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Finance: What is a Fairness Opinion? 0 Views


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Description:

What is a Fairness Opinion? Fairness opinions are used to help parties involved in any sort of changes in business ownership that involve selling. They are used with things like mergers and acquisitions; analysts look at the transaction as a whole and give their opinion regarding the selling price. The buyers and sellers are then able to use this information to ensure that everyone is receiving the best deal possible.

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Transcript

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is a fairness opinion? well shouldn't there be

00:07

something about love and war that goes here you know like not all's fair and [Woman throws page at a man]

00:12

maybe not all right two companies the one who boogs and we love gross each owned

00:17

40% of a small operating business that makes nostril trimmers shaped like the

00:24

16th century French apothecary the division yeah it's called [Nose trimmer vibrates]

00:28

Nostrildamus..........

00:32

A dozen other shareholders own the remaining 20% of the company privately

00:37

the one who boogs wants to buy out the 40% of Nostrildomus that we love gross

00:43

owns and the 20% owned by everyone else well they've co-owned this company for [Longsnout and sneezy walking together]

00:49

decades since great-grandpappy longsnout partnered with another great grandpappy

00:54

sneezy yeah no relation to the Disney family there

00:58

the division will do 100 million dollars in revenue this year and generate 15

01:02

million in cash profits alright so how does it get valued because there's got

01:06

to be a buyout here of the remaining percentage and it's not valued

01:10

separately at the moment why is it important for that value to be well fair?

01:15

while lots of potential for corruption here and unsquare dealings may be gross

01:20

would sell out cheap in return for bugs to back out of the Russian territories [Men with briefcases for heads appear]

01:25

where it does big business sort of a tit for tat business deal but then the 20%

01:30

minority owners of the division would be screwed because they didn't get full and [Minority owners protesting]

01:34

fair price for the division that was sold and well they don't benefit in the

01:38

way that gross would benefit by then being able to run the tables or nostrils

01:42

of Russia you know and the apostrophe stans that it controls right so

01:47

everyone's got to be treated fairly here so that's not easy and especially in

01:52

those stans you know like where Borat comes from so in order for everyone to [Borat wearing a mankini on a beach]

01:56

be treated fairly a wizened investment banker is usually called in to write a

02:03

legal fairness opinion and that opinion will likely be inspected by judges and

02:07

other bankers and lawyers should anything go awry so that banker has to

02:12

be very thorough and careful in the way that they calculate [Person punching numbers into calculator]

02:15

the values of each division and their rationale such that everyone gets paid

02:20

fairly and squarely all right well that fairness opinion is used to frame the

02:24

purchase price in the terms of whatever deal ends up going down or up a big part

02:31

of the bankers value-add is creative solutions to bridge valuation gaps where

02:35

one company thinks it's worth more than the other or at least more than what

02:39

it's getting in the deal and while bankers fairness opinions focus mostly

02:43

on just the cash value of the company well like you can imagine that owning or

02:49

controlling a hundred percent of the company would come with all kind of

02:52

benefits if nothing else just not having to report to tons and tons of

02:55

shareholders so what's that right to not report worth and everyone can argue [Man and woman arguing on the sidewalk]

03:00

about that in a banker who's done lots of these transactions can point to other

03:03

transactions that came with a 12% premium for the right to not have to

03:08

report to tons of tons of shareholders right so that's just one example

03:11

bankers often whisper through one side or the other deal dials that can be [Woman banker whispering to male banker]

03:16

turned where companies then feel more fairly treated and then happier to sign

03:21

on the dotted line because when they do well then the banker gets paid well

03:24

those whispers are things like extended term payments like they're buying for

03:29

cash could they pay over ten years and what if the the acquirer decided to pay

03:34

with equity like their own stock instead of all cash and then there's like 50

03:38

other little things like that the companies care about that bankers can

03:41

help them you know turn the dials and if they didn't care about any of those [Person turns dial]

03:44

things well then they'd be more likely to you know take a nosedive

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