videocon has bought the colour picture tubes business of Thomson for $290 million.
Corporate Restructuring
Corporate Restructuring is the corporate management term for the act of partially dismantling and reorganizing the legal, ownership, operational, or other structures of a company for the purpose of making it more profitable, or better organized for its present needs. The process of reorganizing a company may be implemented due to a number of different factors, viz., a change of ownership or ownership structure, demerger, or a response to a crisis or major change in the business such as bankruptcy, repositioning, or buyout or poise the corporation to move in an entirely new direction.
Page 2
Executives involved in restructuring often hire financial and legal advisors to assist in the transaction details and negotiation. It may also be done by a new CEO hired specifically to make the difficult and controversial decisions required to save or reposition the company. It generally involves financing debt, selling portions of the company to investors, and reorganizing or reducing operations.
Joint Venture:
Joint Venture is an entity formed by two or more companies for a specific period with a specific objective. Joint ventures are useful for a company to enter into new segment of market. Joint venture creates a new entity,
Page 3
however, Strategic Alliance allows companies to remain independent while perusing agreed goal. 3
Acquisitions:
An acquisition is another ambiguous term. At the most general, it means an attempt by one firm, called the acquiring firm to gain a majority interest in another firm called the target firm. The effort to gain control may be a prelude to a subsequent merger. The strategies that can be employed in corporate acquisitions are friendly takeovers & hostile takeovers. Hostile takeover usually occurs when the acquiring company approaches Target Company but management of the target company or the board of directors of the target company do not support the proposal for acquisition. Hence it occurs when acquiring company approached shareholders directly without firstly approaching the management and board of directors of the target company. Acquiring company then attempts to obtain the required amount of shares in the market place via tender offers. Tender offers refer to formal offers made to the shareholders in the market place to obtain a certain amount of shares at a given price which is above the current market price. The acquiring company may also undertake a creeping tender offer by silently purchasing enough shares in the market place before making their intentions known. Friendly takeover involves a situation where the acquiring company approaches the management of the target company with the proposal for acquisition. If management supports such an acquisition and if the board of directors sees a takeover to be in best interests of shareholders, then the board makes such a recommendation to the shareholders. If shareholders approval is obtained then a friendly takeover occurs and it is completed by the acquiring company obtaining shares in the target company.
4 Sell offs
A sell-off, also known as a divestiture, is the outright sale of a company subsidiary. A divestiture is the sale of a portion of the firms assets to a third partytypically another company or a private equity fundin a private transaction. The assets sold may be a division, segment, subsidiary, or product line. Normally, sell-offs are done because the subsidiary doesn't fit into the parent company's core strategy. The market may be undervaluing the combined businesses due to a lack of synergy between the parent and subsidiary. Besides getting rid of an unwanted subsidiary, seller typically receives cash, sometimes also securities or a combination of both. The proceeds from the sale are reinvested in the remaining business or distributed to Krishna Kant Vyas Page 4
the firms claim holders. Divestitures may trigger a substantial tax liability.
6 Spin offs
A spinoff occurs when a subsidiary becomes an independent entity. The parent firm distributes shares of the subsidiary to its shareholders through a stock dividend. Since this transaction is a dividend distribution, no cash is generated. In contrast to a divestiture, a spinoff does not generate any cash proceeds for the parent company. Also, since the spinoff involves a public listing of shares, it has higher transaction costs and takes longer time than a divestiture. Thus, spinoffs are unlikely to be used when a firm needs to finance growth or deals. After the spinoff, the subsidiary becomes a separate legal entity with a distinct management and board. Like carve-outs, spinoffs are usually about separating a healthy operation. In most cases, spinoffs unlock hidden shareholder value. For the parent company, it sharpens management focus.
7 Tracking Stocks
A tracking stock is a special type of stock issued by a publicly held company to track the value of one segment of that company. The stock allows the different segments of the company to be valued differently by investors. The company might issue a tracking stock so the market can value the new business separately from the old.
Page 5
Why would a firm issue a tracking stock rather than spinning-off or carving-out its fast growth business for shareholders? The company retains control over the subsidiary; the two businesses can continue to enjoy synergies and share marketing, administrative support functions, a headquarters and so on. Finally, and most importantly, if the tracking stock climbs in value, the parent company can use the tracking stock it owns to make acquisitions. Still, shareholders need to remember that tracking stocks are class B, meaning they don't grant shareholders the same voting rights as those of the main stock. Each share of tracking stock may have only a half or a quarter of a vote. In rare cases, holders of tracking stock have no vote at all. There are several ways to distribute tracking stock. It can be issued to current shareholders as a dividend or used as payment in an acquisition. The most common way, however, is to sell the tracking stock in a public offering, raising cash for the parent firm. Once the tracking stock is listed, the underlying division files separate financial statements with the SEC. Thus, tracking stock creates a type of quasi-pure play, where the tracked division files its own financial statements and has its own stock, while still being part of the diversified firm. Since tracking stock is an issue of the companys own stock, it has no tax implications.
8 Leveraged recapitalizations
A leveraged recapitalization (henceforth recap) is a significant payout to shareholders financed by new debt borrowed against the firms future cash flow. The company remains publicly traded, but with a substantially higher debt level. The cash distribution to shareholders is typically structured as a large, special onetime dividend. Alternatively, the distribution could be in the form of a share repurchase or exchange offer. Management often forfeits the cash distribution on their shareholdings and instead takes additional stock. Consequently, leveraged recaps typically result in a substantial increase in managerial equity ownership. A leveraged recapitalization triggers a tax liability at the investor level. The tax depends on how the payout to shareholders is structured. For a special dividend, the amount distributed from the firms retained earnings is taxed as a dividend. If the special dividend exceeds the retained earnings on the firms balance sheet, the remaining cash distribution is a return of capital, treated as a capital gain. If the recap is structured as a share repurchase, the entire distribution is taxed as a capital gain.
equity fund managed by an LBO sponsoror recently sometimes a consortium of funds. The sponsor raises debt to finance the majority of the purchase price and contributes an equity investment from the fund. The equity is injected into a shell company, which simultaneously borrows the debt and acquires the target. The sponsor relies on the companys cash flow, often supplemented by assets sales, to service the debt. The objective is to improve operating efficiency and grow revenue for a 35 year period before divesting the firm. Debt is paid down over time and all excess returns accrue to the equity holders. The exit may be in the form of an IPO, a sale to a strategic buyer, or a sale to another LBO fund. While an IPO typically generates a higher valuation, it could take several years for the LBO fund to entirely unwind its holdings through the public markets. A management buyout (MBO) is a leveraged buyout of a segment, a division or a subsidiary of a large corporation in which key corporate executives play a critical role. MBOs are generally smaller than traditional LBOs and, depending on the size of the transaction, a sponsor need not be involved. An LBO is financed with a mix of bank loans, high-yield debt, mezzanine debt, and private equity. The bank debt, which is often syndicated in the leveraged loan market, is secured and most senior in the capital structure. The bank debt has to be amortized before any other claimholders are paid off. At times, cash sweeps are common, requiring the firm to use any excess cash flow for accelerated amortization of the bank loans. Private equity is the most junior in the capital structure. It typically has voting rights but no dividends. This equity is raised from pension funds, endowments, insurance companies, and wealthy individuals into a fund managed by a private equity partnership (the sponsor).
a. Restructuring Pentagon of Copeland, Koller and Murrin [1990] b. The Potential and Resilience Evaluation (PARE) model of Crum and Goldberg [1998] c. Value Chain Model of Porters [1985] d. Value Network Model of Rappaport [1986]
restructuring pentagon framework for analyzing value creation. Their valuation framework based on an analysis of the companys free cash flow and key value. The value of a business is the sum of the value of assets in place and the value of growth opportunities. The value of assets in place is determined by the level of net operating profit after taxes (NOPAT), as well as the weighted average cost of capital (WACC). The value of growth opportunities is determined by the key value drivers of the rate of return on invested capital, the amount of new investment, the period of competitive advantage, the investment rate and the weighted average cost of capital. The most important key value drivers in this valuation framework are the rate of return on invested capital relative to the weighted average cost of capital and the amount the company invests in new capital. Understanding the value drivers helps to develop insight into the likely behavior of free cash flows and value creation in the future. The return on total invested capital indicates the overall performance of the company. The return on incremental invested capital also indicates whether new capital is creating value or not. The Copeland, Koller and Murrin [1990] model of restructuring also shows that internal and external restructuring activities are needed to create value in a business. One way to create value is to undertake internal improvements, i.e., increasing operating margins and sales growth, and decreasing working-capital requirements. By taking advantage of strategic and operating opportunities, the company can realize its potential value as a portfolio of assets. These are the myriad fine-tuning opportunities that arise from understanding the relationship between operating parameters of each business unit (key value drivers) and value creation. Another way of creating value is determining the value enhancement potential that arises from external opportunities, that is, shrinking the company via sell-offs, expanding it through acquisitions or both. Some business units, even though fine tuned, can be more valuable in alternative uses, and should be sold. Divestiture can enhance value to the seller which can then redeploy the cash received to improve its own core business. In acquisitions, combinations that provide real synergies can enhance value.
to investments that generate increment in net. The potential of a company depends on the innovation ability and the implementation capacity of the firm. The assessment of these two factors indicates the preferred position. If the position of company is strong in one of the dimensions and weak in the other, corrective action need to be focused on in the problem area. It the firm is weak in both innovation ability and implementation capacity, serious consideration might be given to liquidation. Management then needs to assess the companys resilience before deciding to liquidate a company. Resilience refers to the risk associated with the future cash flows. It is used as a surrogate concept of risk. Risk can be viewed as the hostile forces that erode the firms competitive position and perhaps even threat its continued existence. Two strategically significant dimensions of risk, focus on different aspects of this possible erosion: the vulnerability position and the reserve capacity of the firm. The resilience position of a company is assessed using the combination of the threat side-the vulnerability position-and the defensive side-the reserve capacity. The overall evaluation of the firm is done by assessing, the potential and resilience dimensions. Strong potential and strong resilience, according to Crum and Goldberg [1998], shows that the company is strong competitor and vigilance is required to maintain that position. On the other hand, low resilience and low potential shows that the management should consider liquidation or, at a minimum, severe restructuring. Creation Evaluation of a company in terms of its potential and resilience helps in identifying problems and indicates corrections needed to create value.
These five forces determine industry profitability because they influence the prices, costs and required investment of firms in an industry.
Page 9
The second basic determinant of a firms profitability is its relative position within its industry. Positioning determines whether a firms profitability is above or below the industry average. A firm that can position itself well may earn high rates of return even though industry structure is unfavorable and the average profitability is therefore modest. The fundamental basis of above average performance in the long run is sustainable competitive advantage. There are two basic types of competitive advantages: cost leadership and differentiation. A primary reason for pursuing forward, backward, and horizontal integration strategies is to gain cost leadership benefits. But cost leadership generally must be pursued in conjunction with differentiation. Summarizing we find that industry attractiveness and competitive advantage are principal sources of value creation. The more favorable these are, the more likely the company will create value.
Page 10