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Corporate
Finance FIN 622
VU
Lesson
36
CORPORATE
RESTRUCTURING
This
handout will take care of
following topics:
Corporate
Restructuring
Divestment
Purpose
of divestment
Buyouts
Types
of buyouts
Financial
distress introduction
Corporate
Restructuring
Corporate
restructuring and improved corporate
governance are essential
parts of economic
reform
programs
under way in many countries.
How can corporations be restructured to
promote growth and
reduce
excessive debt without
placing undue burdens on taxpayers?
What framework is needed to
promote
better corporate
governance?
CORPORATE
Restructuring involves restructuring the
assets and liabilities of corporations,
including their
debt-to-equity
structures, in line with
their cash flow needs to
promote efficiency, restore growth,
and
minimize the
cost to taxpayers. Corporate governance
refers to the framework of rules and
regulations that
enable
the stakeholders to exercise appropriate oversight of
a company to maximize its
value and to obtain
a
return on their holdings. Both corporate
and financial sector restructuring are
central to ongoing
reform
programs
in East Asia. This article
focuses on reform efforts in Indonesia
and Korea, as well as
Malaysia
and
Thailand.
Corporations,
government, and banks have
close relationships in many East Asian
countries.
Conglomerates
controlled by a small group,
nontransparent accounting, interlocking ownership
between the
corporate
and financial sectors, and
weak minority shareholder rights dominate
many sectors of their
economies.
It is estimated that the top 10
families in Indonesia in 1997
controlled corporations worth
more
than
half the country's market capitalization.
Comparable figures are
one-half in Thailand, one-fourth
in
Korea
and Malaysia, but only
23 percent in Japan. Fundamental
cultural and institutional changes
are
required if a
new corporate governance structure is to
be established with arm's-length,
transparent relations
between
corporations, government, and banks.
Changing corporate governance, however, is a
long-term
process.
In East Asia, the immediate
task is to deal with the
present crisis by undertaking
integrated
restructuring of
the assets and liabilities of
highly indebted firms, external debt restructuring,
and financial
sector
reform. Integrated restructuring of both
corporate assets and liabilities is
required if competitive
enterprise
and financial sectors are to be
developed, the risk of crises recurring is to be
reduced, and the
cost
to taxpayers of accomplishing these
goals is to be minimized.
Build
up of vulnerabilities in the corporate sector. Before
the crisis hit, many East
Asian corporations
expanded
into sprawling conglomerates making
extensive use of debt, because
equity markets were
undeveloped
and, in many cases, owners
preferred to retain control of firms with
concentrated holdings.
There
were also structural weaknesses in
these countries' banking
supervision systems and
internal bank
management.
Much of the debt owed to
banks and corporations was
unheeded and short term,
which led to
extreme
over indebtedness following the
devaluations and high
interest rates of 1997 and
1998. Two factors
that
make financial crises in East
Asia difficult to manage are
the large, short-term internal and
external
debts
and openness of many East
Asian economies, both of which
constrain their monetary and
exchange
rate
policies.
Need
for a comprehensive approach.
Resolving corporate sector, financial
sector, and external
debt
problems
requires a comprehensive and integrated
approach. Since good firms
are necessary if an
economy
is to
have good banks, corporate restructuring
must be linked to bank restructuring, which, in
turn, must be
linked
to the settlement of external debt
problems. Perverse incentives
and inequitable burden sharing
can
result
if obligations to short-term external creditors are
met and losses are
concentrated on the government,
labor,
and, ultimately, the taxpayers. The
costs to the government of bank recapitalization are
high--we
estimate
that they range between 15
and 35 percent of GDP for
the four countries discussed in this
article.
Financing
these costs domestically is
likely to increase government borrowing,
thus increasing interest
rates
and
further slowing recovery of the corporate
sector.
In the short
term, there is an urgent need to
restructure the corporate and financial
sectors. It is important
to
manage the crisis in such a
way as to start the process of
satisfying longer-term reform goals in
each
country,
including making the fundamental changes
necessary to create arm's-length
relations between the
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government,
corporations, and banks. Necessary
steps include broadening the ownership of
corporations
by
liberalizing foreign entry
and expanding the role of capital
markets. Protecting shareholder rights
and
developing
improved accounting standards
and bank regulations are
essential. Just as the Great
Depression
led to legislation
and reforms in the United
States that diminished "relation-based"
finance and laid the
foundation
for a modern financial structure, so the
crisis in East Asia offers a
rare opportunity for
countries
in
that region to lay the foundation
for a new, arm's-length
system that is likely to be
more efficient and
sustainable.
The
challenge for policymakers is to
undertake comprehensive reform that
maintains pressure on all
parties
in a
way that promotes equitable
burden sharing among borrowers,
equity holders, the government,
and
external
creditors; restores credit to viable
enterprises and confidence in the
financial system; and leads to
a
competitive
corporate and financial system that
minimizes the chances of recurrence of a
crisis.
Sustainable
reform and the resumption of growth
require a fair sharing of the burdens of
economic
restructuring
among external participants (short-term creditors,
equity holders, and bondholders)
and
internal
participants (shareholders, workers, and
taxpayers). This burden sharing
needs to be seen within
the
context
of creating a future structure in
which arm's-length relations prevail
between new private
sector
owners,
the government, sound financial institutions,
and the broader capital market.
The present
constraints
of meeting external debt payments and
tight capital- adequacy
ratios effectively determine
the
extent,
pace, and costs (and, to a
large extent, who bears
these) of corporate and bank
restructuring.
Framework
for Corporate
Restructuring
Corporate
and financial restructuring takes time. In
order to avoid an unnecessarily
long period of
uncertainty
and slow growth, however, a
country's government needs to enhance
efforts to resolve
these
systemic
problems. A comprehensive approach
requires an active government that
will eliminate obstacles
to restructuring;
facilitate both formal and
informal debt workouts; and
establish an effective new
legal,
regulatory,
accounting, and institutional
framework.
Obstacles
to restructuring that need to be eliminated include
tax policies that impede
corporate
reorganizations,
mergers, debt-for-equity swaps, or
debt forgiveness; restrictions on
foreigners' participation
as
holders of domestic equity
and investors in domestic
banks; labor laws and
other existing laws
and
regulations
that could hinder debt restructuring; and
ineffective bankruptcy procedures.
Effective
bankruptcy procedures, which can be
legally enforced and serve as
part of a country's
debt-
restructuring
process, are a very important
means of ensuring that
unviable firms do not continue to
absorb
credit. An
effective bankruptcy system also serves
to maximize the value of the assets to be
distributed to
creditors.
Moreover, the presence of an effective bankruptcy
system will create the appropriate
incentives
for
creditors and debtors to
reach out-of-court settlements.
Given the costs and risks
associated with even
the
most developed bankruptcy systems, a
policy framework that facilitates
out-of-court settlements that
are
fast,
fair, and acceptable is
essential.
Experience
in several countries demonstrates
that the government can play a constructive,
yet informal role
in
facilitating an orderly workout of
debts (sometimes referred to as the
"London approach"). This
approach,
used in the United Kingdom
since 1989, has been
designed to help bring together
debtors and
creditors
and facilitate negotiations. Many East
Asian countries have adopted, or
are adopting, a similar
framework to
facilitate and encourage corporate restructuring
that includes using new
bankruptcy
provisions as an
incentive for creditors and
debtors to negotiate.
The
government's policy framework should
minimize costs to taxpayers. Because
its primary focus is
likely
to be on
large and medium-sized corporations,
neither direct nor should indirect
subsidies be provided to
them.
Small and medium-sized
businesses require a different approach
than large ones. Because
many of the
former
have only restricted access
to banks and capital
markets, it is important to have
policies in place
that
allow
for rolling over their
working capital and trade
credit.
Policies
are also needed to improve
the competitiveness of the private
sector. Competition policies
that
reduce
anticompetitive practices and
stop large firms' abuses of
market power need to be implemented
in
parallel
with corporate restructuring.
Approaches
to Corporate Restructuring
Indonesia, Korea,
Malaysia, and Thailand have
all adopted an approach that
facilitates and
encourages
corporate
restructuring and have moved to eliminate
obstacles to restructuring. The extent of
progress and
the
degree of government involvement differ
among countries, however, and
are influenced by the share of
corporate
debt held by domestic banks
versus foreign banks, whether
domestic banks are
institutionally
strong enough to
engage in active restructuring, and
which sector the bad loans
are concentrated in
(real
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estate,
commodity production, or manufacturing). In Indonesia,
foreign private banks hold
two-thirds, and
domestic
private banks hold about
one-third, of corporate debt. In Thailand, foreign
private banks hold
about
one-half the corporate debt. In Korea, most corporate
debt is owed to domestic
banks; similarly, in
Malaysia,
domestic banks hold about 90
percent of corporate debt.
In Indonesia,
most corporate debt is owed directly by
the borrowing firms to foreign banks.
The weak
domestic
banks and their small
share of total corporate debt
imply that foreign banks
will be an important
player
in the process. The authorities have
adopted a three-pronged restructuring approach that
consists of
a framework to
facilitate workouts on a voluntary basis,
an improved bankruptcy system, and
provision of
foreign
exchange risk protection once a
restructuring agreement is reached. To
support this process, the
authorities
are also eliminating regulatory
obstacles to corporate restructuring.
Divestment
In
finance and economics, divestment
or
divestiture
is
the reduction of some kind of
asset, for either
financial or
social goals. A divestment is the opposite of an
investment.
Divestment
for Financial
Goals
Often
the term is used as a means to grow
financially in which a company
sells off a business unit in
order
to
focus their resources on a
market it judges to be more
profitable, or promising. Sometimes, such
an
action
can be a spin-off. A company
can divest assets to wholly owned
subsidiaries.
Either
the prime objective for divestment may be the
assets being sold does not
conform to the overall
business
strategy or they fail to meet the
group hurdle rate. They are
often a cheaper and cleaner
alternative
than
closure of the unit.
It is very
important to calculate the financial
effect of divestment before any final
decision is made based
on
the
two aspects stated above.
The evaluation will take the
form of a comparison of the potential
price
available
for the relevant business unit
and the financial effect on the remainder of the
group, against the
financial
return available from the
business unit if it were
retained. The divestment decision should
only be
made
if the returns of the business unit as
retained as compared with the
disinvestment opportunity
cost.
For
example, if a division of a group is
earning 12% as compared to group
return of 18%, then it should
be
disposed
off.
However,
the cost of asset and price
available for sale must be
compared and evaluated before the
decision
to
sell.
For
example, if an asset or group of
assets costing Rs 100,000 is
earning 12% or 12000 and could be
sold
for
60,000/-. The group hurdle
rate is 18%. Comparing 12,000 with
80,000, then ROCE is
15%
(12,000/80,000)
and is under group hurdle
rate of 18%, therefore, it can be
disposed off.
However,
if the offer price of asset in question
is 50,000, the ROCE is 24%,
which is well above the
group's
rate
of return of 18% and the asset in
question should not be disposed
off.
Divestment
for Social Goals:
Although
these types of divestments
are for social purposes,
yet they have financial
repercussions. The term
also
refers to the reduction of investment in firms,
industries or countries for
reasons of political or
social
policy.
Examples
Examples
of divestment for social reasons
have included:
· The
withdrawal of firms from South Africa
during the 1980s due to
Apartheid
· Discussion
over whether it is ethical to invest in
companies that sell
tobacco
Definition
of buyout
Buyout
is defined as the purchase of a company
or a controlling interest of a corporation's
shares or
product
line or some business. A
leveraged buyout is accomplished
with borrowed money or by
issuing
more
stock.
The
purchase of a company or a controlling
interest of a corporation's
shares.
Management
Buyouts
Management
buyouts are similar in all major
legal aspects to any other
acquisition of a company. The
particular
nature of the MBO lies in the
position of the buyers as managers of the
company and the
practical
consequences that follow
from that. In particular, the due
diligence process is likely to be
limited as
the
buyers already have full
knowledge of the company available to
them. The seller is also
unlikely to give
any
but the most basic
warranties to the management, on the
basis that the management
knows more about
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the
company than the sellers do and therefore
the sellers should not have to warrant
the state of the
company.
In
many cases, the company will
already be a private company,
but if it is public then the
management will
take
it private.
Reasons
for Buyouts:
The
existing parent company of the victim
firm may wish to dispose of
it. The parent company may
be
caught
up in financial distress and is in acute
need of cash and liquidity.
The subsidiary on the other
hand, is
not
strategically fit with
parent's overall business
strategy.
In
case of loss making, selling
the unit to its management
may be the better option than to
dispose or
putting
into liquidation, which has
it own costs.
The
purpose of such a buyout
from the managers' point of
view may be to save their
jobs, either if the
business
has been scheduled for
closure or if an outside purchaser
would bring in its own
management
team.
They may also want to
maximize the financial benefits they receive
from the success they bring to
the
company
by taking the profits for
themselves.
Private
Equity Financing
The
management of a company will
not usually have the money
available to buy the company
outright
themselves.
While they could seek to borrow
from a bank if the bank accepts the risk, they
will commonly
look
to private equity investors to back
their buyout. They will invest
money in return for a
proportion of
the
shares in the company, and
sometimes also grant a loan to the
management.
Private equity
backers are likely to have
somewhat different goals to the
management. They generally aim
to
maximize
their return and make an
exit after 3-5 years while
minimizing risk to them, whereas
the
management
will be taking a long-term view.
While certain aims do
coincide - in particular the primary
aim
of
profitability - certain tensions
can arise. The backers
will invariably impose the
same warranties on the
management
in relation to the company that the
sellers will have refused to
give the management. This
"warranty
gap" means that the management
will bear all the risk of
any defects in the company
that affects
its
value.
As a
condition of their investment, the
backers will also impose
numerous terms on the
management
concerning
the way that the company is
run. The purpose is to
ensure that the management
runs the
company
in a way that will maximize
the returns during the term of the
backers' investment, whereas
the
management
might have hoped to build the
company for long-term gains.
Though the two aims are
not
always
incompatible, the management may feel
restricted.
Leveraged
Buyout LBO
The
acquisition of another company using a significant
amount of borrowed money (bonds or
loans) to
meet
the cost of acquisition. Often, the
assets of the company being acquired
are used as collateral for
the
loans
in addition to the assets of the acquiring
company. The purpose of
leveraged buyouts is to allow
companies
to make large acquisitions
without having to commit a lot of
capital.
In an
LBO, there is usually a
ratio of 90% debt to 10% equity. Because
of this high debt/equity ratio,
the
bonds
usually are not investment
grade and are referred to as
junk bonds. Leveraged buyouts
have had a
notorious
history, especially in the 1980s when
several prominent buyouts led to the
eventual bankruptcy
of the
acquired companies. This was mainly
due to the fact that the leverage
ratio was nearly 100% and
the
interest
payments were so large that
the company's operating cash flows
were unable to meet the
obligation.
It can
be considered ironic that a
company's success (in the
form of assets on the balance
sheet) can be used
against
it as collateral by a hostile company that
acquires it. For this
reason, some regard LBOs as
an
especially
ruthless, predatory tactic.
Employee
Buyout EBO
A restructuring
strategy in which employees
buy a majority stake in
their own firms. This form
of buyout is
often
done by firms looking for an alternative
to a leveraged buyout. Companies being
sold can be either
healthy
companies or ones that are
in significant financial distress.
For
small firms, an employee buyout
will often focus on the sale
of the company's entire assets, while
for
larger
firms; the buyout may be on a subsidiary
or division of the company. The
official way an
employee
buyout
occurs is through an employee
stock ownership plan (ESOP).
The buyout is complete when
the
ESOP
owns 51% or more of the company's common
shares.
Management
Buy In (MBI):
Management
Buy in (MBI) occurs when a manager or a
management team from outside
the
company
raises
the necessary finance buys it and
becomes the company's new
management. A management
buy-in
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team
often competes with other
purchasers in the search for a
suitable business. Usually, a manager
will lead
the
team with significant experience at
managing director level.
The
difference to a management buy-out is in the
position of the purchaser: in the case of
a buy-out, they
are
already working for the
company. In the case of a buy-in,
however, the manager or management team
is
from
another source.
Some
of the private equity groups and
executive search firms that
focus on management buy-ins.
Spin
out
To rotate
out of control, as a skidding car leaving
a roadway.
Factors
to be considered in Management
Buyout
A
management buyout occurs
when incumbent management
takes
ownership of a firm by purchasing
a
sufficient
amount of the firm's common
stock. These
transactions vary due to the conditions
under which
the
firm is offered for sale
and the method of financing employed by
the managers.
Consider
the conditions that may
encourage managers to purchase a
controlling interest in the firm's
stock.
The
owners of a corporation are
its stockholders. These
stockholders are concerned
with increasing the
value
of their investment, not only in
one specific firm, but
for all investments. Therefore, if a
majority of
the firm's
stockholders perceive that the
value of their investment will be
enhanced by agreeing to be
acquired
by another firm, they will elect to
sell their stock to the acquiring
firm at a price they consider
fair.
Managers
of a firm may consider this
transfer of ownership a benign event. They
may also, however, be
concerned
that the new owners will
not manage the firm most
efficiently, that they will
have less control
over
the management of the firm, or that
their jobs will be less
secure. In this situation, the current
managers
of the firm may consider
purchasing the firm
themselves.
Another
situation that frequently
leads to management buyouts is the case
of financial distress. If the firm
is
having
serious difficulties meeting
its financial obligations, it may choose
to reorganize itself. This can be
done by
closing failing operations to slow the
drain on financial resources and by
selling profitable
operations to an
outside party for the cash
needed to restore financial
viability to remaining operations. It
is
not
uncommon for firms in this situation to give
managers of the divisions being divested the
opportunity
to buy
the assets. This makes sense
for two reasons. First,
management probably has the
greatest expertise
in
managing the subset of assets
offered for sale. Second, it
saves the cost of searching
for an external party
with
an interest in the division, for
sale.
Once
incumbent management has decided it is
interested in purchasing the firm or a
particular portion of
the
firm, they must raise the
capital needed to buy it.
Managers in many corporations are
encouraged to
become
stockholders in the firm by including
stock and the option to buy
more stock as part of
their
compensation
package. The non-management
stockholders, however, will expect
some compensation
from
this
sale and the value of
manager-owned stock is not
likely to be sufficient to finance the
purchase of the
firm
or one of its divisions. This means
that managers must raise
cash from other sources
such as personal
wealth.
If
managers have sufficient
capital in other investments,
these can be sold and
used to finance the
remainder
of the purchase price.
While a
management buyout is relatively straightforward
when managers have
sufficient personal capital
to
meet
the purchase price, the more common
scenario requires managers to
borrow significant amounts. It is
not
un-common for managers to mortgage
homes
and other personal assets to
raise needed funds, but
in
many
transactions, these amounts
are still not sufficient. In
these cases, managers will
borrow larger
amounts
using the assets of the firm they
are acquiring as collateral. This type of
transaction is called a
leveraged
buyout, or
LBO. The LBO is a common
form of financing for large
transactions. It provides
the
management team with the
financing needed to control the
assets of the firm with only
a small amount
of equity.
Nevertheless, the new firm
that emerges from this
transaction has very high financial risk.
The
large
amounts of debt
will
require large periodic payments of
interest. If the firm cannot meet
this
obligation
during any period, it can be
forced into bankruptcy by the debt
holders.
This description of
a management buyout can be
generalized to define an employee
buyout. In some
situations,
it is feasible that all
employees, not just a small
group of managers, can collectively
purchase a
controlling
interest in a firm's stock. This
may be the long-term result of a
carefully designed employee
stock
ownership plan (ESOP), that
management has instituted. It
may also result from the
pressures of
financial
distress. In 1994, United
Airlines was faced with
declining profits and strained relations
with labor.
Management
and labor eventually agreed on a
swap of wage concessions for
a 55 percent equity stake in the
firm.
In the five following years, the
firm became more profitable,
the stock price rose significantly,
and
employees
retained a controlling interest in
Unity's common stock.
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It is
important to note that
managers (or employee
owners) are no different than
other investors. They
will
assess
the risk
and
rewards associated with a
buyout, leveraged or otherwise,
and will act in their
own best
interests.
As managers, they have specialized
knowledge of the firm that may
prove advantageous in
charting a
future course of action for the
acquired firm. By assuming ownership of
the acquired firm, they
will
also assume a riskier position
personally. If the potential rewards
associated with control are
perceived
as
adequate compensation for this risk,
then the management buyout
will be source of financial
distress.
Sources
of Financial Distress:
A situation in
which available cash is
insufficient to pay supplier, vendors,
employees, banks and
creditors is
known
as financial distress. Signs of
first-stage distress include negative net
cash flow and earnings
and a
falling
market equity value. If this situation
persists, then management
must take actions to rectify
it. The
second-stage
signs of distress include managements'
attempt to reduce costs, such as
employee lay off
and
plant
closing.
If this situation
goes on, the firm enters the
third and final stage of
distress marked by delayed
and small
payments
to creditors and vendors,
employees and others. This
may also include of sale of
assets, issuing
loan
stocks and rescheduling
payment with creditors and
banks. If these actions do
not alleviate the
financial
sufferings and the firm is
likely to embrace the bankruptcy the
eventual result of financial
distress.
A firm
incurs several costs when
its financial position deteriorates,
even if the firm does not
declare
bankruptcy.
These are called costs of
financial distress. Bankruptcy involves
additional fatal costs. As a
general
definition, any loss of
value that can be attributed
to a firm's financial strength is a cost of
financial
distress.
These can be classified into
three categories:
- In
terms of favours to stakeholders to off
set them for the risk of doing
business with financially
sick firm
- Loss
of competitive edge in product
market
- Loss
of tax shield available
In the
next hand out we shall cover
the sources of financial distress in
detail.
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