The Key to M&A Success: Validate the Value of the Acquisition to the Buyer
To Close Deals, Find the Best Buyer, and Clearly Demonstrate Value
Company owners planning to sell need to convince buyers that the premium they’re asking for is legitimate, necessary, and justified. Ron Stacey offers tips on how to validate value to potential buyers.
In order for an M&A transaction to successfully close, the investment value to a specific buyer, or special-interest purchaser, to buy the business (with cash-flow enhancing synergies) must be greater than the value to the seller to keep the business (without synergies). Â This difference in value or acquisition premium, if you will, is necessary to induce the sale and, in many cases, can exceed 30% of the value without synergies. It is incumbent upon the seller to demonstrate to the buyer the business case necessary to justify the acquisition premium. Â Failure to do so results in a failure to close. Â In this article, we address the critical importance of validating the value of the acquisition to the buyer, and we identify some generic best-buyer advantages and the most attractive acquisition strategies.
Find the Best Buyer
A properly conceived strategic marketing plan clearly identifies the best buyers enabling the sell side deal team to tactically articulate a compelling business case for the acquisition to potential buyers.  The key is to be sure that the best buyers are targeted; those buyers to whom the acquisition will add the most value for specific reasons.  Ultimately the process culminates in the “best buyer” paying the highest price available in the marketplace for the business because the best buyer can generate the highest cash flows for the business.  The highest price available in the market from the best buyer meets the all-important test of overcoming the premium needed to induce the seller to sell and to get the deal to closing.Â
Price negotiations generally revolve around how the value of the synergies (incremental additional cash flow) is divided between buyer and seller.Â
If the seller cannot communicate a business case to the buyer, at some point, the deal fails. Put differently, the buyer must be able to clearly point out the synergies (revenue and/or cost) that justifies the premium. Â Buyer discomfort with the deal can occur at any point in the M&A process. Â Once this tipping point is breached, there is no second chance; the seller needs to get the price justification (validation) right the first time and every time. Â To be a successful seller, think like a buyer.Â
Indentify Distinct Best Buyer AdvantagesÂ
The best buyer possesses some distinct advantages for owning the business. Â These may include cross linkages to other buyer-owned business, unique skill sets, and better operational governance, among others. Â Not on this advantages list is size, scale, strategic diversification or new business model.Â
Synergistic links to other businesses in a business portfolio are powerful means to add value.  Take for example a waste collection business—yes, garbage.  A seller has a collection contract for a number of cities, but no landfill close to the pickup routes.  The buyer has a landfill near the seller’s collection routes making it the best buyer for the seller’s collection business since it has the shortest route to the landfill. More common examples include the ability to leverage large company sales forces with acquisitions involving new and innovative products developed at smaller companies without the distribution infrastructure.
Value can be created through the application of unique skill sets in the value drivers of a particular business. Â In manufacturing, for example, companies like GE bring world-class manufacturing capability through lean Six Sigma and best practices. Â The application of these skills to an acquired business produces better cash flows (higher value) from efficiency and cost reduction. Â Depending on the circumstances, these improvements can be dramatic. Â Similarly, in consumer products businesses, Procter & Gamble has distinct advantages in brand development both from acquisitions and start ups.
Private equity generates value by being better operators. Private equity partners with operating management to create an incentivized performance culture. Odyssey Partners’ 1998 buy-and-build acquisition of Transdigm Group (NYSE:TDG) in the aerospace industry is a case in point. With a well conceived strategy of acquiring niche manufacturing operations in businesses with high proprietary engineering content, Odyssey invariably included the management teams in the ownership structure.  It worked.  In 2003, Odyssey sold the combined $300 million revenue company to Warburg Pincus for just over $1 billion.  Everyone did quite well including Warburg Pincus who later took the company public. As of this writing, Transdigm’s market capitalization is $6.34 billion, and in 2012, it ranked first in operating margin (45%), and first in operating profit per employee ($151,000) in its sector.
Attractive Deal Structures
The investment thesis or acquisition strategy underpinning any transaction is a powerful determinant of deal success. The best deal types typically involve improving the seller’s existing cash flow performance, impacting return on invested capital (ROIC) either through cost reduction and/or revenue enhancement; acquiring seller skill sets specific to the value drivers in the business, sooner and cheaper; weeding out excess industry capacity; gaining access to new markets or consolidating existing markets.
 The ability to substantially improve the seller’s performance through increased cash flow and ROIC is clearly the most common method to create sufficient value to justify the acquisition price.  A good example is General Mills’ purchase of Pillsbury from Diageo in 2001 for $10.4 billion.  Both General Mills and Pillsbury are in the packaged food business, while Diageo is primarily in the alcoholic beverages business and ran Pillsbury as a standalone operation.  General Mills was able to integrate Pillsbury into its packaged food operations leveraging purchasing, manufacturing, distribution, and marketing.  To boost revenues, General Mills introduced Pillsbury products to the “school lunch” market where General Mills already had a strong presence.  And lastly, General Mills distributed newly introduced Pillsbury refrigerated products on its fleet of refrigerated trucks.  All in all, General Mills boosted Pillsbury’s operating profits by 70%.  The price General Mills paid, including the premium, was less than the value to General Mills but more than the value to Diageo to continue to operate the business. Hence, the deal got done.1
The opportunity to acquire skill sets, or technologies sooner and at less cost is a formidable framework for successful acquisitions.  This deal attribute is particularly important at information technology companies where it can take years and cost millions to develop code and acquire customers.  Cisco Systems (NASDAQ:CSCO) is a good example of a company built through acquisitions from a single product line to a broad based internet equipment provider.  Since its first acquisition in 1993, shortly after going public, Cisco Systems, through May of 2012, acquired 152 companies reaching sales of $45.6 billion with a market capitalization of $88 billion. Google (NASDAQ:GOOG) is another great example of an Internet technology company built through acquisitions. Since 2001, Google has acquired 110 companies with announced prices exceeding $21.4 billion. Its latest acquisition of Motorola Mobility is the largest in its history at $12.5 billion. While Google’s sales at $40 billion are in line with Cisco Systems, Google’s market capitalization is a whopping $192 billion.
In high-volume, capital-intensive, and cyclical industries, an acquisition strategy aimed at taking capacity out of the market can be highly successful. Representative industries include chemicals, foundries, refineries, paper mills, pulp mills, and packaging manufactures. These businesses typically have high fixed costs with the concomitant high operating leverage. During soft demand (excess capacity), the high fixed costs force competitors to lower prices to the point where the marginal contribution to overhead is minimized.Â
Rationalizing capacity through acquisitions leads to higher prices and, more importantly, higher capacity utilization from the remaining plants. Once the utilization reaches fixed-cost break-even, the profit curve becomes very steep.  These two factors (big losses versus big profits) combined can create compelling scenarios involving the acquisition and shut down of excess capacity.  Wayzata Investment  Partners has employed this strategy very successfully in the U.S. foundry business by buying up foundry assets at the bottom of the cycle (many times out of bankruptcy), then rationalizing the capacity by keeping only the best parts of each acquired facility.  A specific example is the 2010 Wayzata Investment Partners acquisition of Grede Foundries,  which was then merged into Citation Corporation to form a highly diversified foundry business with 14 foundries and 2 machining centers.Â
Market access for new and innovative products, usually developed at smaller companies, can drive successful acquisition scenarios. Â The format is simply taking the products and driving them through the big company sales force and distribution capability. IBM employs this strategy quite successfully. Â Since the beginning of 2000, IBM has acquired 130 companies in strategic areas including analytics, cloud, security, and Smarter Commerce. IBM expects to spend $20 billion in acquisitions over the 2015 Road Map period to support growth initiatives.2Â In a 2010 IBM investor briefing, IBM estimated that revenues in the acquired companies increased by 50% in the two years immediately following the acquisition and by 10% in each of the three years thereafter.
Comprehensive Case Example
Joe Grover, the owner at refuse collector West Maine Disposal, is nearing retirement. Joe knows that crosstown rival East Maine Waste Services is the perfect buyer for the business; East Maine’s landfill is 14 miles closer to the customers than West Maine’s. Moreover, Joe believes that with some rerouting, better efficiencies and higher productivity is achievable. Joe wisely hires an investment banker to approach East Maine about the possibility of an acquisition with some meaningful synergies.
Meetings are arranged and soon Joe and his counterpart at East Maine, Jeff Lyons, are discussing what synergies are achievable in a combined business. Â The shorter distance to landfill reduces travel time and increases equipment utilization, and saves on fuel cost while reducing labor costs. Some of the routes can be redrawn to gain further savings. Â Joe confirms what Jeff believes to be the synergies.
Jeff does the math and determines that $2.1 million can be saved at the gross margin level. Jeff also determines that the headcount reduction from combining the sales and administration functions produces another $2.45 million in savings. Total synergies are $4.55 million. Jeff works up the following spreadsheet in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Best Buyer Synergy Worksheet
|
East Maine |
West Maine |
Combined |
Synergies Value |
000’s |
|
|
|
|
Revenue |
$85,000 |
$35,000 |
$120,000 |
 |
Cost of Sales |
56,100 |
25,200 |
79,200 |
2,100 |
Gross Profit |
28,900 |
9,800 |
40,800 |
 |
% |
34% |
28% |
34% |
 |
SG&A |
15,300 |
4,900 |
17,750 |
2,450 |
  Operating       Profit |
13,600 |
4,900 |
23,050 |
 |
% |
16% |
14% |
19% |
4,550 |
Value at a 5 Multiple |
$68,000 |
$24,500 |
$115,250 |
$22,750Â |
In the first column, Jeff calculates East Maine’s value sans synergies, for simplicity’s sake, at five times operating profit or $68 million. He does the same calculation in column two for West Maine, a smaller company with lower margins, and derives a value of $24.5 million. The combined company, however, has an investment value to Jeff of $115.25 million, $68 million for East Maine plus $24.5 million for West Maine plus the added value of the $4.55 million in synergies; $22.75 million at a five multiple.
Jeff offers $32.5 million for West Maine—an approximate 33%, or $8 million, premium to the $24.5 million value and a 6.6 multiple of operating profit. Of the $22.75 million in synergies value, Jeff is giving up about 35% of the synergies with the $8.0 million premium. On his investment banker’s advice, Joe accepts. Now Jeff has to go out and realize those synergies!
Summary
The price dynamics of healthy M&A transactions dictate that for a sale to occur, typically an acquisition premium must be paid.  It’s the seller’s duty to know and understand the relative advantages of the best buyers and to demonstrate to those buyers the business case that justifies the purchase price.  Buyers with synergistic links to other portfolio business, unique skill sets, and better operators are all good candidates to be the best buyer. Attractive acquisition strategies that create value include improving performance, acquiring special skill sets sooner and cheaper, squeezing out excess industry capacity, gaining access to new markets and consolidating existing markets. To quote Warren Buffet, “Price is what you pay, value is what you get.”  The seller needs to ensure that the necessary value to justify the price is clearly visible to the buyer.
1 Tim Killer, Richard Dobbs, and Bill Huyett, The Four Cornerstones of Corporate Finance, John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, NJ, 2011.
2 IBM website, May 29, 2012: wwwibm.com/annualreport/2011/ghv/#five.
This article first appeared in the July/August 2012 issue of The Value Examiner.
Ron Stacey is a senior level corporate finance and operating executive with a broad range of experience over a wide variety of industries. A creative problem solver with a unique ability to effectively close complex transactions, his professional history includes work with world-class national and international financial services companies as well as privately held businesses. He can be reached at (214) 750-1112 or via email at rstacey@legacyadvisors.org.