Disentangling Value: Misvaluation and Divestitures
Working Paper No. 98017
47 Pages Posted: 28 Jul 1999
Date Written: August 1998
Abstract
This paper presents a rationale for divestiture consistent with one of the frequently cited reasons by divesting firms, namely, that the firm is undervalued and splitting the firm into its component businesses will make it easier for the market to value the components accurately. The rationale is based on two basic premises. One, the market can observe the aggregate cash flows of the firm but not divisional cash flows; two, the cost of financing a project by divesting a division is greater than the cost of external equity financing which, in turn, is costlier than internal capital. In this setup, we show that the firm may be misvalued if the informativeness of divisional cash flows regarding the respective divisions' future prospects are different. If an undervalued firm needs external capital, it may resort to costly divestiture while an overvalued firm will use less costly external equity, resulting in correct valuation of the divisions. Among the empirical implications the model yields are: 1) The stock price reaction to a divestiture announcement is positive and is greater for focus-increasing divestitures; 2) Firms that divest invest more than their conglomerate counterparts; 3) Firms that divest are likely to divest the poorly performing divisions.
JEL Classification: G34
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Information Asymmetry, Valuation, and the Corporate Spin-Off Decision
-
Information Asymmetry, Monitoring, and the Placement Structure of Corporate Debt
By Sudha Krishnaswami, Paul A. Spindt, ...
-
Consistent Estimation of Cross-Sectional Models in Event Studies
By B. Espen Eckbo, Vojislav Maksimovic, ...
-
The Impact of Sec Rule 144a on Corporate Debt Issuance by International Firms
By Susan Chaplinsky and Latha Ramchand
-
Public Debt as a Punching Bag: An Agency Model of the Mix of Public and Private Debt
By Richard J. Rosen and Mark Carey
-
Why Issue Tracking Stock? Insights from a Comparison with Spin-Offs and Carve-Outs
-
Corporate Spinoffs and Information Asymmetry between Investors
By Mark R. Huson and Greg H. Mackinnon
-
An Investigation of the Gains from Specialized Equity: Tracking Stock and Minority Carve-Outs
-
Information Asymmetry and the Market Reaction to Equity Carve-Outs
By Huijing Fu
-
How Eventful are Event Studies?
By Kim R. Sawyer and André Gygax