Showing posts with label Cisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cisco. Show all posts

Monday, May 06, 2013

M&As: A Phenomenon of the Market

M&As have always been an area of debate for business experts. However, new research explains who acquires whom, whether payment is made in cash or stock, what valuation consequences arise from mergers, and why there are merger waves

In the late 1990s, the United States and world economies experienced a large wave of mergers and acquisitions, culminating in the bursting of the Internet bubble and the subsequent stock market fallout.

Until now, there have generally been two ways to understand mergers and acquisitions. One explanation relies upon the notion of synergy, i.e. the greater profit potential that results from combining two companies. The second explanation suggests that mergers and acquisitions are the product of bad management being kicked out by better management.

Previous research has addressed the separate merger waves of the past 40 years, offering a different explanation for the waves of the 1960s, ‘80s, and ‘90s. A new study, Stock Market Driven Acquisitions, undertaken by me and Andrei Shleifer of Harvard University, offers a more unified framework for understanding the different characteristics of acquisitions and how they vary over time.

We suggest that mergers and acquisitions are a financial phenomenon created by stock market misvaluations of the combining firms, and are related to the level of the market as a whole. Markets are inefficient, while managers of firms are rational, taking advantage of stock market inefficiencies through well-timed merger decisions. The objective was to come up with a simpler theory recognising that valuations differ from true fundamental values temporarily because of market sentiment. In part, companies make acquisitions or become targets of acquisitions to benefit from stock prices that are temporarily out of whack.

The Spiraling Effect of Misvaluation

A company’s valuation may be heavily influenced by investor psychology, since expectations for growth are built into the price investors are willing to pay. For example, to justify paying a price-earnings multiple of 150 ($150 per current dollar of earnings), you would have to believe that the company’s earnings will grow dramatically over the next five to seven years.

We find that in the 1990s, the valuations for the market were pushed up for some companies much more so than others, creating the “haves” and the “have nots.” Misvaluation in this context refers to the “haves,” such as America Online (AOL), Cisco, and Intel, being deemed worthy of excessively high valuations based on unrealistic growth expectations. These companies knew their share price would fall when the market learned of its overconfidence. The star companies therefore had a short-run opportunity to cash in by using their stock as currency to buy other companies-hard assets that were more sanely valued.

Our model says there was some sanity prevailing among the CEOs of high-flying companies. They knew that the valuations were unreasonable, so by acquiring all these earnings producing assets in exchange for their shares, they cushioned themselves from the full impact of the bust.

Why would a company agree to be sold in exchange for overpriced stock? The answer can be found in the different “horizons” of corporate managers. Horizons refer to how long a manager wants to hold onto a company. Managers with short horizons might wish to retire or exit, or simply have options or equity they are anxious to sell. Managers with long horizons might want to keep on working, be locked into their equity, be overconfident about the future, or just love their business.


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2013.
An Initiative of IIPM, Malay Chaudhuri
 
For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles

Saturday, January 19, 2013

It takes ‘3’ to make a ‘Com’eback!

The 3Com acquisition is a definite plus to HP’s suite of data centre offerings (triple play of server, storage and networking), but integration problems could be quite daunting

Move over Microsoft & Google. Move over Intel & AMD (especially after the truce they just announced). The rivalry that could beat them all to the record books when it comes to the technology industry could well be the rivalry between two technology giants who are well known in their respective industries as companies who made all competition bite the dust. They have been partners for long when it comes to providing a comprehensive suite of solutions to their clients; and have won business together. However, their win-win relationship now seems to be a thing of the past.

Yes, we are talking about HP and Cisco, iconic companies led by iconic leaders Mark Hurd and John Chambers respectively. As the world, and the IT industry move towards a shaky recovery, these two leaders seem to be intent on redrawing the battle lines with regard to what they stand for and can deliver. And thanks to this latest posturing, they are finding it increasingly difficult to stand each other.

It all started when Cisco made a major play into the server market when it mooted the idea of marketing its own servers, therefore providing its clients with the benefit of one unified data center from one vendor – with server, storage and networking as a combination offering. The transition was mainly aimed at taking it beyond the status of a mere box mover, which would enable it to extract more value out of its clients. Earlier this month, Cisco has gone a step further as it entered into an alliance with network storage major EMC to enhance its power position in the high stakes cloud computing arena; where data centers are going to be a major winning proposition.

And now the stakes have got even higher with HP’s acquisition of 3Com, a move that aims at making HP a stronger player in the networking space and competing with Cisco. With this acquisition, HP seeks to leverage from 3Com’s expertise in networking as well as its Chinese market. People tend to miss the point that 3Com was the company that pioneered networking, and was founded by Bob Metcalfe (father of the internet networking protocol).


Source : IIPM Editorial, 2012.
An Initiative of IIPMMalay Chaudhuri
and Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist).

For More IIPM Info, Visit below mentioned IIPM articles.