T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
596.1 | Sooner than you may think | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Mon Aug 15 1988 22:18 | 7 |
| "Investment types" have often said that Digital would become a takeover
candidate when the founder retired. The most frequently mentioned
candidates for taking over Digital are General Electric and Ford. In
the national interest, it would be unlikely be a foreign corporation.
Digital's conservative financial policies and hoard of cash contribute
to this impression.
|
596.2 | I hope so, but... | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Mon Aug 15 1988 22:26 | 1 |
| Given the current stock price - do you think they'll wait that long?
|
596.3 | Na I doubt it. | XCUSME::KING | Give me a Challenge | Tue Aug 16 1988 04:04 | 10 |
| I would think a strategy has been worked out to make DEC an unlikely
takeover candidate. Maybe all that cash can be used for the buyback
of stock. Or perhaps in ten years, DEC will be so large that a
takeover would require the financial assets that very few companies
would be able to afford. Has any corporation or individual ever
tried to buyout IBM? Not recently, they're too big to swallow.
Hopefully the same will hold true for DEC.
Bryan
|
596.4 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Tue Aug 16 1988 14:27 | 11 |
| I heard Ken Olsen say several years ago that a good part of the
company's financial strategy was geared towards making the corporation
an unattractive hostile takeover target, while still giving upper
management the flexibility to negotiate a "desireable" sale of the
company.
A high stock price (relative to book value) is one way to insure
against a LBO. Lots of cash and little debt is another.
/Al
|
596.5 | Mergers and Acquisitions 101 | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Tue Aug 16 1988 14:54 | 20 |
| If you know how to create "a high stock price (relative to book
value)", you really ought to start your own company.
In part 2, you've got it reversed. Lots of cash and little debt
make one an _attractive_ takeover for a leveraged buyout (LBO).
The acquiring company goes into the capital market and borrows $10
billion for arguments sake, takes over Digital and then immediately
retires $6 billion from Digital's current assets (including cash) and
pays off the other $4 billion over the next 25 years (maybe $200
million per year).
How much is Digital worth? Take shares outstanding (June 1987 numbers
were 130 million shrs) and multiply by the share price (roughly 100)
and you get a market valuation of $13 billion.
(Special disclaimer: I do NOT work for Investor Services, Corporate
Relations, or any group within Digital with material non-public
knowledge of the financial state of the corporation. The views abbove
are my own)
|
596.6 | huh? | DLOACT::RESENDEP | following the yellow brick road... | Tue Aug 16 1988 16:35 | 20 |
| RE: .5
> Lots of cash and little debt make one an _attractive_ takeover for a
> leveraged buyout (LBO).
This question is from an admitted financial midget: I don't
understand. It seems like having a couple of billion in the bank
and the credit to borrow more would give Digital the ability to
buy up our own stock and thereby AVOID a leveraged buyout.
A major southern textile company just managed last year to avoid
a takeover by buying up their own stock and making it unavailable
to the would-be purchaser. Southland Corporation here in Dallas did
the same thing last year, selling off many of their subsidiaries
to raise the cash to buy their stock.
Pat, can you explain further?
Pat
|
596.7 | | BINKLY::WINSTON | Jeff Winston (Hudson, MA) | Tue Aug 16 1988 18:43 | 12 |
| > This question is from an admitted financial midget: I don't
> understand. It seems like having a couple of billion in the bank
> and the credit to borrow more would give Digital the ability to
> buy up our own stock and thereby AVOID a leveraged buyout.
I believe insiders hold around 5% of DEC stock, about 85% of DEC stock
is in institutional hands, who may find it hard to turn down a
generous offer. For us to buy back enough stock to prevent a takeover
is tantamount to going private, which does not feel like something DEC
would do. For someone else to buy our stock and absorb us, may or may
not be possible - I'm a bit of a $ midget too, any M & A experts care
to comment?
|
596.8 | We might have a few poison pills around ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed Aug 17 1988 03:02 | 43 |
|
re: Takeovers or buyouts
Take this analysis for with a grain of salt, as my Finance days
are well behind me:
Given the Market Value of the Company, a raider would most likely
have to raise well over ten billion bucks to attempt a buyout, and
a leveraged buyout probably would break down if the raider could
not raise lots of capital *fast*. Even a hint of a takeover would
drive the stock price up, and the Market Value of the Company would
probably outpace the raider's capital pool before he gains control.
Even though DEC has a lot of cash and about the lowest debt-to-equity
ratio around, KO could change that picture with the stroke of a pen.
A stock buy-back, or a reciprocal takeover bid could easily soak up
all of our liquid cash and lines of credit. Even taking the company
private is a possibility, albeit farfetched. The fact that we have
a lot of flexibility with liquid assets and a sterling credit rating
makes us a hard target pin down, so Ken has a lot more options open
to him that most other CEO would in a takeover situation.
The fact that most of our stock has been traditionally held by the
institutional-type investors also works in our favor. These are
the people who are most likely to dump a stock (via the "programmed
trades" we hear so much about) when it's going down. But they buy
the stock based on the idea that it *will* rise over the long term,
and if the price is going up, they will hold onto the stock instead
of selling it for a short-term gain. *That* mode of operation is the
hallmark of the mutual funds, and speculative investors.
The cash pot aside, I don't think DEC has the characteristics that
would make it a takeover target: We are a tightly-integrated, single-
industry company, with no loose subsidiaries or independent units
that could be broken off and easily sold. Our credit rating, market
share, and business reputation are all reflections of the confidence
that business and financial leaders have in Ken Olsen as president.
These intangible, but extremely valuable assets would not necessarily
survive a takeover intact. This is one reason I personally worry
about the day when Ken *does* reliquish the reins ...
Geoff
|
596.9 | Lower stock price = bigger target?? | GALLOP::BOURNEJ | Say YES to DCL!! | Wed Aug 17 1988 05:03 | 10 |
| This question is loosely related to the prvious replies!
If we are not likely to be an LBO target why is the stock price
dropping ($97.?? in todays Financial Times)
As it drops do we not become increasingly attractive?
From another investment/stock exchange midget!
Jim
|
596.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Wed Aug 17 1988 06:38 | 17 |
| > If we are not likely to be an LBO target why is the stock price
> dropping ($97.?? in todays Financial Times)
It went up yesterday 7/8ths to 98 7/8; the big drop was on Monday (about 3),
along with the rest of the market, when interest rates went up.
Current DEC stock performance (in my opinion) is mostly due to DEC stock
following the rest of the market. Why should a rise in interest rates cause
anyone who knows that the company had more interest *income* than interest
*expense* last year to sell?
One thing that an astute investor might notice is that our expenses, especially
cost of sales, are rising faster than our income. We need to get these sort
of expenses under control. This means cutting back in the field on things like
cars, lunches, and cellular phones.
/john
|
596.11 | Let's get back on track. | MCIS2::MAKSIN | Joe Maksin | Wed Aug 17 1988 12:26 | 14 |
| The topicality of Digital's stock performance has casued a shift in
dialogue away from the original question. Does a financial tutorial
of a relatively short-term nature (compared to Digital's historic stock
trend) really address the issue of a successor to Ken? I think not.
Another perspective might be where is Digital going and whose leadership
will best get us there. If you believe Digital will become more of
a services company like EDS, then Jack Shields might be a pretty good
choice. Other possibilities, of course, exist. Comments, please.
Joe
|
596.12 | Pier-Carlo Falotti -- you heard it here. | NOVA::M_DAVIS | returns like a spot on a M�bius strip | Wed Aug 17 1988 13:44 | 1 |
|
|
596.13 | Thanks for getting us back on track. | MCIS2::MAKSIN | Joe Maksin | Wed Aug 17 1988 14:04 | 4 |
| PCF would be an excellent choice. As an aside, though, whatever
happened to PCF's famous $10B Plan?
Joe
|
596.14 | boats are stable on the ocean floor too! | POBOX::BRISCOE | | Wed Aug 17 1988 19:08 | 24 |
| can't resist one last pass at leveraging a buy out.
re: .6 and .8 - timing is EVERTHING - ask the Hunts!
Cash on hand is a definite liability since it exposes us to being
bought out by our own liquid capital.
BUT - if it can't be orchestrated quietly and quickly via "un noticed"
aquisitions then the market price will prevent the buyers from "shooting
the moon".
Since we are largely held by institutional programs, it would be
very difficult to orchestrate such an "under the tables" acquisition
program.
By the by - you only need to capture a "controlling" interest not
the whole bag of marbles, so were looking at some 35-45% of the
outstanding issues.
Also, I like the point about being a single focus corporation w/
few undifferentiated subsidiaries available to be liquidated to
generate capital. That probable protects us some what, but also
makes the market less confident in our ability to respond to changing
market climates. So its a double edged sword.
|
596.15 | Don't Let DEC become Another RCA | HJUXB::JUDICE | May fortune favor the foolish. | Wed Aug 17 1988 22:07 | 26 |
|
Don't assume that a freindly merger with a strong company like
GE would be entirely negative. As we move toward the year 2000,
the largest, strongest global corporations will be $N*100 billion
entities. Independence and singlular focus are great today,
but they may be a liability in the future.
A good example is RCA, which was in many ways the "DEC" of the
1930's and 1940's - darling of Wall Street and very well thought
of. By 1986, RCA, a $10 Billion company decided it was TOO small
to compete in it's core industry of Aerospace, Broadcasting and
Consumer Electronics. (GE has since sold the RCA and GE consumer
products groups to Thompson CSF).
Another interesting DEC/RCA parallel is a singular strong leader
(RCA's David Sarnoff). Though many felt that the world would come
to an abrupt halt when The General passed away, life continued.
No one is irreplacable - you can count on the board of directors
of a $10 billion company to see to it that DEC will prosper
even without KO.
BTW, I am a former RCA employee *AND* a 12 year admirer of KO.
/ljj
|
596.16 | the pot boils from the bottom up! | POBOX::BRISCOE | | Thu Aug 18 1988 15:33 | 9 |
| I agree that it would be hard to expect a corporation this large
to see an immediate and dramatic change when the leader moves on.
Unless of course he's replaced by the board because of some "problem"
in the company.
I've been watching DEC fo 15 years now and been with the company
for five. We still act like 100+ small companies loosely alligned
along product marketing strategies. Down on the grass roots level,
change occurs faster when district/area management changes.
|
596.17 | can it be done? | PH4VAX::MCBRIDE | the syntax is 6% in this state | Fri Aug 19 1988 20:29 | 12 |
| It's hard to imagine any company growing from an out of the pocket
(and possibly a little venture capital) company to 10+ billion dollars
in around 30 years. Is that really 9 zeroes? More inconcievable
is that one man started it and has led and sometimes dragged it
this far. DEC people are notorious for griping about the little
things that we are uncertain about. The sheer humungousness of
the growth of this company is mind boggling. Of course, there is
no one to replace Ken Olson but, that's not what is to be anyway.
Whoever takes over the reins is not starting in some lab at MIT.
He (or she) is taking over as CEO of a Fortune 50 company. By the
year 2000 we should know how well it will work out.
|
596.18 | If anyone can | GATORS::VICKERS | Understanding always beats logic | Sat Aug 20 1988 23:45 | 18 |
| Ken can do it. This is one of the most difficult goals that Ken
has. It is also one which he has planned for some time. I certainly
have enormous faith in his ability to make the right decisions to
move Digital into the future.
I have much less faith in Wall Street. The people there are just
like the dealers in a casino. They help other people gamble their
money and take a cut. They are an effect and not a cause.
We have always worried about the right things such as providing
the systems our customers need. As long as we do that we will be
in good shape. We must stop the trend toward being arrogant and
complacent about our customers. If we don't then the Wall Street
people will be right about us.
Keep the faith,
Don
|
596.19 | ...and $37/year for me... | GOLD::OPPELT | To reach the unreachable node:: | Thu Sep 08 1988 17:00 | 8 |
|
I don't know about what will happen AFTER Ken retires, but I
truly believe that we will see DEC declare a dividend by the
time he retires. Even if it is only $1 per share (1%), with
KO holding X million shares, he can sleep well knowing that
his retirement years will be well-funded.
Joe Oppelt
|
596.20 | I hope Drexel doesn't notice, but | CIMNET::JET | Jim Thompson | Thu Sep 15 1988 01:03 | 9 |
| I'm not so sure we couldn't be split up. You might
spin off a $3B+ maintainance organization, and a
sizable system house/system integrator. Then use
the cash and sell the receivables...
Not a pretty thought.
Jim
|
596.21 | Has this moved? | MDVAX1::MCGUIRE | Mike `Hiram' McGuire, St. Louis | Wed Sep 28 1988 19:10 | 27 |
| From another struggling economics midget...
I 'm sorry if the subtopic has been ended or moved, but I am curious
about how buying our own stock will help avert a leveraged buyout.
If buying our own stock reduces the number of shares outstanding
(voting shares), and if a corporate raider holds x% of the outstanding
already, doesn't a mass reduction of outstanding shares actually
increase the potential raider's percentage of voting stock in the
company? It is true that assets (cash) are reduced, but, unless
the stock is cancelled, the potential new owner can reissue them
and get money back into the company?
The dividend idea is probably a good one, except that I have the
impression that Ken already has more money than he could possibly
use. ($300M or so?) The Government would get a good chunk of his
money in this case.
Distribution of cash some other way such as bonuses, raises, (c'mon,
don't laugh, this is hypothetical) R&D, real estate, would affect
the balance sheet, but the income statement seems to be of great
concern right now. It seems that costs are about to catch up with
revenues, and the day they cross, we start losing money. If Wall
Street is nervous about us now, just wait until the day we post
a loss.
Any thoughts?
|
596.22 | Preventative maintenance | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Thu Sep 29 1988 18:45 | 15 |
| re: .21 buying back stock ...
Buying back your own stock after a raider has started aquiring it
is no help. Buying back stock is a preventative measure to keep
the stock price up, and discourage raiders from buying it.
re: dividends
Ken owns a lot of stock compared to you or me, but he doesn't own
much compared to the other major stockholders (institutions). A
dividend would make the stock more attractive to blue-chip investors
who use their stock portfolio to generate dividend income, rather
than speculators who are interested in capital gains.
Geoff
|
596.23 | Dividends? Sales Commissions? We don't do that?? | MDVAX1::MCGUIRE | Mike `Hiram' McGuire, St. Louis | Fri Sep 30 1988 12:52 | 20 |
| Thank you, Geoff, I had forgotton about the price support by reducing
the number of outstanding shares.
Is our stock really held by `speculators'? I know (after 10 years
here) that there is no dividends on stock, or commissions on sales
paid by DEC. Those two peculiarities make DEC unique on Wall Street.
However, I think that even our investors (owners) misunderstand
our position. I perceive that we are in `react mode' (a familiar
field service term) depending on what Wall Street says about us.
It was pointed out earlier that we have more income from interest
than expense, so why did we suffer when the interest rate went up?
Until we can a)educate Wall Street on what we really are so that
they can view us properly, or b)become more of a standard company
(one of them) and revert to dividends, etc., or c)forget about what
everybody says and stay the way we have been for the last 30-odd
years, then I think that we are in for a rough and rugged road.
Thanks for listening to the frustration from a novice econonomist
;-)
|
596.24 | Shares Don't Vanish | WORSEL::DOTY | ESG Systems Product Marketing | Fri Sep 30 1988 21:38 | 6 |
| First, if we (Digital) own certain shares of stock, then we have
a "pretty good" idea of how those shares will be voted -- don't
forget, those shares don't dissapear!
Second, Instutional investors can to a large degree be classified
as speculators . . .
|
596.25 | Two incorrect statements about the market | CALL::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Fri Sep 30 1988 22:53 | 19 |
| > First, if we (Digital) own certain shares of stock, then we have
> a "pretty good" idea of how those shares will be voted -- don't
> forget, those shares don't dissapear!
Common stock repurchased by the corporation has no voting rights; its
monetary value is added to the shareholders equity. The voting rights
of those shares _do_ disappear.
"Management" is typically given a proxy to vote those shares held by
individuals and corporations.
> Second, Instutional investors can to a large degree be classified
> as speculators . . .
Institutional investors are not speculators. Speculators, by
definition, assume large short-term risks. Institutional Investors, by
definition, are insurance companies, pension funds, and mutual funds.
With the exception of a few mutual funds, all seek to preserve capital
and achieve growth through income and capital gains.
|
596.26 | Yes, but... | VMSNET::WOODBURY | Atlanta Networks/VMS Support | Sun Oct 02 1988 10:36 | 24 |
| Re .25:
> > Second, Instutional investors can to a large degree be classified
> > as speculators . . .
> Institutional investors are not speculators. Speculators, by
> definition, assume large short-term risks. Institutional Investors, by
> definition, are insurance companies, pension funds, and mutual funds.
> With the exception of a few mutual funds, all seek to preserve capital
> and achieve growth through income and capital gains.
True, but they have no real interest in the businesses they hold,
other than as capital. As a result, their only concern is the bottom
line, and the short term bottom line at that. Further, being allergic to
risk in any form, they accentuate any downward trend by getting out of
any investment that looks the least bit rocky. As a result, they act
like speculators psychologically and have a destablizing effect on the
market. It was their 'portfolio insurance' schemes that have been blamed
to a large measure for the crash last year, at least by some sources.
If DEC stock were held more by long term investors, and less by the
institutions, the prices would probably be much more stable, and would
react much more rationally. We might just have reached that point. In
the last few weeks, DEC stock prices have shown much less volatility than
usual.
|
596.27 | See you in SOAPBOX | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Sun Oct 02 1988 14:47 | 4 |
| When RAHAB::SOAPBOX is once again on-line, I hope we can continue this
there. The definition of "institutional investor" I gave in 596.25 isn't
being challenged but some side-effect of their holdings in Digital is
being argued in 596.26.
|
596.28 | More Info, Please | WORSEL::DOTY | ESG Systems Product Marketing | Sun Oct 02 1988 20:43 | 15 |
| Mr. Sweeney, could you clarify (and perhaps add some background
on) what happens to the shares a company repurchases? In particular,
why do these shares lose their voting rights? If repurchased shares
effectively "go away", then what are the advantages to a company
to repurchase its own stock?
(As an aside, my original reference to instutional investors as
"speculators" was intended humorously, and was directed at their
tendancy to take short term positions and increase market volatility.
I am aware that these are generalizations, but the drive of major
investors to "beat the average" return, which they may contribute
significantly to setting, is a strong underlying influence.)
Regards,
Russ Doty
|
596.29 | Treasury Stock | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Mon Oct 03 1988 09:10 | 20 |
| If you can accept the premise that a corporation cannot own itself;
that ownership of a corporation must be held by individuals and other
corporations, then it becomes clear that repurchased stock has no
voting rights. Who would vote the stock?
The officers and directors of Digital only vote the stock they
personally own or are given voting rights through a proxy from the
holder of the voting rights.
(This is the season to read and sign your proxy, by the way.)
This type of stock is called "Treasury Stock" and it has appeared
on Digital's balance sheet only in 1987 and 1988. Note J in the
annual report will tell you it was purchased for various employee
stock and option plans.
Other companies purchase their own stock to reduce the cash and other
assets of the company and make it a less attractive takeover target, or
because they think that the climate isn't right for making any new
capital investments.
|
596.30 | Still a Bit Confused | WORSEL::DOTY | ESG Systems Product Marketing | Mon Oct 03 1988 10:26 | 5 |
| Thanks for the clarification. Is the premise that a corporation
can't own itself part of law, tradition, custom, or what? (It seems
somewhat strange to me that a corporation can own other corporations,
but can't own itself.) Also, what are the implications of a
corporation going private?
|
596.31 | Digital to go private? | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Mon Oct 03 1988 14:43 | 11 |
| It's a matter of logic that a corporation can't own itself. That's
like a indirect pointer reference that loops back on itself. This bit
of logic in embedded in corporation law, and the articles of
incorporation, and the bylaws of the corporation. This isn't going
to happen to Digital.
A company that goes private cannot trade its stock in the public
stock market, but on the other hand does not have to file public
disclosures of its balance sheet and income statement as public
companies do to the SEC. This isn't going to happen to Digital,
either.
|
596.32 | Has this been discussed in BMT::INVESTING? | DR::BLINN | Doctor Who? | Tue Oct 04 1988 11:14 | 10 |
| Perhaps extended discussions of investing, Wall Street, and the
stock market belong in BMT::INVESTING? If so, you can add it to
your notebook by pressing KP7 or using the SELECT key or command.
Of course, aspects of investing specific to Digital and especially
those germane to the question of how Ken Olsen's retirement will
impact "the Digital way of working" (the subjects of this topic
and this conference) are suitable here.
Tom
|
596.33 | No more guessing | ROSETA::PEARSON | | Wed Jul 29 1992 19:28 | 2 |
| Looks like we'll be finding out the answer to the question soon
and it didn't take 10 years.
|