>>> What to look at today - 26th of October 2015

Asian equity markets got their first opportunity to respond to another heavy dose of monetary easing by the PBoC, and the reaction has been fairly positive though perhaps somewhat more muted than anticipated. Nikkei is leading the rally by over 1% despite the firmer JPY, followed closely by the mainland indices. Dec e-mini futures however are down marginally. On Friday, the PBoC cuts both the 1-year rate and system-wide RRR by 25bps and 50bps, while also deciding to remove the ceiling on bank deposit rates. The decision to cut comes on the eve of China's Communist Plenum where it will formally announce its growth targets going forward. Over the weekend, Chinese leaders worked to manage market expectations of a potential downgrade from the 7% target. Premier Li said 7% is not a hard target that should be "defended to the death", and that 6.9% growth reported in Q3 still represents reasonable range. PBoC Dep Gov Yi Gang then added that China can sustain growth of 6-7% for the next 3-5 years. Later in the day, PBoC research bureau chief Lu Lei also remarked that the GDP of 6.9% reflects China economic fundamentals. Ahead of this week's crucial BOJ meeting that features semiannual review of GDP and CPI objectives, Goldman Sachs forecast that Japan central bank will announce more easing. In Europe, officials with SNB and BOE reacted to the easier tone adopted by the ECB Pres Draghi in the last decision. BOE's Carney said that while UK interest rate hike is a possibility, it is not a certainty. Likewise, SNB VP Zurbruegg said the central bank will monitor and evaluate the impact of any easing measures taken by the ECB the next time when it meets.

Nikkei +0.65% Hang Seng -0.32% Shanghai +0.10%

Eur$ 1.1032 JPY 121.13 CNY 6.35 GBP 1.5326 BRL 3.8763 RUB$ 62.13 WTI $44.68 (+0.18%)

S&P -0.22% EuroStoxx +0.06% Dax +0.11% SMI +0.23%


Macro
- Juncker: Must Slow Down the Uncontrolled Flows of Refugees
- EU Said to Be Alerted to Problems With Car Tests in 2013: FT

Keep an eye on :
- ADN LN : Aberdeen Asset Management Said to Seek Buyers for Company: FT
- ACS SM : ACS Wins EU85m Contract for Japanese Photovoltaic Plant
- AF FP : Air France Could Start Hiring New Pilots From 2018: Echos
- BKIA SM : Bankia seen as target for Spain’s top banks in upcoming M&A
- BINCK NA : BinckBank 3Q Net Drops, Sees First KIFID Rulings in Coming Half
- CSGN VX : Credit Suisse Enlarges Rights Offering Banking Syndicate
- ERF FP : Eurofins Raises 2015 FY Revenue Target; Sees Positive Trends
- EROS LN : Eros Falls Most on BSE 500 Tracking U.S. Parent’s 17% Decline
- MKS LN : Marks & Spencer CEO Tells Board He’s Sticking Around: Telegraph
- MTX GY : MTU Aero Says End-of-Year Targets Reaffirmed
- UG FP : Peugeot Citroen 3Q Rev. In Line; Says Confident in Plan
- PHIA NA : Philips 3Q Adj. Ebita Beats Estimates; Lumileds Sale Uncertain
- PRY IM : Prysmian Awarded China Submarine Cable Project Worth Over $140m
- RWE GY : RWE to Transfer Five Lignite Power Plants to German Reserve
- RWE GY : Germany Agrees EU1.6B Capacity Reserve W/RWE, Vattenfall, Mibrag
- SPM IM : Eni to Sell Part of Its Saipem Stake to Cassa Depositi: Il Sole
- SECUB SS : Diebold to Sell Business to Securitas for $350 Million
- SHP LN : Shire Says It Will Have Chance to Argue Against Bass Challenge
- SYNN VX : Syngenta to Be Proactive After CEO’s Exit, Chairman Tells SaS
- TNTE NA : TNT 3Q Adj. Op Income EU13m; Says Progress Made on FedEx Offer
- UBSN VX : Swiss Banks Need More Capital, Finma CEO Branson Tells SaS
- VOW3 GY : Volkswagen Probe to Incl. Managers Who Turned Blind Eye: NYT
- VOW3 GY : Volkswagen Mulls Exchanging Cars Instead of Recall Repairs: DPA
- VOW3 GY : Winterkorn Didn’t Know About Diesel Software at VW: BamS
- VOW3 GY : VW Suspends Another Top Engineer Over Diesel Scandal: BamS
- VOW3 GY : VW Sees Diesel Scandal Costing More Than EU30b: Manager Magazin

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 26th of October 2015

>>> Up
*BRAMMER RAISED TO BUY AT JEFFERIES
*GREEN REIT RAISED TO OUTPERFORM FROM NEUTRAL AT CREDIT SUISSE
*NATIONAL EXPRESS RAISED TO BUY VS HOLD AT LIBERUM
*NORTHGATE RAISED TO BUY AT JEFFERIES
*ROCKWOOL RAISED TO BUY VS HOLD AT HSBC

>>> Down
*GO-AHEAD CUT TO HOLD VS BUY AT LIBERUM
*HEXPOL CUT TO HOLD AT NORDEA
*INGENICO CUT TO NEUTRAL VS BUY AT BOFA
*JENOPTIK CUT TO HOLD VS BUY AT BERENBERG
*KEMIRA CUT TO HOLD AT NORDEA
*RANDSTAD CUT TO EQUALWEIGHT VS OVERWEIGHT AT MORGAN STANLEY
*SSAB CUT TO NEUTRAL VS BUY AT GOLDMAN
*SSAB CUT TO HOLD VS BUY AT KEPLER CHEUVREUX
*THYSSENKRUPP CUT TO NEUTRAL AT CITI

>>> PT Change


>>> Initiation
*LEG IMMOBILIEN RATED NEW NEUTRAL AT CREDIT SUISSE
*MERLIN RATED NEW NEUTRAL AT CREDIT SUISSE

>>> Call
>> Stock
*BANCO POPOLARE SET AS A NEW LONG AT MEDIOBANCA, REPLACES UBI
*GENERALI SET AS A NEW SHORT AT MEDIOBANCA, REPLACES DANIELI

>>> Bankia seen as target for Spain’s top banks in upcoming M&A –report (transla

Bankia seen as target for Spain’s top banks in upcoming M&A 

Bankia [BME:BKIA], the Spanish bank that is 63.8%-owned by the state, is seen as a potential target for Spain’s top banks, Expansion reported. The banking industry in Spain is expected to undergo a new wave of mergers and acquisitions and Bankia is seen as one of the main protagonists, the Spanish-business daily said.

If it is bought by either Santander [BME:SAN] or BBVA [BME:BBVA], it would make them the undisputed leader in the Spanish financial industry, the report said. Bankia is particularly strong in Madrid and Valencia, where regional regulators would need to approve the deal, which would also need to be extended to all shareholders, the report continued.

Spain holds its majority stake in Bankia via Frob (the Fund for Orderly Bank Restructuring), which is expected to hold any sale of Bankia through a competitive auction, the report said.

The report also referred to another bank owned by Frob, Banco Mare Nostrum (BMN), which the government is required (under EU bailout regulations) to have sold by 2017. General elections later in the year may revive the government’s appetite to revive earlier plans (later shelved) to launch an initial public offering for the group, the report said.

Expansion

>>> Asian Update

Asian Mid-session Update: Equities rally after another PBoC rate cuts as markets look ahead to China Plenum growth

***Economic Data***
- (TH) Thailand Sept Custom Trade Balance: $2.8B v $1.1Be

***Index Snapshot (as of 02:30 GMT)***
- Nikkei225 +1.2%, S&P/ASX +0.1%, Kospi +0.1%, Shanghai Composite +0.7%, Hang Seng +0.3%, Dec S&P500 -0.1% at 2,063

***Commodities/Fixed Income***
- Dec gold +0.1% at $1,164/oz, Dec crude oil +0.4% at $44.79/brl, Dec copper +0.1% at $2.35/lb
- (KR) South Korea Finance Ministry sells 20-yr bonds at 2.215%
- (CN) As of Oct 23rd, China total margin debt CNY1.01T v CNY973B w/w (highest since Sept 1st)
- (AU) Australia MoF (AOFM) sells A$900M in 4.75% 2027 Bonds; avg yield: 2.81%; bid-to-cover: 2.79x

***Market Focal Points/FX***
- Asian equity markets got their first opportunity to respond to another heavy dose of monetary easing by the PBoC, and the reaction has been fairly positive though perhaps somewhat more muted than anticipated. Nikkei is leading the rally by over 1% despite the firmer JPY, followed closely by the mainland indices. Dec e-mini futures however are down marginally. In FX, USD/JPY is down about 40pips from the highs below 121.10, while AUD/USD and NZD/USD are up some 50pips from session lows respectively above 0.7260 and 0.6790.

- On Friday, the PBoC cuts both the 1-year rate and system-wide RRR by 25bps and 50bps, while also deciding to remove the ceiling on bank deposit rates. The decision to cut comes on the eve of China's Communist Plenum where it will formally announce its growth targets going forward. Over the weekend, Chinese leaders worked to manage market expectations of a potential downgrade from the 7% target. Premier Li said 7% is not a hard target that should be "defended to the death", and that 6.9% growth reported in Q3 still represents reasonable range. PBoC Dep Gov Yi Gang then added that China can sustain growth of 6-7% for the next 3-5 years. Later in the day, PBoC research bureau chief Lu Lei also remarked that the GDP of 6.9% reflects China economic fundamentals.

- Ahead of this week's crucial BOJ meeting that features semiannual review of GDP and CPI objectives, Goldman Sachs forecast that Japan central bank will announce more easing. Business Federation (Keidanren) chairman Sakakibara was less convinced, stating the economy was still in virtuous cycle though it has slowed a little. PM Abe's cabinet and Abenomics reviews remain lukewarm - only some 25% said in a survey they were confident Abenomics would result in improved economy.

- Overseas in Europe, officials with SNB and BOE reacted to the easier tone adopted by the ECB Pres Draghi in the last decision. BOE's Carney said that while UK interest rate hike is a possibility, it is not a certainty. Likewise, SNB VP Zurbruegg said the central bank will monitor and evaluate the impact of any easing measures taken by the ECB the next time when it meets.

***Equities***
Notable movers by sector:
- Consumer discretionary: Li Ning Co 2331.HK +1.1% (asset sale); Kao Corp 4452.JP +1.0% (9M result); Stockland SGP.AU +0.8% (Q1 result); Panasonic Corporation 6752.JP +8.0% (H1 result speculation)
- Financials: China Vanke 2202.HK +2.5%, Evergrande Real Estate Group 3333.HK +1.7% (PBoC cuts rates); China Reinsurance (Group) Corporation 1508.HK +0.4% (IPO debut); Agricultural Bank of China 1288.HK -0.9% (Q3 result); Shanghai Pudong Development Bank 600000.CN +2.6% (approval for asset purchase and share sale)
- Industrials: Dalian Port PDA Co 601880.CN +4.6% (Q3 result); Great Wall Motor 601633.CN +2.7% (Q3 result); Orient Overseas International 316.HK -5.8% (Q3 result); Nippon Yusen 9101.JP -3.9% (likely to miss H1 guidance); Hitachi Ltd 6501.JP +7.2% (raises guidance)
- Technology: Beijing Baofeng Technology Co 300431.CN -7.8% (job cut speculation); Anhui USTC iFlytek Co 002230.CN +4.3% (9-month result); Toshiba Corporation 6502.JP +4.3%, Sony 6758.JP +4.0% (speculation for Toshiba to sell business to Sony)
- Materials: Bluescope Steel BSL.AU +11.6% (acquisition, raises guiance)
- Energy: China Shenhua Energy Co 601088.CN +2.5% (Q3 result); Xinjiang Goldwind Science & Technology Co 2208.HK +3.0% (Q3 result)

(Musing) AB Inbev / SAB Miller Merger



Winning at a Loser's Game? Control, Synergy and the ABInBev/SABMiller Merger!

Posted: 23 Oct 2015 07:15 AM PDT

I have been a long time investor in ABInBev, though I became one indirectly and accidentally, through a stake I took a long time ago in Brahma, a Brazilian beverage company . That company became Amber in 1999, which in turn was merged with Interbrew, the Belgian brewer, in 2004, and expanded to include Anheuser Busch, the US beer maker, in 2008 to become the largest beer manufacturer in the world.  I made the bulk of my money early in my holding life, but Amber has remained in my portfolio, a place holder that provides me exposure to both the beverage business and Latin America, while delivering mostly positive returns. It was thus with trepidation that I read the news report in mid-September that ABInBev (which owns 62% of Ambev) had approached SABMiller about a takeover at a still-to-be-specified premium over the the latter's market value. While it is entirely possible to create value from acquisitions, I have argued that creating growth through acquisitions is difficult to do, and doubly so when the acquisition is of a large public company. Since ABInBev's control rests with 3G Capital, a group that I respect for its investment acumen, it would be unfair to prejudge this deal without looking at the numbers. So, here we go!

The Fog of Deal Making: Breaking down an acquisition
The first casualty in deal making is good sense, as the fog of the deal, created by bankers, managers, consultants and journalists, clouds the numbers. Not only do you see "control" and "synergy", two words that I include in my weapons of mass distraction, thrown around casually to justify billions of dollars in premiums, but you also see them used interchangeably. When you acquire a company, there are three (and only three possible) motives that are consistent with intrinsic value
  1. Undervaluation: You buy a target company because you believe that the market is mispricing the company and that you can buy it for less than its "fair" value. In effect, you are behaving like any value investor would in the market and there is no need for you to either change the way the target company is run or look for synergy benefits. 
  2. Control: You buy a company that you believe is badly managed, with the intent of changing the way it is run. If you are right on the first count and can make the necessary changes, the value of the firm should increase under your management. If you can pay less than the "changed" value, you can claim the difference for yourself (and your stockholders). 
  3. Synergy: You buy a company that you believe, when combined with a business (or resource) that you already own, will be able to do things that you could not have done as separate entities. Broadly speaking, you can break synergy down into "offensive synergies" (where you are able to grow faster in existing or new markets than you would have as standalone businesses and/or charge higher prices for your products), "defensive synergies" (where you are able to reduce costs or slow down/prevent decline in your businesees) and "tax synergies" (where you directly take advantage of tax clauses or indirectly by being able to borrow more money). 
The key distinction between synergy and control is that control does not require another entity or even a change in managers. It can be accomplished by the target company's management, if they put their minds to it and perhaps hire some help. Synergy requires two entities coming together and stems from the combined entity's capacity to do something that the individual entities would not have been able to deliver. Note that these motives can co-exist in the same acquisition and are not mutually exclusive.  To assess whether these motives apply (or make sense), there are four numbers that you need to track: 
  1. Acquisition Price: This is the price at which you can acquire the target company. If it is a private business, it will be negotiated and probably based on what others are paying for similar businesses. If it is a public company, it will be at a premium over the market price, with the premium a function of the state of the M&A market and whether you have other potential bidders. 
  2. Status Quo Value: This is the value of the target company, run by existing management and based on existing investing, financing and dividend policies. 
  3. Restructured Value: This is the value of the target company, with changes to investing, financing and dividend policies. 
  4. Synergy value: This can be estimated by valuing the combined company (with the synergy benefits built in) and subtracting out the value of the acquiring company, as a stand alone entity, and the restructured value of the target company. 
Connecting these numbers to the motives, here are the conditions you would need for each motive to make sense (by itself).

Motive Test
Undervaluation Acquisition Price < Status Quo Value
Control Acquisition Price < Restructured Value (Status Quo Value + Value of Control
Synergy Acquisition Price < Restructured Value + (Value of Combined company with synergy - Value of Combined company without synergy)

Which of these motives, if any, is driving ABInBev's acquisition of SABMiller, and whatever the motive or motives, is the premium being paid justified? To make that assessment, I will compute each of the four numbers for this deal.

Setting up the ABInBev Deal
The first news stories on ABInBev’s intent to buy SABMiller came out on September 15, 2015, though there may have been inklings among some who are more connected than I am. While no price was specified, the market’s initial reaction was positive, with both ABInBev and SABMiller’s stock prices increasing on the story. The picture below captures the key details of the deal, including both possible rationale and consequences:



There were two key reasons provided to rationalize the potential deal. The first is geographic complementarity, since these two companies overlap in surprisingly few parts of the world, given their size. ABInBev is the largest player in Latin America, with Brazil at its center, and SABMiller is the biggest brewer in Africa. SABMiller’s Latin American operations are outside of Brazil, for the most part and while ABInBev has significant North American operations, SABMiller's North American exposure is entirely through its Coors Joint Venture. While no specifics are provided, the basis for synergy seems to be that after this deal, ABInBev will be able to expand sales in the fastest growing market in the world (Africa) and that SABMiller will be able to increase its revenues in the most profitable market in the world (Latin America). The second is consolidation, a vastly over used term that often means nothing, but  if it tied to specifics, relates to potential costs savings and economies of scale. While the absence of geographic overlap may reduce the potential for cost cutting, ABInBev can use the template that it has used so successfully on prior deals (especially the Grupo Modelo acquisition) to cut costs in this acquisition as well.

There are also negative consequences that follow from this deal. The first is that when anti trust regulators in different parts of the world will be paying close attention to this deal, and it seems likely that SABMiller will be forced to sell its 58% stake in MillerCoors and that Molson Coors, the other JV partner, will be the beneficiary. The second, and this adds to the pressure, ABInBev has agreed to pay $3 billion to SABMiller if the deal falls through.  In summary, though, the challenge is a simple one. ABInBev is paying a $29 billion premium to acquire SABMiller. Is there enough value added to ABInBev's stockholders that they will be able to walk away as winners?

The Players in the Deal
To make a value judgment of this deal, we have to begin by looking at ABInBev and SABMiller, as stand alone companies, prior to this deal. In the picture below, I start with a snapshot of ABInBev:

Capital Mix Operating Metrics Geographical Mix
Interest-bearing Debt $51,504 Revenues $45,762 Latin America $18,849.00 42.03%
Lease Debt $1,511 Operating Income (EBIT) $14,772 Africa $- 0.00%
Market Capitalization $173,760 Operating Margin 32.28% Asia Pacific $5,040.00 11.24%
Debt to Equity ratio 30.51% Effective tax rate 18.00% Europe $4,865.00 10.85%
Debt to Capital ratio 23.38% After-tax return on capital 12.10% North America $16,093.00 35.88%
Bond Rating A2 Reinvestment Rate = 50.99% Total $44,847.00 100.00%
Looking past the numbers, it is worth noting that not only does ABInBev has a history of growing successfully through acquisitions but that its lead stockholder, 3G Capital, is considered a shrewd allocator and steward of capital.

On the other other side of the deal stands SABMiller, and the picture below provides a sense of the company's standing at the time of the deal:

Capital Mix Operating Metrics Geographical Mix
Interest-bearing Debt $12,550 Revenues $22,130 Latin America $7,812 35.30%
Lease Debt $368 Operating Income (EBIT) $4,420 Africa $6,853 30.97%
Market Capitalization $75,116 Operating Margin 19.97% Asia Pacific $3,136 14.17%
Debt to Equity ratio 17.20% Effective tax rate 26.40% Europe $4,186 18.92%
Debt to Capital ratio 14.67% After-tax return on capital 10.32% North America $143 0.65%
Bond Rating A3 Reinvestment Rate = 16.02% Total $22,130 100.00%

This table, though, misses SAB's holdings in the MillerCoors JV and its other minority holdings in associates around the world, and the numbers for SAB's shares of these are summarized below:
SAB Share of Other Associates
Operating Metrics Geographical Mix
Revenues $6,099.00 Latin America $- 0.00%
Operating Income (EBIT) $654.00 Africa (mostly South Africa) $2,221 36.42%
Operating Margin 10.72% Asia Pacific $2,203 36.12%
Effective tax rate 25.00% Europe $1,675 27.46%
After-tax return on capital 11.00% North America $- 0.00%
Invested Capital $4,459 Total $6,099 100.00%
SAB Share of MillerCoors JV
Operating Metrics Geographical Mix
Revenues $5,201.00 Latin America $- 0.00%
Operating Income (EBIT) $800.00 Africa (mostly South Africa) $- 0.00%
Operating Margin 15.38% Asia Pacific $- 0.00%
Effective tax rate 25.00% Europe $- 0.00%
After-tax return on capital 11.05% North America $5,201 100.00%
Invested Capital $5,428 Total $5,201 100.00%
The numbers reinforce my earlier point about geographic complementarity at least at the parent company level, with ABInBev getting a large percent of its Latin American sales in Brazil and SABMiller getting most of its Latin American sales from countries other than Brazil.

Is SABMiller a bargain?
The first step in this analysis to a valuation of SABMiller, as a stand alone company and with its existing management in place. Based on the numbers, this is a conservatively run company (both in terms of use of debt and reinvestment for growth) and the valuation reflects that:

SAB Miller + 58% of Coors JV + Share of Associates SAB Miller Consolidated
Revenues $22,130.00 $5,201.00 $6,099.00
Operating Margin 19.97% 15.38% 10.72%
Operating Income (EBIT) $4,420.00 $800.00 $654.00
Invested Capital $31,526.00 $5,428.00 $4,459.00
Beta 0.7977 0.6872 0.6872
ERP 8.90% 6.00% 7.90%
Cost of Equity = 9.10% 6.12% 7.43%
After-tax cost of debt = 2.24% 2.08% 2.24%
Debt to Capital Ratio 14.67% 0.00% 0.00%
Cost of capital = 8.09% 6.12% 7.43%
After-tax return on capital = 10.33% 11.05% 11.00%
Reinvestment Rate = 16.02% 40.00% 40.00%
Expected growth rate= 1.65% 4.42% 4.40%
Number of years of growth 5 5 5
Value of firm
PV of FCFF in high growth = $11,411.72 $1,715.25 $1,351.68
Terminal value = $47,711.04 $15,094.36 $9,354.28
Value of operating assets today = $43,747.24 $12,929.46 $7,889.56 $64,566.26
+ Cash $1,027.00
- Debt $12,918.00
- Minority Interests $1,183.00
Value of equity $51,492.26
 I am adding in my estimated values for SAB's share of the Coor's JV and other associates to arrive at the total value of the operating assets. In valuing each piece, I have estimated equity risk premiums that reflect where each one operates, using a 6% mature market premium for the Coors JV, since it generates most of its revenues in North America, and much higher premiums for the other two parts. At least based on my estimates, the value of equity is $51.5 billion, well below the market capitalization of $75 billion on September 15. (This may be cynical of me, but if used (wrongly in my view) a 6% equity risk premium for SABMiller, based on its UK incorporation, I get a value of $76 billion for its equity.)
Bottom line: To me, SABMiller does not look like it is priced to be a bargain, even at the pre-deal price, and definitely not at the deal price.

The Value of Control
Is SABMiller ripe for a restructuring? It is tough to tell from the outside but one way to measure room for improvement is to compare the company on key corporate finance measures against both the acquirer (InBev) and the rest of the alcholic beverage sector:
SABMiller ABInBev Global Alcoholic Beverage Sector
Pre-tax Operating Margin 19.97% 32.28% 19.23%
Effective Tax Rate 26.36% 18.00% 22.00%
Pre-tax ROIC 14.02% 14.76% 17.16%
ROIC 10.33% 12.10% 13.38%
Reinvestment Rate 16.02% 50.99% 33.29%
Debt to Capital 14.67% 23.38% 18.82%
This comparison may be simplistic, but it looks like SABMiller lags the sector is in its reinvestment rate and return on capital, and that it earns a profit margin that match up to the sector. It also has a debt ratio that is not far off from the sector average. ABInBev has a much higher profit margin than the rest of the sector and pays a lower tax rate. I revalued SABMiller with the return on capital, debt ratio and reinvestment rate set equal to the industry average. (I considered using ABInBev's operating margin but much of that comes from Brazil and it is unlikely that SABMiller can match it in South Africa or the rest of Latin America.

Status Quo Value Restructured Changes made
Cost of Equity = 9.10% 9.37% Increases with debt ratio
After-tax cost of debt = 2.24% 2.24% Left unchanged
Debt to Capital Ratio 14.67% 18.82% Set to industry average
Cost of capital = 8.09% 8.03% Due to debt ratio change
Pre-tax return on capital 14.02% 17.16% Set to industry average
After-tax return on capital = 10.33% 12.64% Result of pre-tax ROIC change
Reinvestment Rate = 16.02% 33.29% Set to industry average
Expected growth rate= 1.65% 4.21% Result of reinvestment/ROIC
Value of firm
PV of FCFF in high growth = $11,411.72 $9,757.08
Terminal value = $47,711.04 $56,935.06
Value of operating assets today = $43,747.24 $48,449.42
+ Cash $1,027.00 $1,027.00
+ Minority Holdings $20,819.02 $20,819.02
- Debt $12,918.00 $12,918.00
- Minority Interests $1,183.00 $1,183.00 Value of Control
Value of equity $51,492.26 $56,194.44 $4,702.17
Bottom line: Changing the way SABMiller is run adds about $4.7 billion to the value, but even with that addition, the equity value of $56.2 billion is still far below what ABInBev paid on October 15. That suggests that control was not the primary rationale either.

The Value of Synergy
This leaves us with only one option, synergy, and to value synergy, I valued ABInBev as a standalone company and put it together with the restructured value of SABMiller to get a combined company value, with no synergy. I then assumed that the synergy (from geographic complementarity and consolidation) would manifest itself in a higher operating margin, higher reinvestment and a higher growth rate for the combined company:

Inbev SABMiller Combined firm (no synergy) Combined firm (synergy) Actions
Cost of Equity = 8.93% 9.37% 9.12% 9.12%
After-tax cost of debt = 2.10% 2.24% 2.10% 2.10%
Cost of capital = 7.33% 8.03% 7.51% 7.51% No changes expected
Operating Margin 32.28% 19.97% 28.27% 30.00% Cost cutting & Economies of scale
After-tax return on capital = 12.10% 12.64% 11.68% 12.00% Cost cutting also improves return on capital
Reinvestment Rate = 50.99% 33.29% 43.58% 50.00% More aggressive reinvestment in shared markets
Expected growth rate= 6.17% 4.21% 5.09% 6.00% Higher growth because of reinvestment
Value of firm
PV of FCFF in high growth = $28,732.57 $9,806.49 $38,539.06 $39,150.61
Terminal value = $260,981.86 $58,735.57 $319,717.43 $340,174.63 Value of Synergy
Value of operating assets = $211,952.80 $50,065.35 $262,018.16 $276,609.92 $14,591.76
It is possible that I have been too pessimistic about the potential cost savings or growth possibilities, but given the history of synergy in big deals, I think that I am being optimistic. Based on my estimates at least, the value of synergy in this deal is $14.6 billion (and that is assuming it is delivered instantaneously).
Bottom line: If synergy is the motive for this deal, a great deal has to go right for ABInBev to break even on this deal, let alone create value.

The Disconnect
The history of 3G Capital as successful value creators predisposed me to give them the benefit of the doubt, when I started assessing the deal. After looking at the numbers, though, I don't see the value in this deal that would justify the premium paid. It is possible, perhaps even likely, that there is some aspect of the deal, perhaps taxes or other benefits, that I am not grasping. If so, I would encourage you to use my template, change the numbers that you think need to be changed, make your own assessment and enter them in this shared Google spreadsheet. It is also possible that even the smartest investors in the world can sometimes let over confidence drive them to over react. Time will tell!

YouTube version


Data Attachments
  1. ABInBev Annual Report (2014)
  2. SABMiller Annual Report (2015)

Spreadsheets
  1. SABMiller: Status Quo and Control Value
  2. Value of Synergy 
  3. Google Shared Spreadsheet for Deal Analysis