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Practical M&A Execution and Integration: A Step by Step Guide To Successful Strategy, Risk and Integration Management (Wiley Corporate F&A)

SKU: 9780470687963

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Practical M&A Execution and Integration: A Step by Step Guide To Successful Strategy, Risk and Integration Management (Wiley Corporate F&A), H. Kent Baker, 9780470687963

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Covering the field of M&A execution, this accessible and practical book is divided into sections which broadly reflect the chronological order a typical M&A deal follows. Taking the reader through the M&A process, stage by stage, the book describes the challenges and goals for each, and suggests approaches to dealing with these challenges, presenting guidance on how to prepare for the stage. At each stage topics such as strategy, IT, communications, HR considerations and legal/regulatory constraints are addressed. Replete with practical tools such as process flows and sample control documents, the book also contains downloadable template control documents on an accompanying CD. The book also includes a number of interviews with those currently involved in M&A deals, industry perspectives from those outside the process, and is peppered with examples and over 30 case studies and examples. Covering the topic of M&A in general, the book also has a number of sections relating specifically to banking M&A in light of the unique nature of M&A in this industry and recent trends and activities in banking M&A. Tables and Figures xi Foreword xv Acknowledgments xvii SECTION A: ABOUT MERGERS AND ACQUISITIONS 1 Chapter 1: Introduction 3 Fundamentals of mergers & acquisitions 5 Types of M&A deals 6 Challenges of M&A deals 11 Reasons for M&A 14 Chapter 2: Role of regulation 21 Regulatory regimes 22 UK anti-trust regime 23 European Union regulation 26 US anti-trust legislation 27 Bid process 28 SECTION B: FUNDAMENTALS OF THE DEAL 31 Chapter 3: Anatomy of a deal 33 M&A Stages 33 Phase 1: Prelude (to a deal) 36 Phase 2: Deal negotiation 40 Phase 3: Pre-change of control 44 Phase 4: Change of control 50 Phase 5: Integration 50 Phase 6: Business as usual 53 SECTION C: SUCCESSFUL M&A 55 Chapter 4: M&A power 57 Clarity 57 Capacity 61 Speed 76 Chapter 5: M&A process 79 Risk management 80 Planning, management and control 106 Project lifecycle and structure 113 Issue management 133 Risk management practice 138 Reporting 149 Assumption management 152 Dependency management 154 Scope change management 157 Quality management 162 Resource management 164 Cost management 166 Communications management 170 Stakeholder management 173 Chapter 6: M&A people 175 Culture 175 Stakeholders 179 Personnel 179 SECTION D: PULLING IT ALL TOGETHER: DELIVERING M&A 185 Chapter 7: Timing 187 Managing the integration and change of control period 187 Project organisation and control 197 SECTION E: BANKING M&A 207 What makes banking M&A unique? 207 Planning for the post-merger period 211 Planning to get to the change of control 212 Organisational approach 225 Issue management 229 What if it all goes wrong? 235 SECTION F: DOCUMENT TEMPLATES AND SUGGESTED TABLES OF CONTENTS 239 Control documents 239 Report templates 245 Project document templates 255 Bibliography 289 About the author 291 Index 293 Tables Table 5.1 Temporal impacts on risk behaviour, after Das and Teng 85 Table 5.2 Delphi participation 95 Table 5.3 Sample risk classifi cation 98 Table 5.4 Sample risk meta data 99 Table 5.5 Example classifi cation of risks identifi ed using CRIM process 104 Table 5.6 Project constraints at different stages of a deal 110 Table 5.7 Inherent project risk 144 Table 5.8 Example of Earned Value Analysis (EVA) 168 Table 6.1 Approaches to forging a common culture 180 Table 6.2 Approaches to motivation of retained and non-retained staff 183 Table 7.1 Establishing integration team contacts 1 198 Table E.1 Establishing integration team contacts 2 209 Table E.2 Example: Trading desk distribution 215 Table E.3 Build activities 217 Table E.4 Testing 217 Table E.5 Dress rehearsal planning 218 Table E.6 Operational readiness 218 Table E.7 Change of control requirements 219 Table E.8 Change of control/cutover activities 221 Table E.9 First trading day requirements 221 Table E.10 Reporting audiences 229 Figures Figure 1.1 Three capabilities for successful M&A 4 Figure 1.2 Impact of a merger 7 Figure 1.3 Impact of an acquisition 8 Figure 1.4 Impact of a demerger 9 List of Tables & Figures Figure 1.5 Merger values 1968-2007 12 Figure 1.6 Recent merger activity, 2008-2010 13 Figure 3.1 Strata model 35 Figure 3.2 High level M&A plan (1 of 2) 37 Figure 3.3 High level M&A plan (2 of 2) 38 Figure 3.4 Relationship of high level planning 41 Figure C.1 Key elements of successful M&A 56 Figure 4.1 M&A power pyramid 58 Figure 5.1 M&A process pyramid 79 Figure 5.2 Reconceptualised model of risk determinants, after Sitkin and Pablo 84 Figure 5.3 CRIM framework 88 Figure 5.4 Risk classifi cation 97 Figure 5.5 Bands of answers 102 Figure 5.6 Example results 102 Figure 5.7 Risk signifi cance (sorted) versus level of mitigation 103 Figure 5.8 Programme constraints triangle 111 Figure 5.9 Typical project lifecycle 115 Figure 5.10 ‘Gated’ waterfall approach 115 Figure 5.11 ‘Realistic’ waterfall approach 116 Figure 5.12 Single project iteration 117 Figure 5.13 An RAD project 118 Figure 5.14 Project controls active in each project phase 120 Figure 5.15 Initiation phase 121 Figure 5.16 Design phase 124 Figure 5.17 Execution phase 126 Figure 5.18 Testing phase 128 Figure 5.19 Implementation phase 130 Figure 5.20 Closure and review phase 132 Figure 5.21 Issue management process (1 of 2) 134 Figure 5.22 Issue management process (2 of 2) 136 Figure 5.23 Issue states 139 Figure 5.24 Risk management process (1 of 2) 141 Figure 5.25 Risk management process (2 of 2) 142 Figure 5.26 Risk signifi cance based on risk probability and impact 147 Figure 5.27 Mitigation impact 148 Figure 5.28 Risk states 150 Figure 5.29 Reporting cycle 151 Figure 5.30 Assumption management process 153 Figure 5.31 Dependency management process 156 Figure 5.32 Scope change management (1 of 2) 159 Figure 5.33 Scope change management (2 of 2) 160 Figure 5.34 Example of EVA 169 Figure 5.35 Communications planning 171 Figure 6.1 M&A people pyramid 176 Figure 6.2 Example: Cultural differences report 178 Figure 6.3 Staff motivational needs 182 Figure 7.1 Sample time line 189 Figure 7.2 Reporting hierarchy 205 Figure E.1 Cutover control infrastructure 227 Figure E.2 Issue states for CoC control 234 Figure E.3 Layout of a typical control centre 236

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