Section 14 Flashcards

1
Q

What can Agency cost of equity tell us?

A

it can be a signal of low profitability; can reduce effort of the manager (and thus affect value of firm)

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2
Q

What can the agency cost of debt do?

A

induce risk shifting and inefficient project choice (thus reducing value of firm)

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3
Q

define free cash flow?

A

cash flow in excess of that required to fund all projects that have positive net present values.

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4
Q

Describe the theory developed that explains the benefits of debt in reducing agency costs of free cash flow:

A

how to motivate managers to disgorce cash rather than investing it at below the cost of capital or wasting it on organization inefficiencies

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5
Q

What does debt do to managers in regards to their ability to squander funds?

A

debt, and its periodic payments, reduces managers ability to squander funds on pet projects and “empire building”

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6
Q

what is the lazy manager problem?

A

managers in stable firms with lots of free cash flow and without much product market competition may become lazy and complacent

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7
Q

what does raising leverage do on managers in the lazy managers problem?

A

puts a lot of pressure on them to perform and make operations more efficient

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8
Q

what do most leverage increasing transactions do after the fact to common stock prices, and which transactions are they?

A

stock repurchases, exchange of debt or preferred for common, debt for preferred : result in significantly positive increases in common stock prices.

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9
Q

most leverage reducing transactions do what to common stock prices, and what are those transactions?

A

sale of common, exchange of common for debt/preferred, preffered for debt, call of convertible bonds, convertible preferred forcing conversion into common: result in significant decreases in stock prices

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10
Q

from 1973 to 1970’s crude oil prices did what..?

A

increased tenfold

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11
Q

what agency conflicts can excessive leverage produce?

A

risk shifting; managers have incentives to loot company prior to bankruptcy

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12
Q

inefficiently managed firms are targets for…?

A

corporate raiders

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13
Q

what is the market for corporate control?

A

the market for the right to control the management of corporate resources

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14
Q

name the types of takeovers:

A

mergers, hostile and friendly tender offers, proxy contests, leveraged buyouts

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15
Q

what is a merger?

A

bidder negotiates an agreement with target management on the terms of the offer for the target and then submits the proposed agreement to a vote with shareholders

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16
Q

what is a tender offer?

A

bidder makes an offer directly to shareholders to buy some or all of the stock of the target firm

17
Q

what is a “Friendly” tender offer?

A

offers that are supported by target management

18
Q

what is a “hostile” tender offer?

A

refers to offers which are opposed by target managements

19
Q

what is a proxy contest?

A

dissident shareholder group attempts through a vote of shareholders to obtain control of the board of directors

20
Q

what are leveraged buyouts?

A

buyouts of shareholders equity, heavily financed with debt by a group that frequently includes incumbent management

21
Q

why are defensive strategies against hostile takeovers controversial?

A

they pose a conflict of interest for target management because they impose significant welfare losses on managers

22
Q

how can defensive strategies against hostile takeovers help target shareholders during a control contest?

A

litigation and other blocking actions may provide necessary time for the management of the firm to “shop” the target and negotiate competing bids

23
Q

what are some defensive measures against control contests?

A

litigation by target management, greenmail, poison pill

24
Q

define litigation by target management:

A

litigation against a hostile suitor based on charges of securities fraud, antitrust violations, and violations of state or federal tender offer regulations

25
Q

define greenmail:

A

targeted block stock repurchase - occurs when target management ends hostile takeover threat by repurchasing at a premium the hostile suitor’s block of target stock

26
Q

define poison pills

A

first introduced in 1982 and describes a family of shareholder rights agreements that, when triggered by an event such as a tender offer for control: provide target shareholders with rights to purchase additional shares or sell shares to the target at very attractive prices; makes hostile acquisitions exorbitantly expensive in most cases since the bidder has to buy much more shares

27
Q

what were some factors in the high level of takeover activity in the 1980’s?

A

changes in antitrust regulations, and deregulation

28
Q

describe the changes in antirturst regulations that led to takeovers in the 80’s?

A

antritrust regulators object less to vertical combinations. Even horizontal mergers between industry leaders were completely taboo before the 1980’s and are often allowed now

29
Q

Describe the deregulation that caused the takeover activity in the 1980’s

A

many of the mergers, takeovers, and restructuring over the last ten years have occurred in industries that recently were deregulated (transpiration, airlines, financial services, broadcasting, and oil/gas)

30
Q

returns to shareholders of acquiring companies are..?

A

typically low or even negative.

31
Q

returns to bidders and targets of takeovers…?

A

shareholders of target clearly benefit from takeovers because of high premiums

32
Q

Moeller et all (2005) showed that from 1991 to 2001, acquiring firms shareholders lost..?

A

$216 billion