MERGER & ACQUISITIONS (M&A)

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Either sale or acquisition of a company, including merger procedure, is an important event in life and in career of a company and its leaders. There are all kinds of elements surrounding it: economic, juridical, tax, emotional to play attention to achieve success for our clients.

 

We put our efforts, either in M&A advising and consulting and sale and set in market of companies. We operate in assessment, tax advising, corporate juridical and contract advising, and have a wide expertise in national and international transactions, but for us it a must to be client close from the beginning to completion, but over all we follow him, advising and walking along with him, in circumstances that occur once transaction is over: tax events, contractual consequences, labour problems. We are close to our people.

  • Mergers and acquisitions (M&A) are complex, involving many parties.
  • Mergers and acquisitions involve many issues, including:
    • Corporate governance.
    • Form of payment.
    • Legal issues.
    • Contractual issues.
    • Regulatory approval.

M&A analysis requires the application of valuation tools to evaluate the M&A decision

DEFINITIONS

Parties to the acquisitions:
    • The target company (or target) is the company being acquired.
    • The acquiring company (or acquirer) is the company acquiring the target.
Classified based on endorsement of parties’ management:
    • A hostile takeover is when the target company board of directors objects to a takeover offer.
    • A friendly transaction is when the target company board of directors endorses the merger or acquisition offer.
Classified by the relatedness of business activities of the parties to the combination:
TYPE CHARACTERISTIC EXAMPLE
Horizontal merger Companies are in the same line of business, often competitors.

Walt Disney Company buys Lucasfilm (October 2012).

Vertical merger Companies are in the same line of production (e.g., supplier–customer). Google acquired Motorola Mobility Holdings (June 2012).
Conglomerate merger Companies are in unrelated lines of business. Berkshire Hathaway acquires Lubrizol (2011).
MOTIVES FOR MERGER
Creating Value
Synergy
Growth
Increasing market power
Acquiring unique capabilities or resources
Unlocking hidden value
Cross-Border Mergers Exploiting market imperfections
Overcoming adverse government policy
Technology transfer
Product differentiation
Following clients
Dubious Motives Diversification
Bootstrapping earnings
Managers’ personal incentives
Tax considerations

The motives for a merger are influenced, in part, by the industry’s stage in its life cycle.
Factors include:

    • Need for capital.
    • Need for resources.
    • Degree of competition and the number of competitors.
    • Growth opportunities (organic vs. external).
    • Opportunities for synergy.
TRANSACTION CHARACTERISTICS
Form of the Transaction

Stock purchase
Asset purchase
Method of Payment Cash
Securities
Combination of cash and securities
Attitude of Management Hostile
Friendly
FORM OF ACQUISITION
  • In a stock purchase, the acquirer provides cash, stock, or combination of cash and stock in exchange for the stock of the target firm.
    • A stock purchase needs shareholder approval.
    • Target shareholders are taxed on any gain.
    • Acquirer assumes target’s liabilities.
  • In an asset purchase, the acquirer buys the assets of the target firm, paying the target firm directly.
    • An asset purchase may not need shareholder approval.
    • Acquirer likely avoids assumption of liabilities.
WHO BENEFITS FROM MERGERS?
  • Mergers create value for the target company shareholders in the short run.
  • Acquirers tend to overpay in merger bids.
    • The transfer of wealth is from acquirer to target company shareholders.
    • Roll: Overpayment results from “hubris”
  • Acquirers tend to underperform in the long run.
    • They are unable to fully capture any synergies or other benefit from the merger.