In the world of free trade, what did Ed do with his television company?
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Step 1: Ed recognized the potential for expanding his television company into international markets due to the principles of free trade, which reduce barriers to trade between countries. Show more…
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On January 10, 2000, AOL and Time Warner announced their intention to merge and create the world's first Internet-age media and communications company. The proposed deal represented the biggest corporate merger of all time, with the merged entity valued at approximately $350 billion. The deal was also unique in that it combined one of the leading names from the booming "new economy" with one of the largest "old economy" media companies. While the deal was billed by AOL and Time Warner as a "merger of equals," AOL was generally recognized as the "acquirer" and Time Warner as the "target." The objective of this case is to understand the structure and financial implications of the merger. Questions: 1. Describe the major synergies and other sources of value creation associated with the merger. 2. The terms of the merger represent a significant premium to Time Warner shareholders. Quantify this premium. 3. Do you think that the additional value created by the deal is sufficient to justify the premium being offered to Time Warner shareholders? 4. Estimate AOL's pre-merger intrinsic value by improving AOL's historical financial statements into eVal, setting the forecast horizon to 10 years and the valuation date to January 10, 2000, and leaving all other assumptions at their default values. What is the intrinsic stock price for AOL? Do you think that this is a reasonable pre-merger valuation? 5. Assume that the default assumptions in question 4 are appropriate for a pre-merger AOL and that the addition of Time Warner to AOL increases the value of AOL by exactly the $142 billion purchase price given in the online Exhibit 2 (i.e., the acquisition is a zero NPV investment). Compute AOL's post-merger intrinsic stock price. You don't need to use eVal for this question. 6. Reconcile the pre- and post-merger intrinsic valuations in questions 4 and 5. Why did a zero NPV investment change the value of AOL's intrinsic stock price? 7. Estimate whether the merger will be accretive (i.e., increase AOL's near-term EPS relative to what EPS would have been if the merger hadn't taken place) or dilutive (i.e., decrease AOL's near-term EPS relative to what EPS would have been if the merger hadn't taken place).
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In the 1990 s thousands of "dot-com" companies emerged with great fanfare to take advantage of the Internet and new information technologies. A few, like Yahoo, eBay, and Amazon, have generally thrived and prospered, but many others struggled and eventually failed. Explain these varied outcomes in terms of how the market system answers the question "What goods and services will be produced?"
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