Merger & Acquistion (M&A) Deal Structures Explained - YouTube

Channel: Brett Cenkus

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Hi everyone, hope you're having a great week.
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Today we're gonna talk about structuring M&A deals.
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How to structure the sale of your business or the purchase of a business.
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There are 3 primary ways to do it - we'll get into that in a second.
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In my experience, it's something that is not covered or addressed well enough up front.
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By the time I get involved, and we're putting together the documents, the structure's already
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been put together without a whole lot of thought about the consequences.
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Not always, but often.
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So, you need to know all about it up front - we'll get into that.
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First, a little bit about me.
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I'm Brett Cenkus, I'm a business attorney.
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I do that from my law firm, Cenkus Law, based in Austin.
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I have an office based in Houston, and I have clients all over.
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I'm also a startup consultant and business consultant.
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I do that out of my brand, The Startup Shepherd.
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The links to the websites are in the descriptions.
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I've done M&A at a very high level - billion dollar deals.
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In this life I do half a million to about 20 million dollar deals.
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That's kind of the size of the market in which I play.
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And, that's considered the main street part of the market, the lower-middle market.
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Those are kind of terms of art, but just so you understand what's going on, these are
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smaller deals and this content is aimed at someone buying or selling in that space.
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So, deal structures - there's 3 primary ways to structure the sale of a business.
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One is to sell the stock or equity interests.
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Two is to sell the assets.
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Third is a merger.
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We're not gonna spend a whole lot of time on mergers even though that's half of the
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term M&A or mergers and acquisitions.
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Not a lot of the deals at this part of the market are done as mergers.
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Mergers are driven by kinda high level tax issues often, and that kind of deal just doesn't
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show up down here.
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So, stock sales and asset sales are primarily what I see.
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So, a stock sale, the seller actually takes their equity interest and sells it to the
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buyer.
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They don't touch the company.
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Kinda like if you have a share of Microsoft, you could sell it to me, we didn't touch Microsoft.
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Now someone else, I, own that tiny little piece of the company that you used to own.
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An asset sale, you actually itemize all the assets of the business and you transfer those
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to the buyer.
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So those are two main ways deals get done in this part of the market.
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Generally speaking, sellers want to sell stock, and buyers want to buy assets.
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Two main reasons.
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One is tax, one is liability.
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On the tax side, sellers want to sell stock or equity interest because they can get favorable
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capital gains treatment.
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Sometimes they can get capital gains treatment depending on the assets, but stock is clearly
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gonna be a capital gains item.
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And, if they held the stock for longer than a year, they get long-term capital gains treatment.
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And, if it's qualified small business stock, a special type of corporate stock, they potentially
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can have no tax.
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So, there's usually a reason sellers want to be selling stock.
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Buyers, on the other hand, want to purchase assets, they want to buy the individual assets.
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The main reason is because, if they buy the stock and step into the seller's shoes they
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take over the assets at the book value that are on the books of the company at the time
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of the sale.
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Now, if the assets have been held for a long time and have been heavily depreciated, there
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may not be a whole lot of depreciation left.
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Depreciation is write-offs against income.
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So, you want as much depreciation as you can get.
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A buyer who purchases assets gets to mark the value of those assets up to their fair
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market value and depreciate the assets again.
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So, generally interests are not totally aligned.
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Sellers want to sell stock, and buyers want to buy assets.
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That's tax - the other reason is liability.
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So, when the seller sells the stock, the whole company - all of it - goes over to the buyer,
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including the liabilities.
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There are ways to carve out certain liabilities or the seller could indemnify the buyer for
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things that are particularly sensitive items, but, generally speaking, the buyer is taking
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the whole thing - the good and the bad.
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If the buyer purchases assets, they could cherry pick the assets and leave behind the
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liabilities.
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There are exceptions, like there always are in law.
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It's called successor liability and sometimes buyers can be responsible for liabilities
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even though they didn't want them.
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But, generally speaking, if you're concerned about liabilities, purchasing assets is a
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safer play.
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So, couple other things to think about.
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That's generally, if you're selling that's what you want, if you're buying that's what
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you want.
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In my experience, a lot of the business brokers market assets.
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It's kind of an easier thing to market.
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Some of them are concerned about licensing issues because they are not investment bankers,
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they don't have broker dealer licenses to market securities.
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They're more comfortable just marketing the sale of a business as the sale of assets.
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So, sometimes that doesn't get covered over up front too much because brokers are used
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to just kind of doing things a certain way.
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Another thing to consider on both sides - interests are aligned, here - is that getting a deal
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done as a stock sale is a little easier.
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Assets, when you start looking at the individual assets, every contract - is it assignable,
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can we transfer that to the buyer?
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If the buyer steps into the shoes of the seller and just takes over the stock or equity interest,
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nothing changed at the company level.
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We didn't transfer a contract.
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We just transferred the owner of the business.
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And, so there's anti-assignment clauses is what they're called in a lot of commercial
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contracts that say you can't assign this contract without the counterparty's consent, without
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their approval.
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And an asset sale is an assignment or transfer that would trigger that.
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So, sometimes there's concerns around being able to tranfer individual assets that make
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it more compelling to structure deals as stock sales.
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Those are the main things to consider.
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There's always a lot of other nuances and reasons and thoughts, but that hopefully gives
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you something to go on.
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So, buying a company or selling your company, spend time up front.
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Figure out what are the consequences.
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As a seller, get with your CPA early on.
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Does it matter if I sell stock or I sell assets?
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As a buyer, you won't really know much until you start to see the books of the seller,
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but you know enough now to at least ask the question, and tackle the issue before the
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documents come out and the deal's already put together.
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So, hope you enjoyed that.
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If you want to dive a little bit deeper I've got an article on my website that goes into
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more detail about it.
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If you want to talk about this or have any other questions about M&A or business generally,
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visit me at cenkuslaw.com.
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Hope you enjoyed that.
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If you have a question, leave it in the comments.
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If you're involved in M&A and agree with me or disagree with me, if you see a lot of mergers
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at this part of the market, I would love to hear about your experience.
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Different things happen differently in different parts of the country, so drop a comment in.
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Hope you enjoyed the content.
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Have a great week.