Breakup Value

Breakup Value

The breakup value of a corporation is the worth of each of its main business segments if they were spun off from the parent company. Using multiples such as price-to-earnings (P/E), forward P/E, price-to-sales (P/S), price-to-book (P/B), and price to free cash flow, analysts evaluate how the business segment is performing compared to its peers. If a company's stock has not kept up with the perceived level of its full value, investors may call for the company to be split apart, with proceeds returned to investors as cash, new shares in the spinoff companies, or a combination of both. If a major corporation has a market capitalization that is less than its breakup value for a prolonged period of time, major investors may press for the company to be split apart in order to maximize shareholder profits. Investors also may calculate breakup value on a perfectly healthy company as a way to determine a potential floor for its stock price or a potential entry point for a prospective stock buyer.

Breakup value is an analysis of the worth of each of a large corporation's distinct lines of business.

What Is Breakup Value?

The breakup value of a corporation is the worth of each of its main business segments if they were spun off from the parent company. It is also called the sum-of-parts value.

If a major corporation has a market capitalization that is less than its breakup value for a prolonged period of time, major investors may press for the company to be split apart in order to maximize shareholder profits.

Breakup value is an analysis of the worth of each of a large corporation's distinct lines of business.
If the breakup value is greater than its market capitalization, investors may press for a spinoff of one or more divisions.
Investors would be rewarded with stock in the newly-formed companies, or cash, or both.

Understanding Breakup Value

Breakup value is applicable to large-cap stocks that operate in several distinct markets or industries.

If a company's stock has not kept up with the perceived level of its full value, investors may call for the company to be split apart, with proceeds returned to investors as cash, new shares in the spinoff companies, or a combination of both.

Breakup value is also an indicator of the intrinsic value of a corporation, the sum of its parts.

Investors also may calculate breakup value on a perfectly healthy company as a way to determine a potential floor for its stock price or a potential entry point for a prospective stock buyer.

To accurately calculate a company's breakup value, data is needed on each distinct operating unit's revenue, earnings, and cash flows. From there, relative valuations, based on publicly-traded industry peers, can be used to establish a value for the segment.

Breakup Value and Business Valuation

The end result is a breakup value analysis for each business segment of the corporation. One way to do this is by relative valuation, which measures the performance of each segment against its industry peers. Using multiples such as price-to-earnings (P/E), forward P/E, price-to-sales (P/S), price-to-book (P/B), and price to free cash flow, analysts evaluate how the business segment is performing compared to its peers.

Analysts may also use an intrinsic valuation model such as discounted cash flows or a DCF model. In this scenario, analysts use the business segment’s future free cash flow projections and discounts them, using a required annual rate, to arrive at a present value estimate.

A DCF is calculated as:

DCF = [CF1 / (1+r)1] + [CF2 / (1+r)2] + ... + [CFn / (1+r)n]

CF = Cash Flow

r = discount rate (WACC)

Other Valuation Methods

Other business valuation methods include market capitalization, a straightforward calculation of in which a company’s share price is multiplied by its total number of shares outstanding. I

The times revenue method relies on a stream of revenues generated over a period of time, to which an analyst applies a specific multiplier, derived from the industry and economic environment. For example, a tech company in a high growth industry may be valued at 3x revenue, while a less hyped service firm may be valued at 0.5x revenue.

Related terms:

Absolute Value

Absolute value is a measure of a company's or asset's intrinsic value. read more

Accounting

Accounting is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business to oversight agencies, regulators, and the IRS. read more

Appraisal Right

An appraisal right is the right to determine a fair stock price and oblige the acquiring corporation to repurchase shares at that price. read more

Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)

Discounted cash flow (DCF) is a valuation method used to estimate the attractiveness of an investment opportunity. read more

Entry Point

Entry point refers to the price at which an investor buys or sells a security. read more

Intrinsic Value : How Is It Determined?

Intrinsic value is the perceived or calculated value of an asset, investment, or a company and is used in fundamental analysis and the options markets. read more

Large Cap (Big Cap)

Large cap (big cap) refers to a company with a market capitalization value of more than $10 billion. read more

Market Capitalization

Market capitalization is the total dollar market value of all of a company's outstanding shares. read more

Multiple

A multiple measures some aspect of a company's financial well-being, determined by dividing one metric by another metric. read more

Outstanding Shares

Shares outstanding refer to a company's stock currently held by all its shareholders, including share blocks held by institutional investors and restricted shares owned by the company’s insiders. read more