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Finance and Investment Organization Meeting #6 November 2, 2000

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Finance and Investment Organization. Meeting #6 November 2, 2000. Agenda. Markets Review Club Portfolio Review Stock Analysis Mergers and Acquisitions Diversification. Agenda. Markets Review Club Portfolio Review Stock Analysis Mergers and Acquisitions Diversification. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Finance and Investment Organization

Finance and Investment Organization

Meeting #6November 2, 2000

Page 2: Finance and Investment Organization

Agenda

• Markets Review

• Club Portfolio Review

• Stock Analysis– Mergers and Acquisitions– Diversification

Page 3: Finance and Investment Organization

Agenda

• Markets Review

• Club Portfolio Review

• Stock Analysis– Mergers and Acquisitions– Diversification

Page 4: Finance and Investment Organization

Dow Jones Industrial

Up 8%

Page 5: Finance and Investment Organization

NASDAQ

Flat

Page 6: Finance and Investment Organization

S&P500 Index

Up 3.3%

Page 7: Finance and Investment Organization

Market Movers – The Bad

• More earnings warnings – Nortel Networks, UPS, Gap, Daimler Chrysler

• Continued Euro weakness. Hit low of 1 Euro = $0.81. Now approx $0.84

• Continued concerns about energy prices.– OPEC to increase oil production by 500,000

bbl/day

• Uncertainty about election

Page 8: Finance and Investment Organization

Market Movers - The Good

• Economy slowing - 2.7% growth in Q3 vs 5.6% in Q2.

• Low underlying inflation 0.4% in Sept. but 0.2 excluding energy.

• Consumer spending still strong. Up 0.8% in Sept. while incomes up 1.1%.

• Productivity up 3.8% in Q3 while unit labor costs up only 2.5%

Page 9: Finance and Investment Organization

Agenda

• Markets Review

• Club Portfolio Review

• Stock Analysis– Mergers and Acquisitions– Diversification

Page 10: Finance and Investment Organization

Club Portfolio Voting Results

• Between 10/19/ and 10/22, 135 shares voted (90%)– 96.3% approval for AMD. 1.76 average ranking.– 77.8% approval for INTC. 2.37 average ranking.– 68.5% approval for COST. 2.72 average ranking.– 50.0% approval for EBAY. 3.87 average ranking.

• 75% of shares needed for a quorum• 2/3 share majority needed for decision.

Page 11: Finance and Investment Organization

Club Portfolio Purchases

• At 10 AM on 10/23, we bought:– 32 shares of AMD at $22 5/8 + $12

commission for a total of $736.00– 17 shares of INTC at $43 7/8 + $12

commission for a total of $757.88– Leaving $6.12 in our money market account

• On 10/31, we received $1.98 in interest on our money market holdings. New money market balance is $8.10

Page 12: Finance and Investment Organization

Share Value History

$8.80

$9.00

$9.20

$9.40

$9.60

$9.80

$10.00

$10.20

$10.40

$10.60

$10.80

$11.00

10/22/00 10/23/00 10/24/00 10/25/00 10/26/00 10/27/00 10/28/00 10/29/00 10/30/00 10/31/00 11/1/00 11/2/00

Date

Shar

e Va

lue

FIO ACTUAL

FIO ADJUSTED

DJIA

NASDAQ

S&P500

Page 13: Finance and Investment Organization

Portfolio Performance

• FIO Actual - Up 6.1%

• FIO Adjusted (w/o Commissions) – Up 7.7%

• DJIA – Up 6.4% (Underperform by 0.3%)

• S&P 500 – Up 2.2% (Outperform by 3.9%)

• Nasdaq – Down 1.6% (Outperform by 7.7%)

$25 $26.53 $50 $53.06$100 $106.11 $200 $212.22

Page 14: Finance and Investment Organization

Agenda

• Markets Review

• Club Portfolio Review

• Stock Analysis– Mergers and Acquisitions– Diversification

Page 15: Finance and Investment Organization

Investing Defensive Strategies

• Time vs. Risk– The longer you invest, the greater your chance of

profits

• Diversification– Protects you from a meltdown in one stock or one

industry.– http://university.smartmoney

.com/departments/investing101/riskvsreward/index.cfm?story=defense

– Purchase either a variety of stocks or use mutual funds for diversification

Page 16: Finance and Investment Organization

More Defensive Strategies

• Asset Allocation– While stocks provide the highest returns they also

provide the highest risk of losses.

– Bonds and money market funds provide greater stability but a lower risk.

– In general, long term investors should have most of their investments in diversified stocks but shift towards bonds and money market funds as they approach retirement.

– One rule often used is that the percentage of your savings in stocks should be 100 – your age.

Page 17: Finance and Investment Organization

Diversification

• Major Industry Groups– Technology e.g. software, hardware, internet,

networking, semiconductors, peripherals,– Healthcare e.g. pharmaceuticals, biotechs, HMO’s– Financials e.g. banks, brokers, insurance– Energy e.g. oil drillers, refiners, utilities– Capital goods e.g. military, aerospace, machinery,

manufacturing

Page 18: Finance and Investment Organization

Diversification

– Transporation e.g. airlines, railroads, truckers, couriers– Consumer Staples e.g. tobacco, food, beverages,

personal care, household products– Consumer Cyclicals e.g. recreation, automakers,

retailers (dept stores, specialty, etc) broadcasting, gambling, restaurants, publishing

– Communications e.g. equipment, long distance, local carriers, wireless

Page 19: Finance and Investment Organization

Stock Analysis

The Chase ManhattanCorporation

J.P. Morgan & Co.Incorporated

+

J.P. Morgan Chase & Co.

Page 20: Finance and Investment Organization

Merger

• The formation of one company from two or more previously existing companies through the pooling of common stock, cash payment, or a combination of both.

• Mergers where common stock is exchanged for common stock are non taxable and are called tax-free mergers. e.g. JPM/CMB

Page 21: Finance and Investment Organization

Types of Mergers/Acquisitions

• All cash exchange – usually associated with acquisitions where acquired company is significantly smaller. Not preferred since cash is valuable and forces stockholders of smaller company to take an immediate tax hit.

• All stock exchange – more common today in both mergers and acquisitions especially with high stock valuations/currency. Essentially costs “nothing” since except dilution of stock.

Page 22: Finance and Investment Organization

Why merge/acquire?

• To quickly expand into new geographical or product markets

• To purchase a valuable brand/identity

• To gain economies of scale

Page 23: Finance and Investment Organization

Goodwill

• Goodwill is the value in excess of the acquired company’s liquidation value.

• Needed to satisfy stockholders and board of acquired company

• Intangible asset that must be written off (paid for) over a period of time.

Page 24: Finance and Investment Organization

Amortization

• Amortization is the process of writing off goodwill over a max period of 40 years.

• Similar to depreciation which is a non cash charge that represents the reduction in value of an asset due to wear, age, or obsolescence.

• Both amortization and depreciation reduce net income

Page 25: Finance and Investment Organization

EBITDA

• EBITDA = Earnings Before Interest Taxes Depreciation and Amortization

• aka operating cash flow. How much money (cash) is the company actually making/losing before all these unusual items?

Page 26: Finance and Investment Organization

Pooling of Interests vs. Purchase Accounting

• Pooling is the preferred way of accounting for mergers.

• FASB proposing to eliminate pooling.• Major differences.

– combination of assets and liabilities at book value rather than market value

– no goodwill recorded

– future income unaffected by amortization and depreciation

– hides the true cost of acquisitions

Page 27: Finance and Investment Organization

Merger Details

• September 13, Chase Manhattan Bank (CMB) and JP Morgan (JPM) announced that they would merge in a $36 billion deal.

• Combined assets of $660 billion• Proforma 1999 Net income of $7.5 billion on

$31 billion in revenues. 2nd only to Citigroup• 3.7 shares of CMB stock will be exchanged for

each share of JPM. Based on closing price on announcement day, JPM was priced at $207/share

Page 28: Finance and Investment Organization

JPM Stock Charts

MergerAnnounced

Page 29: Finance and Investment Organization

JPM Stock Quote

J P MORGAN & CO (NYSE:JPM) - More Info: News , Msgs , Profile , Research , Insider , Options

Last Trade

10:53AM · 167 3/8

Change+2 7/16 (+1.48%)

Prev Cls164 15/16

Volume533,000

Div DateOct 13

Day's Range166 - 168 7/8

BidN/A

AskN/A

Open166

Avg Vol2,122,954

Ex-DivSep 21

52-week Range104 7/8 - 187 5/8

Earn/Shr11.68

P/E14.12

Mkt Cap26.742B

Div/Shr4.00

Yield2.43

Page 30: Finance and Investment Organization

CMB Stock Chart

MergerAnnounced

Page 31: Finance and Investment Organization

N Sync

Page 32: Finance and Investment Organization

Arbitrage

• At yesterday’s close,– JPM = $ 164 15/16– CMB = $ 44 7/8

• Merger exchanges 3.7 shares CMB per 1 JPM• JPM = 3.7 x $ 44 7/8 = $166• 1% premium• Difference is the discounted risk based on how

likely the merger is to be approved.

Page 33: Finance and Investment Organization

Other deals

• JDSU – $ 78 9/16• SDLI – $ 246 17/64• 3.8 shares of JDSU per

SDLI• 3.8 x $ 78 9/16 = $ 298 ½• 21% premium

• AOL – $ 52• TWX – $ 77.31• 1.5 shares of AOL per

TWX• 1.5 x $52 = $78• 1% premium

Page 34: Finance and Investment Organization

CMB Stock Quote

CHASE MANHATTAN (NYSE:CMB) - More Info: News , Msgs , Profile , Research , Insider , Options

Last Trade

11:02AM · 45 15/16

Change+1/4 (+0.55%)

Prev Cls45 11/16

Volume2,230,000

Div DateOct 31

Day's Range45 5/8 - 46 1/2

BidN/A

AskN/A

Open45 11/16

Avg Vol9,514,818

Ex-DivOct 4

52-week Range32 3/8 - 67 1/8

Earn/Shr3.89

P/E11.74

Mkt Cap57.085B

Div/Shr1.28

Yield2.80

Page 35: Finance and Investment Organization

JP Morgan Chase

• Brands will be preserved but operations will be combined.

• Wholesale Business (JP Morgan)– investment banking (including strategic advisory, equity

and debt capital raising, credit, and global trading and market-making activities), operating services, wealth management, institutional asset management and private equity

• Retail Business (Chase)– credit cards, regional consumer banking in the New York

tri-state area and Texas, mortgage banking, diversified consumer lending, insurance and middle-market banking

Page 36: Finance and Investment Organization

Details of the Merger

• Synergies of $1.9 billion/year– cost savings of $1.5 billion– incremental net revenues of $400 million– expected to be achieved within 2 years of the

merger

• Merger costs of $2.8 billion to be recognized as a one time charge when deal completed in Q1 2001.

Page 37: Finance and Investment Organization

Benefits of the Merger

• Adds diversity to Chase’s earningsEarnings by Line of Business,pro forma, first half 2000 % of

totalInvestment Banking 55%National Consumer Services 18%Private Equity 12%Wealth Management 9%Operating Services 6%

100%

• Improves their asset management, investment banking, equities and bond underwriting/trading.

Page 38: Finance and Investment Organization

Mergers and Acquisitions

LeapfroggingSolid gains for combined firm in worldwide M&A

Company 2000 Ranking

Worldwide M&A advisory

Deal value ($billions)

Market share (percent)

Goldman Sachs 1 1,601 43Morgan Stanley Dean Witter 2 1,343 36.1

Merrill Lynch 3 1,072 28.8

Chase-J.P. Morgan* 4 884 23.6

Salomon Smith Barney 5 663 17.8

UBS Warburg 6 627 16.8

J.P. Morgan** 7 556 14.9

Chase** 9 328 8.8

*If combined. **Alone, excluding effects of merger. Source: Thomson Financial Securities Data, through Sept. 12, 2000.

Page 39: Finance and Investment Organization

Market Leadership Position

Pro Forma Pro Forma

Full Year 1999 First Half 2000Strategic Advisory (M&A) Global Completed Transactions 5 4 European Completed Transactions 3 4Capital Raising Global Syndicated Loans 1 1Global Investment Grade Debt 3 3Global Common Stock 8 7High Yield Global Offerings 3 5

#3 with $720 billion of assets under management

Page 40: Finance and Investment Organization

Consolidation in Industry

• Needed for CMB to remain competitive. Other recent deals include:– Associates First Capital by Citigroup Donaldson

Lufkin Jenrette by Credit Suisse First Boston– Paine Webber by UBS AG

• Continues Chase’s investment banking acquisition spree which has included Beacon Group ($500 million), Hambricht & Quist ($1.35 billion), Fleming’s ($7.7 billion)

Page 41: Finance and Investment Organization

Downsides

• Will be earnings dilutive next year by about 7% due to cost of deal and premium for JPM.

• To make deal break even, Chase will need to find $800 million in cost savings at JPM or 11% of its total expenses.– All past deals by CMB have been successfully

integrated although none have been on the same scale.

• Culture clash between JPM and CMB

Page 42: Finance and Investment Organization

Comparison (First 9 months)

JPM CMB JPM/

CMB

C

Revenues $7.637 billion

$17.568 billion

$25.205 billion

$50.642 billion

Operating Income

$2.513 billion

$3.480 billion

$5.993 billion

$15.152 billion

Net Income $1.684 billion

$3.335 billion

$5.019 billion

$9.683 billion

Market Cap. $26.3 billion

$56.9 billion

$83.3 billion

$234.9 billion

Assets $373 billion

$426 billion

$799 billion

$1.9 trillion

Page 43: Finance and Investment Organization

Management Efficiency

JPM CMB JPM/ CMB

C

Gross Margins

32.9% 19.8% 23.8% 29.9%

Net Margins 22.1% 19.0% 19.9% 19.1%

Return on Assets

0.81% 1.26% N/A 1.70%

Return on Equity

19.58% 20.72% N/A 25.72%

Page 44: Finance and Investment Organization

Valuation Ratios

JPM CMB C

Share Price 164 15/16 45 11/16 51 11/16

EPS $9.64 $2.57 $2.10

Dividends $3.00 $0.96 $0.42

Yield 2.43% 2.80% 1.09%

Book Value $62.31 $21.84 $9.85

P/E 14.13 11.71 19.43

Price/Sales 2.48 2.60 4.81

Price/Book 2.34 2.02 4.66