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2012. Capital Acquisition & Capital Structure. BT 401-13. Capital Structure: Key Topics. Evaluation of Current Financial Obligations and Resources – The Static View (Balance Sheet) Prioritizing Capital Structure Risks Evaluation of Capital Market Transactions
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2012 Capital Acquisition&Capital Structure • BT 401-13
Capital Structure: Key Topics • Evaluation of Current Financial Obligations and Resources – • The Static View (Balance Sheet) • Prioritizing Capital Structure Risks • Evaluation of Capital Market Transactions • The Dynamic View (History & Prospects)
2010 Risk of Impairment Various Risks – Rates, Refinancing, Covenants, Accounting visibility, Consolidation, Credit ratings
2012 Capital Market Transactions • Potential Equity Transactions: • New Issuances of Equity • Conversions • Returns to Shareholders (Dividends & Buybacks) • Potential Debt Transactions & Credit Ratings • Banking Relationships • Capital Market Strategies • e.g., refinancing options, hedging strategies, dividend policies, etc. • Major Restructurings
Common stock only • No preferred, converts, warrants • Par Value and “Paid-in Capital” • “Authorized” vs “Issued & Outstanding” • Treasury Stock
1916: Original incorporation • 1979: Acquired by RJR Nabisco • 1990: Sold to Merrill Lynch investors • Recapitalized by Texas Pacific Group ?
1999: New IPO (NYSE: DLM) • 1997-2001: Deals with Nestlé, Contadina, SunFresh • 2002: Major deal with Heinz • 2006: Acquisition of Meow Mix
2011 DJIA Buyback Results
Capital Acquisition The Original Issuer Paradigm
Henry Ford & the Invention of “Retained Earnings” Most businesses can’t do this
Capitalism:Other People’s Money “Original Capitalism”
The “Rich Uncle” Phase of Capitalism 1850-1950
The “Finance Revolution” (since 1950...) • Tremendous quantitative expansion of capital markets • Tremendous qualitative development of • new financial players • new financial instruments • Development of “Modern Finance Theory”
Growth of Global Financial Markets Source: The McKinsey Quarterly (2005)
The Mutual Fund Explosion Source: The Wall Street Journal (2005)
A Change in Thinking About Capital & Investment • The old mindset – • “return on investment” • The new mindset – • value creation
“Return on Investment” • Dividends, Coupons • A “Bond” mentality Pennsylvania RR merges with NY Central (1968) Penn Central goes bankrupt (1970)
ROI Mindset • Based on direct claims on the cash flows from the business • Claimed to be the basis of market value by early theorists
Value Creation • Based on Market Value directly • Market value is influenced by many things other than cash flow per se
Assets to be Acquired • Inventory • Trained Personnel • Parts • Building • Supplies • Tools...
...with a piece of paper... How do you acquire Cash?
The Fundamental Question Why would you exchange your piece of paper for my piece of paper?
What terms do I need to include on my piece of paper? • Make it a Contract • ...give it the status of a Legal Instrument • Enforceable in court
What else? Attach “rights” that create value • Promises to Pay Cash in the Future • Periodic payments • Repayment of the Entire Amount Like what?
What else? • Claims on other Assets • “Collateral”, “security interest” • “Liquidation preference”
What else? • Right to Re-sell my Paper to someone else • ...to get cash from someone else (not me)
Two Broad Classes of “Rights”that create Value for the Investor • Intrinsic Value • Extrinsic Value Almost every successful “financial instrument” has both intrinsic and extrinsic value
Intrinsic Value • Created by specific provisions in the “contract” What is “within the four corners of the document”
Extrinsic Value? • Not a part of the “contract” • Not enforceable in court!! • Created from “outside”... • ...by “the Market”
Building a Financial Instrument • Every successful “piece of paper” is a mixture of intrinsic and extrinsic value features