Fundamentals of Financial Management
Fundamentals of Financial Management
15th Edition
ISBN: 9780357307724
Author: Brigham
Publisher: CENGAGE L
Question
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Chapter 21, Problem 8IC

a.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The reasons that is economically justifiable among tax considerations, control, synergy, risk reduction and buying of assets at a below-replacement cost.

Introduction: A merger is the mix of two organizations into one by either shutting the old entities into one new entity or by one organization engrossing the other. In other terms, at least two organizations are united into one organization to form a merger.

a.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The reasons that are economically justifiable among tax considerations, control, synergy, risk reduction and buying of assets at below-replacement cost is as follows:

The rationale that is economically justifiable for mergers are synergy and tax consequences. Synergy happens when the estimation of the joined firm surpasses the total of the estimations of the organizations taken independently. A synergistic merger makes value that must be allotted between the stockholders of the merging organizations.

Synergy can emerge from the below four sources:

  • Through expanded market control because of decreased rivalry. The operating and money related economies are socially appropriate, as mergers that increase the administrative effectiveness, but mergers that decrease rivalry are both unattractive and unlawful.
  • Through financial economies, this might incorporate higher debt limit, decreasing transaction expenses, or better inclusion by securities’ examiners that can prompt greater demand and thus greater costs.
  • Through operating economies of scale in administration, creation, marketing or conveyance.
  • Through differential management effectiveness, which suggests that new administration can expand the value of a firm's assets.

Another legitimate justification behind mergers is tax consideration. For instance, a firm that is extremely cost-effective and thusly in the most noteworthy corporate-tax section could procure an organization with huge accumulated tax losses, and promptly utilize those losses to protect its present and future revenue. Without the merger, the carry forwards may inevitably be utilized, yet their value would be greater whenever utilized now as opposed to the future.

The thought processes that are usually less sustainable on economic positions are risk reduction, buy of assets at lower replacement cost, regulator, and globalization. Managers regularly express that expansion balances out an organization's profit stream and in this manner lessens total risk, and henceforth benefits investors. Equilibrium of profit is absolutely helpful to an organization's workers, providers, clients, and directors. But, if a stock investor is worried about earnings changeability, the concerned investor can diversify more effectively than the firm can.

Occasionally a firm will be publicized as a conceivable procurement contender on the grounds that the replacement value of its assets is extensively higher than it’s fairly market value. Currently, numerous hostile takeovers have happened. In order to preserve their organizations self-regulating and furthermore to secure their occupations, earlier build cautious or defensive mergers which make their organizations harder to "process." Also, such defensive mergers are typically debt financed, which makes it tougher for a potential purchaser to utilize debt financing to fund the purchaser. When all is said in done, defensive mergers seem, by all accounts, to be planned more to serve managers than for investors.

An expanded want to end up globalized has brought about numerous mergers. To merge just to end up worldwide is not a financially supported explanation behind a merger; in any case, expanded globalization has prompted expanded economies of scale. Along these lines, synergism regularly results or in other words legitimate purpose behind mergers. Synergy seems, by all accounts, to be the explanation behind this merger.

b.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The similarities between hostile merger and friendly merger.

b.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The similarities between hostile merger and friendly merger are as follows:

In a friendly merger, the administration of one firm or also called as the acquirer consents to purchase another firm. In several cases, the activity is started by the acquiring firm, but in a few circumstances the target may start the merger. The administrations of the two firms get together and exercise terms that they accept to be gainful to the two sets of investors. At that point they issue declarations to their investors prescribing that they consent to the merger. Obviously, the shareholders of the target firm ordinarily should vote on the merger, yet administration's help for the most part guarantees that the votes will be advantageous.

If a target company's administration opposes the merger, at that point the purchasing firm's advances are said to be hostile as opposed to friendly. For this situation, the acquirer decides to make an immediate interest to the shareholders of the target firm. This appears as a tender offer, whereby the target firm's investors are requested to "tender" their shares to the purchasing firm in return for money, stock, securities, or a mix of the three. In the event that at least 51% of the target firm's shareholders tender their shares, at that point the merger will be finished over administration's opposition.

c.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The cash flow statement of Division HH’s from 2018 to 2021, the reasons on why the interest expense deducted in merger cash flow statement and the reasons on why earnings retentions deducted in cash flow statement.

c.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Determine the cash flow statement of Division HH’s from 2018 to 2021

Using a excel spreadsheet, the cash flow statement of Division HH’s from 2018 to 2021 is determined.

Excel Spreadsheet:

Fundamentals of Financial Management, Chapter 21, Problem 8IC , additional homework tip  1

Excel Workings:

Fundamentals of Financial Management, Chapter 21, Problem 8IC , additional homework tip  2

The reasons on why the interest expense deducted in merger cash flow statement is as follows:

It is necessary to note that these declarations are indistinguishable to ordinary capital budgeting cash flow statements with the exception of that both interest expense and maintenances are incorporated into merger examination. In straight capital budgeting, all debt included is new debt that is issued to finance the asset accompaniments. Consequently, the debt included all costs the equivalent, the rate of debt (rd) and this expense is represented by reducing or discounting the cash streams at the company's weighted average cost of capital.

But, in a merger the procuring firms normally both expect the current debt of the target and issues new debt to fund the takeover. In this way, the debt included has diverse expenses, and consequently cannot be represented as a solitary expense in the weighted average cost of capital. The most effortless clarification is to unequivocally incorporate interest expense in the cash flow statement.

The reasons on why earnings retentions deducted in cash flow statement is as follows:

Concerning to the retentions, the majority of the cash streams from an individual project are accessible for use all through the firm, however a portion of the cash streams produced by a procuring are for the most part held with the new partition to assist its growth. Since such retentions are not accessible to the parent organization for utilize somewhere else, they should be removed in the cash flow statement. With interest expense and retentions incorporated into the cash flow statements, the cash streams are residuals that are accessible to the obtaining company's equity holders. Company SHR’s administration could pay these out as dividends or reinvest them in different partitions of the firm.

d.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The appropriate discount rate to apply to the cash flows developed in the previous part and the actual estimate of the discount rate.

d.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 8IC

The actual estimate of the discount rate is 14.2%.

Explanation of Solution

The appropriate discount rate to apply to the cash flows developed in the previous part is as follows:

From the above discussions, the cash streams are residuals, and they have a place with the obtaining company's shareholders. Since interest expense has just been measured, the cash streams are more risky than the characteristic capital budgeting cash streams, and they should be discounted utilizing the cost of equity instead of the weighted average cost of capital. Additionally, the discount rate must replicate the riskiness of the cash flows, and these cash flows have Company HH's business risk not Company SHR’s business risk.

Though, the market risk of the Division HH is not the equivalent as the market risk of Company HH working freely, in light of the fact that the merger influences Company HH’s leverage and tax rate. Company SHR’s investment bankers have assessed the Division HH’s beta will be 1.3 after the merger and the extra leverage has been utilized.

Determine the actual estimate of the discount rate

DiscountRate(rs)=[rF+β×rM]=[9%+1.3×4%]=[0.09+0.052]=0.142or14.20%

Here,

rF - Risk free rate

rM - Market risk premium

B - Beta of stock

Therefore the actual estimate of the discount rate is 14.20%.

e.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The estimated continuing value of acquisition and the value of Company HH to Company SHR and whether it would be the same value if another firm evaluating Company HH as acquisition.

e.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Answer to Problem 8IC

The estimated continuing value of acquisition is $221.05 million and the value of Company HH to Company SHR is $163.93 million.

Explanation of Solution

Determine the estimated continuing value of acquisition

ContinuingValue=[CashFlow2021×(1+g)(rsg)]=[$17.10×(1+6%)(14.20%6%)]=[$18.138.20%]=$221.05million

Here,

g – Growth rate

rs – Discount rate

Therefore the estimated continuing value of acquisition is $221.05 million.

Determine the value of Company HH to Company SHR

Using a excel spreadsheet, the value of Company HH to Company SHR is determined as $163.93 million.

Excel Spreadsheet:

Fundamentals of Financial Management, Chapter 21, Problem 8IC , additional homework tip  3

Excel Workings:

Fundamentals of Financial Management, Chapter 21, Problem 8IC , additional homework tip  4

Therefore the value of Company HH to Company SHR is $163.93 million.

The reasons on whether it would be the same value if another firm evaluating Company HH as acquisition is as follows:

In the event that another firm was valuing Company HH, they would most likely acquire an estimate not quite the same as $163.93 million. Most imperative, the synergies included would probably be dissimilar, and henceforth the cash flow estimates would contrast. Likewise, another potential acquirer may utilize diverse financing methods, or have an alternate tax rate, and consequently determine an alternate discount rate.

f.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: Whether Company SHR makes an offer for Company H, if offered the share price.

f.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

Determine the current market value of Company HH

CurrentMarketValue=[CurrentSharePrice×SharesOutstanding]=[$9×10,000,000]=$90,000,000or$90million

Therefore the current market value of Company HH is $90 million.

Determine the difference of value

Since Company HH's expected value to Company SHR’s is $163.9 million, it creates the impression that the merger would be valuable to the two sets of investors.

Difference=[ValueCompanyHHCurrentMarketValue]=[$163.93million$90million]=$73.93million

Therefore the difference of value is $73.93 million.

Determine the range of share price

The price of the share several weeks ago was $9.

SharePrice=[ValueCompanyHHSharesOutstanding]=[$163.93million10million]=$16.393

Therefore the range of share price is between $9 and $16.393

The reasons on whether Company SHR makes an offer for Company H is as follows:

At a share price of $9, the majority of the advantage of the merger goes to Company SHR’s investors, while with a share price of $16.39, the majority of the value made goes to Company HH's investors. If Company SHR’s offers more than $16.39 per share, at that point the wealth would be exchanged from Company SHR’s investors to Company HH's investors. With regards to the real offering value, Company SHR’s should make the offer as low as could reasonably be expected, yet adequate to Company HH's investors. A low starting offer, roughly $9.50 per share, would likely be rejected and the exertion squandered.

Additionally, the offer may impact other potential suitors to think about Company HH, and they could emerge outbidding Company SHR’s. On the other hand, a high value, roughly $16, passes the majority of the gain to Company HH's investors, and Company SHR’s administrators ought to hold however much of the synergistic value as could be expected for their very own investors. It is also necessary to note that this argument expect that Company HH's price of $9 as "reasonable," equilibrium value without a merger. As the stock trades irregularly, the share price of $9 may not signify to a reasonable least cost. Company HH's administration should make an assessment of a reasonable cost and utilize this data in its transactions with Company SHR.

g.

Summary Introduction

To Determine: The merger related activities that are undertaken by investment bankers.

g.

Expert Solution
Check Mark

Explanation of Solution

The merger related activities that are undertaken by investment bankers are as follows:

  • Risk arbitrage conjecturing in the stocks of organizations that are expected to takeover targets
  • Assisting target organizations in creating and applying cautious strategies
  • Assisting to value target organizations
  • Assisting to organize mergers
  • Assisting in financing mergers

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