CHAPTER 10 Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures SYNOPSIS OF CHAPTER This chapter continues the discussion of corporate strategy that was begun in Chapter 9. Diversification into more than one business is the corporate-level strategy for growth. The corporation is treated as a portfolio of investments, and diversification is seen as a way of further leveraging the firm’s distinctive competencies. The role of diversification in increasing firm profitability, through transferring or leveraging competencies, sharing resources, managing multipoint competition, or leveraging general organizational competencies, is also discussed. Next, the chapter deals with related and unrelated diversification, the advantages and disadvantages of each strategy. The limits of diversification are also described, including an extensive treatment of bureaucratic costs. The chapter continues with a discussion of diversification efforts that lead to value dissipation, rather than value creation. The remainder of the chapter describes three entry strategies for diversification: internal new ventures, acquisitions, and joint ventures. In each section, the benefits and challenges of that entry strategy are listed, along with suggestions about how to increase the chances of a successful implementation of that strategy. Finally, diversification’s opposite, restructuring, is introduced and several exit strategies are described. TEACHING OBJECTIVES 1. Introduce students to concepts related to diversification, including the reasons why firms pursue diversification. 2. Describe related and unrelated diversification and the benefits and problems associated with each. 3. Summarize the limits of diversification with a focus on bureaucratic costs, and show how diversification can lead to value dissipation, rather than value creation. 4. Describe benefits, challenges, and implementation guidelines for the corporate-level strategy of internal new ventures. 5. Describe benefits, challenges, and implementation guidelines for the corporate-level strategy of acquisitions. 6. Describe benefits, challenges, and implementation guidelines for the corporate-level strategy of joint ventures. 7. Discuss the reasons why firms restructure, and illustrate several exit strategies. OPENING CASE: TYCO INTERNATIONAL From 1996 to 2001, the conglomerate Tyco International expanded rapidly, acquiring over 100 diverse businesses. Tyco’s business model is to seek to consolidate a previously fragmented industry in each of the industries in which it competes. Also, Tyco refuses to enter into risky hostile takeovers, instead looking for companies that make basic products and have a strong market presence, but are less profitable than their peers. The firm thoroughly investigates each potential target and replaces top managers with its own team. After acquisition, cost cutting becomes the focus, with incentives for executives whose units reach earnings objectives. Tyco’s stock underperforms, because investors are put off by the complexity of its financial reporting and its heavy debt burden. Rumors that Tyco was conspiring with managers of the acquired firms to inflate Tyco’s Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures 119 performance persist. CEO Kozlowski resigned after being charged with tax evasion. John Fort, the new CEO, spun off Tyco’s finance division, and used the cash to pay down debts. Whether he can find a source of continuing profitability remains to be seen. Teaching Note: This case tells how Tyco’s acquisition strategy both brings benefits to the firm, as well as introduces some potential weaknesses. For example, the very success of its acquisition strategy led to the high debt that brought the stock price down. An interesting discussion for your class could be started, based on questions about Tyco’s ethics. Persistent rumors of financial misdeeds, a CEO charged with tax evasion, and obscure financial reporting all seem to point to ethical problems at Tyco. Do your students think that Tyco does in fact have an unethical organization culture? If no, how do they explain the rumors? If yes, can outside observers (for example, potential investors) determine the nature of the ethical issues, and how? LECTURE OUTLINE I. II. Overview A. This chapter is the second chapter that deals with corporate strategy, and focuses on diversification, the process of adding new businesses to the company that are distinct from its established operations. Thus, a diversified company is involved in two or more distinct businesses. B. Another focus is on the execution of a diversification strategy. This might take place through internal new venturing, which is starting a business from scratch; acquisition, or buying an existing business; and joint ventures established with the help of a partner. C. A third topic is restructuring, the opposite of diversification, in which a company reduces the scope of its operations by exiting industries. Expanding Beyond a Single Industry A. Corporate-level managers identify which industries a company should compete in to maximize longrun profitability. 1. Often, it is better to compete within a single industry. a. One advantage of a single business corporation is the ability to focus more resources and attention on that one area. b. Another advantage is that a firm sticks with what it knows and does best, and does not risk making the mistake of moving into areas in which it has no distinctive competencies. 2. There are also disadvantages to a single-business strategy. a. One disadvantage is the increased risk that comes from tying corporate profitability to just one industry. b. Another disadvantage is that a firm may miss out on opportunities to further leverage its distinctive competencies. B. One model of a corporation looks at the firm as a portfolio of distinctive competencies, rather than a portfolio of products. Managers can then consider how to leverage those competencies. C. Hamel and Prahalad claim that, once a firm has identified its current competencies, it should use a matrix, such as the one presented in Figure 10.1, to establish an agenda for building and leveraging competencies to create new businesses. Show Transparency 62 Figure 10.1: Establishing a Competency Agenda 1. 2. 3. 4. The lower left corner of the matrix represents the company’s current portfolio of competencies. This quadrant is called “fill-in-the-blanks” because the recommended strategy here is to transfer existing competencies in order to improve its position in existing industries. The upper left matrix quadrant is called “premier plus 10,” to suggest that managers must be building new competencies today to ensure that the firm is a premier provider ten years from now. The lower left quadrant is “white spaces,” and it indicates the firm’s search for new industries where its existing distinctive competencies could be deployed through diversification. The upper left quadrant is referred to as “mega-opportunities,” and it represents opportunities for entry into new industries where the company currently has none of the required competencies. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 120 Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures 5. III. Use of this matrix helps managers think strategically about competencies and industries as they change over time. Managers who use this matrix will be unlikely to enter new markets where they do not have a competitive advantage. D. Companies that wish to expand beyond a single industry must develop their business model at two levels. 1. First, they must develop a business model for each industry in which they plan to compete. 2. Then, the company must develop a higher-level multibusiness model that justifies entry into different industries in terms of profitability. This model should describe how the firm plans to leverage its distinctive competencies across industries. The model must also describe how the business and corporate strategies boost profitability. Increasing Profitability Through Diversification A. Diversification is the process of adding new businesses to the company that are distinct from its established operations. Thus, a diversified company is involved in two or more distinct businesses. B. To increase profitability, diversification should allow the company to lower costs, differentiate its products, or better manage industry rivalry. C. When the firm is generating free cash flow, that is, profits about the level necessary to meet current expenses and obligations, the firm’s managers may choose to return dividends to shareholders or to invest the cash in diversification. D. For diversification to make economic sense, the expected return on invested capital (ROIC) from the diversification must exceed the returns shareholders could realize through investing that capital in a diversified investment portfolio. 1. One way that firms use diversification to boost profitability is through their ability to transfer their existing distinctive competencies to an existing business in another industry. The transfer must involve competencies that are important for competitive advantage in that business. Show Transparency 63 Figure 10.2: Transfer of Competencies at Philip Morris 2. Another way of boosting profitability requires that the company leverage its existing distinctive competencies by using them to create a new business in a different industry. a. Leveraging competencies involves creation of a new business, whereas transferring competencies involves an existing business. This distinction is important because the two different situations require the use of different managerial skills. b. Companies that leverage competencies tend to use R&D skills to build a new venture in a technology-related industry, whereas companies that transfer competencies tend to acquire established businesses. STRATEGY IN ACTION 10.1: DIVERSIFICATION AT 3M: LEVERAGING TECHNOLOGY 3M is known for its ability to generate new products and new businesses—30 percent of its sales come from products developed during the last five years. The company is consistently able to extend an existing technological competency to making a similar yet innovative product. Their success is due to a variety of factors, including a culture that encourages risk taking, a focus on solving customer problems, the use of stretch goals, and employee autonomy to pursue their own ideas. Also important are the firm’s system for sharing technologies and expertise and a reward structure that recognizes innovators. Teaching Note: This case provides an example of a firm that is skilled at leveraging existing competencies into the creation of new businesses, but it’s especially useful that the specific mechanisms for encouraging innovation are described in detail. Ask students to consider how another company with which they are familiar might use some or all of 3M’s strategies for improving innovation. What would be some likely results? 3. Another way to use diversification to increase profitability is through sharing resources across multiple businesses in order to obtain cost reductions. This sharing is called economies of scope. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures a. 121 Economies of scope occur because each business can invest less in the shared resource than in resources that are not shared. Show Transparency 64 Figure 10.3: Sharing Resources at Procter & Gamble b. IV. Economies of scale generate economies of scope, because resource sharing allows the company to use the resource more intensively. c. Economies of scope are obtained only when there is significant commonality between one or more value creation functions in the two businesses. d. Also, managers must weigh the benefits obtained by resource sharing against the increased bureaucratic costs of doing so. 4. Diversification can also boost profitability by enabling the company to better manage rivalry through the use of multipoint competition. a. Multipoint competition occurs when two companies rival each other in more than one industry. b. The threat of increasing competitive rivalry in one industry can keep a competitor from entering another industry or can cause the competitor to lessen the intensity of competitive pressure. 5. A final way that profitability can increase due to diversification is through the improved use of general organizational competencies, that is, corporate-level competencies that transcend individual functions or businesses. a. General organizational competencies require the use of rare managerial skills and are difficult to develop and implement. b. One general organizational competency is an entrepreneurial capability, which allows managers to recognize and develop new businesses internally. Companies with this competency are skilled at encouraging risk taking while also limiting the amount of risk undertaken. c. Another general organizational competency is the ability to develop effective organization structure and controls. (1) Effective structure and controls encourage business-level managers to maximize efficiency and effectiveness, increasing profitability. (2) Companies with effective structure and controls tend to use self-contained business divisions. (3) Companies with effective structure and controls tend to be decentralized. (4) Companies with effective structure and controls tend to link pay to performance. d. Another general organizational competency is a superior strategic capability, such that top managers have good governance skills and can effectively manage the firm’s business-level managers. (1) One aspect of superior strategic capability is a flair for entrepreneurship. (2) Superior strategic capability also expresses itself in an ability to recognize ways to improve the performance of individuals, functions, and businesses. (3) Another aspect of effective governance is the ability to diagnose the real source of problems and then to know the appropriate steps to take to fix those problems. (4) Superior strategic capability is at work when a diversified company acquires a new business and then restructures it to improve performance. Types of Diversification A. Related diversification moves the company into a new activity that is linked to its existing activity by a commonality between value chain activities. 1. Typically, the commonality lies in the manufacturing, marketing, and technology functions. 2. Typically, firms pursing a strategy of related diversification expect to benefit from transferring and leveraging competencies and from sharing resources. 3. Also, companies pursing a strategy of related diversification are likely to encounter their rivals in several related industries and thus are likely to benefit from managing that rivalry through multipoint competition. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 122 Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures STRATEGY IN ACTION 10.2: RELATED DIVERSIFICATION AT INTEL Intel’s operations have been focused on microprocessors for personal computers, but when executives realized that PC sales were reaching saturation and that communications would likely be the next high-growth industry, they turned the company’s attention to developing semiconductors for the communications industry. This switch would allow the company to leverage their technological know-how more fully. From 1997 to 2001, Intel acquired 18 chipmakers and moved into fourth place in the industry, spending a total of $18 billion. Unfortunately, the communications industry slumped and the business became a money-loser. In contrast, its PC chips are still highly profitable and its competition position in that industry seems assured. Teaching Note: This case gives an example of a not very successful foray into related diversification. Although Intel executives expected to be able to leverage their competencies, the firm is still in a weak position in the communications industry. You can use this case to illustrate the difficulties in identifying businesses that have enough commonality to allow for successful leveraging of competencies. Also, now is a good time to ask students for creative suggestions for related diversification in other firms. You can ask them, “What businesses are good candidates for related diversification by Exxon?” “by Disney?” “by Wal-Mart?” and so on. As students debate the merits of different potential targets, they will come to realize how difficult identifying a good target can be. B. V. Unrelated diversification moves the company into a new activity that has no obvious commonalities with any of the company’s existing activities. 1. Typically, firms expect to benefit from unrelated diversification through the exploitation of general organizational competencies. 2. Typically, firms pursuing unrelated diversification are unlikely to meet their rivals in more than one industry, and thus are unlikely to benefit from managing rivalry through multipoint competition. The Limits of Diversification A. Diversification, in many cases, can dissipate value instead of creating it. 1. Although related diversification has more ways to increase profitability and seems to involve fewer risks, research has shown that related firms achieve profits that are only slightly higher than unrelated firms. 2. Firms that are extensively diversified, with many businesses, tend to be less profitable. 3. A study by Michel Porter found that over time, companies divested many more of their acquisitions than they kept. B. One reason for the failure of diversification to achieve its goals is that the bureaucratic costs of diversification exceed the value created by it. 1. The level of bureaucratic costs is a function of the number of businesses in a company’s portfolio. a. The greater the number of businesses, the more difficult it is for managers to remain informed about the complexities of each business. They simply do not have the time to process all the information. (1) Therefore, corporate-level managers end up making important decisions based on a superficial analysis of each business. (2) Corporate managers’ lack of familiarity with operations increases the probability that business-level managers will be able to distort information provided to those at the corporate level. b. Thus, information overload can result in substantial inefficiencies within extensively diversified companies. c. In order to overcome information overload, some corporate managers limit the extent of diversification at their firms. 2. Another source of bureaucratic costs is the coordination required to realize value from transferring competencies and resource sharing. Show Transparency 65 Figure 10.4: Coordination Among Related Business Units a. Bureaucratic costs arise from an inability to identify the unique profit contribution of a business unit that is sharing resources and functions with another unit. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures b. VI. 123 This problem can be resolved if corporate management directly audits both divisions, however, doing so requires both time and effort from corporate managers. c. The accountability problem is far more serious at companies that are extensively diversified. Information overload occurs and corporate management effectively loses control of the company. 3. Thus, bureaucratic costs, which increase as a function of the number of businesses and the extent of resource sharing, place a limit on the value created by diversification. If a company continues to diversify after the point at which costs exceed benefits, profitability will decline. Then, divestment is the best solution. C. Another reason that companies fail to realize the expected benefits of a diversification is that companies make an inappropriate choice between related and unrelated diversification. 1. Although the ways that related diversified companies can create value are more numerous, the bureaucratic costs of a related strategy are higher than those of an unrelated strategy. Thus, related firms may be no more profitable than unrelated firms. 2. Related diversification should be chosen when the firm’s distinctive competencies in its core business have commonalities with the competencies required to compete in other businesses, and when the bureaucratic costs of implementation do not exceed the value created through resource sharing. 3. A company should pursue unrelated diversification when its distinctive competencies are highly specialized and have few applications outside the core business, when top management possesses super strategic capabilities, and when the bureaucratic costs of implementation do not exceed the value created through restructuring. D. Another reason for the failure of a diversification strategy to meet its objectives is that many companies diversify for the wrong reasons, and end up dissipating value rather than creating it. 1. One inappropriate reason for diversification is to pool risk. a. Risk pooling is said to create a more stable income stream, reducing the risk of bankruptcy, which is in the best interests of stockholders. b. However, this argument ignores two facts. (1) Stockholders can easily eliminate the risks inherent in holding an individual stock by diversifying their own portfolios, and they can do so at a much lower cost than the company can. (2) Research shows that corporate diversification is not a very effective way to pool risks. The business cycles of different industries are not easy to predict and in any case tend to be a less important influence on share price than a general economic downturn, which hits all industries simultaneously. 2. A second inappropriate reason to diversify is to achieve greater growth. Such diversification is not a coherent strategy because growth on its own does not create value, despite the fact that empire-building top executives sometimes pursue growth for its own sake. Entry Strategy: Internal New Ventures A. Internal new venturing is one method that companies can use to execute a corporate-level diversification strategy. B. Internal new venturing is an appropriate strategy to use for several reasons. 1. Internal new venturing is used when a company possesses a set of valuable competencies in its existing businesses that can be leveraged or recombined to enter the new business area. 2. Science-based companies that use their technology to create market opportunities in related areas tend to favor internal new internal venturing. 3. Even if it lacks the competencies required to compete in a new business area, a company may use internal new venturing to enter a newly emerging or embryonic industry where there are no established players that possess the competencies required to compete in that industry. Thus, internal new venturing is the only option. C. There are some drawbacks to the use of internal new ventures, which have a very high failure rate. 1. Large-scale entry into a new business is more likely to be successful than is small-scale entry, because it entails greater short-term costs, but gives greater returns in the long run. This is due to the greater economies of scale, brand loyalty, and access to distribution channels that large firms enjoy. The effect is especially noticeable when a firm is entering an established industry with powerful incumbents. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 124 Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures Show Transparency 66 Figure 10.5: Scale of Entry, Profitability, and Cash Flow 2. Another concern with internal new ventures is that a company can become blinded by the technological possibilities of a new product and fail to analyze market opportunities properly, leading to poor commercialization. Successful commercialization requires that there be a market demand for the technology. 3. Internal new ventures can also fail due to a poor implementation. Common mistakes here include pursuit of too many ventures at once leading to strained resources, failure to ensure the strategic value of the venture beforehand, and failure to anticipate the tie-and-cost demands— leading to an unrealistic profit expectation. D. To avoid the above pitfalls, managers can follow a number of guidelines to reduce the risk of new venture failure. 1. A company should use a structured approach to new venture development, including both exploratory (basic) research and development research. a. Good basic research comes from strong ties to university research communities and from giving researchers enough resources to pursue “blue-sky” projects of their own choosing. b. However, basic research alone will not lead a successful commercial venture. c. Good development research also requires resources to be given to business-level managers, who are ideally situated to recognize commercially viable technologies. d. Good development research also requires communicating company strategies and goals to researchers, so that their research will be relevant to those goals. 2. Another way to increase the probability of new venture success is to foster close links between R&D and marketing and R&D and manufacturing. a. Project teams with members from the various functional areas are an effective way to foster close links. b. These teams can also significantly reduce product development time. 3. Another strategy is to devise a selection process for choosing only the ventures that demonstrate the greatest probability of commercial success. 4. To ensure success, managers must also monitor the new venture closely, focusing on market share rather than on profit goals for the first few years. Large market share facilitates economies of scale and learning effects, which will ultimately lead to superior profitability. 5. Finally, companies can help to ensure new venture success by thinking big. They should look for products that have high potential demand, construct efficient-scale manufacturing plants ahead of need, and spend generously on marketing. These steps will help to lead to high market share and profitability. VII. Entry Strategy: Acquisitions A. Acquisitions are the main strategy for implementing horizontal integration, and they are also used in vertical integration and diversification strategies. B. Acquisition is an appropriate strategy to use for several reasons. 1. A company can use acquisition to enter a new business area when they lack important competencies required in that area, and they can purchase an incumbent company that has those competencies at a reasonable price. 2. Acquisition is a quick way to establish a significant market presence and generate profitability. 3. Acquisitions are perceived to be somewhat less risky than internal new ventures, because they involve less uncertainty. When a company makes an acquisition, it is acquiring known profitability, revenues, and market share; thus it reduces uncertainty. 4. Acquisition is a good entry mode when the industry to be entered is well established with high barriers to entry. The greater the barriers to entry, the more likely it is that acquisitions will be the favored entry mode. C. There are some drawbacks to the use of acquisition, which have a high failure rate and often dissipate value instead of creating it. 1. A challenge for acquiring firms is to smooth postacquisition integration of the two companies. Unanticipated problems often occur when an attempt is made to marry two divergent corporate cultures. This can lead to high management turnover and can depress profitability. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures 125 STRATEGY IN ACTION 10.3: POSTACQUISITION PROBLEMS AT MELLON BANK In 1993 Mellon Bank acquired Boston Co., a money management firm for major institutional clients, for $1.45 billion. Problems at Boston Co. began to surface soon after the acquisition. From the start there was a clash of cultures—Mellon’s culture is based on frugality and top-down control, whereas Boston Co. employees expected autonomy and high pay. Mellon cut Boston’s expenses and increased rules and restrictions. When a Boston Co. portfolio experienced low returns, Mellon managers liquidated it, taking a $130-million charge against earnings and firing the portfolio manager, for “unauthorized trades.” Infuriated by what they saw as Mellon’s interference, seven Boston Co. managers proposed a management buyout. When Mellon rejected the proposal, some highprofile Boston Co. managers left, taking valuable employees and clients with them. Teaching Note: The problems at Mellon and Boston are yet another example of how difficult it can be to merge two divergent corporate cultures, and how the management turnover that results from such attempts can deal a serious blow to any attempt to create value out of an acquisition. Ask students to suggest how Mellon might have avoided or mitigated some of these problems. 2. 3. Another challenge is that companies often overestimate the potential for creating value by joining together different businesses. They overestimate the strategic advantages of the acquisition and thus overpay for the target company. Richard Roll attributes this to top management hubris. Another drawback relates to the price of acquisitions, which tend to be very expensive. Stockholders of the target company do not want to sell unless they are offered a premium price. In addition, several bidders are sometimes pursuing the same target company, bidding up the price to result in a typical increase in market value of 40 to 80 percent. STRATEGY IN ACTION 10.4: JDS UNIPHASE’S $40 BILLION ERROR JDS Uniphase was doing a booming business in optical gear, but couldn’t increase capacity fast enough to handle the growing demand. So from November 1999 to July 2000, the firm made three acquisitions, financing them with issuance of JDS stock. When demand collapsed in early 2001, it became clear that the firm paid too much for the acquisitions and the company had to write down the value of intangible assets, reducing earnings by $44.8 billion. No “real” money was lost and the write down left the company in a sound financial position. However, shareholders saw the stock price decline from a high of over $150 in March 2000 to under $2 in September 2002. Teaching Note: This case illustrates yet another drawback to acquisitions, which is that an accurate valuation can be very difficult to achieve, especially when the reasons for the acquisition are not wholly rational, as in this case. 4. D. Another drawback is that, when firms overpay for the acquisition, the resulting debt can depress company profits. 5. Yet another drawback is that many companies make acquisition decisions without thoroughly analyzing the potential benefits and costs. As a consequence, after the acquisition is complete, many acquiring companies find that they have purchased a troubled organization instead of a well-run business. To avoid the above pitfalls, managers can follow a number of guidelines to reduce the risk of acquisition failure. 1. Thorough screening of acquisition targets leads to a more realistic assessment of the costs and benefits of an acquisition. a. The company should begin with an assessment of the strategic rationale for the acquisition and identify the types of companies that would make good candidates. b. Next, the company should scan the target population, assessing such items as finances, management capabilities, and corporate culture. c. Then, favorable targets should be identified and evaluated more thoroughly. This may involve talking to third parties, as well as performing a detailed audit, if the acquisition is a friendly one. 2. Good bidding strategy help to reduce risk because it can reduce the price of an acquisition. a. Friendly takeovers are more likely to have a favorable price. b. The timing of the acquisition is also important. Essentially sound businesses that are suffering from short-term or localized problems are usually undervalued. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 126 Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures Taking positive steps to quickly integrate the acquired business into the company’s organizational structure is also key to an acquisition’s success. a. Integration should focus on the source of the expected competitive advantages. b. Integration should be accompanied by elimination of any duplication of assets or functions. 4. Acquirers should also take steps to learn from previous experience with acquisitions. VIII. Entry Strategy: Joint Ventures A. Joint ventures are used as a diversification mode less frequently than are internal new ventures and acquisitions. B. Joint venture is an appropriate strategy to use for several reasons. 1. Joint ventures are particularly appealing when a firm wishes to enter an embryonic or emerging market, but hesitates to commit the resources. Joint ventures allow two or more companies to share the risks of a new business. 2. Companies use joint ventures when they possess some of the skills and assets needed by the new business, but not all. They can team up with a firm with complementary skills to increase the probability of success. C. There are some drawbacks to the use of joint ventures. 1. Although a joint venture allows a company to share the risks and costs of developing a new business, it also means that it must share the profits if the new business is successful. 2. By definition, in the case of a joint venture, control must be shared with the venture partner. This can lead to substantial problems if the two companies have different business philosophies, time horizons, or investment preferences. Conflicts over how to run the joint venture can tear it apart and result in business failure. 3. When a company enters into a joint venture, it always runs the risk of giving away critical know-how to its joint-venture partner. IX. Restructuring A. Restructuring, or strategies for reducing the scope of the company by exiting from business areas, is the opposite of diversification, which increases scope. B. Restructuring is becoming increasingly popular among firms that diversified in the 1980s and 1990s. C. Restructuring occurs in response to several factors. 1. In recent years, investors have assigned a diversification discount to highly diversified companies, meaning that their stock was undervalued as compared to the stock of less diversified firms. a. Investors are deterred by the complexity and lack of transparency in the financial statements of highly diversified firms, leading to an increased risk for the investment. b. Investors have learned from experience that many companies overdiversify, or diversify for the wrong reasons, leading to lower profitability. c. Therefore, companies have restructured in order to split the company and increase returns to shareholders. 2. Restructuring can be a response to failed acquisitions. 3. Due to innovations in management processes and strategies, the advantages of being vertically integrated or diversified have diminished, and so companies are restructuring. D. Companies use a variety of strategies to implement restructuring, that is, to exit a business. 1. Divestment is the best way for a company to recoup as much of its initial investment in a business as possible. The idea is to sell the business unit to the highest bidder. There are three types of buyers. a. Selling a business to independent investors is referred to as a spinoff. A spinoff makes good sense when the unit to be sold is profitable and the stock market is looking for new stock issues. b. Selling off a unit to another company is another strategy. The buyer is often a competitor in the same line of business. In such cases, the purchaser may pay a considerable amount of money for the opportunity to substantially increase the size of its business immediately. c. Selling off a unit to its management is normally referred to as a management buyout (MBO). In an MBO, management finances the purchase through the sale of high-yield 3. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 10: Corporate Strategy: Diversification, Acquisitions, and Internal New Ventures 2. 3. 127 bonds to investors. In recent years, the lack of investors interested in high-yield, high-risk bonds (also called junk bonds), has made it difficult to carry out any MBOs. A harvest strategy is implemented when a company ceases investment in a business, but continues to “harvest” profits from it for as long as possible. a. Although this strategy sounds nice in theory, it is often a poor one to pursue in practice because the morale of the unit’s employees, as well as the confidence of the business’s customers and suppliers in its continuing operation, can all decline rapidly once it becomes apparent that the business is pursuing a harvest strategy. b. Therefore, the rapid decline in the business’s revenues can make the strategy untenable. This strategy is thus much less desirable than a divestment strategy. A liquidation strategy requires a company to cease operations in that business and sell its assets. a. A liquidation strategy is the least attractive of all to pursue because the company has to write off its investment in a business unit—often at a considerable cost. b. Liquidation is much less desirable than either a divestment or a harvest strategy. c. More information about harvest and liquidation strategies is available in Chapter 6, in the final section that discusses strategies for declining industries. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.