Harvard Business Cases Valuation

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Harvard Business Cases Valuation Fin 321 Dr. Ghosh Adriana Nava Kristie Tillett Grace Tung Eddie Pinela Zhibin Yang

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Harvard Business Cases Valuation. Fin 321 Dr . Ghosh Adriana Nava Kristie Tillett Grace Tung Eddie Pinela Zhibin Yang. Outline . Introduction Background History Question I : Is Mercury an appropriate target? Question II: Are the given projections appropriate? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Harvard Business Cases Valuation

Page 1: Harvard Business Cases Valuation

Harvard Business Cases Valuation

Fin 321

Dr. Ghosh Adriana Nava

Kristie Tillett

Grace Tung

Eddie Pinela

Zhibin Yang

Page 2: Harvard Business Cases Valuation

• Introductiono Backgroundo History

• Question I : Is Mercury an appropriate target?

• Question II: Are the given projections appropriate?

• Question III: Estimate the value of Mercuryo Given informationo Formulaso Detailed calculations

• Conclusion

Outline

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West Coast Fashions Inc. • WCF is a large designer and marketer of men's and

women's branded apparel

• WCF is planning for a reorganization which includes the shedding of its footwear division, Mercury Athletic

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Athletic and Casual Footwear Industry • Competitive

• Casual segment

• Athletic segment

• Lifecycle

• 12-16 months

• Import taxes and tariffs

• China

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Mercury Athletic• Branded athletic / Casual footwear

• Mercury was founded by Daniel Fiore

• $431.1 million / $51.8 million

• Financial Performance

• Mercury products

• Athletic Footwearo Men - largest segment and constituted its core business

o Women - had subpar performance

• Casual Footwear o Men - peaked in 2004, declined since then

o Women - worse-performing line of shoes

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Mercury Athletic • Performance

• In late 2006o Didn't fit with WCF

Mercury's size customers brand image

o Determined to sell the business

• Mercury's prospective buyer was Active Gear Inc.

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Active Gear Inc.

• Founded in 1965

• Privately held footwear company

• The most profitable firms in the footwear industry

• Beginning 1970so Casual/ recreational footwear o Age 25-45

• Sold by 5700 retail stores

• Outsourcing

• However, the company was much smaller than many competitors and AGI's executives felt its small size was becoming a competitive disadvantage

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Given Information

• Cost of debt - 6%

• Risk free rate1 - 4.93%

• Risk free rate2- 4.69%

• Expected market return - 9.7%

• Tax rate - 40%

• Beta - 1.6

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Question IIs mercury an appropriate target for AGI? Why or why

not?

• Estimates based on assumptions

• Sufficient evidence to suggest it will be advantageous for AGI to acquire Mercury Athletics.

• Culture is importanto If the cultures drastically differ

Inhibit efficiency Effectiveness of strategic planning.

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Diagram

• Diagram 1

Acti

• The revenueso Comparableo Very closely identical

Mercury athletic has lower overhead costso Acquisitiono More leverage with producers.

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Question IIReview the projections formulated by Liedtke. Are they appropriate? How would you recommend modifying them?

• CAGR = 9.7%o Expected market return V.S. CAGRo CAGR has no risk in formula

• 3.0% revenue growth end of time

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Question IIIEstimate the value of Mercury using a discounted cash flow approach and Liedtke’s base case projections. Please show your work, and explain any assumptions that you make.

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Free cash flows cont.

• We repeated the same process for cash flow years 2008 -2011.

o 2008 - $26,729o 2009 - $22,098o 2010 - $25,473o 2011 - $29,544

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Cost of Equity

CAPM = KRF1 + β ( KM - KRF2 )4.93%+ 1.6 (9.7%-4.69%)

= 12.95%(CostS)

*assumption CAGR

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WACC

WACC = WD costD (1 - T) + Ws costs

0.2 [0.06 ( 1- 0.4)] +0.8 (0.1295)

=0.0072 + 0.1036 =11.08%

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Terminal Value Formulas

VN= FCFn ( 1 +g FCF ) WACC-gFCF

= $29,544 ( 1 + 0.03) 0.1108 - 0.03

= $376,613

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Enterprise Value

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Conclusion

Based on enterprise value $359,653 as well as increasing market share in manufacturing leverage we believe that AGI should go through with the acquisition at the enterprise value price.

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ANY QUESTIONS?!

Thank you!