“As an M&A analyst, you are tasked with determining whether a proposed 100% stock acquisition will be accretive or dilutive to the acquirer's earnings per share (EPS), and explaining why EPS accretion or dilution isn't the only metric that matters when judging whether a deal makes sense.”
As an M&A analyst, you are tasked with determining whether a proposed 100% stock acquisition will be accretive or dilutive to the acquirer's earnings per share (EPS), and explaining why EPS accretion or dilution isn't the only metric that matters when judging whether a deal makes sense.
Task: work out whether the acquirer's EPS rises or falls after the deal closes, and identify the break-even point that separates an accretive deal from a dilutive one.
Both companies are publicly traded, and the acquirer is proposing an all-stock deal.
| Line Item | Acquirer | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Net Income | $400m | $100m |
| Shares Outstanding | 100m | 50m |
| Current Share Price | $80.00 | $20.00 |
| Offer Premium to Target's Share Price | — | 20% (0.20) |
EPS = Net Income / Shares Outstanding; P/E = Share Price / EPS
Using this formula, compute the standalone EPS and P/E multiple for both the acquirer and the target.
Offer Price per Target Share = Target Share Price × (1 + Premium); Exchange Ratio = Offer Price per Target Share / Acquirer Share Price
Using this formula, compute the offer price per target share and the number of new acquirer shares issued to Target shareholders.
Pro Forma Net Income = Acquirer Net Income + Target Net Income
Using this formula, compute the combined net income of the merged company.
Pro Forma EPS = Pro Forma Net Income / (Acquirer Shares Outstanding + New Shares Issued)
Using this formula, compute the pro forma EPS and compare it to the acquirer's standalone EPS.
Assume:
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