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September 6, 2008

Buy High, Sell Low

Best of times or worst of times to make some acquisitions?

This is one area where the head/heart divergence may be more radical than usual—and where it could really cost you.

Here's how McKinsey poses the dilemma:

"As the credit crunch threatens to become a global downturn, corporate leaders have a choice: pull in their horns and ride out the storm or look for opportunities to pick up bargain-basement assets that will help them grow and create future value for shareholders. If past is prologue, more will follow the first course—which is a mistake."

The head/heart opposition is simple to understand:  While your head tells you that one of the best times to invest is in a downturn, that's precisely when your heart quails.  "Buy low, sell high" is advice so impeccable as to achieve the truly advanced state of tautological, but "buy high, sell low" is more descriptive of the way people actually behave across economic cycles. 

I may not be able to change your heart—only you in league with your spouse or your shrink can do that—but I can at least hope to arm you with the intellectual fortitude to mount a stalwart case for exploring some acquisitions now, in the teeth of the fretful and querulous naysayers.

Based on a survey of over 200 global companies, the authors (who also collaborated on the May 2008 book The Granularity of Growth), derive two pivotal conclusions:  The most powerful way to position one's firm for growth coming out of a downturn is through selective acquisitions during that downturn, and, conversely and with wonderfully rewarding and symmetric logic, during an upturn selective divestitures create slightly more value than acquisitions.

If only people behaved that way:

Downturns

This shows the actual behavior across a sample of 537 product/service lines (from 187 companies) between 2001 and 2004, in reaction to a "major" (> 10%) upturn (top blue bars) or downturn (bottom green bars).  Essentially, the lessons are:

  • Companies are more likely to divest during a downturn;
  • And more likely to acquire during an upturn;
  • While the reality remains that during both upturns and downturns the most likely course of action of all is simply to do nothing.

Again, this is understandable.  But that, I would argue, is less an excuse than an indictment of conventional wisdom. 

Do you want to "protect your balance sheet" during a downturn?  Sounds logical.  (And, to be sure, some firms simply aren't in a position to do otherwise.)  And as revenues flag and margins are compressed, you may focus on cutting costs and trying to at least match previous periods' earnings levels.

But the savviest growth companies do otherwise.  Famously (as even the usually somnolent business coverage of The New York Times realized in 1999), GE Capital immediately went on a capital spending binge following the Asian financial meltdown in 1997:

The last two years alone, [GE Capital] has made at least eight major investments in four Asian countries, expanding its assets to about $20 billion in the region. Acquisitions included two consumer-credit businesses, a life insurance company and a $5 billion leasing company in Japan, a consumer-credit business and a portfolio of car loans in Thailand and a life insurance unit in the Philippines. It also has its sights on a stake in a South Korean bank.

[...]

[T]he 1997 Asian financial meltdown and resulting recession turned the area into a vast bargain basement. Here was GE Capital's chance to buy up distressed companies and establish itself in the one part of the world where it lacked a strong presence.

''There's no question that financial turmoil has resulted in an environment that facilitates deal creation,'' Denis J. Nayden, president of GE Capital, said in a telephone interview from the company's headquarters in Stamford, Conn. ''Yes, we have moved into that opportunity.''

In other words, countercyclical growth works. 

If you're in a position to do so, think about trying some for yourself.  You may like where you'll end up on the other side of this credit markets lockdown.

Published by Bruce at September 6, 2008 4:25 PM | TrackBack
Published to Finance | Globalization | Leadership | M&A | Strategy

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