Problem:
Hampshire-Cathaway (H-C), a large established corporation with no growth in its real earnings, is considering acquiring 100% of the shares of Trilennium Corporation, a young firm with a high growth rate of earnings. The acquisitions analysis group at H-C has produced the following table of relevant data:
Hampshire-Cathaway Trilennium
Earnings per share $3.00 $2.00
Dividend per share $3.00 $0.80
Number of shares 200 million 10 million
Stock price $30 $20
H-C's analysts estimate that investors currently expect growth of about 6% per year in Trilennium's earnings and dividends. They assume that with the improvements in management that H-C could bring to Trilennium, its growth rate would be 10% per year with no additional investment outlays beyond those already expected.
Q1. What is the expected gain from the acquisition?
Q2. What is the NPV of the acquisition to H-C shareholders if it costs an average of $30 per share to acquire all of the outstanding shares?
Q3. Would it matter to H-C's shareholders whether the shares of Trilennium stock are acquired by paying cash or H-C stock?