Monday, February 11, 2013
Merger Valuation
A recent article in CFO
outlines potential pitfalls in mergers. For example, the article
advises avoiding over-optimism about the company, a flaw discussed in
behavioral finance. The article also argues that the bidder should not
pay for synergies unless they are well defined. For example, one CFO
said that his company paid for synergies in one acquisition because the
target would be rolled into a current division, which allowed for cost
savings from eliminating part of the existing management, the board of
directors, and other expenses that the target incurred. However, he
would not include synergies if the target were in an entirely new
business. The last pitfall we would like to mention here is to keep
financial models honest. Logical errors are much more common than
mathematical errors. For example, if margins are increasing, this cannot
be infinite. After all, you can never get a 100 percent margin, and
something a lot lower is more reasonable.