Whatever.com has extra cash. It can pay a dividend. It can buy back its own stock. It can buy a competitor.
Example:
Cendant Corporation. Largest fraud case in modern history in corporate America. The company, which owns rental cars and office space and insurance things and travel things, had a nice "subscription-like" business. It wanted more growth. So it bought CUC (Comp-u-card), one of the early AOL partners who used Groupon-like discounting to market to subscription members all around the world. The transaction was done as an MOE, or Merger of Equals, as the market valuations of both companies was about the same at the time.
The problem? CUC was only actually "worth" about 1/5th of the valuation it had convinced Wall Street to accord it, because it had taken massive merger reserves while it had built its own business over time. That is, it grew by acquiring tons of small companies, overstating the banking and "restructuring costs" (i.e., firing people). That number kept growing and growing on the balance sheet, and investors kinda just ignored it.
Eventually, when the real audit was done, the chickens came home to roost (and poop all over the place), and it came clear that the company was only about 1/3 as profitable as it said it was. So the stock prices of the combined companies went from somewhere in the mid $40s to middle-single-digit-midget status.
And yes, there was massive transaction risk there. For way less money, Cendant (which had no fraud) could have bought back half of its own stock and been just fine as a company...but they took the risk and got bitten. Bad.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is Counterparty Risk?9 Views
Finance a la shmoop what is counterparty risk?
alright here's you the party and here's the guy you're contracting with to sell [Woman and man stood side by side]
18 tons of bricks or buy a line of credit for your flower shop or sell a
futures contract with the right to buy oil at 80 bucks a barrel for the next [Person signs contract]
two years so you're the party and he's the counterparty and the yin and yang of
the party and here's the risk yeah well the counterparty risk is just
that the person you contracted with doesn't live up to their end of the
bargain you pay them good money you sign a good contract all lawyered up and [Stack of money and contract appears]
stuff and then they split like totally split disappeared sea men choose the
bottom of the ocean maybe they went to Bora Bora
maybe they got facial surgery in the Philippines you know they do that now [George Clooney in a surgical bed]
well when that happens you will probably feel like crying and you should its your
counterparty you can cry if you want to come on that was a good reference people [Man singing]
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