Merger As A Strategy of Growth: Manita Jindal 133 Sweta Aggarwal Sumit Lakra 102 Himansu Kumar
Merger As A Strategy of Growth: Manita Jindal 133 Sweta Aggarwal Sumit Lakra 102 Himansu Kumar
Merger As A Strategy of Growth: Manita Jindal 133 Sweta Aggarwal Sumit Lakra 102 Himansu Kumar
Manita jindal 133 Sweta aggarwal Sumit lakra 102 Himansu kumar
otherwise if the segment has two companies one is relatively large company then other but it don't own the technical speciality or that item which is required by the company to take benefit of growth opportunity but the other small firm has that speciality then the large firm can acquire the small one and by using that technical speciality of that small
Example of M&A
Two companies that are recognized as among the best at making successful acquisitions are General Electric and Cisco Systems. These companies have been star performers in growing shareholder value. The core principal that runs through almost every acquisition is integration. Over the past 10 years Cisco Systems has acquired 81 companies. Their stock price is up a remarkable 1300%. GE outperformed the S&P 500 index over the same period by 300%.
There are several categories of strategic acquisition that can produce some outstanding results:
ACQUIRE CUSTOMERS OPERATING LEVERAGE CAPITALIZE ON A COMPANY STRENGTH COVER A WEAKNESS BUY A LOW COST SUPPLIER IMPROVING OR COMPLETING A PRODUCT LINE TECHNOLOGY - BUILD OR BUY? ACQUISITION TO PROVIDE SCALE AND ACCESS TO CAPITAL MARKETS PROTECT AND EXPAND MATURE PRODUCT LINES ACQUISITION TO REMOVE BARRIERS TO ENTRY
ACQUIRE CUSTOMERS
This is almost always a factor in strategic acquisitions. Some companies buy another that is in the same business in a different geography. They get to integrate market presence, brand awareness, and market momentum.
OPERATING LEVERAGE
The major focus in this type of acquisition is to improve profit margins through higher utilization rates for plant and equipment. Eg.A manufacturer of cardboard containers that is operating at 65% of capacity buys a smaller similar manufacturer. The acquired company's plant is sold, all but two machines are sold, the G&A staff are let go and the new customers are served more cost effectively.
COVER A WEAKNESS
This requires a good deal of objectivity from the acquiring company in recognizing and chinks in the corporate armor. Let me help you with some suggestions 1. Customer concentration; 2. Product concentration; 3. Weak product pipeline; 4. Lack of management depth or technical expertise 5. Great technology and products - poor sales and marketing.
In this area, bigger is better. Larger companies are considered safer investments. Larger companies command larger valuation multiples. Some companies make acquisitions in order to get big enough to attract public capital in the form of an IPO or investments from Private Equity Groups.
Many larger firms have established business development offices to execute corporate growth strategies through acquisition. These experienced buyers search for companies that fit their welldefined acquisition criteria. In most cases they are attempting to buy companies that are not actively for sale. The win for the successful corporate acquirer is to target several candidates, buy them at financial valuation multiples, integrate to strength and achieve strategic performance.
Indian scenario
The latest example Wipro Acquiring QuanTech (company providing services in the area of CAD/CAM), New Logic, and Enabler. Further, in the last six months they have acquired four companies. The sizes of the acquisitions are bigger in terms of market ratings. They are confident that they will derive significant value from these companies in the upcoming years. These acquisitions were meant to build certain geographical footprint, particularly in Europe. Through acquisitions, Wipro is also looking at building domain expertise, acquiring intellectual property and patents, and basically strengthening its consultancy skills.
Acquisitions are done to help to be compatible with industry growth rates. Looking at revenues after Acquisition, there was a slight increase in Wipros overall revenue by two percent. Their business strategy is to acquire companies with a range of business that were not present in their vertical. They are also looking for second tier cities to expand their operation, in order to minimize costs. To reap maximum benefits, Wipro has to work closely with the employees to understand their grievances and expectations after
Similarly, Satyam Computers acquired two companies, Knowledge Dynamics, a high-end consulting solutions provider in Business Intelligence, and Citisoft, a highly specialized European business and systems consulting firm. Acquiring companies of different countries is not always going to provide better ROI. The reasons like high pay package, less working hours, strict law policies are going to be major threats to the Indian IT top management in building their businesses in foreign soils. Extracting maximum value from the second and third tier organization is going to be a tough