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Mergers, Acquisitions,

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Mergers, Acquisitions, & Divestitures Reasons Types Tax Issues Non-Tax Issues Methods Tax Deductibility of Goodwill Reasons for Mergers/Acquisitions 1) To improve ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mergers, Acquisitions,


1
Mergers, Acquisitions, Divestitures
  • Reasons
  • Types
  • Tax Issues
  • Non-Tax Issues
  • Methods
  • Tax Deductibility of Goodwill

2
Reasons for Mergers/Acquisitions
  • 1) To improve economic efficiency
  • 2) To extend the power base of



    management
  • 3) To effect transfers of wealth between
    classes of stakeholders

3
Reasons for Divestitures
  • 1) To focus on core competencies
  • 2) To free managers of the divested business
    to focus on the divested firm
  • 3) To solve market mispricing
  • 4) To gain greater access to capital markets

4
Types of Mergers/Acquisitions
  • Freestanding companies can acquire
  • 1) Other freestanding companies
  • 2) Subsidiaries of other companies
  • Acquisitions can be structured to be
  • 1) Taxable (when the acquirer uses cash)
  • 2) Tax-free (when the acquirer uses mostly
    stock)

5
Types of Divestitures
  • Tax-Free Spin-off Involves the division of the
    parent corporation into two or more distinct
    corporations.
  • Equity Carve-out Involves the sale of a portion
    of a subsidiarys equity for cash.

6
Major Tax Issues
  • 1) Shareholder tax liabilities
  • 2) Effect on tax attributes
  • 3) Corporate-level tax effect of the merger,
    acquisition, or divestiture
  • 4) Change in the tax basis of the assets of the
    target or divested subsidiary
  • 5) Effect of leverage on mergers and
    acquisitions

7
Shareholder Tax Liabilities--Mergers/Acquisitions
  • If taxable Purchase price - Basis
    in stock Gain recognized by target
    shareholders
  • Requirement for a tax-free acquisition
  • Target shareholders must maintain a continuity of
    interest--50 of total consideration paid is
    acquiring-firm stock
  • Note Tax-free transactions can result in a
    taxable gain for target shareholders to the
    extent they receive cash!

8
Shareholder Tax Liabilities--Divestitures
  • Spin-off No taxable gain or loss recognized by
    the divesting corporations shareholders
  • Equity Carve-out No taxable gain or loss
    recognized by shareholders
  • Sale of Division or Subsidiary for Cash No
    taxable gain or loss recognized by the divesting
    corporations shareholders unless proceeds are
    distributed to them by the divesting corporation

9
Effect on Tax Attributes
10
Corporate-Level Tax Effect--Mergers/Acquisitions
  • If acquisition is accomplished through the
    purchase of assets in a taxable transaction, a
    taxable gain or loss is recognized by the target
    corporation
  • If acquisition is accomplished through the
    purchase of stock in either a taxable or tax-free
    transaction, no gain or loss is recognized at the
    corporation level

11
Corporate-Level Tax Effect--Divestitures
  • Subsidiary Sale Purchase price of
    stock or assets - Sellers basis in stock
    or assets Taxable gain (loss) recognized
    by seller
  • Equity Carve-out Generally does not result in a
    taxable gain or loss for the divesting
    corporation
  • Spin-off Since a spin-off is usually tax-free,
    no taxable gain is recognized under typical
    circumstances

12
Change in Tax Basis of Assets of the Target or
Divested Subsidiary
  • A step-up in the tax basis of assets of an
    acquired business to the purchase price creates
    increased future depreciation deductions, which
    provide valuable tax savings.
  • This is common in subsidiary sales, but
    acquisitions of freestanding C corporations are
    limited in this practice by the Tax Reform Act of
    1986.

13
Non-Tax Issues in Mergers, Acquisitions, and
Divestitures
  • Financial Reporting Costs
  • Purchase Accounting
  • Pooling of Interests Accounting
  • Transaction Costs
  • Contingent or Unrecorded Liabilities
  • Managerial and/or Control Issues
  • FASB eliminated this method after 2001

14
Five Basic Methods to Acquire a Freestanding C
Corporation
  • As taxable purchase of Cs (for C Corp) assets
  • As taxable purchase of Cs stock followed by an
    I.R.C. 338 election
  • As taxable purchase of Cs stock not followed by
    an I.R.C. 338 election
  • As acquisition of Cs stock in a tax-free
    exchange
  • As acquisition of Cs assets in a tax-free
    exchange

15
Four Methods to Divest a Subsidiary or Line of
Business
  • Subsidiary Stock Sale
  • Subsidiary Asset Sale
  • Spin-off
  • Equity Carve-out

16
Tax Deductibility of Goodwill Under I.R.C. 197
  • I.R.C. 197 makes goodwill tax-deductible.
  • However, goodwill is only tax-deductible when the
    tax basis of the acquired firms assets is
    stepped up.
  • This occurs frequently in subsidiary sales and in
    acquisitions of conduits but not in acquisitions
    of freestanding C corporations.

17
Structures Employed in Acquisitionsof
Freestanding C Corpsand Tax Implications
18
Divestiture Methods and Tax Implications
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