Chapter 13 Financing The Deal
Chapter 13 Financing The Deal
Chapter 13 Financing The Deal
—Milton Friedman
Exhibit 1: Course Layout: Mergers,
Acquisitions, and Other
Restructuring Activities
Part I: M&A Part II: M&A Process Part III: M&A Part IV: Deal Part V: Alternative
Environment Valuation and Structuring and Business and
Modeling Financing Restructuring
Strategies
Ch. 1: Motivations for Ch. 4: Business and Ch. 7: Discounted Ch. 11: Payment and Ch. 15: Business
M&A Acquisition Plans Cash Flow Valuation Legal Considerations Alliances
Ch. 2: Regulatory Ch. 5: Search through Ch. 8: Relative Ch. 12: Accounting & Ch. 16: Divestitures,
Considerations Closing Activities Valuation Tax Considerations Spin-Offs, Split-Offs,
Methodologies and Equity Carve-Outs
Ch. 3: Takeover Ch. 6: M&A Ch. 9: Financial Ch. 13: Financing the Ch. 17: Bankruptcy
Tactics, Defenses, and Postclosing Integration Modeling Basics Deal and Liquidation
Corporate Governance
1
Financial engineering describes the creation of a viable capital structure that magnifies financial returns to equity investors.
Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs)
Factors Contributing to
LBO Value Creation
Factors Common to
LBOs of Public and
Private Firms
•Deferring Taxes
•Debt Reduction
•Operating Margin
Improvement
•Timing of the Sale of
the Firm
Tax Shield Example:
Depreciation Times Marginal Tax Rate
Income Statement
Key Points: 1. Tax savings of $17 between Case 1 and Case 2 equals
depreciation times tax rate or $50 x .34 = $17 (tax shield)
2. Case 1 Operating Cash Flow2 = $66
Case 2 Operating Cash Flow = $33 + $50 = $83
3. Case 2 operating cash flow > Case 1 by $17 or the amount
of tax savings/tax shield.
1
Assumes asset write-up results in additional depreciation.
2
Assumes capital spending and the change in working capital and changes in financing activities are zero.
LBOs Create Value by Reducing Debt and Increasing Margins
Thereby Increasing Potential Exit Multiples
Firm
Value
Tax
Shield1
1
Tax shield = (interest expense + additional depreciation and amortization expenses from asset write-ups) x marginal tax rate.
LBO Value is Maximized by Reducing Debt, Improving
Margins, and Properly Timing Exit
Case 1: Case 2: Case 3:
Debt Reduction Debt Reduction + Margin Debt Reduction + Margin
Improvement Improvement + Properly
Timing Exit
LBO Formation Year:
Total Debt $400,000,000 $400,000,000 $400,000,000
Equity 100,000,000 100,000,000 100,000,000
Transaction/Enterprise Value $500,000,000 $500,000,000 $500,000,000
Financial Sponsor
(Limited Partnership
Fund)
Equity
Contribution
Financial Sponsor
Limited Partnership Fund
Equity
Contribution
Parent
(Controlled by Financial Target Firm
Sponsor)
Key Point: Merger Sub merged into Target with Target surviving as a wholly
owned subsidiary of the parent firm.
Typical LBO Capital Structure
Common
Equity (10%)
Equity (25%)
Preferred
Equity (15%)
Purchase Revolving
Price Credit (5%)
Term Loan A
Senior
Debt (75%) Secured Debt Term Loan B
(40%)
Term Loan C
2nd Mortgage
Sub Debt
Debt/Junk
Bonds (30%)
Mezzanine
Debt & PIK
Case Study: Cox Enterprises Takes Cox
Communications Private
In an effort to take the firm private, Cox Enterprises announced a proposal to buy the remaining 38% of Cox
Communications’ shares not currently owned for $32 per share. Valued at $7.9 billion (including $3 billion in
assumed debt), the deal represented a 16% premium to Cox Communication’s share price at that time. Cox
Communications is the third largest provider of cable TV, telecommunications, and wireless services in the U.S,
serving more than 6.2 million customers. Historically, the firm’s cash flow has been steady and substantial.
Cox Communications would become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Cox Enterprises and would continue to
operate as an autonomous business. Cox Communications’ Board of Directors formed a special committee of
independent directors to consider the proposal. Citigroup Global Markets and Lehman Brothers Inc. committed
$10 billion to the deal. Cox Enterprises would use $7.9 billion for the tender offer, with the remaining $2.1 billion
used for refinancing existing debt and to satisfy working capital requirements.
Cable service firms have faced intensified competitive pressures from satellite service providers DirecTV
Group and EchoStar communications. Moreover, telephone companies continue to attack cable’s high-speed
Internet service by cutting prices on high-speed Internet service over phone lines. Cable firms have responded
by offering a broader range of advanced services like video-on-demand and phone service. Since 2000, the
cable industry has invested more than $80 billion to upgrade their systems to provide such services, causing
profitability to deteriorate and frustrating investors. In response, cable company stock prices have fallen. Cox
Enterprises stated that the increasingly competitive cable industry environment makes investment in the cable
industry best done through a private company structure.
Discussion Questions:
1. What is the equity value of the proposed deal?
•Why did the board feel that it was appropriate to set up special committee of independent board directors?
•Why does Cox Enterprises believe that the investment needed for growing its cable business is best done
through a private company structure?
•Is Cox Communications a good candidate for an LBO? Explain your answer.
•How would the lenders have protected their interests in this type of transaction? Be specific.
Things to Remember…
• M&As commonly are financed through debt, equity, and available
cash on balance sheet or some combination.
• LBOs make the most sense for firms having stable cash flows,
significant amounts of unencumbered tangible assets, and strong
management teams.
• Successful LBOs rely heavily on management incentives to improve
operating performance and a streamlined decision-making process
resulting from taking the firm private.
• Tax savings from interest and depreciation expense from writing up
assets enable LBO investors to offer targets substantial premiums
over current market value.
• Excessive leverage and the resultant higher level of fixed expenses
makes LBOs vulnerable to business cycle fluctuations and
aggressive competitor actions.