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Defensive & Offensive Takeover Strategies 
PART 1 
PGDM TRIMESTER V: STRATEGIC FINANCING 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Introduction 
• Not all M&A are welcome 
• Various devices were developed to 
defend against unwelcome proposals 
during the 1980s 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
India 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Strategic Aspect of M&A 
• Management and board of company 
must continuously reassess competitive 
environment 
• All forms of M&A activities may impact 
firm both as threats and opportunities 
– Main developments in industry 
– Opportunities for adding critical capabilities 
to participate in attractive growth areas 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Opportunities for rolling-up fragmented 
industries into stronger firms 
– Improving or deteriorating sales to capacity 
relationships in industry 
– Impact of consolidating mergers on capacity 
and cost structure 
– Enhanced capabilities of competitors as a 
result of their merger activity 
– Preemptive moves 
– Responses to takeover bids 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
TAKEOVER 
• Takeover, an inorganic corporate 
growth device whereby one company 
acquires control over another company, 
usually by purchasing all or a majority 
of its shares. 
• Takeover implies acquisition of control 
of a company, which is already 
registered, through the purchase or 
exchange of shares. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
TYPES OF TO 
• Friendly Takeover: Friendly takeover is with the consent of taken 
over company. There is an agreement between the management of two 
companies through negotiations and the takeover bid may be with the 
consent of majority or all shareholders of the target company and hence 
is also called Negotiated Takeover. 
• Hostile Takeover: When an acquirer company does not offer the 
target company the proposal to acquire its undertaking but silently and 
unilaterally pursues efforts to gain control against the wishes of existing 
management. 
• Bail Out Takeover: Takeover of a financially sick company by a 
profit earning company to bail out the former. There are several 
advantages for a profit making company to takeover a sick company. 
The price would be very attractive as creditors, mostly banks and 
financial institutions having a charge on the industrial assets, would like 
to recover to the extent possible. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
SEBI GUIDELINES FOR TO BIDS 
• SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares & TO) Regulations 
2011, require acquirers to make bids for acquisition of 
certain level of holdings subject to certain conditions. A 
takeover bid is required to be introduced through a public 
announcement through newspapers in cases: 
(a) for acquisition of 25% or more of the shares or voting rights; 
(b) for acquiring additional shares or voting rights to the extent 
of 5% of the voting rights in any financial year ending on 31st 
March if such person already holds not less than 25% but 
not more than 75% or 90% of the shares or voting rights in a 
company as the case may be; 
(c) for acquiring control over a company. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive or Hostile 
Takeover Strategies 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive Strategy 1 
• Street Sweep: An investment strategy 
in which large amounts of a target 
company's stock are quickly purchased. 
Also called market sweep. After 
amassing a large amount of shares, an 
open bid is made. 
• Usually the target firm has no choice 
but to give in. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive Strategy 2 
• Bear Hug: An offer made by acquirer to 
buy the shares of target for a much 
higher per-share price than what that 
company is worth. The target company's 
management is essentially forced to 
accept the generous premium as it is 
legally obligated to look out for the best 
interests of its shareholders. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive Strategy 3 
• Dawn Raid: Acquirer buys a substantial 
amount of shares as soon as the stock 
market opens for trading. It does this 
through stock brokers in order to mask 
its identity & intention. Usually prevalent 
in UK. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive Strategy 4 
• Saturday Night Special: A sudden 
attempt by one company to take over 
another by making a public tender offer 
over the weekends. Typical in US. (This 
is controlled now as any purchase of 
5% or more of equity must be disclosed 
to the regulator) 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Offensive Strategy 5 
• Lady Macbeth: A corporate-takeover 
strategy with which a third party poses as 
a white knight to gain trust, but then turns 
around and joins with the unfriendly 
bidders. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
SCOUTING FOR A TARGET FIRM 
– low P/E ratio 
– Low stock price in relation to replacement cost 
of assets or potential earning power 
– Highly liquid balance sheet with large amounts 
of excess cash, unused debt capacity, etc. 
– Good cash flows relative to current stock prices 
– Subsidiaries or properties that could be sold off 
without significantly impairing cash flows 
– Relatively small stockholdings under control of 
incumbent management 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Combinations of these factors can 
simultaneously make a target firm an 
attractive investment & facilitate its 
financing 
• Firm's assets can be used as collateral 
for acquirer's borrowing 
• Target's cash flows from operations 
and divestitures can be used to repay 
loans 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Reasons for Defensive Strategies 
– Target is resisting to get a better price 
– Management of target judges that 
company will perform better on its own 
– Management is seeking to entrench itself 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
HOW DOES A COMPANY 
DEFEND ITSELF FROM A 
HOSTILE TAKEOVER? 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
(I)Financial Defenses 
– Increase debt — use borrowed funds to 
• Repurchase equity 
• Concentrate management's percentage holdings 
– Increase dividends 
– Loan covenants structured to force 
acceleration of repayment in event of takeover 
– Liquidate securities portfolio 
– Decrease excess cash 
• Invest in positive net present value projects 
• Return to shareholders in dividends or share 
repurchases 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Excess liquidity could be used to acquire 
other firms 
– Divest subsidiaries that can be eliminated 
without impairing cash flows; or spin-offs to 
avoid large cash inflows 
– Divest low-profit operations 
– Undervalued assets should be sold 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
(II) Corporate Restructuring and 
Reorganization 
• Reorganization of assets 
– Asset acquisitions can be used to block 
takeovers 
• Dilute ownership position of bidder by using 
equity in acquisitions 
• Create antitrust problems for bidder 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Reorganizing financial claims 
• Debt-for-equity exchanges — increase leverage 
to levels unacceptable to bidder 
• Dual-class recapitalizations — increase voting 
powers of insider groups to levels that would 
enable them to block tender offers 
• Leveraged recapitalizations/ Leveraged cash-out 
— outsiders (shareholders) receive a large one-time 
cash dividend and insiders (mgt. & 
employees) get new shares instead of dividend. 
The cash dividend is financed through borrowed 
funds – senior bank debt or subordinated 
debentures. 
• ESOPs can be used to decrease voting shares 
available for tender 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Target firm may look for international partner 
– Share repurchase can be used to defend 
against takeovers 
• Increase ownership of insiders 
• Low reservation price shareholders can be 
bought out — higher tender offer price needed 
for bid to succeed 
– Proxy contest — aim is to change control 
group and make performance improvements 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
(III) Defensive Strategies 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 1 
• Golden Parachute: discourages an 
unwanted takeover by offering lucrative 
benefits (bonuses, stock options, liberal 
severance pay) to the current top 
executives, who may lose their job if 
their company is taken over by another 
firm. Golden parachutes can be worth 
millions of dollars and can cost the 
acquiring firm a lot of money. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 2 
Greenmail 
• Represents targeted repurchase of 
large block of stock (that raider has 
cornered) from specified shareholders 
at premium to end hostile takeover 
threat. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 3 
• Standstill agreement 
–Voluntary contract in which raider 
agrees not to make further investments 
in target company during specified 
period of time 
– If no targeted repurchase is made, large 
block-holder agrees not to further 
increase in ownership percentage of the 
firm 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 4 
Pac Man defense 
– Target firm makes a counteroffer for bidder firm 
– Rarely used 
– Effective if target much larger than bidder 
– Implies target finds combination desirable but 
seeks control of surviving entity 
– Extremely costly 
• Could involve devastating financial effects for both 
firms, especially if large amount of debt used to 
purchase shares 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 5 
White Knight 
–Target company chooses another 
company with which it prefers to be 
combined 
–Alternative company preferred by target 
because of : 
• Greater compatibility 
• New bidder may promise not to break 
up target or engage in massive 
restructuring 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Defensive Strategy 6 
White Squire 
– Modified form of white knight defense in 
which the white squire does not acquire 
control of target 
– Target sells block of its stock to third party 
(white squire) it considers to be friendly 
– Often accompanied by standstill agreement 
• Limits amount of additional target stock white 
squire can purchase for specified period of time 
• Restricts sale of its target stock, usually giving 
right of first refusal to target 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– White squire often receives in return 
• Seat on target board 
• Generous dividend and/or 
• Discount on target shares 
– Preferred stock usually used in white 
squire transactions because it enables 
Board to tailor characteristics of stock as 
described 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
(IV) Antitakeover Amendments 
• Anti-takeover amendments to firm's 
corporate charter generally impose 
new conditions on transfer of 
managerial control of firm — "shark 
repellents” 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Anti-TO Amendment 1 
• Supermajority amendments 
– Require shareholder approval by at least 
2/3rd vote (even as much as 90%) for all 
transactions involving change in control 
– Involve "board-out" clause that gives board 
power to determine when and if 
supermajority provisions will be in effect 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Anti-TO Amendment 2 
• Fair-price amendments 
– Supermajority provisions with board-out 
clause and additional clause waiving 
supermajority requirement if fair price is 
paid by bidder for all purchased shares 
– Fair price — highest market price of target 
during a past specified period 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Anti-TO Amendment 3 
• Staggered or Classified boards 
– It delays effective transfer of control following TO 
– Management's rationale is to assure continuity of 
policy and experience 
Eg: 1/3rd of board stands for election to 3-year term each year 
• Reduce effectiveness of cumulative voting because 
greater shareholder vote is required to elect single 
Director 
• Directors are removable only due to a cause 
• Limited number of directors to prevent "packing" 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Anti-TO Amendment 1 
Poison Pills 
– Creation of securities carrying special 
rights exercisable by triggering event such 
as accumulation of specified percentage of 
target shares or announcement of tender 
offer 
– Make acquisition of control of target firm 
more costly 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Can be adopted by board without 
shareholders' approval 
– Poison pill adoptions often submitted to 
shareholders for ratification even though 
not required to do so 
– Use of poison pills requires justification to 
be upheld by courts — adoption of poison 
pills in the best interest of shareholders — 
"business judgment rule" 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
• Types of Poison Pill plans 
– Flip-over plans 
• Bargain purchase of bidder's shares at some 
trigger point 
• Weakness: If rights are exercisable only when 
bidder obtains 100% of company stock, bidder 
may buy just over 50% to obtain control 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
– Flip-in plans 
• Bargain purchase of target's shares at some 
trigger point 
• More widely used than flip-over plans 
• Ownership flip-in provision allows rights holder 
to purchase shares of target at a discount if 
acquirer exceeds a shareholding limit — rights 
of bidder who triggered pill become void 
• Some plans waive flip-in provision if acquisition 
is cash tender offer for all outstanding shares 
(defend against two-tier offers) 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Historical cases of Takeovers 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Era of Takeovers may begin 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
End of part 1 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
DIVESTITURE 
PART 2 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
DIVESTITURE/DEMERGER 
• It is a form of Corporate Restructuring which 
involves the sale of only some assets of the 
firm – such as a plant, division, product line, 
subsidiary, etc. 
• For the seller, Divestiture causes contraction 
in size, but not necessarily in profits. In fact, 
Divestiture is undertaken to part with loss-making 
or low revenue yielding business to 
enhance overall Corporate value. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Strategic Rationale 
• Unlocking hidden value – Establish a public market valuation for undervalued assets 
and create a pure-play entity that is transparent and easier to value 
• Un-diversification – Divest non-core businesses and sharpen strategic focus when direct 
sale to a strategic or financial buyer is either not compelling or not possible 
• Institutional sponsorship – Promote equity research coverage and ownership by 
sophisticated institutional investors, either of which tend to validate Spin Co as a standalone 
business 
• Public currency – Create a public currency for acquisitions and stock-based 
compensation programs 
• Motivating management – Improve performance by better aligning management 
incentives with SpinCo's performance (using SpinCo, rather than ParentCo, stock-based 
awards), creating direct accountability to public shareholders, and increasing transparency 
into management performance 
• Eliminating dissynergies – Reduce bureaucracy and give SpinCo management 
complete autonomy 
• Anti-trust – Break up a business in response to anti-trust concerns 
• Corporate defense – Divest "crown jewel" assets to make a hostile takeover of ParentCo 
less attractive 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
DEMERGER 
The demerged company sells and transfers one or more of its undertakings to 
the resulting company for an agreed consideration. 
The resulting company issues its shares at the agreed exchange ratio to the 
shareholders of the demerged company. 
Demerger might take place for various reasons – 
• a conglomerate carrying out various activities might transfer one or more 
of its existing activities to a new company to give effect to rationalization or 
specialization in the manufacturing process; 
• or such transfer might be of a less successful part of the undertaking to 
the newly formed company, 
• or demerger may be result of the family owned properties of the company 
transferring to the new companies formed by the different family members 
to carry on different activities etc. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Demerger of L&T 
to concentrate 
on infrastructure, engineering, energy & turnkey businesses 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
SLUMP SALE 
A company sells or disposes of the whole or substantially the whole 
of its undertaking for a predetermined lump sum consideration. 
In a slump sale, an acquiring company may not be interested in 
buying the whole company, but only one of its divisions or a 
running undertaking which may be on a going concern basis. 
The sale is made for a lump sum price, without values being 
assigned to the 
individual assets and liabilities transferred. The business to be hived-off 
is transferred from the transferor company to an existing or a 
new company. A "Business Transfer Agreement" (Agreement) is 
drafted containing the terms and conditions of transfer. 
The agreement provides for transfer by the seller company to the 
buyer company, its business as a going concern with all 
immovable and movable properties, at the agreed consideration. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Spin-Offs 
• In a spin-off, the parent company (ParentCo) distributes to 
its existing shareholders new shares in a subsidiary, 
thereby creating a separate legal entity with its own 
management team and board of directors. 
• The distribution is conducted pro-rata, such that each 
existing shareholder receives stock of the subsidiary in 
proportion to the amount of parent company stock already 
held. No cash changes hands, and the shareholders of the 
original parent company become the shareholders of the 
newly spun company. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Spin-Off by eBay 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Split-Up 
• A method of demerger involving the 
breakup of the entire company into a 
series of newly created legal entities, so 
that the parent firm no longer exists and 
only the new off-spring survive. 
• Smaller, hence logistically more 
convenient to manage and hence liable 
to enhance efficiency & performance. 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Split-up 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in
Thank you! 
firdaus@icbm.ac.in

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CF_5 UNIT2 OFFENSIVE & DEFENSIVE STRATEGIES

  • 1. Defensive & Offensive Takeover Strategies PART 1 PGDM TRIMESTER V: STRATEGIC FINANCING firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 2. Introduction • Not all M&A are welcome • Various devices were developed to defend against unwelcome proposals during the 1980s firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 4. Strategic Aspect of M&A • Management and board of company must continuously reassess competitive environment • All forms of M&A activities may impact firm both as threats and opportunities – Main developments in industry – Opportunities for adding critical capabilities to participate in attractive growth areas firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 5. – Opportunities for rolling-up fragmented industries into stronger firms – Improving or deteriorating sales to capacity relationships in industry – Impact of consolidating mergers on capacity and cost structure – Enhanced capabilities of competitors as a result of their merger activity – Preemptive moves – Responses to takeover bids firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 6. TAKEOVER • Takeover, an inorganic corporate growth device whereby one company acquires control over another company, usually by purchasing all or a majority of its shares. • Takeover implies acquisition of control of a company, which is already registered, through the purchase or exchange of shares. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 7. TYPES OF TO • Friendly Takeover: Friendly takeover is with the consent of taken over company. There is an agreement between the management of two companies through negotiations and the takeover bid may be with the consent of majority or all shareholders of the target company and hence is also called Negotiated Takeover. • Hostile Takeover: When an acquirer company does not offer the target company the proposal to acquire its undertaking but silently and unilaterally pursues efforts to gain control against the wishes of existing management. • Bail Out Takeover: Takeover of a financially sick company by a profit earning company to bail out the former. There are several advantages for a profit making company to takeover a sick company. The price would be very attractive as creditors, mostly banks and financial institutions having a charge on the industrial assets, would like to recover to the extent possible. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 8. SEBI GUIDELINES FOR TO BIDS • SEBI (Substantial Acquisition of Shares & TO) Regulations 2011, require acquirers to make bids for acquisition of certain level of holdings subject to certain conditions. A takeover bid is required to be introduced through a public announcement through newspapers in cases: (a) for acquisition of 25% or more of the shares or voting rights; (b) for acquiring additional shares or voting rights to the extent of 5% of the voting rights in any financial year ending on 31st March if such person already holds not less than 25% but not more than 75% or 90% of the shares or voting rights in a company as the case may be; (c) for acquiring control over a company. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 9. Offensive or Hostile Takeover Strategies firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 10. Offensive Strategy 1 • Street Sweep: An investment strategy in which large amounts of a target company's stock are quickly purchased. Also called market sweep. After amassing a large amount of shares, an open bid is made. • Usually the target firm has no choice but to give in. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 11. Offensive Strategy 2 • Bear Hug: An offer made by acquirer to buy the shares of target for a much higher per-share price than what that company is worth. The target company's management is essentially forced to accept the generous premium as it is legally obligated to look out for the best interests of its shareholders. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 12. Offensive Strategy 3 • Dawn Raid: Acquirer buys a substantial amount of shares as soon as the stock market opens for trading. It does this through stock brokers in order to mask its identity & intention. Usually prevalent in UK. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 13. Offensive Strategy 4 • Saturday Night Special: A sudden attempt by one company to take over another by making a public tender offer over the weekends. Typical in US. (This is controlled now as any purchase of 5% or more of equity must be disclosed to the regulator) firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 14. Offensive Strategy 5 • Lady Macbeth: A corporate-takeover strategy with which a third party poses as a white knight to gain trust, but then turns around and joins with the unfriendly bidders. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 15. SCOUTING FOR A TARGET FIRM – low P/E ratio – Low stock price in relation to replacement cost of assets or potential earning power – Highly liquid balance sheet with large amounts of excess cash, unused debt capacity, etc. – Good cash flows relative to current stock prices – Subsidiaries or properties that could be sold off without significantly impairing cash flows – Relatively small stockholdings under control of incumbent management firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 16. Combinations of these factors can simultaneously make a target firm an attractive investment & facilitate its financing • Firm's assets can be used as collateral for acquirer's borrowing • Target's cash flows from operations and divestitures can be used to repay loans firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 17. Reasons for Defensive Strategies – Target is resisting to get a better price – Management of target judges that company will perform better on its own – Management is seeking to entrench itself firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 18. HOW DOES A COMPANY DEFEND ITSELF FROM A HOSTILE TAKEOVER? firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 19. (I)Financial Defenses – Increase debt — use borrowed funds to • Repurchase equity • Concentrate management's percentage holdings – Increase dividends – Loan covenants structured to force acceleration of repayment in event of takeover – Liquidate securities portfolio – Decrease excess cash • Invest in positive net present value projects • Return to shareholders in dividends or share repurchases firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 20. – Excess liquidity could be used to acquire other firms – Divest subsidiaries that can be eliminated without impairing cash flows; or spin-offs to avoid large cash inflows – Divest low-profit operations – Undervalued assets should be sold firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 21. (II) Corporate Restructuring and Reorganization • Reorganization of assets – Asset acquisitions can be used to block takeovers • Dilute ownership position of bidder by using equity in acquisitions • Create antitrust problems for bidder firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 22. – Reorganizing financial claims • Debt-for-equity exchanges — increase leverage to levels unacceptable to bidder • Dual-class recapitalizations — increase voting powers of insider groups to levels that would enable them to block tender offers • Leveraged recapitalizations/ Leveraged cash-out — outsiders (shareholders) receive a large one-time cash dividend and insiders (mgt. & employees) get new shares instead of dividend. The cash dividend is financed through borrowed funds – senior bank debt or subordinated debentures. • ESOPs can be used to decrease voting shares available for tender firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 23. – Target firm may look for international partner – Share repurchase can be used to defend against takeovers • Increase ownership of insiders • Low reservation price shareholders can be bought out — higher tender offer price needed for bid to succeed – Proxy contest — aim is to change control group and make performance improvements firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 24. (III) Defensive Strategies firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 25. Defensive Strategy 1 • Golden Parachute: discourages an unwanted takeover by offering lucrative benefits (bonuses, stock options, liberal severance pay) to the current top executives, who may lose their job if their company is taken over by another firm. Golden parachutes can be worth millions of dollars and can cost the acquiring firm a lot of money. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 26. Defensive Strategy 2 Greenmail • Represents targeted repurchase of large block of stock (that raider has cornered) from specified shareholders at premium to end hostile takeover threat. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 27. Defensive Strategy 3 • Standstill agreement –Voluntary contract in which raider agrees not to make further investments in target company during specified period of time – If no targeted repurchase is made, large block-holder agrees not to further increase in ownership percentage of the firm firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 28. Defensive Strategy 4 Pac Man defense – Target firm makes a counteroffer for bidder firm – Rarely used – Effective if target much larger than bidder – Implies target finds combination desirable but seeks control of surviving entity – Extremely costly • Could involve devastating financial effects for both firms, especially if large amount of debt used to purchase shares firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 29. Defensive Strategy 5 White Knight –Target company chooses another company with which it prefers to be combined –Alternative company preferred by target because of : • Greater compatibility • New bidder may promise not to break up target or engage in massive restructuring firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 30. Defensive Strategy 6 White Squire – Modified form of white knight defense in which the white squire does not acquire control of target – Target sells block of its stock to third party (white squire) it considers to be friendly – Often accompanied by standstill agreement • Limits amount of additional target stock white squire can purchase for specified period of time • Restricts sale of its target stock, usually giving right of first refusal to target firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 31. – White squire often receives in return • Seat on target board • Generous dividend and/or • Discount on target shares – Preferred stock usually used in white squire transactions because it enables Board to tailor characteristics of stock as described firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 32. (IV) Antitakeover Amendments • Anti-takeover amendments to firm's corporate charter generally impose new conditions on transfer of managerial control of firm — "shark repellents” firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 33. Anti-TO Amendment 1 • Supermajority amendments – Require shareholder approval by at least 2/3rd vote (even as much as 90%) for all transactions involving change in control – Involve "board-out" clause that gives board power to determine when and if supermajority provisions will be in effect firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 34. Anti-TO Amendment 2 • Fair-price amendments – Supermajority provisions with board-out clause and additional clause waiving supermajority requirement if fair price is paid by bidder for all purchased shares – Fair price — highest market price of target during a past specified period firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 35. Anti-TO Amendment 3 • Staggered or Classified boards – It delays effective transfer of control following TO – Management's rationale is to assure continuity of policy and experience Eg: 1/3rd of board stands for election to 3-year term each year • Reduce effectiveness of cumulative voting because greater shareholder vote is required to elect single Director • Directors are removable only due to a cause • Limited number of directors to prevent "packing" firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 36. Anti-TO Amendment 1 Poison Pills – Creation of securities carrying special rights exercisable by triggering event such as accumulation of specified percentage of target shares or announcement of tender offer – Make acquisition of control of target firm more costly firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 37. – Can be adopted by board without shareholders' approval – Poison pill adoptions often submitted to shareholders for ratification even though not required to do so – Use of poison pills requires justification to be upheld by courts — adoption of poison pills in the best interest of shareholders — "business judgment rule" firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 38. • Types of Poison Pill plans – Flip-over plans • Bargain purchase of bidder's shares at some trigger point • Weakness: If rights are exercisable only when bidder obtains 100% of company stock, bidder may buy just over 50% to obtain control firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 39. – Flip-in plans • Bargain purchase of target's shares at some trigger point • More widely used than flip-over plans • Ownership flip-in provision allows rights holder to purchase shares of target at a discount if acquirer exceeds a shareholding limit — rights of bidder who triggered pill become void • Some plans waive flip-in provision if acquisition is cash tender offer for all outstanding shares (defend against two-tier offers) firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 40. Historical cases of Takeovers firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 51. Era of Takeovers may begin firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 52. End of part 1 firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 53. DIVESTITURE PART 2 firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 54. DIVESTITURE/DEMERGER • It is a form of Corporate Restructuring which involves the sale of only some assets of the firm – such as a plant, division, product line, subsidiary, etc. • For the seller, Divestiture causes contraction in size, but not necessarily in profits. In fact, Divestiture is undertaken to part with loss-making or low revenue yielding business to enhance overall Corporate value. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 55. Strategic Rationale • Unlocking hidden value – Establish a public market valuation for undervalued assets and create a pure-play entity that is transparent and easier to value • Un-diversification – Divest non-core businesses and sharpen strategic focus when direct sale to a strategic or financial buyer is either not compelling or not possible • Institutional sponsorship – Promote equity research coverage and ownership by sophisticated institutional investors, either of which tend to validate Spin Co as a standalone business • Public currency – Create a public currency for acquisitions and stock-based compensation programs • Motivating management – Improve performance by better aligning management incentives with SpinCo's performance (using SpinCo, rather than ParentCo, stock-based awards), creating direct accountability to public shareholders, and increasing transparency into management performance • Eliminating dissynergies – Reduce bureaucracy and give SpinCo management complete autonomy • Anti-trust – Break up a business in response to anti-trust concerns • Corporate defense – Divest "crown jewel" assets to make a hostile takeover of ParentCo less attractive firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 56. DEMERGER The demerged company sells and transfers one or more of its undertakings to the resulting company for an agreed consideration. The resulting company issues its shares at the agreed exchange ratio to the shareholders of the demerged company. Demerger might take place for various reasons – • a conglomerate carrying out various activities might transfer one or more of its existing activities to a new company to give effect to rationalization or specialization in the manufacturing process; • or such transfer might be of a less successful part of the undertaking to the newly formed company, • or demerger may be result of the family owned properties of the company transferring to the new companies formed by the different family members to carry on different activities etc. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 57. Demerger of L&T to concentrate on infrastructure, engineering, energy & turnkey businesses firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 58. SLUMP SALE A company sells or disposes of the whole or substantially the whole of its undertaking for a predetermined lump sum consideration. In a slump sale, an acquiring company may not be interested in buying the whole company, but only one of its divisions or a running undertaking which may be on a going concern basis. The sale is made for a lump sum price, without values being assigned to the individual assets and liabilities transferred. The business to be hived-off is transferred from the transferor company to an existing or a new company. A "Business Transfer Agreement" (Agreement) is drafted containing the terms and conditions of transfer. The agreement provides for transfer by the seller company to the buyer company, its business as a going concern with all immovable and movable properties, at the agreed consideration. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 59. Spin-Offs • In a spin-off, the parent company (ParentCo) distributes to its existing shareholders new shares in a subsidiary, thereby creating a separate legal entity with its own management team and board of directors. • The distribution is conducted pro-rata, such that each existing shareholder receives stock of the subsidiary in proportion to the amount of parent company stock already held. No cash changes hands, and the shareholders of the original parent company become the shareholders of the newly spun company. firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 61. Spin-Off by eBay firdaus@icbm.ac.in
  • 62. Split-Up • A method of demerger involving the breakup of the entire company into a series of newly created legal entities, so that the parent firm no longer exists and only the new off-spring survive. • Smaller, hence logistically more convenient to manage and hence liable to enhance efficiency & performance. firdaus@icbm.ac.in