Tuesday, August 28, 2018
Merger Math
Several big merger or acquisition announcements have been in the news
recently. And, although we argue that the analysis of a potential merger
is an NPV analysis with consideration for synergies, many mergers and
the payment are done by the "seat of your pants"
method. For example, when Elon Musk announced he was considering taking
Telsa private at $420 per share, his bid was based on a 20 percent
premium to the current stick price, rounded up to $420 dollars per
share. A cash flow analysis of Tesla was not necessary since it has no
operating cash flows. And when Disney announced it was increasing its
bid for 21st Century Fox by $19 billion, it was because the intrinsic
value of these assets has increased, notably due to tax reform and
operational improvements." While mergers tend to be a tricky analysis,
we have severe doubts about any merger done by the seat of your pants
method.
Moody's Fined
Moody's Investors Services, the well-known bond rating agency, was fined $16.5 million
for failing to ensure the accuracy of its statistical models. The SEC
accused the company of failures on more than 650 mortgage backed
securities. Moody's assigned ratings on several bonds that were
inconsistent with ratings for similar bonds and did not establish a
rigorous control process for bond data entry, resulting in incorrect
data entry. This resulted in bonds being given incorrect ratings.
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