Defensive Acquisition
Categories: Entrepreneur, Investing, Company Management
Mergers and Acquisitions (M&A) as a practice is all about companies seeking to merge or buy other companies with the goal of expansion and growth. However, there are occasions when a defensive strategy might be in place—think: to defend against competitors and to stave off hostil takeovers.
Example: The merger in 2018 of T-Mobile and Sprint has a defensive acquisition component to it. Given that the combined company is sufficiently large enough to rival Verizon or AT&T, it also has the added defensive aspect of making both T-Mobile and Sprint off limits to prospective acquisition by Verizon or T-Mobile/Sprint due to potential antitrust law violations.
The deterrent factor is something not lost on corporate rivals. It's akin to buying a gun, not to so much excel in marksmanship as to be a preventative measure against physical attack.
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Finance: What is Defensive Stock?1 Views
Finance allah shmoop what is a defensive stock Well pretty
much everyone looks like a genius in a big bull
market right At least everyone who is invested in the
market and not just sitting there holding cash well in
a big bull market Every stock's going up everyone's making
money he invested or getting richer on the best investment
results of that bunch come from the aggressive investors or
offensive groups of stocks the ones that exist on a
hope and a prayer of massive growth They usually pay
no dividend that khun traded hundreds of times trailing earnings
or more and they're expected to more than double earnings
every year for the next five years or more Offensive
that's How owners of them get when those stocks get
crushed in a bad market Yeah well the fed raises
rates Bomb goes off in an oil field The president
loses a high stakes arm wrestling match Something like that
And all of a sudden the bull market is over
the masses air selling selling selling and well that hundred
times a dollar of earnings growth stock promising wifi enabled
fidget spinners trading at one hundred bucks a share atleast
it wass last month Yeah well it crater celestine Half
of that ouch Fifty bucks a share and still expensive
and trading down So what about that tortoise to this
company's hair The big dumb slow moving oil company How
about them It grows revenues It like something totally unexciting
like gdp plus a percent in a good year It
won't double earnings for like thirty years or more but
it has and will pay a six percent dividend more
or less forever And if you think about it while
skittish linoleum our favorite company like that trades at forty
bucks a share and pays two dollars forty cents a
year in davy in a big bad ugly awful market
Well sure it probably goes down a bit Two bucks
to thirty eight a share five bucks to thirty five
maybe even a bit more But while nervous marble has
gone from one hundred to thirty down some seventy percent
while skittish linoleum is gone from forty to thirty five
in these bad two years of bear market itis down
a few percent not too bad And meantime it's paying
its two dollars forty cents a year dividend steady so
you've gotten back four dollars and eighty cents in dividends
so even down from forty to thirty five If you
add back the dividend and you should know you're only
down like twenty cents and we're going to forget about
taxes here Big would compare that to nervous marble So
yeah that's a defensive stock when the trades at low
multiples of earnings and pays a big fat dividend and
generally does well when the tide goes out and shows
everyone else's you know not thing And so well there
Yeah but every now and then it's Awfully nice to 00:02:47.788 --> [endTime] be the tortoise and not the hair