Report
At a Glance
- An active and ongoing portfolio management strategy involving regular acquisitions and divestitures always beats ambitious portfolio transformations.
- In today’s disruptive environment, divestitures are instrumental to accelerate the transition to a future portfolio; they release the time, talent, energy and capital tied up in nonstrategic businesses.
- In practice, many companies delay and underprepare for divestitures, resulting in value leakage.
- Systematic preparation helps divesting companies get ahead of common divesting pitfalls—for both proactive divestitures and regulator-mandated ones.
This article is Section 4.4 of Bain's 2020 Global Corporate M&A Report. Explore our latest annual M&A report here.
Divestitures can create value when done proactively
Divestitures are quite common. On average, almost two-thirds of strategic deals, by value, involved divestitures over the past decade. Timely divestments can accelerate the transition to a future portfolio by releasing the time, talent and energy tied up in nonstrategic businesses. Divestments are also a source of capital to fuel growth. Some companies use this lever more frequently and to greater effect than others do.
Our extensive research on M&A value creation over the past two decades shows that frequent acquirers outperform other companies (see Figure 4.7, left panel). We define frequent acquirers as companies that make at least 10 acquisitions within a decade. What also stands out is that these companies are active portfolio managers that both acquire and divest proactively. We found almost 91% of frequent acquirers divest and that they divest around 2.5 times more than others (see Figure 4.7, middle and right panels).
M&A practitioners also agree that divestitures can be value-creating transactions. In a recent senior executive survey on M&A and divestitures, about 200 respondents who had experience with divestitures reported that about two-thirds of their divestitures met or exceeded expectations and created value for the company.
Holding on to assets past their due date destroys value
Despite the value in making timely divestitures, roughly 60% of our survey respondents reported that divestment decisions take longer than other strategic decisions. They say action often is delayed by months, if not years. The biggest cause of delay is waiting for better market conditions—that is, hoping for a better sale price (see Figure 4.8). Among the other reasons for delay were difficulty in separating operations, legacy/cultural resistance, deprioritizing divestitures, and concerns about stranded costs and dis-synergies.
We believe that operational concerns, such as the complexity of functional separation or the challenge of assessing and mitigating stranded costs and dis-synergies, are all addressable with better preparation.
Cultural reasons for delaying divestitures are harder to navigate and lead to tremendous value leakage. They come in various forms. There is the hold-and-hope mentality in which a company expects the business to turn around. There are concerns about shrinking the size of the business, or companies simply deprioritize divestitures on the belief that the business impact is minimal. There may also be a fear of exposing a bad business to the market. Overall performance and investor reaction to divestitures shows that these are generally unfounded concerns.
Companies should instead change the narrative to one in which they honestly ask who the right parent is and then find that parent for their nonstrategic businesses. Delays in divestitures not only stop a company from fully focusing on its strategic growth businesses but also weaken the nonstrategic businesses in the process. For the majority of corporates, capital is limited, and assets tagged nonstrategic are the first to see funding cuts. This perpetuates a cycle of value erosion over time (see Figure 4.9). If getting good value for the business was a concern at the starting point, it’s certainly a bigger concern after a period of value erosion. The bottom line: Companies need to act faster when it comes to divestitures.
A little preparation goes a long way in getting your fair share
Once a company decides to divest, the question is whether that company is getting its fair share of value. Our experience shows corporates tend to underestimate the value of the assets they are divesting.
Private equity firms are eager to buy corporate carve-out assets. Yet while companies may hold off on divestitures, awaiting a better sale price, the bigger issue is that they don’t capture their fair share of value from carve-outs when they do sell because they are underprepared. It is a particularly important issue when corporates go up against sophisticated PE buyers.
Several PE transactions involving corporate carve-outs illustrate this situation. For example, in October 2018, a Blackstone-led consortium acquired 55% of Thomson Reuters’ financial and risk unit, valuing the business at $20 billion. This asset was proposed to be sold within a year to the London Stock Exchange at a valuation about 35% higher, at $26.7 billion.
Our senior executive survey shows that a clear strategic rationale and adequate preparation lead to success in divestitures (see Figure 4.10). Applying the PE playbook to maximizing exit value is the best way to prepare.
A PE exit playbook applied toward preparing for divestitures incorporates the following:
- Capture quick-win improvements. Implement and realize sustainable in-year profit improvements from high-impact opportunities.
- Build an exit story. Create a strategic action plan to realize the full potential of the business, and back it with a robust fact base and proven traction on specific initiatives to show early signs of success.
- Embed the future buyer perspective. Outline a value-creation plan for the next owner (tailored for a corporate vs. financial buyer).
- Prepare for sale well ahead of time. Ensure early preparation of selling documents, typically a year before the actual sale, and create a short list of buyers 6 to 12 months before the sale.
The following two examples show how proactive preparation helped the divesting companies find buyers and realize a better-than-expected sale price.
A US-based global aerospace and defense company wanted to divest its services business due to underperformance and limited future growth prospects. The company had not taken steps to adapt the business to current and expected top-line declines. To prepare the asset, the company pressure tested its business plan against market projections and peer forecasts, identified a requisite set of growth and cost initiatives to close the gap to new performance targets, and began implementing a subset of no-regrets cost initiatives. These actions increased in-year operating profit by roughly 50% and improved the likelihood of finding a buyer. In fact, the growth and cost initiatives identified during preparation reflected about 70% of the synergies ultimately identified by the strategic buyer.
A major European telecom company had a small innovative business unit that established a new product in partnership with business-to-business (B2B) clients. That new product had few synergies and little integration with the core business—not to mention low growth prospects. The company initially planned to sell the business to its B2B partner at a loss of several million dollars. After a few months of systematic preparation, however, including a strategic opportunities assessment and buyer screening, the divesting company was able to realize a profit from the sale instead of incurring the loss that it had expected. It also found a buyer other than its B2B partner.
With adequate preparation, regulator-mandated divestitures don’t have to be painful
With many industries hitting the limits of consolidation, the likelihood that a scale deal will require regulator-mandated divestitures is high and poses a risk to both the timeline and synergies.
Regulator-mandated divestitures add tremendous complexity to the divestiture process. They can feel more unnatural than planned divestitures and must be completed within a short time frame (see Figure 4.11). Often, the remedies require selling a part of the target’s business, something you don’t know very well. It puts you in a compromised negotiating position with the buyer, and you may find yourself surrounded by advisers with conflicting objectives. Moreover, you may be running the sale process alongside regulator negotiations—all while dealing with ongoing integration planning. It is certainly not for the faint hearted.
Getting ahead of this complexity requires preparing for regulator consultations and monitoring the interdependencies between the integration and separation efforts. The best acquirers take the time to study the regulator’s approach and develop their own war-gaming scenarios to prepare for consultations.
A systematic approach to preparing for regulator-mandated divestitures involves five steps:
- Identify potential categories at risk. Understand how the regulator views the market to identify overlapping business areas that would come under scrutiny.
- Define the business perimeter of remedy options. For each overlapping business, define the potential remedy options (products, geographies) and whether they belong to the acquirer or target’s business.
- Identify the value at risk. Assess the revenue and margin impact of each remedy option.
- Define discrete divestiture packages. For each remedy option, assess feasibility—supporting infrastructure, probability of finding buyers, impact on closing timeline and so forth.
- War-game potential scenarios. Rank order your potential remedy options, and run a scenario analysis to prepare your response to various regulator reactions.
This is usually a complex exercise involving trade-offs among minimizing the impact on deal value, satisfying regulatory concerns, attracting interested bidders and limiting separation complexity. A key aspect is also identifying walkaway conditions—namely, those in which the original deal would no longer make economic sense.
As all deal types face increasing scrutiny, there is great value in preparing in advance for remedy negotiations. Such preparation delivers a huge pay-off by minimizing the drain on leadership, resources and the costs of getting into protracted regulatory issues. The most successful companies are proactive. They start to assess and plan for regulatory risk at the deal diligence and negotiation phase.
This article is part of Bain’s 2020 Global Corporate M&A Report. Explore the contents of the report here or download the PDF to read the full report.