I don't think that there can be any disagreement that Hewlett Packard (HP) had a terrible day on November 20. In a surprise announcement, the company announced that it was taking a write off of $8.8 billion of the $11.1 billion that it paid to acquire Autonomy, a UK based technology company, in October 2011, and that a large portion of this write off ($ 5 billion) could be attributed to accounting improprieties at Autonomy. Even by the standards of acquisition mistakes, which tend to be costly to acquiring company stockholders, this one stood out on three dimensions:
I am sure that this case will be examined and reexamined over time in books like this one, but at this moment, every one involved in the merger is blaming someone else for the fiasco. So, here is a roundup of the suspects:
Building up to an acquisition price: The original deal
Before we look at the numbers, it is worth reviewing the history of the two companies involved. Autonomy was a company founded at the start of the technology boom in 1996, which soared and crashed with that boom and then reinvented itself as a business/enterprise technology company that grew through acquisitions between 2001 and 2010. Hewlett Packard, with a long and glorious history as a pioneer in computers/technology, had fallen on lean times as it's PC business became less competitive/profitable and due to top management missteps.
On August 18, 2011, HP's then CEO, Leo Apotheker (who had worked at SAP) announced his intent to get out of the PC business and expand the enterprise technology business by buying Autonomy. While the deal making began on his watch, the actual deal was officially completed on October 3, 2011, with Meg Whitman as CEO. If she was a reluctant participant in the deal, it was not obvious in the statement she released at the time where she said that "(t)he exploding growth of unstructured and structured data and unlocking its value is the single largest opportunity for consumers, businesses and governments. Autonomy significantly increases our capabilities to manage and extract meaning from that data to drive insight, foresight and better decision making."
One of the perils of assessing "big" merger deals is that the fog of deal making, composed of hyperbole, buzzwords and general uncertainty, obscures the facts. So, let me stick with the facts that were available at the time the deal was done (a time period that stretched from August 18, 2011, to October 3, 2011):
You can see the build up to the price paid by HP as a series of premiums:
The cost of accounting impropriety & breaking down blame
Let's fast forward to today. In the conference call on November 18, the CFO of HP attributed the write off of $8.8 billion to two primary sources: $5 billion to accounting improprieties at Autonomy and $3.8 billion to a drop in HP's stock price. The latter rationale does not really hold up since it mistakes cause and effect; the stock price went down because of HP's misstep (though it has made so many that I am not sure which one) and is not the cause of the write off. Thus, it makes sense to attribute the entire write off to the deal. Applying HP's write off of $8.8 billion to the acquisition price of $11.1 billion, brings Autonomy's estimated value (according to HP) back down to $2.3 billion (almost equal to the pre-deal book value of $2.1 billion). In effect, HP is arguing that almost all of the premiums in the original deal (the accounting write up, the pre-deal market premium, the acquisition premium) were not justified.
So, what form did these accounting improprieties take? Based on news reports, HP's contention is that Autonomy was "overstating" and "mis-categorizing" revenues (they were allegedly booking low margin hardware sales as higher margin service/software sales). Assume for the moment that HP is right, and that Autonomy's revenues in 2010 were overstated by 15% and that its true operating margin was the industry average of 31% (and not the 36% that Autonomy was reporting in 2010). Since the accounting misstatements predated the HP acquisition, the pre-deal market value of $5.9 billion should already have been inflated because of the misstatements. Using the pre-deal market value of $5.9 billion as a base, I extracted an expected revenue growth rate of 14.25%. I then substituted in the lower revenues (15% drop) and lower margin (31%) into the valuation and estimated a value for the equity of $4.2 billion. Put differently, if you buy into HP's story fully, the value effect of the accounting misstatement was $1.7 billion (the difference between the pre-deal market value and the adjusted value) on the pre-deal value.
HP's argument would be that the synergy premium of $5.2 billion that they paid was also overstated because of the accounting improprieties. Since we do not have access to the detailed synergy estimates (assuming that they were made), we assumed that the accounting overstatement would comprise the same percent of the synergy value it was of the pre-deal market value ($1.7 billion is 28.81% of $5.9 billion) and that half of this value is Autonomy's share (since synergy accrues to the combined firm):
Estimated accounting impropriety portion of synergy value =0.5( 28.81% of $5,200) = $749 million
I know that this may not be fair and that I am going with incomplete information, but here is my breakdown of blame for the $ 8.8 billion write down:
As I see it, everyone involved in this process owns part of this disaster. Leo Apotheker, the CEO who pushed this deal through, gets the lion's share with $4,451 million, though the investment bankers who advised him were his enablers in the process. To the extent that HP is right in its contention that Autonomy cooked the books (inflating revenues and margins), Autonomy's founder/ managers and its auditor (Deloitte) are responsible for $2,449 million in value destruction. That leaves us still with an additional $1,900 million in write offs, which I can attribute to either a deterioration of Autonomy's business in the eleven months since HP took it over (a form of reverse synergy) or game playing on the part of HP, where taking bigger losses now will allow them to claim improvements and look better in the future. In either case, I would hold HP's current management responsible for that portion ($1,900 million) damage. As HP stockholders, though, don't expect any of these parties to offer to cover their fair share.
This deal offers important lessons about headstrong CEOs, the ineffectual accounting for acquisitions and the flaws in the acquisition process that allow bad deals like this one to get through, but this post has become too long to expand on these issues. So, more in my next few posts....
The Acquisition Series
HP's deal from hell: The mark-it-up and write-it-down two step
Acquisition Archives: Winners and Losers
Acquisition Hubris: Over confident CEOs and Compliant Boards
Acquisition Advice: Big deal or good deal?
Acquisition Accounting I: Accretive (Dilutive) Deals can be bad (good) deals
Acquisition Accounting II: Goodwill, more plug than asset
- It was disproportionately large: While there have been larger write offs of acquisition mistakes , this one stands out because it amounts to approximately 80% of the original price paid.
- The preponderance of the write off was attributed to accounting manipulation: Most acquisition write offs are attributed either to over optimistic forecasts at the time (the investment banker made us do it..) of the merger or changes in operations/markets after the acquisition (it was not our fault). HP's claim is that the bulk of the write off ($5 billion of the 8.8 billion) was due to accounting improprieties (a polite word for fraud) at Autonomy.
- The market was surprised: Most acquisition write offs, which take the form of impairments of goodwill, are non-news because they lag the market and have no cash flow effects. In other words, by the time accountants get around to admitting a mistake from an acquisition, markets have already admitted the mistake and moved on. In HP's case, the market was surprised and HP's stock price dropped about $ 3 billion (12%) on the announcement. Put differently, the market had priced in an acquisition mistake of $5.8 billion into the value already and was surprised by the difference.
I am sure that this case will be examined and reexamined over time in books like this one, but at this moment, every one involved in the merger is blaming someone else for the fiasco. So, here is a roundup of the suspects:
- Meg Whitman, the current CEO of HP, blamed the prior top management at the company, and said that "(t)he two people that should have been held responsible are gone ".
- Leo Apotheker, the prior CEO who orchestrated the acquisition, claimed to be shocked at the "accounting improprieties" at Autonomy.
- Michael Lynch, the founder of Autonomy, said that two major auditors had performed "due diligence" on the financial statements and had found no improprieties at the company.
- Deloitte LLP, the auditor for Autonomy, denied all knowledge of accounting misrepresentations and claimed to be cooperating with authorities.
- The advisers on the deal (Perella Weinberg & Barclay's Capital for HP, Quatalyst, UBS, Goldman Sachs, Chase & BofA for Autonomy) have all been mysteriously silent, though none have offered a refund of their advisory fees.
Building up to an acquisition price: The original deal
Before we look at the numbers, it is worth reviewing the history of the two companies involved. Autonomy was a company founded at the start of the technology boom in 1996, which soared and crashed with that boom and then reinvented itself as a business/enterprise technology company that grew through acquisitions between 2001 and 2010. Hewlett Packard, with a long and glorious history as a pioneer in computers/technology, had fallen on lean times as it's PC business became less competitive/profitable and due to top management missteps.
On August 18, 2011, HP's then CEO, Leo Apotheker (who had worked at SAP) announced his intent to get out of the PC business and expand the enterprise technology business by buying Autonomy. While the deal making began on his watch, the actual deal was officially completed on October 3, 2011, with Meg Whitman as CEO. If she was a reluctant participant in the deal, it was not obvious in the statement she released at the time where she said that "(t)he exploding growth of unstructured and structured data and unlocking its value is the single largest opportunity for consumers, businesses and governments. Autonomy significantly increases our capabilities to manage and extract meaning from that data to drive insight, foresight and better decision making."
One of the perils of assessing "big" merger deals is that the fog of deal making, composed of hyperbole, buzzwords and general uncertainty, obscures the facts. So, let me stick with the facts that were available at the time the deal was done (a time period that stretched from August 18, 2011, to October 3, 2011):
- Acquisition Price: While there have been varying numbers reported about what HP paid for Autonomy, partly reflecting when the story was written (between August & November) and partly because of exchange rate movements (HP paid £25.50/share), the actual cost of the deal was $11.1 billion.
- Market Price prior: Autonomy's market cap a few days prior to the deal being announced was approximately $5.9 billion.
- Pre-deal accounting book value: The book value of Autonomy's equity, prior to the deal, was estimated to be $2.1 billion. (Source: Autonomy's balance sheet from its annual report for 2010)
- Post-deal accounting book value: After acquisitions, accountants are given a limited mission of reappraising the value of existing assets and this appraisal led to an adjusted book value of $ 4.6 billion for Autonomy. (Source: HP's 2011 annual report, page 99)
You can see the build up to the price paid by HP as a series of premiums:
- The accounting "write up" premium for book value: One of the residual effects of the changes that have been made to acquisition accounting is that accountants are allowed to reassess the value of a target company's existing assets to reflect their "fair" value. For technology companies such as Autonomy, this becomes an exercise in putting values to technology patents and other intangible assets and that exercise added $2,533 million to the original book value of equity.
- The pre-deal "market" premium over book value ($1.3 billion over post-deal book value): Even if accountants write up the value of assets in place to fair value, markets may still attach a premium for growth potential and future investments. As with any market number, this number can be wrong, too high for some companies and too low for others. Prior to the HP deal, the market was attaching a value of $6.2 billion to Autonomy, $3,833 million higher than the original book value of equity and $1.3 billion more than the post-deal accounting book value of equity.
- The acquisition premium ($5.2 billion): To justify this premium, HP would have to had to believe that one or more of the following held: (i) the market was undervaluing Autonomy, i.e., that the true value of Autonomy was much higher than the $ 5.9 billion, (ii) there are synergies between HP and Autonomy that have value, i.e., that there are value-enhancing actions that the combined firm (HP+Autonomy) can take that could not have been taken by the firms independently and/or (iii) that Autonomy was badly run and that changing the way it was run could make it more valuable, i.e., there is a control premium. Even without the benefit of hindsight, neither undervaluation nor the control premium seemed to fit as motives in this acquisition. First, Autonomy was being priced by the market richly in August 2011; the market cap of $ 5.9 billion was roughly 6 times revenues and 15 times earnings and neither number looked like a bargain. Second, for a company that had been as badly run as HP to be talking about inefficiencies at other companies (and control premiums) strikes me as absurd.
The cost of accounting impropriety & breaking down blame
Let's fast forward to today. In the conference call on November 18, the CFO of HP attributed the write off of $8.8 billion to two primary sources: $5 billion to accounting improprieties at Autonomy and $3.8 billion to a drop in HP's stock price. The latter rationale does not really hold up since it mistakes cause and effect; the stock price went down because of HP's misstep (though it has made so many that I am not sure which one) and is not the cause of the write off. Thus, it makes sense to attribute the entire write off to the deal. Applying HP's write off of $8.8 billion to the acquisition price of $11.1 billion, brings Autonomy's estimated value (according to HP) back down to $2.3 billion (almost equal to the pre-deal book value of $2.1 billion). In effect, HP is arguing that almost all of the premiums in the original deal (the accounting write up, the pre-deal market premium, the acquisition premium) were not justified.
So, what form did these accounting improprieties take? Based on news reports, HP's contention is that Autonomy was "overstating" and "mis-categorizing" revenues (they were allegedly booking low margin hardware sales as higher margin service/software sales). Assume for the moment that HP is right, and that Autonomy's revenues in 2010 were overstated by 15% and that its true operating margin was the industry average of 31% (and not the 36% that Autonomy was reporting in 2010). Since the accounting misstatements predated the HP acquisition, the pre-deal market value of $5.9 billion should already have been inflated because of the misstatements. Using the pre-deal market value of $5.9 billion as a base, I extracted an expected revenue growth rate of 14.25%. I then substituted in the lower revenues (15% drop) and lower margin (31%) into the valuation and estimated a value for the equity of $4.2 billion. Put differently, if you buy into HP's story fully, the value effect of the accounting misstatement was $1.7 billion (the difference between the pre-deal market value and the adjusted value) on the pre-deal value.
HP's argument would be that the synergy premium of $5.2 billion that they paid was also overstated because of the accounting improprieties. Since we do not have access to the detailed synergy estimates (assuming that they were made), we assumed that the accounting overstatement would comprise the same percent of the synergy value it was of the pre-deal market value ($1.7 billion is 28.81% of $5.9 billion) and that half of this value is Autonomy's share (since synergy accrues to the combined firm):
Estimated accounting impropriety portion of synergy value =0.5( 28.81% of $5,200) = $749 million
I know that this may not be fair and that I am going with incomplete information, but here is my breakdown of blame for the $ 8.8 billion write down:
As I see it, everyone involved in this process owns part of this disaster. Leo Apotheker, the CEO who pushed this deal through, gets the lion's share with $4,451 million, though the investment bankers who advised him were his enablers in the process. To the extent that HP is right in its contention that Autonomy cooked the books (inflating revenues and margins), Autonomy's founder/ managers and its auditor (Deloitte) are responsible for $2,449 million in value destruction. That leaves us still with an additional $1,900 million in write offs, which I can attribute to either a deterioration of Autonomy's business in the eleven months since HP took it over (a form of reverse synergy) or game playing on the part of HP, where taking bigger losses now will allow them to claim improvements and look better in the future. In either case, I would hold HP's current management responsible for that portion ($1,900 million) damage. As HP stockholders, though, don't expect any of these parties to offer to cover their fair share.
This deal offers important lessons about headstrong CEOs, the ineffectual accounting for acquisitions and the flaws in the acquisition process that allow bad deals like this one to get through, but this post has become too long to expand on these issues. So, more in my next few posts....
The Acquisition Series
HP's deal from hell: The mark-it-up and write-it-down two step
Acquisition Archives: Winners and Losers
Acquisition Hubris: Over confident CEOs and Compliant Boards
Acquisition Advice: Big deal or good deal?
Acquisition Accounting I: Accretive (Dilutive) Deals can be bad (good) deals
Acquisition Accounting II: Goodwill, more plug than asset
27 comments:
Meg Whitman could have just paid the $116 million break-up fee, and walked away. Wouldn't that make her contingently responsible for the loss?
David,
Not only that. She was a member of the board that approved the merger.. So, there is joint responsibility here... You are right.
Just a couple of queries on the valuation worksheet -
1) Operating lease debt of 262.72 is not added to 748.20 of book debt.
2) Operating lease differential of 342.47 (this appears large, is it?) is not added to ebit.
These may not make that much of a difference. But please let me know if there is any specific reason.
HP's screw up tells us how deals are actually first made based on perceptions,relationships and optimism, and later sheets and presentations are prepared for back up.
I have worked in a big 4 accounting firm and know how it works!
This is part of a generic spreadsheet, where the lease worksheet is part of the spreadsheet. These leases are carried over from whatever company was in the spreadsheet from before but Autonomy did not seem to have any lease commitments (that I could find). If you look at the basic input page, I have entered no to the "Do you have operating leases?" question. if you answer yes, you would have to update the lease commitments.
I am not sure that the 12% drop in HP's price the day of the write-off should be attributed to the write-off itself (or a surprise factor of $3B). HP was also reporting earnings (declining revenue across most businesses) and reduced their guidance for the next quarter the same day. That's a minor comment. To me at least, it seemed the value of the acquisition had already been written off by the market.
I would be interested in your thoughts on HP's valuation. Despite the sins in HP's past, $25B in market cap for a company that generated $7B+ in FCF in the last 12 months seems cheap, to put it mildly... Just the printing business by itself should be worth something close to that, based on relative valuations. It doesn't make sense to me, however I do the numbers, unless we assume most of the company will be gone within 10 years.
Having worked in an investment bank, I would say that companies are not necessarily getting objective and good advice from their bankers.
After all, banks only gets paid IF the deal is completed. All the incentive in the world to push through with the deal, even if it doesn't make sense to their clients.
One also wonders why a milestone/time based deferred payment of purchase consideration was given a go by...usually the case with large deals.
The law needs to provide for premium disgorgement in case of such questionable deals that are hurried through!
Thanks for clarifying on op leases; I also see a couple of more sheets that are not relevant to this valuation.
Thanks!
In terms of the reasons why an acquisition price was different from the market cap- apart from the mentioned undervaluation by the market, specific synergies and control premium there could also be different cost of capital (maybe HP can finance itself cheaper then an average market participant? #WACC).
I would be careful with quantifying the fraud in this case. I understand that assuming that absent of fraud the margins would revert back to industry wide averages seems the only way to go about it (for now at least), but those margins could have been even lower. We can see how sensitive those calculations are and that assuming lower margins would knock the fair valuation even further down. Thank you!
I work on the buy side, and I think it's fair to say that the market has already written off the Autonomy acquisition by the time of the announcement. The market already knew revenue is declining at Autonomy from the prior earning release. This combining with the fact that HP paid 10x sales for Autonomy, guaranteed a write off. I think the stock price reacted the way it did primarily because management gave below consensus guidance for 1Q13. This also made their 2013 full year eps guidance harder to hit.
Just out of curiosity, Dr. Damodaran, why would an Autonomy advisor offer a "refund of their advisory fees"? Qatalyst (not "Quatalyst") secured an excellent deal for Autonomy, which was their client. In fact, one could argue that the size of the writeoff reflects the impressiveness of the sellside advisory work.
I agreed, it was the joint responsibility here. HP was deteriorate revenue across most businesses and reduced their directions for the next quarter on the same day. Thanks for clarifying most of the queries on op leases; I can also see some sheets that are not related to this valuation.
Dear Prof,
Would you like to comment on Muddy Water's attack on Olam? It is a very interesting case.
Dan, You are right. It is the advisors to HP who should be refunding their fees. And Krystian, you are falling into one of the most common valuation myths in acquisitions: that a "safer" company can make a riskier company more valuable because it has a lower cost of capital. If there is synergy, it better be something else that actually makes a difference: higher growth, lower costs... The bottom line, though, is not whether there can be synergy. Of course, there can. In this particular merger, there was none.
Hi
is this risk in FB acquisition?
Now wait a moment, Dan, I respectfully disagree. IMHO, this is not even remotely a matter of fees, it's a matter of investigating and holding accountable those who are responsible for the books-culinary. In an entirely free economy, where the only law is "pacta sunt servanda", you can buy and sell whatever you want at whatever price in private transactions. In that case, if you (or your bankers) can convince your counterparty that your company owns the technology for the Philosopher's Stone, good for you, you get paid trillions for it. Now this is a public company, and such behavior would transcend the boundaries of the immoral, it's outright illegal. Forget synergies and book values, it's wrongdoing.
Cases like this undermine the confidence that the general public has in the financial markets, which in my opinion, is shaken enough. For me, this industry suffers from a chronic incentives misalignment and lack of enforcement of fiduciary duties. The markets cannot serve their function of connecting spenders and savers for as long as one of those groups is being systematically screwed.
prof, what inputs did you use to arrive at 14.25% growth rate in revenues to get to target valuation of 5.9 b? The formula does not appear in the working sheet.
Totally agreed with you Mr. Eduardo, you can buy and sell anything you want at whatever price in private proceedings. You can satisfy your customer that your Business company owns the engineering, Can can earn millions with this. Your behavior would surpass the Limits of the immoral, it's entirely lawless. It is a very interesting case.
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I cannot believe the compensation packages that so many companies shell out for their CEO'S its really outrageous meg whitman got a tremendous package when she went to hewlett packard. The thing that most disturbs me most is the stock options that many CEO'S receive The Compensation received though stock options does not have to be expensed or deducted from net income. The share count just increases. I would make issuing stock options and not deducting them from net income as compensation when their exercised illegal. What shareholder in their right mind would dissagree with that.
Agree absolutely..Eduardo. Free market economy does not necessarily mean free pricing at the expense of the small investor. Major stakeholders (synonymous with mgmt.... esp of tech companies) always bulldoze their way to pass self seeking resolutions in company meetings. Areas of limitations still do abound with the best of corporate governance measures.
Are the legends on columns 2 and 3 of the first graph swapped the wrong way around?
Prof,
Good column. Actually in these deals, it is difficult to really figure out (even expost) what was actually paid. Here, you say that the actual cost of the deal was $11.1 billion. How can an investor figure this out - which entries in which financials does one need to piece together to get a handle on this - especially given the mix of stock & cash they paid & some options and incentives thrown in & the different currencies & potential tax effects. Would be a good column to do on just this aspect of complicated deals - with this as an illustration.
Thanks
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The post which you have been posted is so informative for me.I think this risk is FB acquisition.
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