Why would a company want to acquire another company?
A company would acquire another company if it believes it will earn a good return on its investment - either in the form of a literal ROI‚ or in terms of a higher EPS number‚ which appeals to shareholders.
There are several reasons why a buyer might believe this to be the case:
• The buyer wants to gain market share by buying a competitor.
• The buyer needs to grow quickly and sees an acquisition as a way to do that.
• The buyer believes the seller is undervalued.
• The buyer wants to acquire the seller’s customers so it can up-sell and cross-sell products and services to them.
• The buyer thinks the seller has a critical technology‚ intellectual property‚ or other “secret sauce” it can use to significantly enhance its business.
• The buyer believes it can achieve significant synergies and therefore make the deal accretive for its shareholders.
Walk me through a basic merger model.
What’s the difference between a merger and an acquisition?
Why would an acquisition be dilutive?
Is there a rule of thumb for calculating whether an acquisition will be accretive or dilutive?
YES:
• Cost of Cash = Foregone Interest on Cash * (1 - Buyer Tax Rate)
• Cost of Debt = Interest Rate on Debt * (1 - Buyer Tax Rate)
• Cost of Stock = Reciprocal of Buyer’s P/E Multiple (i.e. E/P or NI/Equity Value)
• Yield of Seller = Reciprocal of Seller’s P/E Multiple (ideally calculated using Purchase Price rather than the Seller’s Current Share Price)
Example: The buyer’s P/E multiple is 8x and the seller’s P/E multiple is 10x. The buyer’s int. rate on cash is 4%‚ and int. rate on debt is 8%. The buyer is paying with 20% cash‚ 20% debt‚ and 60% stock. The buyer’s tax rate is 40%:
• Cost of Cash = 4% * (1 - 40%) = 2.4%
• Cost of Debt = 8% * (1 - 40%) = 4.8%
• Cost of Stock = 1/8 = 12.5%
• Yield of Seller = 1/10 = 10%
• Weighted Average Cost = 20%(2.4%) + 20%(4.8%) + 60%(12.5%) = 8.9% < 10%
• Summary: Since Weighted Average Cost < Seller’s Yield‚ the deal is ACCRETIVE.
Wait a minute‚ though‚ does [the rule of thumb for determining whether an acquisition will be accretive or dilutive] work all the time?
A company with a higher P/E acquires one with a lower P/E - is this accretive or dilutive?
Why do we focus so much on accretion/dilution? Is EPS really that important? Are there cases where it’s not relevant?
How do you determine the Purchase Price for the target company in an acquisition?
All else being equal‚ which method would a company prefer to use when acquiring another company - cash‚ stock‚ or debt?
Assuming the buyer had unlimited resources‚ it would almost always prefer to use cash when buying another company. Why?
• Cash is cheaper than debt b/c int. rates on cash are usually under 5% whereas debt int. rates are almost always higher than that. Thus‚ foregone interest on cash is almost always LESS than the additional interest paid on debt for the same amount of cash or debt.
• Cash is almost always cheaper than stock b/c most companies P/E multiples are in the 10-20x range‚ which equals 5-10% for “Cost of Stock”
• Cash is also less risky than debt b/c there’s no chance the buyer might fail to raise sufficient funds from investors‚ or that the buyer might default.
• Cash is also less risky than stock b/c the buyer’s share price could change dramatically once the acquisition is announced.
Could there be cases where cash is actually more expensive than debt or stock in an acquisition?
If a company were capable of paying 100% in cash for another company‚ why would it choose NOT to do so?
How much debt could a company issue in a merger or acquisition?
When would a company be most likely to issue stock to acquire another company?
Let’s say that a buyer doesn’t have enough cash available to acquire the seller. How could it decide between raising debt‚ issuing stock‚ or some combination of those?
There’s no simple rule to decide - key factors include:
• The relative “cost” of both debt and stock: For example‚ if the company is trading at a higher P/E multiple it may be cheaper to issue stock (e.g. P/E of 20x = 5% cost‚ but debt at 10% interest = 10%*(1 - 40%) = 6% cost.
• Existing Debt: If the company already has a high debt balance‚ it likely can’t raise as much new debt.
• Shareholder dilution: Shareholders do not like the dilution that comes w/ issuing new stock‚ so companies try to minimize this.
• Expansion Plans: If the buyer expands‚ begins a huge R&D effort‚ or buys a factory in the future‚ it’s less likely to use cash and/or debt and more likely to issue stock so that it has enough funds available.
Let’s say that Company A buys Company B using 100% debt. Company B has a P/E multiple of 10x and Company A has a P/E multiple of 15x. What interest rate is required on the debt to make the deal dilutive?
Let’s go through another M&A scenario. Company A has a P/E of 10x‚ which is higher than the P/E of Company B. The interest rate on debt is 5%. If Company A acquires Company B and they both have 40% tax rates‚ should Company A use debt or stock for the most accretion?
This is a multi-part question. Let’s look at another M&A scenario:
• Company A: Enterprise Value of 100‚ Market Cap of 80‚ EBITDA of 10‚ Net Income of 4.
• Company B: Enterprise Value of 40‚ Market Cap of 40‚ EBITDA of 8‚ Net Income of 2.
First‚ Calculate the EV/EBITDA and P/E multiples for each one.
* Company B: EV/EBITDA = 40/8 = 5x; P/E = 40/2 = 20x
This is a multi-part question. Recall:
• Company A: EV of 100‚ Market Cap of 80‚ EBITDA of 10‚ NI of 4‚ EV/EBITDA = 10x‚ P/E = 20x
• Company B: EV of 40‚ Market Cap of 40‚ EBITDA of 8‚ NI of 2‚ EV/EBITDA = 5x‚ P/E = 20x
Company A decides to acquire Company B using 100% Cash. Company A does NOT pay any kind of premium to acquire Company B. What are the combined EBITDA and P/E multiples?
This is a multi-part question. Recall:
• Company A: EV of 100‚ Market Cap of 80‚ EBITDA of 10‚ NI of 4‚ EV/EBITDA = 10x‚ P/E = 20x
• Company B: EV of 40‚ Market Cap of 40‚ EBITDA of 8‚ NI of 2‚ EV/EBITDA = 5x‚ P/E = 20x
Now‚ let’s say that Company A instead uses 100% debt‚ at a 10% interest rate and 25% tax rate‚ to acquire Company B. Again‚ Company A pays no premium for Company B. What are the combined multiples?
This is a multi-part question. Recall:
• Company A: EV of 100‚ Market Cap of 80‚ EBITDA of 10‚ NI of 4‚ EV/EBITDA = 10x‚ P/E = 20x
• Company B: EV of 40‚ Market Cap of 40‚ EBITDA of 8‚ NI of 2‚ EV/EBITDA = 5x‚ P/E = 20x
What was the point of this multi-step scenario and these questions? What does it tell you about valuation multiples and M&A activity?
There are a few main takeaways from this exercise:
Why would a strategic acquirer typically be willing to pay more for a company than a private equity firm would?
B/c the strategic acquirer can realize revenue and cost synergies that the private equity firm cannot unless it combines the company with a complementary portfolio company. Those synergies make it easier for the strategic acquirer to pay a higher price and still realize a solid return on investment.
What are the effects of an acquisition?
Why do Goodwill & Other Intangibles get created in an acquisition?