Monday 1 March 2010

Buffett's Lesson to Merger: Don't give up more than you are getting

A Lesson From Warren Buffett
February 27, 2010


Paul Maidment is Editor, Forbes Media

A Warren Buffett letter to shareholders wouldn't be a Warren Buffett letter to shareholders without at least one self-depreciating but cautionary tale. This year's, which Berkshire Hathaway's chairman says is true but from long ago:


We owned stock in a large well-run bank that for decades had been statutorily prevented from acquisitions. Eventually, the law was changed and our bank immediately began looking for possible purchases. Its managers – fine people and able bankers – not unexpectedly began to behave like teenage boys who had just discovered girls.


They soon focused on a much smaller bank, also well-run and having similar financial characteristics in such areas as return on equity, interest margin, loan quality, etc. Our bank sold at a modest price (that’s why we had bought into it), hovering near book value and possessing a very low price/earnings ratio. Alongside, though, the small-bank owner was being wooed by other large banks in the state and was holding out for a price close to three times book value. Moreover, he wanted stock, not cash.

Naturally, our fellows caved in and agreed to this value-destroying deal. “We need to show that we are in the hunt. Besides, it’s only a small deal,” they said, as if only major harm to shareholders would have been a legitimate reason for holding back. Charlie’s reaction at the time: “Are we supposed to applaud because the dog that fouls our lawn is a Chihuahua rather than a Saint Bernard?”

The seller of the smaller bank – no fool – then delivered one final demand in his negotiations. “After the merger,” he in effect said, perhaps using words that were phrased more diplomatically than these, “I’m going to be a large shareholder of your bank, and it will represent a huge portion of my net worth. You have to promise me, therefore, that you’ll never again do a deal this dumb.”

Yes, the merger went through. The owner of the small bank became richer, we became poorer, and the managers of the big bank – newly bigger – lived happily ever after.


Lesson to merger mavens: Don't give up more than you are getting.


More wit and wisdom from Warren Buffett.
http://blogs.forbes.com/streettalk/2010/02/27/a-lesson-from-warren-buffett/

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