Title: Corporate Restructuring
1Corporate Restructuring
- By
- Bharat Sai Kiran
- Ashok Lahoty
2 Forms of Corporate Restructuring
- Expansion
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Tender Offers
- Asset Acquisition
- Joint Ventures
- Contraction
- Spin offs
- Split offs
- Divestitures
- Equity carve-outs
- Assets sale
- Corporate Control
- Takeover defenses
- Share repurchases
- Exchange offers
- Proxy contests
3Expansion
- Expansion is a form of restructuring, which
results in an increase in the size of the firm.
It can take place in the form of a merger,
acquisition, tender offer, asset acquisition or a
joint venture.
4Mergers
- Merger is defined as a combination of two or more
companies into a single company - Amalgamation is the type of merger that involves
fusion of two or more companies. After the
amalgamation, the two companies loose their
individual identity and a new company comes into
existence. This form is generally applied to
combinations of firms of equal size.
A
B
AB
Brooke Bond Lipton India Ltd
Brooke Bond India Ltd
Lipton India Ltd
5This would also be by far the most valuable in
the business, with a market capitalization of
about 135 billion. The companies described the
deal as a merger, valuing it at 140 billion, but
the mechanism is essentially a stock swap, with
Travelers paying 70 billion for Citi's shares.
Travelers will issue 2.5 shares for each Citicorp
share, and current stockholders of each company
will own about half of the new enterprise.
- 2nd Largest Commercial Bank in USA
- Worlds Leading distributor of credit cards
- Issuing 60 Million Bank Cards
- Financial conglomerate that offers insurance and
investment banking services. - 698 billion of assets
6Acquisition
- A corporate action where an acquiring company
makes a bid for an acquiree. If the target
company is publicly traded, the acquiring company
will make an offer for the outstanding shares - Absorption is a type of merger that involves
fusion of a small company with a large company.
After the merger the smaller company ceases to
exist.
A
A
B
Oriental Bank Of Commerce
Global Trust Bank
Oriental Bank Of Commerce
7Joint Venture
- Cooperation between two or more companies in
which the purpose is to achieve jointly a
specified business goal. Upon the attainment of
the goal, the joint venture is terminated. A
joint venture, which is typically limited to one
project, differs from a partnership that can work
jointly on many projects.
A
B
AB
Honda
Hero Honda
Hero Motor Corp
8Tender Offer
- Tender offer is a corporate finance term denoting
a type of takeover bid. The tender offer is a
public, open offer or invitation (usually
announced in a newspaper advertisement) by a
prospective acquirer to all stockholders of a
publicly traded corporation (the target
corporation) to tender their stock for sale at a
specified price during a specified time, subject
to the tendering of a minimum and To induce the
shareholders of the target company to sell, the
acquirer's offer price usually includes a premium
over the current market price of the target
company's shares. maximum number of shares.
B
A
C
D
E
Public Offer
F
G
H
I
J
K
9Example ---- Tender Offer
- Flextronics International giving an open market
offer at Rs. 548 for 20 of paid up capital in
Hughes Software Systems. - AstraZenca Pharmaceuticals AB, a Swedish firm,
announced an open offer to acquire 8.4 stake in
AstraZenca Pharma India at a floor price of Rs.
825 per share.
10Asset Acquisition
- A buyout strategy in which key assets of the
target company are purchased, rather than its
shares. These assets may be tangible assets like
a manufacturing unit or intangible assets like
brands. This is particularly popular in the case
of bankrupt companies, who might otherwise have
valuable assets which could be of use to other
companies, but whose financing situation makes
the company un-attractive for buyers
A
A
B
11Examples ---- Asset Acquistion
- The acquisition of the cement division of Tata
Steel by Laffarge of France. Laffarge acquired
only the 1.7 million tonne cement plant and its
related assets from Tata Steel. - The asset being purchased may also be intangible
in nature. For example, Coca-Cola paid Rs.170
crore to Parle to acquire its soft drinks brands
like Thums Up, Limca, Gold Spot etc. - Google acquired the Motorola for its new open
source operating system Android for the need of
Motorolas 17000 patents out of which Google
needs around 6000 patents. - M3M India acquired DLF 28- Acre Plot in Gurgaon
as non core assets for Rs 440 Cr.
12 Forms of Corporate Restructuring
- Expansion
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Tender Offers
- Asset Acquisition
- Joint Ventures
- Contraction
- Spin offs
- Split offs
- Divestitures
- Equity carve-outs
- Corporate Control
- Takeover defenses
- Share repurchases
- Exchange offers
- Proxy contests
13Contraction
- Contraction is a form of restructuring, which
results in a reduction in the size of the firm.
It can take place in the form of a - Spin-off,
- Split off,
- Divestiture
- Equity carve-out.
14Spin-off
- A Company distributes all the shares it owns in a
subsidiary to its own shareholders implying
creation of two separate public companies with
same proportional equity ownership. Sometimes, a
division is set up as a separate company. Hence,
the stockholders proportional ownership of shares
is the same in the new legal subsidiary as well
as the parent firm. The new entity has its own
management and is run independently from the
parent company. A spin-off does not result in an
infusion of cash to parent company.
Shareholders of Company A also has shares of
Company B
Shareholders of Company A
A
B
A
B
B
Subsidiary Company of A
15Examples ----- Spin-off
- Air-India has formed a separate company named
Air-India Engineering Services Ltd., by
spinning-off its engineering division. - Guidant was spun out of Eli Lilly and Company in
1994, formed from Lilly's Medical Devices and
Diagnostics Division. - Agilent Technologies spun out of Hewlett-Packard
in 1999, formed from HP's former
test-and-measurement equipment division. - Cenovus Energy was spun out of Encana Corporation
in 2009 - Shugart Associates was a spin-out of IBM.
16Split- off
- In a split off, a new company is created to
takeover the operations of an existing division
or unit. A portion of existing shareholders
receives stock in a subsidiary (new company) in
exchange for parent company stock Hence the
shareholding of the new entity does not reflect
the shareholding of the parent firm. A split-off
does not result in any cash inflow to the parent
company
Shareholders of Company A
Shareholders of Company A
Shareholders of Company B
Shareholders of Company A
A
D
New Company
A
B
F
E
D
C
F
E
C
D
Operations of Company A
17Split-UP
- In a split-up the entire firm is broken up in
series of spin-offs, so that the parent company
no longer exists and only the new off springs
survive. A split-up involves the creation of a
new class of stock for each of the parents
operating subsidiaries, paying current
shareholders a dividend of each new class of
stock, and then dissolving the parent company.
Shareholders of Company A will get shares of
Shareholders of Company A
A
A
E
D
C
B
B
C
D
E
Subsidiary Companies of A
18Examples ------ Split-UP
- The Andhra Pradesh State Electricity Board
(APSEB) was split-up in 1999 as part of the Power
Sector reforms. The power generation business and
the transmission and distribution business has
transferred to two separate companies called
APGENCO and APTRANSCO respectively. APSEB ceased
to exist as a result of split-up.
19Divestitures
- A divestiture is a sale of a portion of the firm
to an outside party, generally resulting in an
infusion of cash to the parent. A firm may choose
to sell an undervalued operation that it
determines to be non-strategic or unrelated to
the core business and to use the proceeds of the
sale to fund investments in potentially higher
return opportunities.
Some Operations of A
Operations of A
Cash
B
A
Operations
20Equity Carve Out
- A parent has substantial holding in a subsidiary.
It sells part of that holding to the public.
"Public" does not necessarily mean a shareholder
of the parent company. Thus the asset item
"Subsidiary Investment" in the balance-sheet of
the parent company is replaced with cash. Parent
company keeps control of the subsidiary but gets
cash.
A
Investors
Issues IPO of B 20 Shares of B
CCashA
B
20 Shares of Company B
Subsidiary Company of A
21 Forms of Corporate Restructuring
- Expansion
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Tender Offers
- Asset Acquisition
- Joint Ventures
- Contraction
- Spin offs
- Split offs
- Divestitures
- Equity carve-outs
- Assets sale
- Corporate Control
- Takeover defenses
- Share repurchases
- Exchange offers
- Proxy contests
22Corporate Control
- Firms can also restructure without necessarily
acquiring new firms or divesting existing
corporations. Corporate control involves
obtaining control over the management of the
firm. Control is the process by which managers
influence other members of an organization to
implement the organizational strategies
23Takeover Defenses
- Takeover defenses, both pre-bid and post-bid have
been resorted to by the companies. - Pre Bid This defense is also called preventive
defense it is employed to prevent a sudden,
unexpected hostile bid from gaining control of
the company. - Post Bid When preventive takeover defenses are
not successful in fending off an unwanted bid,
the target implements post-bid or active defenses - These takeover defenses intend to change the
corporate control position of the promoters.
24Preventive Measures
Stock Market
Buy Back Of its Shares at Premium Price
A
Good Bye, Sweet Kisses to Share Holders
I Want to Acquire You
Acquire me Plzzzz
A
B
C
No Thanks C is Acquiring me
Ok, I will pay premium to ur Share Holders
25Contd
- White Squire
- Recapitalization
I Want to Acquire You
Acquire me Plzzzz
A
B
C
B
No Thanks C is Acquiring me
Ok, I will Acquire Lesser part from U.
Buy Back Of its Shares at Premium Price
Banks Or Investors
Stock Market
A
Lending Money
OR
Paying More as Dividends
A is acting as its Own White Knight
26 Forms of Corporate Restructuring
- Expansion
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Tender Offers
- Asset Acquisition
- Joint Ventures
- Contraction
- Spin offs
- Split offs
- Divestitures
- Equity carve-outs
- Assets sale
- Corporate Control
- Takeover defenses
- Share repurchases
- Exchange offers
- Proxy contests