Transcript CHAPTER 5

Selecting the Proper Form of Business
Ownership and Exploring Mergers and
Acquisitions
Chapter 4
Sole Proprietorships
Partnerships
Corporations
Sole Proprietorship:
Business owned by a single individual
Unlimited Liability:
Legal condition under which any business damages
or debts can also be attached to the owner because
the two have no separate legal identity
Advantages

Easy to establish
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Owner has control &
independence
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Owner reaps all profits
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Income is taxed at individual
rates

Company plans & financial
performace remain private
Disadvantages
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Limited financial
resources
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Owner may lack
managerial skills
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Owner is liable for
business debts &
damages
Business may cease
with death of owner
Partnership:
Unincorporated business owned and operated by two or more
persons under a voluntary legal association
General Partnership:
Partnership in which all partners have the right to participate
as co-owners and are individually liable for the business's
debts
Limited Partnership:
Partnership composed of one or more general partners and
one or more partners whose liability is usually limited to
the amount of their capital investment
Advantages
 Easy to establish

Owners have control &
independence

Owners reap all
profits

Income is taxed at
lower individual rates

Strength in numbers
Disadvantages
 Owners are liable for
business debts &
damages
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Potential interpersonal
problems
Corporation:
Legally chartered enterprise having most of the
legal rights of a person, including the right to
conduct business, to own and sell property, to
borrow money, and to sue or be sued-owners of
the corporation enjoy limited liability
Shareholders: Owners of a corporation
Stock: Shares of ownership in a corporation
Stock Certificate: Document that proves stock
ownership
Common Stock:
Shares whose owners have voting rights and have
the last claim on distributed profits and assets
Preferred Stock:
Shares that give their owners first claim on a
company's dividends and assets after paying all
debts; usually pays fixed dividends
Dividends:
Distributions of corporate assets to shareholders in
the form of cash or other assets
Owners can be:
Elects
Shareholders
Board of Directors
Group of people elected by the shareholders
who have the ultimate authority in guiding the
affairs of a corporation

Individuals

Other Companies

Not-for-Profit
Organizations
Appoints

Pension Funds
Officers

Mutual Funds
Proxy:
Document authorizing
another person to vote on
behalf of a shareholder in a
corporation
Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
Chief Financial Officer (CFO)
Chief Operating Officer (COO)
Persons appointed by the board of directors to
carry out the board's policies and supervise the
activities of the corporation
Merger:
Combination of two companies in which one
company purchases the other and assumes control
of its property and liabilities
Consolidation:
Combination of two or more companies in which
the old companies cease to exist and a new
enterprise is created
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Advantages
Economies of scale
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Efficiencies
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Synergies: sum is
greater than
individual parts

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Disadvantages
Culture clashes
Create a burden of
high-risk corporate
debt
Distract managers
from day-to-day
operations
Trusts:
Monopolistic arrangements established when one company
buys a controlling share of the stock of competing
companies in the same industry
Horizontal Mergers:
Combinations of companies that compete directly in the
same industry
Vertical Mergers:
Combinations of companies that participate in different
phases of the same industry (i.ematerials. production.
distribution
Conglomerate Mergers:
Combinations of companies that are in unrelated businesses.
Designed to augment a company's growth and diversify risk
Leveraged Buyouts (LBOs):
Situation in which individuals or groups of investors purchase
companies primarily with debt secured by the company's
assets
Hostile Takeovers:
Situations in which an outside party buys enough stock in a
corporation to take control against the wishes of the board
of directors and corporate officers
A hostile takeover can be launched in two ways:
Tender Offer:
Invitation made directly to shareholders by an
outside party who wishes to buy a company's
stock at a price above the current market price
Proxy Fight:
Attempt to gain control of a takeover target by
urging shareholders to vote for directors favored
by the acquiring party
Schemes to avoid hostile takeovers:
Poison
Pill
Shark
Repellant
Golden
Parachute
White
Knight
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Poison pill-showing the company less valuable .
Special sale of newly issued stock tocurrent
stockholders at prices below the market price
İncreases the number of shareholders and makes
the company more expensive to overtake.
The golden parachute-benefit the company’s top
execurives by guaranteeing them generous
compensation packages if they ever leave or
forced out after a takeover .
The shark repellent-stokeholders must approve
the takeover.
The white knight –uses a friendly buyer to take
over the company before a raider does.
White knights agree to leave the current
management tean inplace and let the company
operate in an independent fashion.