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Mergers Acquisitions Study Set 1
Quiz 16: Alternative Exit and Restructuring Strategies
Path 4
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Question 1
Essay
How might the form of payment affect the abnormal return to sellers and buyers?
Question 2
Essay
Describe how you as an analyst would estimate the potential impact of the Huntington Ingalls Industries spin-off on the long-term value of Northrop Grumman's share price?
Question 3
Essay
What is the likely impact of the spin-off on Northrop Grumman's share price immediately following the spin-off of Huntington Ingalls assuming no other factors offset it?
Question 4
Essay
Why do businesses that have been spun off from their parent often immediately put antitakeover defenses in place?
Question 5
True/False
In deciding to sell a business, a parent firm should compare the business' after-tax value in sale with its pre-tax value to the parent as part of the parent.
Question 6
True/False
Divestitures, spin-offs, equity carve-outs, split-ups, and bust-ups are commonly used strategies to exit businesses.
Question 7
Essay
After months of trying to sell its 81 percent stake in Blockbuster Inc., Viacom undertook a spin-off in mid 2004. Why would Viacom choose to spin-off rather than divest its Blockbuster unit? Explain your answer.
Question 8
True/False
Antitrust regulatory agencies may make their approval of a merger contingent on the willingness of the merger partners to divest certain businesses.
Question 9
Essay
Speculate as to why Northrop Grumman used a spin-off rather than a divestiture, split-off or split up to separate Huntington Ingalls from the rest of its operations? What were the advantages of the spin-off over the other restructuring strategies.
Question 10
Essay
On April 25, 2001, in an effort to increase shareholder value, USX announced its intention to split U.S. Steel and Marathon Oil into two separately traded companies. The breakup gives holders of Marathon Oil stock an opportunity to participate in the ongoing consolidation within the global oil and gas industry. Holders of USX-U.S. Steel Group common stock (target stock) would become holders of newly formed Pittsburgh-based United States Steel Corporation. What other alternatives could USX have pursued to increase shareholder value? Why do you believe they pursued the breakup strategy rather than some of the alternatives?
Question 11
Essay
Hewlett Packard (HP) announced the spin-off of its Agilent Technologies unit to focus on its main business of computers and printers. Hewlett Packard provided Agilent with $983 million in start-up funding. HP retained a controlling interest until mid-2000, when it spun-off the rest of its shares in Agilent to HP shareholders as a tax-free transaction. Discuss the reasons why HP may have chosen a staged transaction rather than an outright divestiture of the business.
Question 12
Essay
What factors influence a parent firm's decision to undertake a spin-off rather than a divestiture or equity carve-out?
Question 13
Essay
Since 2001, GE, the world's largest conglomerate, had been underperforming the S&P 500 stock index. In late 2008, the firm announced that it was considering spinning off its consumer and industrial unit. What do you believe are GE's motives for their proposed restructuring? Why do you believe they chose a spin-off rather than an alternative restructuring strategy?
Question 14
Essay
What are the advantages and disadvantages of tracking or target stocks to investors and to the firm?
Question 15
True/False
Empirical studies show that the desire by parent firms to increase strategic focus is an important motive for exiting businesses.
Question 16
Essay
Explain how executing successfully a large-scale divestiture can be highly complex. This is especially true when the divested unit is integrated with the parent's functional departments and with other units operated by the parent. Consider the challenges of interdependencies, regulatory requirements, and customer and employee perceptions.
Question 17
Essay
How would you decide when to sell a business?
Question 18
True/False
The timing of a divestiture is important. If the business to be sold is highly cyclical, the sale should be timed to coincide with the firm's peak year earnings.
Question 19
Essay
Why would the U.S. Internal Revenue Service be concerned about a change of control of the spun-off business such that it might revoke its ruling that the spin-off satisfied the requirements to be tax-free?