Mm
M&A
See mergers and acquisitions.
Management buy-out
A takeover of a company by a group of its own managers or,
in rare cases, by a team of managers from outside.
The man-
agers set up a new company, which buys the old one with
money borrowed from a
mixture of banks and private
equity firms. The banks use the assets of the company as
collateral for their loan.
A management buy-out (mbo) invariably raises a company’s
debt and reduces its equity. As a result,
it is often called a
leveraged buy-out. This makes it doubly vulnerable to any
rise in the rate of interest: first, because such a rise is likely
to
damage its business; and second, because it adds to the cost
of servicing the debt.
During the 1980s, mbos frequently
balanced a pile of debt on
an equity base that made up as little as 10% of the total. Even
with mbos of established businesses generating a lot of cash,
this often led to problems, particularly
when interest rates went
up. These days, mbos are more often constructed on a broader
equity
base making up, say, 35–40% of the total capital. In
such cases, the managers and private equity firms who put up
the equity have more at risk but also more control of the
company’s destiny.
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