Description
The best-owner life cycle means that executives must continually seek out new acquisitions for which their companies could be the best owner. Applying the best-owner principle often leads acquirers toward targets very different from those that traditional target-screening approaches might uncover.
The enduring value of fundamentals
Special 10-year
anniversary issue
2001–2011
Number 40,
Summer 2011
McKinsey on Finance
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McKinsey on Finance is a quarterly
publication written by experts and
practitioners in McKinsey & Company’s
corporate ?nance practice. This
publication offers readers insights
into value-creating strategies
and the translation of those strategies
into company performance.
This and archived issues of McKinsey
on Finance are available online at
corporate?nance.mckinsey.com, where
selected articles are also available
in audio format. A series of McKinsey on
Finance podcasts is also available
on iTunes.
Editorial Contact: McKinsey_on_
[email protected]
To request permission to republish an
article, send an e-mail to
[email protected].
Editorial Board: David Cogman,
Ryan Davies, Marc Goedhart,
Bill Huyett, Bill Javetski, Tim Koller,
Werner Rehm, Dennis Swinford
Editor: Dennis Swinford
Art Direction: Veronica Belsuzarri
Design and layout:
Veronica Belsuzarri, Cary Shoda
Managing Editor: Drew Holzfeind
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Mary Reddy
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Roger Draper
Circulation: Diane Black
Illustrations by Brian Stauffer
The editors would also like to thank
past members of the McKinsey
on Finance editorial board who have
contributed to many of the articles
included in this anniversary edition. They
include James Ahn, Richard Dobbs,
Massimo Giordano, Keiko Honda, Rob
McNish, Jean-Hugues Monier,
Herbert Pohl, and Michelle Soudier.
Copyright © 2011 McKinsey & Company.
All rights reserved.
This publication is not intended to be
used as the basis for trading
in the shares of any company or for
undertaking any other complex
or signi?cant ?nancial transaction
without consulting appropriate
professional advisers.
No part of this publication may
be copied or redistributed in any form
without the prior written consent of
McKinsey & Company.
The enduring value of fundamentals
McKinsey on Finance
Special 10-year
anniversary issue
2001–2011
Number 40,
Summer 2011
2
When we published the inaugural issue of
McKinsey on Finance, in the summer of 2001,
CFOs were facing the challenges of navigat-
ing a global economy recovering from a downturn
and bruised by corporate misbehavior during
the dot-com market crash. The outlook for growth,
valuation, and fnancial regulation was
uncertain at best.
The philosophy of the new publication’s
editorial board was that companies could best
improve their performance in the face of
these uncertainties by drawing on the established
principles of fnance. After a decade marked
by both crisis and profound changes in global
fnancial markets, that remains our approach.
If a single theme has run through the pages of
McKinsey on Finance over the past ten years, it
has been the importance of challenging the
many and recurring incomplete, misleading, and
faddish interpretations of fnance. We have
advanced interpretations of value creation that
respect the long-term effectiveness of capital
markets—and are cautious about mistaking short-
term “noise” for indications of long-term value
creation. Our authors have also sought to provide
specifc tools to help fnance leaders run their
varied functions more effectively and effciently,
and thus to infuence the direction of
their companies.
For this special anniversary anthology, we’ve
compiled a selection of articles and excerpts from
the past decade that we believe remain useful
for driving performance even today.
Editors’ note
3
In this issue, you’ll fnd “The CEO’s guide to
corporate fnance,” which applies the four corner-
stones of corporate fnance to decisions in
mergers and acquisitions, divestitures, project
analysis and downside risk, and executive
compensation. The section on growth examines
the diffculty that large successful companies
have in sustaining it, as well as some of the prac-
tical trade-offs afforded by different types
of growth.
Further in, you’ll fnd a section on governance
and risk, articles that draw from our experience
with active managers in private equity and
from fundamental analysis of hedging and risk
management. There’s also a section on dealing
with investors: describing a better way to
communicate with different segments of investors,
considering the value of transparency in
accounting and investor communications,
and examining the clearest indication of investor
thinking—the movement of stock markets.
Finally, the anthology ends with a practical look
at the role of the CFO and how to improve
the effciency of the fnance function.
We hope that the articles and excerpts that follow
will help you to explore the value and creative
application of tested fnance fundamentals in a
rapidly changing world. Additional related
reading, as well as this collection and the full
versions of excerpted articles, can be found
on mckinseyquarterly.com.
Bill Huyett and Tim Koller
Finance and strategy
Features
7 The CEO’s guide to corporate finance (Autumn 2010)
16 Making capital structure support strategy (Winter 2006)
Excerpts from
8 Are you still the best owner of your assets? (Winter 2010)
15 Stock options—the right debate (Summer 2002)
23 The value of share buybacks (Summer 2005)
24 Paying back your shareholders (Spring 2011)
How to grow
Features
27 Why the biggest and best struggle to grow (Winter 2004)
35 Running a winning M&A shop (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
32 How to choose between growth and ROIC (Autumn 2007)
34 All P/Es are not created equal (Spring 2004)
36 M&A teams: When small is beautiful (Winter 2010)
39 Managing your integration manager (Summer 2003)
41 The five types of successful acquisitions (Summer 2010)
Governance and risk
Features
43 The voice of experience: Public versus private equity (Spring 2009)
49 The right way to hedge (Summer 2010)
Excerpts from
54 Risk: Seeing around the corners (Autumn 2009)
55 Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think (Spring 2003)
Contents
Dealing with investors
Features
57 Communicating with the right investors (Spring 2008)
64 Do fundamentals—or emotions—drive the stock market? (Spring 2005)
Excerpts from
60 Inside a hedge fund: An interview with the managing partner of
Maverick Capital (Spring 2006)
62 Numbers investors can trust (Summer 2003)
63 The misguided practice of earnings guidance (Spring 2006)
69 The truth about growth and value stocks (Winter 2007)
The CFO
Features
71 Starting up as CFO (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
72 Toward a leaner finance department (Spring 2006)
75 Organizing for value (Summer 2008)
6
Finance
and strategy
7
Richard Dobbs, Bill Huyett, and Tim Koller
The CEO’s guide
to corporate ?nance
Four principles can help you make great financial decisions—even when
the CFO’s not in the room.
Number 37,
Autumn 2010
It’s one thing for a CFO to understand the
technical methods of valuation—and for
members of the fnance organization to apply
them to help line managers monitor and
improve company performance. But it’s still
more powerful when CEOs, board members, and
other nonfnancial executives internalize
the principles of value creation. Doing so allows
them to make independent, courageous,
and even unpopular business decisions in the
face of myths and misconceptions about what
creates value.
When an organization’s senior leaders have a strong
fnancial compass, it’s easier for them to resist the
siren songs of fnancial engineering, excessive
leverage, and the idea (common during boom times)
that somehow the established rules of economics
no longer apply. Misconceptions like these—which
can lead companies to make value-destroying
In this section: Features
7 The CEO’s guide to corporate finance (Autumn 2010)
16 Making capital structure support strategy (Winter 2006)
Excerpts from
8 Are you still the best owner of your assets? (Winter 2010)
15 Stock options—the right debate (Summer 2002)
23 The value of share buybacks (Summer 2005)
24 Paying back your shareholders (Spring 2011)
8 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
decisions and slow down entire economies—take
hold with surprising and disturbing ease.
What we hope to do in this article is show how
four principles, or cornerstones, can help
senior executives and board members make some
of their most important decisions. The four
cornerstones are disarmingly simple:
1. The core-of-value principle establishes that
value creation is a function of returns on
capital and growth, while highlighting some
important subtleties associated with
applying these concepts.
2. The conservation-of-value principle says that
it doesn’t matter how you slice the fnancial pie
with fnancial engineering, share repurchases,
or acquisitions; only improving cash fows will
create value.
3. The expectations treadmill principle explains
how movements in a company’s share
price refect changes in the stock market’s
expectations about performance, not
just the company’s actual performance (in
terms of growth and returns on invested
capital). The higher those expectations, the
better that company must perform just
to keep up.
4. The best-owner principle states that no
business has an inherent value in and of itself;
it has a different value to different owners
The best-owner life cycle means that executives must continually seek out new acquisitions for which their
companies could be the best owner. Applying the best-owner principle often leads acquirers toward
targets very different from those that traditional target-screening approaches might uncover. Traditional
ones often focus on targets that perform well ?nancially and are somehow related to the acquirer’s
business lines. But through the best-owner lens, such characteristics might have little or no importance. It
might be better, for instance, to seek out a ?nancially weak company that has great potential for
improvement, especially if the acquirer has proven performance-improvement expertise. Or it might be
better to focus attention on tangible opportunities to cut costs or on the existence of common customers
than on vague notions such as how related the target may be to the acquirer.
Keeping the best-owner principle front and center can also help with negotiations for an acquisition
by keeping managers focused on what the target is worth speci?cally to their own company—as well as to
other bidders. Many managers err in M&A by estimating only an acquisition’s value to their own com-
pany. Because they are unaware of the target’s value to other potential better owners—or how high those
other owners might be willing to bid—they get lulled into conducting negotiations right up to their
breakeven point, creating less value for their own shareholders. Instead of asking how much they can pay,
they should be asking what’s the least they need to pay to win the deal and create the most value.
Excerpt from
Are you still the best owner of your assets?
Number 34,
Winter 2010
Richard Dobbs, Bill Huyett, and Tim Koller
9
or potential owners—a value based on how they
manage it and what strategy they pursue.
Ignoring these cornerstones can lead to poor
decisions that erode the value of companies. Con-
sider what happened during the run-up to the
fnancial crisis that began in 2007. Participants in
the securitized-mortgage market all assumed
that securitizing risky home loans made them more
valuable because it reduced the risk of the assets.
But this notion violates the conservation-of-value
rule. Securitization did not increase the aggre-
gated cash fows of the home loans, so no value
was created, and the initial risks remained.
Securitizing the assets simply enabled the risks to
be passed on to other owners: some investors,
somewhere, had to be holding them.
Obvious as this seems in hindsight, a great many
smart people missed it at the time. And the same
thing happens every day in executive suites and
boardrooms as managers and company directors
evaluate acquisitions, divestitures, projects,
and executive compensation. As we’ll see, the four
cornerstones of fnance provide a perennially
stable frame of reference for managerial decisions
like these.
Mergers and acquisitions
Acquisitions are both an important source of
growth for companies and an important element
of a dynamic economy. Acquisitions that put
companies in the hands of better owners or man-
agers or that reduce excess capacity typically
create substantial value both for the economy
as a whole and for investors.
You can see this effect in the increased combined
cash fows of the many companies involved in
acquisitions. But although they create value overall,
Exhibit 1
1.0
0.4
1.4
Value received
0.1
Value created
for acquirer
1.0
0.3
1.3
Price paid
MoF 37 2010
Stakeholders
Exhibit 1 of 2
To create value, an acquirer must achieve performance
improvements that are greater than the premium paid.
Premium paid
by acquirer
Target’s market
value
Target’s stand-
alone value
$ billion
Value of
performance
improvements
Finance and strategy
10 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit 2
MoF 37 2010
Stakeholders
Exhibit 2 of 2
Present value of announced
performance improvements as
% of target’s stand-alone value
Net value created
from acquisition as %
of purchase price
Premium paid as
% of target’s
stand-alone value
Kellogg acquires
Keebler (2000)
45–70 30–50 15
PepsiCo acquires
Quaker Oats (2000)
35–55 25–40 10
Clorox acquires
First Brands (1998)
70–105 5–25 60
Henkel acquires
National Starch (2007)
60–90 55 5–25
Dramatic performance improvements created
signi?cant value in these four acquisitions.
the distribution of that value tends to be lopsided,
accruing primarily to the selling companies’
shareholders. In fact, most empirical research
shows that just half of the acquiring com-
panies create value for their own shareholders.
The conservation-of-value principle is an excellent
reality check for executives who want to
make sure their acquisitions create value for their
shareholders. The principle reminds us that
acquisitions create value when the cash fows of
the combined companies are greater than
they would otherwise have been. Some of that
value will accrue to the acquirer’s shareholders if
it doesn’t pay too much for the acquisition.
Exhibit 1 shows how this process works. Company
A buys Company B for $1.3 billion—a transaction
that includes a 30 percent premium over its
market value. Company A expects to increase the
value of Company B by 40 percent through
various operating improvements, so the value of
Company B to Company A is $1.4 billion.
Subtracting the purchase price of $1.3 billion from
$1.4 billion leaves $100 million of value creation
for Company A’s shareholders.
In other words, when the stand-alone value of the
target equals the market value, the acquirer creates
value for its shareholders only when the value
of improvements is greater than the premium paid.
With this in mind, it’s easy to see why most
of the value creation from acquisitions goes to the
sellers’ shareholders: if a company pays
a 30 percent premium, it must increase the target’s
value by at least 30 percent to create any value.
While a 30 or 40 percent performance improve-
ment sounds steep, that’s what acquirers
often achieve. For example, Exhibit 2 highlights
four large deals in the consumer products
sector. Performance improvements typically
exceeded 50 percent of the target’s value.
Our example also shows why it’s diffcult for
an acquirer to create a substantial amount
of value from acquisitions. Let’s assume that
Company A was worth about three times
Company B at the time of the acquisition. Signif-
cant as such a deal would be, it’s likely to
increase Company A’s value by only 3 percent—
the $100 million of value creation depicted in
Exhibit 1, divided by Company A’s value, $3 billion.
11
Finally, it’s worth noting that we have not
mentioned an acquisition’s effect on earnings per
share (EPS). Although this metric is often
considered, no empirical link shows that expected
EPS accretion or dilution is an important
indicator of whether an acquisition will create
or destroy value. Deals that strengthen near-term
EPS and deals that dilute near-term EPS are
equally likely to create or destroy value. Bankers
and other fnance professionals know all this,
but as one told us recently, many nonetheless “use
it as a simple way to communicate with boards
of directors.” To avoid confusion during such com-
munications, executives should remind
themselves and their colleagues that EPS has
nothing to say about which company is the
best owner of specifc corporate assets or about
how merging two entities will change the
cash fows they generate.
Divestitures
Executives are often concerned that divestitures
will look like an admission of failure, make
their company smaller, and reduce its stock market
value. Yet the research shows that, on the
contrary, the stock market consistently reacts
positively to divestiture announcements.
1
The divested business units also beneft. Research
has shown that the proft margins of spun-off
businesses tend to increase by one-third during the
three years after the transactions are complete.
2
These fndings illustrate the beneft of continually
applying the best-owner principle: the
attractiveness of a business and its best owner
will probably change over time. At different
stages of an industry’s or company’s lifespan,
resource decisions that once made economic
sense can become problematic. For instance, the
company that invented a groundbreaking
innovation may not be best suited to exploit it.
Similarly, as demand falls off in a mature
industry, companies that have been in it
a long time are likely to have excess capacity and
therefore may no longer be the best owners.
A value-creating approach to divestitures can
lead to the pruning of good and bad businesses at
any stage of their life cycles. Clearly, divesting
a good business is often not an intuitive choice
and may be diffcult for managers—even if
that business would be better owned by another
company. It therefore makes sense to enforce
some discipline in active portfolio management.
One way to do so is to hold regular review
meetings specifcally devoted to business exits,
ensuring that the topic remains on the
executive agenda and that each unit receives
a date stamp, or estimated time of exit.
This practice has the advantage of obliging
executives to evaluate all businesses as
the “sell-by date” approaches.
Executives and boards often worry that dives-
titures will reduce their company’s size and thus
cut its value in the capital markets. There
follows a misconception that the markets value
larger companies more than smaller ones.
But this notion holds only for very small frms,
with some evidence that companies with
a market capitalization of less than $500 million
might have slightly higher costs of capital.
3
Finally, executives shouldn’t worry that
a divestiture will dilute EPS multiples. A company
selling a business with a lower P/E ratio than
that of its remaining businesses will see an overall
reduction in earnings per share. But don’t
forget that a divested underperforming unit’s
lower growth and return on invested capital
(ROIC) potential would have previously depressed
the entire company’s P/E. With this unit gone,
the company that remains will have a higher
growth and ROIC potential—and will be valued at
Finance and strategy
12 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
a correspondingly higher P/E ratio.
4
As the
core-of-value principle would predict, fnancial
mechanics, on their own, do not create or
destroy value. By the way, the math works out
regardless of whether the proceeds from
a sale are used to pay down debt or to repurchase
shares. What matters for value is the business
logic of the divestiture.
Project analysis and downside risks
Reviewing the fnancial attractiveness of project
proposals is a common task for senior executives.
The sophisticated tools used to support them—
discounted cash fows, scenario analyses—often
lull top management into a false sense of
security. For example, one company we know
analyzed projects by using advanced statis-
tical techniques that always showed a zero
probability of a project with negative net present
value (NPV). The organization did not have
the ability to discuss failure, only varying degrees
of success.
Such an approach ignores the core-of-value
principle’s laserlike focus on the future cash fows
underlying returns on capital and growth, not
just for a project but for the enterprise as a whole.
Actively considering downside risks to future
cash fows for both is a crucial subtlety of project
analysis—and one that often isn’t undertaken.
For a moment, put yourself in the mind
of an executive deciding whether to undertake
a project with an upside of $80 million,
a downside of –$20 million, and an expected
value of $60 million. Generally accepted
fnance theory says that companies should take on
all projects with a positive expected value,
regardless of the upside-versus-downside risk.
But what if the downside would bankrupt the
company? That might be the case for an electric-
power utility considering the construction
of a nuclear facility for $15 billion (a rough 2009
estimate for a facility with two reactors).
Suppose there is an 80 percent chance the plant
will be successfully constructed, brought
in on time, and worth, net of investment costs,
$13 billion. Suppose further that there is also
a 20 percent chance that the utility company will
fail to receive regulatory approval to start
operating the new facility, which will then be
worth –$15 billion. That means the net expected
value of the facility is more than $7 billion—
seemingly an attractive investment.
5
The decision gets more complicated if the cash
fow from the company’s existing plants will
be insuffcient to cover its existing debt plus the
debt on the new plant if it fails. The economics
of the nuclear plant will then spill over into the
13
value of the rest of the company—which has
$25 billion in existing debt and $25 billion in
equity market capitalization. Failure will
wipe out all the company’s equity, not just the
$15 billion invested in the plant.
As this example makes clear, we can extend the
core-of-value principle to say that a company
should not take on a risk that will put its future
cash fows in danger. In other words, don’t do
anything that has large negative spillover effects
on the rest of the company. This caveat should
be enough to guide managers in the earlier
example of a project with an $80 million upside,
a –$20 million downside, and a $60 million
expected value. If a $20 million loss would
endanger the company as a whole, the managers
should forgo the project. On the other hand,
if the project doesn’t endanger the company, they
should be willing to risk the $20 million loss
for a far greater potential gain.
Executive compensation
Establishing performance-based compensation
systems is a daunting task, both for board
directors concerned with the CEO and the senior
team and for human-resource leaders and other
executives focused on, say, the top 500 managers.
Although an entire industry has grown up
around the compensation of executives, many
companies continue to reward them for
short-term total returns to shareholders (TRS).
TRS, however, is driven more by movements
in a company’s industry and in the broader market
(or by stock market expectations) than
by individual performance. For example, many
executives who became wealthy from stock
options during the 1980s and 1990s saw these
gains wiped out in 2008. Yet the underlying
causes of share price changes—such as falling
interest rates in the earlier period and the
fnancial crisis more recently—were frequently
disconnected from anything managers did or
didn’t do.
Using TRS as the basis of executive compensation
refects a fundamental misunderstanding of
the third cornerstone of fnance: the expectations
treadmill. If investors have low expectations
for a company at the beginning of a period of stock
market growth, it may be relatively easy for
the company’s managers to beat them. But that
also increases the expectations of new share-
holders, so the company has to improve ever faster
just to keep up and maintain its new stock price.
At some point, it becomes diffcult if not
impossible for managers to deliver on these
accelerating expectations without faltering, much
as anyone would eventually stumble on a
treadmill that kept getting faster.
This dynamic underscores why it’s diffcult
to use TRS as a performance-measurement tool:
extraordinary managers may deliver only
ordinary TRS because it is extremely diffcult
to keep beating ever-higher share price
expectations. Conversely, if markets have low
performance expectations for a company,
its managers might fnd it easy to earn a high TRS,
at least for a short time, by raising market
expectations up to the level for its peers.
Instead, compensation programs should focus
on growth, returns on capital, and TRS
performance, relative to peers (an important
point) rather than an absolute target. That
approach would eliminate much of the TRS that is
not driven by company-specifc performance.
Such a solution sounds simple but, until recently,
was made impractical by accounting rules
and, in some countries, tax policies. Prior to 2004,
for example, companies using US generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) could
avoid listing stock options as an expense
Finance and strategy
14 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
on their income statements provided they met
certain criteria, one of which was that the exercise
price had to be fxed. To avoid taking an
earnings hit, companies avoided compensation
systems based on relative performance,
which would have required more fexibility in
structuring options.
Since 2004, a few companies have moved to
share-based compensation systems tied
to relative performance. GE, for one, granted its
CEO a performance award based on the
company’s TRS relative to the TRS of the S&P
500 index. We hope that more companies
will follow this direction.
Applying the four cornerstones of fnance
sometimes means going against the crowd. It
means accepting that there are no free
lunches. It means relying on data, thoughtful
analysis, and a deep understanding of the
competitive dynamics of an industry. None of this
is easy, but the payoff—the creation of value
for a company’s stakeholders and for society at
large—is enormous.
1
J. Mulherin and Audra Boone, “Comparing acquisitions and
divestitures,” Journal of Corporate Finance, 2000, Volume 6,
Number 2, pp. 117–39.
2
Patrick Cusatis, James Miles, and J. Woolridge, “Some new
evidence that spinoffs create value,” Journal of Applied
Corporate Finance, 1994, Volume 7, Number 2, pp. 100–107.
3
See Robert S. McNish and Michael W. Palys, “Does scale
matter to capital markets?” McKinsey on Finance, Number 16,
Summer 2005, pp. 21–23.
4
Similarly, if a company sells a unit with a high P/E relative
to its other units, the earnings per share (EPS) will increase but
the P/E will decline proportionately.
5
The expected value is $7.4 billion, which represents the sum of
80 percent of $13 billion ($28 billion, the expected value
of the plant, less the $15 billion investment) and 20 percent
of –$15 billion ($0, less the $15 billion investment).
15
Excerpt from
Stock options—the right debate
Number 4,
Summer 2002
Neil W. C. Harper
A valuable debate for shareholders would be to examine the structure of stock options. Consider that
in recent years stock options have reached 50 to 60 percent of the total compensation of CEOs of large
US corporations. Most are issued with an exercise price at or above current market price, and as
the share price rises, the management team earns additional compensation. At ?rst glance, this seems
a logical way to align the interests of managers and shareholders, since in theory option-holding
executives would have a common interest with shareholders in seeing stock price appreciation. But
the theory can be thwarted in two important ways.
Not all stock price appreciation is equal. When a stock rises as a result of good strategic or operational
decision making by the management team, additional compensation through option value gains is
well deserved. However, stock options can also gain signi?cantly in value as a result of several additional
factors—the general economic environment, interest rates, leverage, and business risk. All else being
equal, as the economic environment improves, as interest rates fall, as leverage rises, and as business
risk rises, the value of an executive’s options will also rise. However, many such gains are not the
result of management’s actions, and increasing leverage or business risk is not necessarily in the best
interests of shareholders.
There are limits to downside risk. Even if option contracts were structured to more closely tie executive
reward to value-creating actions, the current structure of most company options plans places less
risk on managers in the case of poor performance than on shareholders. If unsuccessful strategic and
operational decision making leads to a stock price decline, shareholders continue to lose until the
decline bottoms out. Managers, though, have a limit to their downside exposure through option holdings;
once the stock price falls signi?cantly below option exercise price, their options are essentially
worthless (unless there remains a signi?cant time period before exercise date). Their downside to this
extent is limited. Furthermore, they can frequently expect to be issued repriced options at the new
lower stock price, further limiting their overall downside. Correcting for interest rate movements, economic
cycles, and other environmental issues is not as straightforward as it appears.
Many have pondered the issue for decades without coming up with easy solutions, precisely because
fully aligning incentives via a compensation plan is so complex. Executive option contracts could
be structured to adjust for economic conditions as re?ected, for example, by overall market or sector
performance, interest rates, leverage, and risk. Some have even proposed so-called outperformance
options, in which value creation is linked to an executive’s ability to generate returns above their
peers. These approaches can improve alignment between shareholder and manager interests, but only
to some extent.
Finance and strategy
16 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
CFOs invariably ask themselves two related
questions when managing their balance sheets:
should they return excess cash to share-
holders or invest it, and should they fnance new
projects by adding debt or drawing on equity?
Indeed, achieving the right capital structure—
the composition of debt and equity that
a company uses to fnance its operations and
strategic investments—has long vexed
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and Werner Rehm
Making capital structure
support strategy
academics and practitioners alike.
1
Some focus
on the theoretical tax beneft of debt, since
interest expenses are often tax deductible. More
recently, executives of public companies have
wondered if they, like some private-equity frms,
should use debt to increase their returns.
Meanwhile, many companies are holding sub-
stantial amounts of cash and deliberating
on what to do with it.
A company’s ratio of debt to equity should support its business strategy, not help it
pursue tax breaks. Here’s how to get the balance right.
Number 18,
Winter 2006
17
The issue is more nuanced than some pundits
suggest. In theory, it may be possible to reduce
capital structure to a fnancial calculation—
to get the most tax benefts by favoring debt, for
example, or to boost earnings per share
superfcially through share buybacks. The result,
however, may not be consistent with a com-
pany’s business strategy, particularly if executives
add too much debt.
2
In the 1990s, for example,
many telecommunications companies fnanced
the acquisition of third-generation (3G)
licenses entirely with debt, instead of with equity
or some combination of debt and equity, and
they found their strategic options constrained
when the market fell.
Indeed, the potential harm to a company’s
operations and business strategy from a bad
capital structure is greater than the potential
benefts from tax and fnancial leverage. Instead
of relying on capital structure to create value
on its own, companies should try to make it work
hand in hand with their business strategy, by
striking a balance between the discipline and tax
savings that debt can deliver and the greater
fexibility of equity. In the end, most industrial
companies can create more value by making
their operations more effcient than they can with
clever fnancing.
3
Capital structure’s long-term impact
Capital structure affects a company’s overall value
through its impact on operating cash fows
and the cost of capital. Since the interest expense
on debt is tax deductible in most countries,
a company can reduce its after-tax cost of capital
Exhibit 1 Tax bene?ts of debt are often negligible.
McKinsey on
Exhibit < > of < >
1
Earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
2
Companies with ~A to BBB rating.
Ratio of enterprise value to EBITA
1
10
5
0
15
20
0 2 6 8 10
Interest coverage ratio (EBITA
1
÷ annual interest expense)
Investment-grade companies
2
4
6% growth in
revenues
3% growth in
revenues
Finance and strategy
18 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
by increasing debt relative to equity, thereby
directly increasing its intrinsic value. While
fnance textbooks often show how the tax benefts
of debt have a wide-ranging impact on value,
they often use too low a discount rate for those
benefts. In practice, the impact is much less
signifcant for large investment-grade companies
(which have a small relevant range of capital
structures). Overall, the value of tax benefts is
quite small over the relevant levels of interest
coverage (Exhibit 1). For a typical investment-
grade company, the change in value over the range
of interest coverage is less than 5 percent.
The effect of debt on cash fow is less direct but
more signifcant. Carrying some debt increases a
company’s intrinsic value because debt imposes
discipline; a company must make regular interest
and principal payments, so it is less likely to
pursue frivolous investments or acquisitions that
don’t create value. Having too much debt,
however, can reduce a company’s intrinsic value
by limiting its fexibility to make value-creating
investments of all kinds, including capital
expenditures, acquisitions, and, just as important,
investments in intangibles such as business
building, R&D, and sales and marketing.
Managing capital structure thus becomes a
balancing act. In our view, the trade-off
a company makes between fnancial fexibility
and fscal discipline is the most important
consideration in determining its capital structure
and far outweighs any tax benefts, which are
negligible for most large companies unless they
have extremely low debt.
4
Mature companies with stable and predictable
cash fows as well as limited investment
opportunities should include more debt in their
capital structure, since the discipline that
debt often brings outweighs the need for
fexibility. Companies that face high uncertainty
because of vigorous growth or the cyclical
nature of their industries should carry less debt,
so that they have enough fexibility to take
advantage of investment opportunities or to deal
with negative events.
Not that a company’s underlying capital structure
never creates intrinsic value; sometimes it does.
When executives have good reason to believe that
a company’s shares are under- or overvalued,
for example, they might change the company’s
underlying capital structure to create value—
either by buying back undervalued shares or by
using overvalued shares instead of cash to
pay for acquisitions. Other examples can be found
in cyclical industries, such as commodity
chemicals, where investment spending typically
follows profts. Companies invest in new
manufacturing capacity when their profts are
high and they have cash.
5
Unfortunately,
the chemical industry’s historical pattern has
been that all players invest at the same
time, which leads to excess capacity when all of
The trade-off a company makes between
fnancial fexibility and fscal discipline is the most
important consideration in determining
its capital structure.
19
the plants come on line simultaneously. Over
the cycle, a company could earn substantially
more than its competitors if it developed
a countercyclical strategic capital structure and
maintained less debt than might otherwise
be optimal. During bad times, it would then have
the ability to make investments when its
competitors couldn’t.
A practical framework for developing
capital structure
A company can’t develop its capital structure
without understanding its future revenues and
investment requirements. Once those pre-
requisites are in place, it can begin to consider
changing its capital structure in ways that support
the broader strategy. A systematic approach can
pull together steps that many companies already
take, along with some more novel ones.
The case of one global consumer product business
is illustrative. Growth at this company—we’ll
call it Consumerco—has been modest. Excluding
the effect of acquisitions and currency move-
ments, its revenues have grown by about 5 percent
a year over the past fve years. Acquisitions
added a further 7 percent annually, and the operat-
ing proft margin has been stable at around
14 percent. Traditionally, Consumerco held little
debt: until 2001, its debt to enterprise value
was less than 10 percent. In recent years, however,
the company increased its debt levels to
around 25 percent of its total enterprise value in
order to pay for acquisitions. Once they were
complete, management had to decide whether to
use the company’s cash fows, over the next
several years, to restore its previous low levels
of debt or to return cash to its shareholders
and hold debt stable at the higher level. The com-
pany’s decision-making process included
the following steps.
1. Estimate the financing deficit or surplus. First,
Consumerco’s executives forecast the fnancing
defcit or surplus from its operations and
strategic investments over the course of the
industry’s business cycle—in this case,
three to fve years.
Finance and strategy
20 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
In the base case forecasts, Consumerco’s execu-
tives projected organic revenue growth of
5 percent at proft margins of around 14 percent.
They did not plan for any acquisitions over
the next four years, since no large target compa-
nies remain in Consumerco’s relevant product
segments. As Exhibit 2 shows, the company’s
cash fow after dividends and interest
will be positive in 2006 and then grow steadily
until 2008. You can see on the right-hand
side of Exhibit 2 that EBITA (earnings before
interest, taxes, and amortization) interest
Exhibit 2
Disguised global consumer product company
Consumerco started by forecasting its ?nancing debt or surplus.
McKinsey on Finance
Capital structure
Exhibit 2 of 3
1.4
0.9
0.4
–0.1
–0.6
–1.1
–1.6
Interest coverage ratio (EBITA
1
÷ annual
interest expense)
Free cash ?ow (FCF),
€ billion
2000 2002 2004 2006
2
2008
2
2000 2002 2004 2006
2
2008
2
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
Projected 2008 EBITA,
1
€ billion
Target interest coverage ratio
Target 2008 interest expense, € billion
2008 debt at target coverage, € billion
Extra cushion, € billion
Base case
scenario
3
Downside
scenario
3
1.9
4.5x
0.4
8.3
–0.5
1.4
4.5x
0.3
6.2
Interest rate on debt 5% 5%
–0.5
Target 2008 debt level, € billion 7.8 5.7
FCF
FCF after dividends,
interest
1
Earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
2
Projected.
3
Assumes organic revenue growth of % at profit margins of around % and no acquisitions over next years.
Source: Analysts’ reports; Standard & Poor’s; McKinsey analysis
21
coverage will quickly return to historically
high levels—even exceeding ten times
interest expenses.
2. Set a target credit rating. Next, Consumerco
set a target credit rating and estimated
the corresponding capital structure ratios.
Consumerco’s operating performance is
normally stable. Executives targeted the high
end of a BBB credit rating because the
company, as an exporter, is periodically
exposed to signifcant currency risk (otherwise
they might have gone further, to a low BBB
rating). They then translated the target credit
rating to a target interest coverage ratio
(EBITA to interest expense) of 4.5. Empirical
analysis shows that credit ratings can be
modeled well with three factors: industry, size,
and interest coverage. By analyzing other
large consumer product companies, it is
possible to estimate the likely credit rating at
different levels of coverage.
3. Develop a target debt level over the business
cycle. Finally, executives set a target debt level
of €5.7 billion for 2008. For the base case
scenario in the left-hand column at the bottom
half of Exhibit 2, they projected €1.9 billion
of EBITA in 2008. The target coverage ratio of
4.5 results in a debt level of €8.3 billion.
A fnancing cushion of spare debt capacity for
contingencies and unforeseen events
adds €0.5 billion, for a target 2008 debt level
of €7.8 billion.
Executives then tested this forecast against
a downside scenario, in which EBITA would
reach only €1.4 billion in 2008. Following
the same logic, they arrived at a target debt
level of €5.7 billion in order to maintain
an investment-grade rating under the down-
side scenario.
In the example of Consumerco, executives used
a simple downside scenario relative to the
base case to adjust for the uncertainty of future
cash fows. A more sophisticated approach
might be useful in some industries such as com-
modities, where future cash fows could be
modeled using stochastic-simulation techniques
to estimate the probability of fnancial distress
at various debt levels.
The fnal step in this approach is to determine
how the company should move to the
target capital structure. This transition involves
deciding on the appropriate mix of new
borrowing, debt repayment, dividends, share
repurchases, and share issuances over
the ensuing years.
A company with a surplus of funds, such as
Consumerco, would return cash to shareholders
either as dividends or share repurchases.
Even in the downside scenario, Consumerco will
generate €1.7 billion of cash above its target
EBITA-to-interest-expense ratio.
For one approach to distributing those funds to
shareholders, consider the dividend policy of
Consumerco. Given its modest growth and strong
cash fow, its dividend payout ratio is currently
low. The company could easily raise that ratio to
45 percent of earnings, from 30 percent.
Increasing the regular dividend sends the stock
market a strong signal that Consumerco
thinks it can pay the higher dividend comfortably.
The remaining €1.3 billion would then
typically be returned to shareholders through
share repurchases over the next several
years. Because of liquidity issues in the stock
market, Consumerco might be able to
repurchase only about €1 billion, but it could
consider issuing a one-time dividend for
the remainder.
Finance and strategy
22 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
The signaling effect
6
is probably the most
important consideration in deciding between
dividends and share repurchases. Companies
should also consider differences in the taxation
of dividends and share buybacks, as well as
the fact that shareholders have the option of not
participating in a repurchase, since the cash
they receive must be reinvested.
While these tax and signaling effects are real, they
mainly affect tactical choices about how to
move toward a defned long-term target capital
structure, which should ultimately support
a company’s business strategies by balancing the
fexibility of lower debt with the discipline
(and tax savings) of higher debt.
1
Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller, “The cost of capital,
corporate fnance, and the theory of investment,”
American Economic Review, June 1958, Volume 48, Number 3,
pp. 261–97.
2
There is also some potential for too little debt, though the
consequences aren’t as dire.
3
Richard Dobbs and Werner Rehm, “The value of share
buybacks,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 16, Summer 2005,
pp. 16–20.
4
At extremely low levels of debt, companies can create greater
value by increasing debt to more typical levels.
5
Thomas Augat, Eric Bartels, and Florian Budde, “Multiple
choice for the chemical industry,” mckinseyquarterly.com,
August 2003.
6
The market’s perception that a buyback shows how
confdent management is that the company’s shares are
undervalued, for example, or that it doesn’t need
the cash to cover future commitments, such as interest
payments and capital expenditures.
23
The share price increase from a buyback in theory results purely from the tax bene?ts of a company’s
new capital structure rather than from any underlying operational improvement. Take, for example, a
company with €200 million in excess cash, a 3 percent interest rate, a 30 percent tax rate, and a discount
rate at the cost of equity (10 percent). Assuming that the amount of cash doesn’t grow and that it is
held in perpetuity, the company incurs a value penalty of €18 million from additional taxes on the income
of its cash reserves. A buyback removes this tax penalty and so results in a 1.4 percent rise in the
share price. In this case, repurchasing more than 13 percent of the shares results in an increase of less
than 2 percent. A similar boost occurs when a company takes on more debt to buy back shares.
Yet while such increases in earnings per share help managers hit EPS-based compensation targets,
boosting EPS in this way doesn’t signify an increase in underlying performance or value. Moreover, a
company’s ?xation on buybacks might come at the cost of investments in its long-term health.
Share buyback analysis (including tax), hypothetical example
Analyzing the value of a share buyback (including tax)
McKinsey on Finance 16
Share buyback
Exhibit 2 of 4
1
Posttax EBIT ÷ operating capital.
Balance sheet
Cash, € million
Before After
Operating assets, € million
Total assets, € million
Equity, € million
200 0
580 580
780 580
780 580
Value
Value of operations, € million
Cash, € million
Tax penalty of cash, € million
1,300 1,300
200 0
–18 0
Total equity value, € million 1,482 1,300
Income statement
Before After
Interest, € million
Earnings before taxes,
€ million
Tax, € million
134 134
6 0
140 134
–42 –40
Net income, € million 98 94
Shares outstanding, million 100 86.5
Share price, €
Earnings per share (EPS), €
P/E
14.80 15.00
0.98 1.09
15.1 13.8
Return on invested
capital (ROIC)
1
16% 16%
Earnings before interest,
taxes (EBIT), € million
Excerpt from
The value of share buybacks
Number 16,
Summer 2005
Richard Dobbs and Werner Rehm
Finance and strategy
24 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
In most cases, simple math leaves successful companies with little choice: if they have moderate growth
and high returns on capital, it’s functionally impossible for them to reinvest every dollar they earn.
Consider this example: a company earning $1 billion a year in after-tax pro?ts, with a 25 percent return
on invested capital (ROIC) and projected revenue growth of 5 percent a year, needs to invest about
$200 million annually to continue growing at the same rate. That leaves $800 million of additional cash
?ow available for still more investment or returning to shareholders. Yet ?nding $800 million of
new value-creating investment opportunities every year is no simple task—in any sector of the economy.
Furthermore, at a 25 percent ROIC, the company would need to increase its revenues by 25 percent
a year to absorb all of its cash ?ow. It has no choice but to return a substantial amount of cash
to shareholders.
Does it matter whether distributions take the form of dividends or share repurchases? Empirically,
the answer is no. Whichever method is used, earnings multiples are essentially the same for companies
when compared with others that have similar total payouts (Exhibit A). Total returns to shareholders
(TRS) are also the same regardless of the mix of dividends and share repurchases (Exhibit B). These
results should not be surprising. What drives value is the cash ?ow generated by operations. That
cash ?ow is in turn driven by the combination of growth and returns on capital—not the mix of how excess
cash is paid out.
So how should a company decide between repurchases and dividends? That depends on how con?dent
management is of future cash ?ows—and how much ?exibility it needs. Share repurchases offer
companies more ?exibility to hold onto cash for unexpected investment opportunities or shifts in a volatile
economic environment. In contrast, companies that pay dividends enjoy less ?exibility because
investors have been conditioned to expect cuts in them only in the most dire circumstances. Thus,
managers should employ dividends only when they are certain they can continue to do so. Even
increasing a dividend sends signals to investors that managers are con?dent that they will be able to
continue paying the new, higher dividend level.
Share repurchases also signal con?dence but offer more ?exibility because they don’t create
a tacit commitment to additional purchases in future years. As you would expect, changing the proportion
of dividends to share buybacks has no impact on a company’s valuation multiples or TRS, regardless
of payout level.
Excerpt from
Paying back your shareholders
Number 39,
Spring 2011
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
25
Earnings multiples are not affected by the payout mix.
MoF 2011
Payback
Exhibit 3 of 4
Payout mix: average share of dividends
in total payouts, 2002–07, %
1
Insufficient data for payout levels of 96–130% at payout mix of >65 to 100% dividends and for payout levels of
>130% for all payout mixes.
2
For 279 non?nancial companies that were in the S&P 500 at the end of 2009, were continuously in operation since
1999, and paid dividends or repurchased shares. EBITA = earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
Ratio of median enterprise value to EBITA multiple,
year-end 2007
2
0–65% 66–95% 96–130%
0 5 10 15 20 25
0 (100% share repurchases)
>20 to 40%
>40 to 65%
>0 to 20%
>65 to 100%
Level of total payouts: average annual payouts (dividends +
share repurchases) as % of total net income,
1
2002–07
0 (100% share repurchases)
>20 to 40%
>40 to 65%
>0 to 20%
>65 to 100%
Returns to shareholders are unrelated to the payout mix.
MoF 2011
Payback
Exhibit 4 of 4
Level of total payouts: average annual payouts (dividends +
share repurchases) as % of total net income,
1
2002–07
1
Insufficient data for payout level of 66–95% at payout mix of zero dividends (100% share repurchase).
2
For 293 non?nancial companies that were in the S&P 500 at the end of 2009, were continuously in operation since
1999, and paid dividends or repurchased shares. CAGR = compound annual growth rate.
Median total returns to shareholders (TRS),
CAGR, 2002–07,
2
%
0–65% 66–95% 96–130% >130%
0 5 –5 10 15 20 25
Payout mix: average share of
dividends in total payouts, 2002–07, %
Exhibit A
Exhibit B
Finance and strategy
26
How to grow
27
The largest, most successful companies would
seem to be ideally positioned to create value for
their shareholders through growth. After all,
they command leading market and channel posi-
tions in multiple industries and geographies;
they employ deep benches of top management
talent utilizing proven management processes;
and they often have healthy balance sheets to fund
the investments most likely to produce growth.
Yet after years of impressive top- and bottom-line
growth that propelled them to the top of their
markets, these companies eventually fnd they can
no longer sustain their pace. Indeed, over the
past 40 years North America’s largest companies—
those, say, with more than about $25 billion in
market capitalization—have consistently under-
performed the S&P 500,
1
with only two
short-lived exceptions.
In this section: Features
27 Why the biggest and best struggle to grow (Winter 2004)
35 Running a winning M&A shop (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
32 How to choose between growth and ROIC (Autumn 2007)
34 All P/Es are not created equal (Spring 2004)
36 M&A teams: When small is beautiful (Winter 2010)
39 Managing your integration manager (Summer 2003)
41 The five types of successful acquisitions (Summer 2010)
Nicholas F. Lawler, Robert S. McNish, and Jean-Hugues J. Monier
Why the biggest and best
struggle to grow
The largest companies eventually find size itself an impediment to creating new value.
They must recognize that not all forms of growth are equal.
Number 10,
Winter 2004
28 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Talk to senior executives at these organizations,
however, and it is diffcult to fnd many willing to
back off from ambitious growth programs that
are typically intended to double their company’s
share price over three to fve years. Yet in all
but the rarest of cases, such aggressive targets are
unreasonable as a way to motivate growth
programs that create value for shareholders—and
may even be risky, tempting executives to scale
back value creating organic growth initiatives that
may be small or long-term propositions, some-
times in favor of larger, nearer-term, but less
reliable acquisitions.
In our experience, executives would be better
off recognizing the limitations of size and
revisiting the fundamentals of how growth creates
shareholder value. By understanding that
not all types of growth are equal when it comes to
creating value for shareholders, even the
largest companies can avoid bulking up on the
business equivalent of empty calories and
instead nourish themselves on the types of growth
most likely to create shareholder value.
What holds them back?
At even well-run big companies, growth slows or
stops—and for complex reasons. Ironically,
for some it’s the natural result of past success:
their portfolios are weighed down by large,
leading businesses that may have once delivered
considerable growth, but that have since
matured with their industries and now have fewer
natural avenues for growth. At others, man-
agement talent and processes are more grooved
to maintain, not build, businesses; and their
equity- and cash-rich balance sheets dampen
the impact growth has on shareholder value.
For all of them, their most formidable growth
challenge may be their sheer size: it takes
large increments of value creation to have a
meaningful impact on their share price.
The other crucial factor is how management
responds when organic growth starts to falter.
This is often a function of compensation
that ties bonuses to bottom-line growth. In any
case, management is often tempted to
respond as if the slowing organic growth were
merely temporary, rejecting any downward
adjustment to near-term bottom-line growth.
That may work in the short run, but as individual
businesses strip out controllable costs, they
soon begin to cut into the muscle and bone behind
whatever value-rich organic growth potential
remains—sales and marketing, new-product
development, new business development, R&D.
At one industrial company we are familiar
with, management proudly points to each savings
initiative that allows them to meet quarterly
earnings forecasts.
But the short-term focus on meeting
unrealistically high growth expectations can
undermine long-term growth. Ultimately,
the scramble to meet quarterly numbers will
continue to intensify as cost cutting further
decelerates organic growth. If the situation gets
more desperate, management may turn to
acquisitions to keep bottom-line growth going.
But acquisitions, on average, create relatively
little value compared to the investment required,
while adding enormous integration challenges
and portfolio complexity into the mix. Struggling
under the workload, management can lose
focus on operations. In this downward spiral
management chases growth in ways that
create less and less value—and in the end winds
up effectively trading value for growth.
Some companies seem to have recognized the
danger in constantly striving to exceed
expectations. One company’s recent decision
to vest half of its CEO’s stock award for
29 How to grow
simply meeting (rather than handily beating)
the fve-year share price appreciation of the S&P
500 may be one such bow to good reason.
Ironically, relieving the CEO of the pressure to
substantially outperform the market may
have given him the freedom he needs to focus on
longer-term investments in value-creating
organic growth.
All growth is not created equal
The right way for large companies to focus on
growth, we believe, is to differentiate among
entire classes of growth on the basis of what we
call their value creation intensity.
2
The value
creation intensity of a dollar of top-line growth
directly depends on how much invested
capital is required to fuel that growth—the more
invested capital, the lower the value creation
intensity. Sorting growth initiatives this way
requires understanding the time frame in
which shareholder value can be created—as short
as a matter of months for some acquisitions or
more than a decade for some R&D investments. It
also requires assessing the size of an oppor-
tunity by the amount of value it creates for share-
holders, not merely how much top-line revenues
it adds. These are the particularly crucial factors
for very large companies, where smaller
investments can get lost on the management
agenda, long-term investments fail to
capture management’s imagination, and the
temptation is to invest in highly visible near-term
projects with low value creation intensity.
To illustrate, we dipped into M&A research
to see how much value creation even top-notch
acquirers can reasonably expect. We have
also modeled the value creation intensity of four
different modes of organic growth, by estimating
results for prototypical organic growth oppor-
tunities in the consumer goods industry. While
this specifc hierarchy of value creation
intensity may not hold for every industry, it can
serve as a useful example.
New product/market development tends to
have the highest value creation intensity.
It provides top-line growth at attractive margins,
since competition is limited and the market
is growing. We estimate that the prototypical new
product in the consumer goods industry
can create between $1.75 and $2.00 in share-
holder value for every dollar of new revenue.
Ironically, while this type of growth creates the
most value, it’s particularly diffcult for
really large companies. Creating new demand
for a product that did not previously exist
requires outstanding innovation capabilities—
and big companies that have tightened
the screws on operational performance are
notorious for cutting away at research
and development spending.
Expanding into adjacent markets typically
requires incremental invested capital that leads to
lower, though still very attractive, value creation
intensity in the range of $0.30 to $0.75 per dollar
of new revenue. Facilitating adjacent market
expansion requires outstanding execution skills
and organizational fexibility.
Maintaining or growing share in a growing market
requires substantial incremental investments
to make the product and its value distinctive. But
as long as the market is still growing, margins
are not competed away. As a result, we estimate
value creation in the range of $0.10 to $0.50
per dollar of new revenue.
Growing share in a stable market does not always
create value. While incremental investments
are not always material, competition for share in
order to maintain scale is typically intense,
leading to lower margins. We estimate that
30 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit The intensity of value creation varies by mode of growth.
McKinsey on
Exhibit < > of < >
1
Stylized results based on consumer products examples.
2
Assumes a $50 billion market cap, all-stock company with $23 billion of revenue expected to grow at GDP rates and constant
return on invested capital (ROIC).
3
Examination of 338 deals revealed short-term value creation for acquirer of 11% for 75th percentile deals and –1% for 50th
percentile deals.
Acquisition (25th to
75th percentile result)
3
–0.5–0.20 n/m–50
Category of growth
Shareholder value
created for incremental
$1 million of growth/
target acquisition size
1
Revenue growth/
acquisition size necessary
to double typical company’s
share price,
2
$ billions
Competing for share
in a stable market
–0.25–0.40 n/m–25
Expanding an
existing market
0.30–0.75 13–33
Maintaining/growing
share in a growing market
0.10–0.50 20–100
New-product
market development
1.75–2.00 5–6
Consumer goods industry
increasing share in a relatively mature market
may destroy as much as $0.25 or create
as much as $0.40 of shareholder value for every
dollar of new revenue. And for companies
whose growth is already stalling, growth in
a stable market merely postpones
the inevitable.
Acquisitions. While they can drive a material
amount of top-line growth in the relatively
short order, it is now widely accepted that the
average acquirer captures relatively little
shareholder value from its deals.
3
In fact, the
numbers suggest that even an acquirer
who consistently enjoys a top-quartile market
reaction in each of its deals will create
only about $0.20 in shareholder value for every
$1 million in revenues acquired.
4
Obviously, the size and timing of growth oppor-
tunities are determined by business fundamentals
within each industry. Typically, though, they
tend to come in relatively small increments and
mature over multiple years. In the consumer
goods industry, one study
5
found that almost half
of product launches had frst-year sales of less
than $25 million, and the largest was only a little
more than $200 million. The number of these
sorts of top-line growth projects needed to move
the needle for the biggest companies is daunt-
ing. When we stand back from this analysis, we
can’t help but draw a very dispiriting obser-
31
vation for very large companies: there are remark-
ably few growth opportunities that are large
and near-term and highly value creating all at the
same time. Put another way, the amount
of top-line growth required to achieve a doubling
in shareholder value varies dramatically by
mode of growth, and is huge in even the most
favorable modes of growth (exhibit).
Some executives will no doubt fnd uncomfortable
the shift to a perspective that emphasizes
the value creation intensity of growth initiatives.
Though such a shift would serve shareholders
well, it may also lead to lower overall levels of top-
line and earnings-per-share (EPS) growth.
Executive credibility will be on the line in
communicating this message to the markets. One
executive we’ve worked with, for example,
recognized that his company lacked the credibility
to quickly lower his overall EPS growth targets
in favor of a richer mix of value-creating growth
without getting pummeled by the markets.
Instead, the company made one more big push on
operations, letting only enough of the savings
fall to the bottom line to meet the company’s short-
term growth projections. The rest of the savings
was redirected toward slower, but more value
creating, organic growth, with the expectation that
once the company had built some credibility
in that respect with shareholders, it could more
easily make its case to the markets.
When growing gets tough in the largest companies,
tough executives must learn to get growing
in value-creating ways. Rather than bulk up on
the business equivalent of empty calories,
they should explore the value creation intensity of
different modes of growth to build shareholder
value muscle.
1
Credit Suisse First Boston, “The pyramid of numbers,” The
Consilient Observer, Volume 2, Number 17, September 23, 2003.
2
Shareholder value creation per dollar of top-line revenue growth.
3
See, for example, Hans Bieshaar, Jeremy Knight,
and Alexander van Wassenaer, “Deals that create value,”
mckinseyquarterly.com, February 2001.
4
It is important to note, however, that market-entering or
capability-building acquisitions designed to fuel subsequent
organic growth are more likely to create value than
market-consolidating acquisitions designed to capture
cost effciencies.
5
Steve Innen, “Innovation awards 2002,” Food Processing,
December 2002, pp. 35–40.
How to grow
32 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
How to choose between growth and ROIC
Number 25,
Autumn 2007
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
Value-minded executives know that although growth is good, returns on invested capital (ROIC) can be an
equally—or still more—important indicator of value creation. To understand better how value is created
over time, we identi?ed all non?nancial US companies that had a market cap over $2 billion
1
in 1995 and
had been listed for at least a decade as of that year. When we examined their growth and ROIC
performance over the subsequent decade, we found clear patterns in the interaction between the two
measures. These patterns can help guide value creation strategies suited to a company’s current
performance. For companies that already have high ROICs,
2
raising revenues faster than the market
generates higher total returns to shareholders (TRS) than further improvements to ROIC do.
This ?nding doesn’t mean that companies with high ROICs can disregard the impact of growth on their
pro?tability and capital returns. But executives do have the latitude to invest in growth even if ROIC
and pro?tability erode as a result—as long as they can keep ROIC levels in or above the medium band.
Companies that fall in the middle of the ROIC scale
3
have no latitude to let their performance on
either measure decline. For these companies, improving ROIC without maintaining growth at the pace of
the market or generating growth at the cost of a lower ROIC usually results in a below-market TRS. In
most cases, the market rewarded these companies with above-market returns only when they maintained
their growth and improved their ROIC.
4
The pattern continues for companies with a low ROIC.
5
Although both ROIC and growth are still important,
an improvement in ROIC is clearly more important: companies that increased their ROIC generated,
on average, a TRS 5 to 8 percent higher than those that didn’t. Growth relative to the market made less
difference (1 to 4 percent) for shareholders, particularly if the company improved its ROIC. This
result isn’t surprising. Because such companies were generating returns at or below their weighted-
average cost of capital, they would have had dif?culty accessing capital to ?nance further growth
unless they improved their operations and earned the right to grow. Indeed, nearly one-third of the com-
panies in this category from 1995 were acquired or went bankrupt within the following decade.
1
Normalized to 2003 dollars.
2
Those with a ten-year average ROIC greater than or equal to 20 percent in 1995.
3
Those with a ten-year average ROIC in 1995 greater than or equal to 9 percent but less than 20 percent.
4
Because our data represent the median of a group, a company could achieve above-market TRS even though its growth was below
market or its ROIC had declined.
5
Those with a ten-year average ROIC in 1995 greater than or equal to 6 percent but less than 9 percent.
33
Increased
Decreased
Total returns to shareholders (TRS),
1
1996–2005, compared with returns on invested capital (ROIC)
Companies with
high ROIC
2
Companies with
medium ROIC
3
Companies with
low ROIC
4
McKinsey on Finance
Growth
Exhibit 1 of 3
1
Median of compound average annual TRS from 1996 to 2005 for each group of companies, adjusted for compound
1996–2005 average TRS of S&P 500 index companies (6.9%).
2
78 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?20% and market capitalization >$2 billion in 1995.
3
129 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?9% and market capitalization >$2 billion in 1995.
4
64 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?6% but $2 billion in 1995.
5
Compound annual growth rate.
Below
ROIC
(excluding
goodwill)
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
Above
6
11
7
15
Median TRS exceeds market
Below
Growth, CAGR
5
of revenues
Above
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
2
7
6
10
Below Above
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
3
7
11
12
How to grow
34 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
All P/Es are not created equal
Number 11,
Spring 2004
Nidhi Chadda, Robert S. McNish, and Werner Rehm
The relationship between P/E multiples and growth is basic arithmetic:
1
high multiples can result from high
returns on capital in average- or low-growth businesses just as easily as they can result from high
growth. But beware: any amount of growth at low returns on capital will not lead to a high P/E, because
such growth does not create shareholder value.
To illustrate, consider two companies with identical P/E multiples of 17 but with different mechanisms for
creating value. Growth, Inc., is expected to grow at an average annual rate of 13 percent over the
next ten years, while generating a 14 percent return on invested capital (ROIC), which is modestly higher
than its 10 percent cost of capital. To sustain that level of growth, it must reinvest 93 cents from each
dollar of income. The relatively high reinvestment rate means that Growth, Inc., turns only a small amount
of earnings growth into free cash ?ow growth. Many companies ?t this growth pro?le, including
some that need to reinvest more than 100 percent of their earnings to support their growth rate. In con-
trast, Returns, Inc., is expected to grow at only 5 percent per year, a rate similar to long-term nominal
GDP growth in the United States.
2
Unlike Growth, Inc., however, Returns, Inc., invests its capital extremely
ef?ciently. With a return on capital of 35 percent, it needs to reinvest only 14 cents of each dollar to
sustain its growth. As its earnings grow, Returns, Inc., methodically turns them into free cash ?ow.
McKinsey on Finance
Exhibit 2 of < >
Growth, Inc
1
Returns, Inc
1
Reinvestment rate 93% Reinvestment rate 14%
Year 1 Year 2 Year 1 Year 2
Operating pro?t less taxes 100 113 100 105
93 105 14 15 Reinvestment
7 8 86 90 Free cash ?ow
1
Assuming 10% cost of equity, no debt, and 10 year’s excessive growth followed by 5% growth at historic levels of ROIC.
1
For instance, assuming perpetuity growth for a company without any fnancial leverage, P/E = (1 – growth ÷ return on
capital) ÷ (cost of capital – growth).
2
Real GDP growth over the past 40 years in the United States was 3.5 percent.
Because Growth, Inc., and Returns, Inc., take very different routes to the same P/E multiple, it would
make sense for a savvy executive to pursue different growth and investment strategies to increase
each business’s P/E. Obviously, the rare company that can combine high growth with high returns on
capital should enjoy extremely high multiples.
35
Robert T. Uhlaner and Andrew S. West
Running a winning
M&A shop
Picking up the pace of M&A requires big changes in a company’s processes and
organization—even if the deals are smaller.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Corporate deal making has a new look—smaller,
busier, and focused on growth. Not so long
ago, M&A experts sequenced, at most, 3 or 4 major
deals a year, typically with an eye on the benefts
of industry consolidation and cost cutting. Today
we regularly come across executives hoping to
close 10 to 20 smaller deals in the same amount of
time, often simultaneously. Their objective:
combining a number of complementary deals into
a single strategic platform to pursue growth—
for example, by acquiring a string of smaller
businesses and melding them into a unit whose
growth potential exceeds the sum of its parts.
Naturally, when executives try to juggle more
and different kinds of deals simultaneously,
productivity may suffer as managers struggle to
get the underlying process right.
1
Most com-
panies, we have found, are not prepared for the
intense work of completing so many deals—
How to grow
36 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
and fumbling with the process can jeopardize
the very growth companies seek. In fact, most of
them lack focus, make unclear decisions,
and identify potential acquisition targets in
a purely reactive way. Completing deals
at the expected pace just can’t happen without
an effcient end-to-end process.
Even companies with established deal-making
capabilities may have to adjust them to play in
this new game. Our research shows that
successful practitioners follow a number of
principles that can make the adjustment
easier and more rewarding. They include linking
every deal explicitly to the strategy it supports
and forging a process that companies can readily
adapt to the fundamentally different requirements
of different types of deals.
Eyes on the (strategic) prize
One of the most often overlooked, though
seemingly obvious, elements of an effective M&A
program is ensuring that every deal supports
the corporate strategy. Many companies, we have
found, believe that they are following an
M&A strategy even if their deals are only generally
related to their strategic direction and the
connections are neither specifc nor quantifable.
Instead, those who advocate a deal should
explicitly show, through a few targeted M&A
themes, how it advances the growth strategy.
A specifc deal should, for example, be linked to
strategic goals, such as market share and
the company’s ability to build a leading position.
Bolder, clearer goals encourage companies
to be truly proactive in sourcing deals and help to
establish the scale, urgency, and valuation
approach for growth platforms that require a
number of them. Executives should also
ask themselves if they have enough people develop-
ing and evaluating the deal pipeline, which
might include small companies to be assembled
into a single business, carve-outs, and more
obvious targets, such as large public companies
actively shopping for buyers.
Furthermore, many deals underperform because
executives take a one-size-fts-all approach
to them—for example, by using the same process
to integrate acquisitions for back-offce
cost synergies and acquisitions for sales force
synergies. Certain deals, particularly those
focused on raising revenues or building new
capabilities, require fundamentally dif-
ferent approaches to sourcing, valuation, due
diligence, and integration. It is therefore
Excerpt from
M&A teams:
When small is beautiful
Number 34,
Winter 2010
Patrick Beitel and Werner Rehm
Executives at companies that don’t have
large, standing teams may wonder if they are
really essential for successful deal making.
We don’t think they are. If the essentials for the
governance and execution of M&A are in
place, many companies can carry it out
successfully with a small, experienced team that
pulls in resources project by project. In an
ongoing series of executive interviews on M&A,
we’ve run across a number of companies
that have small M&A teams—with as few as
two to three core team members, led
by the head of M&A—which take this kind of
project-driven approach.
Indeed, it may even be more suitable than the
use of large, standing teams—at least for
companies in certain industries, depending on
the number of strategic M&A opportunities.
37
critical for managers not only to understand
what types of deals they seek for shorter-term cost
synergies or longer-term top-line synergies
(exhibit) but also to assess candidly which types
of deals they really know how to execute and
whether a particular transaction goes against a
company’s traditional norms or experience.
Companies with successful M&A programs
typically adapt their approach to the type of deal
at hand. For example, over the past six years,
IBM has acquired 50 software companies, nearly
20 percent of them market leaders in their
segments. It executes many different types of
deals to drive its software strategy, targeting
companies in high-value, high-growth segments
that would extend its current portfolio into
new or related markets. IBM also looks for
technology acquisitions that would accelerate
the development of the capabilities it needs.
Deal sponsors use a comprehensive software-
segment strategy review and gap analysis
to determine when M&A (rather than in-house
development) is called for, to identify targets,
Exhibit Managers must understand not only which types of deals they
desire but also which they know how to execute.
McKinsey on Finance 27
Proactive M&A
Exhibit 1 of 2
Types of M&A deals
Large
Small
Stand-alone cost
improvements
Size of acquired
company relative
to acquirer
Need to expand current capabilities
Cross-selling
existing products
Building
new customer
relationships
Creating new
products
Building a
new business
Overcapacity
• Reduce industry capacity
and overhead
• Present fundamentally
similar product offering
Product/market
consolidation
• Create economies of
scale and consolidate
back of?ce; expand
market presence
Transformation/
convergence
• Use deal to transform
the way industry works
• Create new value
proposition
Roll-up
• Transfer core strengths to
target business(es)
Short-term
cost synergies
Long-term top-line
synergies
Low High
Acquire
products/markets
• Expansion of market offering
and/or geographic reach
Strategic-growth bet
• Seek skill transfer into new
and/or noncore business
Pay mainly for clear
cost synergies
Pay for some growth
and channel access
Pay for opportunity to
attack new markets
and grow through new
capabilities
Pay for lower cost of
operating new businesses,
potential to increase
revenue by leveraging
brand strength
Pay largely for growth and
channel access; revenue
synergy potential via
pull-through also exists
Pay for high-risk option
value and ability to act in
market space
How to grow
38 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
and to determine which acquisitions should
be executed.
IBM has developed the methods, skills, and
resources needed to execute its growth strategy
through M&A and can reshape them to suit
different types of deals. A substantial investment
of money, people, and time has been necessary.
In 2007, IBM’s software group alone was concur-
rently integrating 18 acquisitions; more than
100 full-time experts in a variety of functions and
geographies were involved, in addition to
specialized teams mobilized for each deal. IBM’s
ability to tailor its approach has been critical
in driving the performance of these businesses.
Collectively, IBM’s 39 acquisitions below
$500 million from 2002 to 2005 doubled their
direct revenue within two years.
Organization and process
When companies increase the number and pace
of their acquisitions, the biggest practical
challenge most of them face is getting not only
the right people but also the right number
of people involved in M&A. If they don’t, they may
buy the wrong assets, underinvest in appropriate
ones, or manage their deals and integration
efforts poorly. Organizations must invest to build
their skills and capabilities before launching
an aggressive M&A agenda.
Support from senior management
In many companies, senior managers are often
too impressed by what appears to be a low price
for a deal or the allure of a new product. They
then fail to look beyond the fnancials or to provide
support for integration. At companies that
handle M&A more productively, the CEO and
senior managers explicitly identify it as a
pillar of the overall corporate strategy. At GE, for
example, the CEO requires all business units to
submit a review of each deal. In addition to
the fnancial justifcation, the review must articu-
late a rationale that fts the story line of the
entire organization and spell out the requirements
for integration. A senior vice president then
coaches the business unit through each phase of a
stage gate process. Because the strict process
preceding the close of the deal outlines what the
company must do to integrate the acquisition,
senior management’s involvement with it after
the close is defned clearly.
The most common challenge executives face in
a deal is remaining involved with it and
accountable for its success from inception through
integration. They tend to focus on sourcing
deals and ensuring that the terms are acceptable,
quickly moving on to other things once the
letter of intent is signed and leaving the integration
work to anyone who happens to have the
time. To improve the process and the outcome,
executives must give more thought to the
appointment of key operational players, such as
the deal owner and the integration manager.
2
The deal owner
Deal owners are typically high-performing
managers or executives accountable for specifc
acquisitions, beginning with the identifca-
tion of a target and running through its eventual
integration. The most successful acquirers
appoint the deal owner very early in the process,
often as a prerequisite for granting approval
to negotiate with a target. This assignment, which
may be full or part time, could go to someone
from the business-development team or even a line
organization, depending on the type of deal.
For a large one regarded as a possible platform for
a new business unit or geography, the right deal
owner might be a vice president who can continue
to lead the business once the acquisition is
complete. For a smaller deal focused on acquiring
a specifc technology, the right person might be
39
a director in the R&D function or someone from
the business-development organization.
The integration manager
Often, the most underappreciated and poorly
resourced role is that of the integration manager—
in effect, the deal owner’s chief of staff.
Typically, integration managers are not suffciently
involved early in the deal process. Moreover,
many of them are chosen for their skills as
process managers, not as general managers who
can make decisions, work with people throughout
the organization, and manage complicated
situations independently.
Integration managers, our experience shows,
ought to become involved as soon as
the target has been identifed but before the
evaluation or negotiations begin. They
should drive the end-to-end merger-management
process to assure that the strategic rationale
of a deal informs the due diligence as well as the
planning and implementation of the integra-
tion effort. During IBM’s acquisition of Micromuse,
for example, a vice president–level executive
was chosen to take responsibility for integration.
This executive was brought into the process
well before due diligence and remains involved
almost two years after the deal closed.
IBM managers attribute its strong performance
to the focused leadership of the integra-
tion executive.
Sizing a professional
merger-management function
Companies that conclude deals only occasionally
may be able to tap functional and business
experts to conduct due diligence and then build
integration teams around specifc deals. But
a more ambitious M&A program entails a volume
of work—to source and screen candidates,
conduct preliminary and fnal due diligence, close
deals, and drive integration—that demands
capabilities and processes on the scale of any
other corporate function. Indeed, our
experience with several active acquirers has
taught us that the number of resources
required can be quite large. To do 10 deals a year,
a company must identify roughly 100 candi-
dates, conduct due diligence on around 40, and
ultimately integrate the fnal 10. This kind of
effort requires the capacity to sift through many
deals while simultaneously managing three
or four data rooms and several parallel integration
efforts. Without a suffcient (and effective)
investment in resources, individual deals are
doomed to fail.
Excerpt from
Managing your
integration manager
Number 8,
Summer 2003
Michael J. Shelton
No surprise that the effectiveness of integration
managers varies widely. Many CEOs see them
simply as process coordinators or project
managers. But the best play a far more pivotal
role, helping mergers to succeed by keeping
everyone focused on the issues that have the
greatest potential for creating value and by
infusing integration efforts with the necessary
momentum. Unfortunately, however, too
many integration managers never assume such
a role or, if they do, ?nd it hard to succeed
in it. Our experience during the past ?ve years
with more than 300 integration efforts—
most involving Global 500 corporations—
suggests three reasons: CEOs fail to recruit the
right people for the job, integration managers
don’t become involved in the merger process
early enough, and CEOs fail to give them
adequate support.
How to grow
40 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
A rigorous stage gate process
A company that transacts large numbers
of deals must take a clearly defned stage gate
approach to making and managing decisions.
Many organizations have poorly defned processes
or are plagued with choke points, and either
fault can make good targets walk away or turn to
competitive bids. Even closed deals can get
off to a bad start if a target’s management team
assumes that a sloppy M&A process shows
what life would be like under the acquirer.
An effective stage gate system involves three
separate phases of review and evaluation.
At the strategy approval stage, the business-
development team (which includes one
or two members from both the business unit and
corporate development) evaluates targets
outside-in to assess whether they could help the
company grow, how much they are worth,
and their attractiveness as compared with other
targets. Even at this point, the team should
discuss key due diligence objectives and integra-
tion issues. A subset of the team then drives
the process and assigns key roles, including that
of the deal owner. The crucial decision at
this point is whether a target is compatible with
the corporate strategy, has strong support
from the acquiring company, and can be
integrated into it.
At the approval-to-negotiate stage, the team
decides on a price range that will allow the com-
pany to maintain pricing discipline. The
results of preliminary due diligence (including the
limited exchange of data and early manage-
ment discussions with the target) are critical here,
as are integration issues that have been reviewed,
at least to some extent, by the corporate functions.
A vision for incorporating the target into
the acquirer’s business plan, a clear operating
program, and an understanding of the
acquisition’s key synergies are important as well,
no matter what the size or type of deal. At
the end of this stage, the team should have pro-
duced a nonbinding term sheet or letter of
intent and a roadmap for negotiations, confrma-
tory due diligence, and process to close.
The board of directors must endorse the defnitive
agreement in the deal approval stage. It should
resemble the approval-to-negotiate stage if the
process has been executed well; the focus ought to
be on answering key questions rather than
raising new strategic issues, debating valuations,
or looking ahead to integration and discussing
how to estimate the deal’s execution risk.
Each stage should be tailored to the type of deal
at hand. Small R&D deals don’t have to pass
through a detailed board approval process but
may instead be authorized at the business
or product unit level. Large deals that require
signifcant regulatory scrutiny must cer-
tainly meet detailed approval criteria before
moving forward. Determining in advance
what types of deals a company intends to pursue
and how to manage them will allow it to
articulate the trade-offs and greatly increase its
ability to handle a larger number of deals
with less time and effort.
As companies adapt to a faster-paced, more
complicated era of M&A deal making, they must
fortify themselves with a menu of process and
organizational skills to accommodate the variety
of deals available to them.
1
These results were among the fndings of our June 2007 survey
of business-development and merger integration leaders.
2
In some smaller deals, the integration manager and deal owner
can be the same person in complementary roles.
41
Excerpt from
The five types of successful acquisitions
Number 36,
Summer 2010
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and David Wessels
In our experience, the strategic rationale for an acquisition that creates value typically conforms to at least
one of the following ?ve archetypes.
Improve the target company’s performance. This is one of the most common value-creating acquisition
strategies. Put simply, you buy a company and radically reduce costs to improve margins and cash ?ows.
In some cases, the acquirer may also take steps to accelerate revenue growth.
Consolidate to remove excess capacity from industry. The combination of higher production from existing
capacity and new capacity from recent entrants often generates more supply than demand. It is in
no individual competitor’s interest to shut a plant, however. Companies often ?nd it easier to shut plants
across the larger combined entity resulting from an acquisition than to shut their least productive
plants without one and end up with a smaller company.
Accelerate market access for the target’s (or buyer’s) products. Often, relatively small companies
with innovative products have dif?culty reaching the entire potential market for their products. Small
pharmaceutical companies, for example, typically lack the large sales forces required to cultivate
relationships with the many doctors they need to promote their products. Bigger pharmaceutical
companies sometimes purchase these smaller companies and use their own large-scale sales forces to
accelerate the sales of the smaller companies’ products.
Get skills or technologies faster or at lower cost than they can be built. Cisco Systems has used
acquisitions to close gaps in its technologies, allowing it to assemble a broad line of networking products
and to grow very quickly from a company with a single product line into the key player in Internet
equipment. From 1993 to 2001, Cisco acquired 71 companies, at an average price of approximately
$350 million. Cisco’s sales increased from $650 million in 1993 to $22 billion in 2001, with nearly
40 percent of its 2001 revenue coming directly from these acquisitions. By 2009, Cisco had more than
$36 billion in revenues and a market cap of approximately $150 billion.
Pick winners early and help them develop their businesses. The ?nal winning strategy involves making
acquisitions early in the life cycle of a new industry or product line, long before most others recognize that
it will grow signi?cantly. Johnson & Johnson pursued this strategy in its early acquisitions of medical-
device businesses. When J&J bought device manufacturer Cordis, in 1996, Cordis had $500 million in
revenues. By 2007, its revenues had increased to $3.8 billion, re?ecting a 20 percent annual growth
rate. J&J purchased orthopedic device manufacturer DePuy in 1998, when DePuy had $900 million in
revenues. By 2007, they had grown to $4.6 billion, also at an annual growth rate of 20 percent.
How to grow
42
Governance and risk
43
In this section: Features
43 The voice of experience: Public versus private equity (Spring 2009)
49 The right way to hedge (Summer 2010)
Excerpts from
54 Risk: Seeing around the corners (Autumn 2009)
55 Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think (Spring 2003)
Viral Acharya, Conor Kehoe, and Michael Reyner
The voice of experience:
Public versus private equity
Few directors have served on the boards of both private and public companies.
Those who have give their views here about which model works best.
Number 31,
Spring 2009
Advocates of the private-equity model have
long argued that the better PE frms perform
better than public companies do. This
advantage, these advocates say, stems not only
from fnancial engineering but also from
stronger operational performance.
Directors who have served on the boards of both
public and private companies agree—and add
that the behavior of the board is one key element
in driving superior operational performance.
Among the 20 chairmen or CEOs we recently
interviewed as part of a study in the United
Kingdom,
1
most said that PE boards were signif-
cantly more effective than were those of their
public counterparts. The results are not compre-
hensive, nor do they fully refect the wide
diversity of public- and private-company boards.
Nevertheless, our fndings raise some important
issues for public boards and their chairmen.
44 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit 1 Private-equity boards are considered effective overall
even if public boards have some advantages.
McKinsey on Finance
PE Directors
Exhibit 1 of 2
Source: Interviews with about 20 UK-based directors who have served, over the past 5 years, on the boards of both private and
public companies (FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses and private-equity owned), most with an enterprise value of >£500 million
Interviewees’ rating of boards (on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1= poor, 5 = world class)
Boards of private-equity
portfolio companies
Boards of public limited
companies (PLCs)
Overall effectiveness 4.6 3.5
Strategic leadership 4.3 3.3
3.1 4.8
Performance
management
4.1 3.8
Development/succession
management
4.8 3.3
Stakeholder
management
3.8 4.2
Governance (audit,
compliance, and risk)
When asked to compare the overall effectiveness
of PE and public boards, 15 of the 20 respondents
said that PE boards clearly added more value;
none said that their public counterparts were
better. This sentiment was refected in the scores
the respondents gave each type of board,
on a fve-point scale (where 1 was poor and 5 was
world class): PE boards averaged 4.6, public
boards 3.5.
Clearly, public boards cannot (and should not)
seek to replicate all elements of the PE model: the
public-company one offers superior access to
capital and liquidity but in return requires a more
extensive and transparent approach to gover-
nance and a more explicit balancing of stakeholder
interests. Nevertheless, our survey raises many
questions about the two ownership models and
how best to enhance a board’s effectiveness. How,
for example, can public boards be structured
so that their members can put more time into
managing strategy and performance?
Moreover, can—and should—the interests of
public-board members be better aligned
with those of executives?
How both models add value
Respondents observed that the differences
in the way public and PE boards operate—and are
expected to operate—arise from differences in
ownership structure and governance expectations.
Because public companies need to protect the
interests of arm’s-length shareholders and ensure
the fow of accurate and equal information to
the capital markets, governance issues such as
audit, compliance, remuneration, and risk
management inevitably (and appropriately) loom
much larger in the minds of public-board
members. Our research did indeed suggest that
public-company boards scored higher on
45
governance and on management development.
However, respondents saw PE boards as
more effective overall because of their stronger
strategic leadership and more effective
performance oversight, as well as their manage-
ment of key stakeholders (Exhibit 1).
Strategic leadership
In almost all cases, our respondents described PE
boards as leading the formulation of strategy,
with all directors working together to shape it and
defne the resulting priorities. Key elements
of the strategic plan are likely to have been laid
out during the due-diligence process. Private-
equity boards are often the source of strategic
initiatives and ideas (for example, on M&A) and
assume the role of stimulating the executive
team to think more broadly and creatively about
opportunities. The role of the executive-
management team is to implement this plan and
report back on the progress.
By contrast, though most public companies state
that the board’s responsibility includes overseeing
strategy, the reality is that the executive team
typically takes the lead in proposing and
developing it, and the board’s role is to challenge
and shape management’s proposals. None of
our interviewees said that their public boards led
strategy: 70 percent described the board as
“accompanying” management in defning it, while
30 percent said that the board played only a
following role. Few respondents saw these boards
as actively and effectively shaping strategy.
Performance management
Interviewees also believed that PE boards
were far more active in managing performance
than were their public counterparts: indeed
the nature and intensity of the performance-
management culture is perhaps the most striking
difference between the two environments.
Private-equity boards have what one respondent
described as a “relentless focus on value creation
levers,” and this focus leads them to identify
critical initiatives and to decide which key perfor-
mance indicators (KPIs) to monitor. These
KPIs not only are defned more explicitly than
they are in public companies but also focus
much more strongly on cash metrics and speed of
delivery. Having set these KPIs, PE boards
monitor them much more intensively—reviewing
progress in great detail, focusing intently on
one or two areas at each meeting, and intervening
in cases of underperformance. “This performance-
management focus is the board’s real raison
d’être,” one respondent commented.
In contrast, public boards were described as
much less engaged in detail: their scrutiny was
seen at best as being on a higher level (“more
macro than micro,” one interviewee said) and at
worst as superfcial. Moreover, public boards
focus much less on fundamental value creation
levers and much more on meeting quarterly
proft targets and market expectations. Given the
importance of ensuring that shareholders
get an accurate picture of a business’s short-term
performance prospects, this emphasis is
perhaps understandable. But what it produces is
a board focused more on budgetary control,
the delivery of short-term accounting profts, and
avoiding surprises for investors.
Management development
and succession
Private-equity boards scored less well on their
development of human capital—both absolutely
and relative to public boards. PE boards do
focus intensely on the quality of the top-executive
team, in particular the CEO and the CFO, and
are quick to replace underperformers. But such
boards invest little or no time exploring
broader and longer-term issues, such as the
Governance and risk
46 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
strength of the management team, succession
plans, and developing management.
“Their interest in management development is
frustratingly narrow,” one interviewee said.
Public boards, by comparison, were seen as more
committed to and effective for people issues. Such
boards insist on thorough management-review
processes, discuss not only the top team but also
its potential successors, debate the key capa-
bilities needed for long-term success, are more
likely to challenge and infuence management-
development processes, and play a more active
role in defning remuneration policies and
plans. There are weaknesses, however: public
boards can be slower to react when change
is needed, and their voice on everything but the
CEO succession tends to be more advisory
than directive. Remuneration discussions are
thorough, but public boards can seem
more concerned about the reaction of external
stakeholders to potential plans than about
their impact on performance. Overall, however,
public boards are more focused on people,
tackle a broader range of issues, and work in
a more sophisticated way.
Stakeholder management
Our respondents felt that PE boards were
much more effective at managing stakeholders,
largely as a result of structural differences
between the two models. Public boards operate
in a more complex environment, managing a
broader range of stakeholders and dealing with
a disparate group of investors, including large
institutions and small shareholders, value and
growth investors, and long-term stockholders
and short-term hedge funds. These groups have
different priorities and demands (and, in the
case of short-selling hedge funds, fundamentally
misaligned interests). The chairmen and
CEOs of public companies therefore have to put
a lot of effort into communicating with
diverse groups.
The challenge for PE boards is more straight-
forward. Their effective shareholders
(the investors in PE funds) are locked in for the
duration of the fund. The shareholders’
representatives (the PE house) are in effect
a single bloc (or a very small number of
blocs in a club deal) and so act in alignment.
Furthermore, these representatives are
more engaged than board members in the public
world are—they are literally “in the room”
with executives and are much better informed
about business realities than are investors
in public companies. Unsurprisingly, therefore,
the burden of investor management is much
less onerous for PE boards and the quality of
the dialogue much better.
Yet PE boards are much less experienced in
engaging with broader stakeholders, such as the
media, unions, and other pressure groups.
This inexperience was evident in the initial
response of these boards to the greater scrutiny
they attracted in 2007. The Walker Report
2
and the changes PE houses subsequently made to
increase the frequency and transparency
of their communications do go some way in
addressing the shortcomings, but public
boards typically are still more sophisticated and
effective in this area.
Governance and risk management
Public boards earned their best scores in
governance and risk management, a result that
refected the drive to improve governance
standards and controls in the wake of the various
scandals that led to the Sarbanes–Oxley
legislation and the initiatives suggested in the
Higgs Report.
3
The typical board subcommittees
(audit, nomination, remuneration, and
47
corporate social responsibility) are seen as
conducting a thorough, professional scrutiny of
the agreed-upon areas of focus, while the overall
board supervises effectively and can draw
on a broad range of insights and experiences to
identify potential risks. Compliance with the
United Kingdom’s Combined Code on Corporate
Governance is high—an important factor in
building investor confdence.
Yet there are important underlying concerns.
Unsurprisingly, many respondents held that some
elements of governance are overengineered and,
as a result, consume much time while generating
little value. Of greater concern, perhaps, many
respondents felt that, in emphasizing governance,
public boards had become too conservative.
“Boards seek to follow precedent and avoid confict
with investors rather than exploring what
could maximize value,” commented one respon-
dent. “The focus is on box-ticking and covering
the right inputs, not delivering the right outputs,”
said another.
Private-equity boards scored lower on governance,
refecting their lower level of emphasis on it
and their typically less sophisticated processes
for managing it. In every case, governance
efforts focused on a narrower set of activities,
though almost all PE boards embraced the
need for a formal audit committee. Interestingly,
though, PE boards in general were seen as
having a deeper understanding of operational busi-
ness risks and fnancial risks. They were also
perceived to be more focused on, and skilled in,
risk management as opposed to risk avoidance.
Sources of difference?
Since our respondents felt that PE boards were
typically more effective than public ones were
Exhibit 2 Private-equity boards lead on value creation, while public
boards excel at governance and risk management.
McKinsey on Finance
PE Directors
Exhibit 2 of 2
Source: Interviews with about 20 UK-based directors who have served, over the past 5 years, on the boards of both private and
public companies (FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses and private-equity owned), most with an enterprise value of >£500 million
Top 3 board priorities, number of respondents
Boards of private-equity
portfolio companies
Boards of public limited
companies (PLCs)
Value creation 18 5
External relations 4 5
Exit strategy 11 0
100-day plan 5 0
5 9
Strategic initiatives
(including M&A)
9 0
Governance,
compliance, and risk
0 7
Organization design
and succession
Governance and risk
48 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
in adding value, we sought to learn why.
The comments of the respondents suggest two key
differences. First, nonexecutive directors of
public companies are more focused on risk
avoidance than on value creation (Exhibit 2). This
attitude isn’t necessarily illogical: such
directors are not fnancially rewarded by a
company’s success, and they may lose
their hard-earned reputations if investors
are disappointed.
Second, our respondents noted a greater level of
engagement by nonexecutive directors at
PE-backed companies. The survey suggested that
PE directors spend, on average, nearly three
times as many days on their roles as do those at
public companies (54 versus 19). Even in
the bigger FTSE 100 companies, the average
commitment is only 25 days a year. Respondents
also observed differences in the way non-
executive directors invest their time. In both
models of ownership, they spend around
15 to 20 days a year on formal sessions, such as
board and committee meetings. However,
PE nonexecutives devote an additional 35 to 40
days to hands-on, informal interactions
(such as feld visits, ad hoc meetings with execu-
tives, phone calls, and e-mails), compared
with only 3 to 5 days a year for nonexecutive
directors at public companies.
1
We interviewed directors who had, over the past fve years,
served on the boards both of FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses
and PE-owned companies with a typical value of more than
£500 million. While the number of interviewees may seem small,
it is probably a large proportion of the limited population of
such directors.
2
See David Walker, Guidelines for Disclosure and Transparency
in Private Equity, Walker Working Group, 2007.
3
See Derek Higgs, Review on the Role and Effectiveness
of Non-Executive Directors, UK Department of Trade and
Industry, 2003.
49
Hedging is hot. Shifts in supply-and-demand
dynamics and global fnancial turmoil have created
unprecedented volatility in commodity prices in
recent years. Meanwhile, executives at companies
that buy, sell, or produce commodities have
faced equally dramatic swings in proftability.
Many have stepped up their use of hedging
to attempt to manage this volatility and, in some
instances, to avoid situations that could put
a company’s survival in jeopardy.
When done well, the fnancial, strategic, and oper-
ational benefts of hedging can go beyond
merely avoiding fnancial distress, by opening up
options to preserve and create value as well.
But done poorly, hedging in commodities often
overwhelms the logic behind it and can
actually destroy more value than was originally
at risk. Perhaps individual business units
hedge opposite sides of the same risk, or managers
expend too much effort hedging risks that are
Bryan Fisher and Ankush Kumar
The right way to hedge
Deciding how and what to hedge requires a company-wide look at the total
costs and benefits.
Number 36,
Summer 2010
Governance and risk
50 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
immaterial to a company’s health. Managers can
also underestimate the full costs of hedging
or overlook natural hedges in deference to costly
fnancial ones. No question, hedging can entail
complex calculations and diffcult trade-offs. But
in our experience, keeping in mind a few
simple pointers can help nip problems early and
make hedging strategies more effective.
Hedge net economic exposure
Too many hedging programs target the nominal
risks of “siloed” businesses rather than a
company’s net economic exposure—aggregated
risk across the broad enterprise that also
includes the indirect risks.
1
This siloed approach
is a problem, especially in large multibusiness
organizations: managers of business units
or divisions focus on their own risks without con-
sidering risks and hedging activities elsewhere
in the company.
At a large international industrial company, for
example, one business unit decided to hedge
its foreign-exchange exposure from the sale of
$700 million in goods to Brazil, inadvertently
increasing the company’s net exposure to fuctu-
ations in foreign currency. The unit’s managers
hadn’t known that a second business unit was at
the same time sourcing about $500 million
of goods from Brazil, so instead of the company’s
natural $200 million exposure, it ended up
with a net exposure of $500 million—a signifcant
risk for this company.
Elsewhere, the purchasing manager of a large
chemical company used the fnancial markets to
hedge its direct natural-gas costs—which
amounted to more than $1 billion, or half of its
input costs for the year. However, the com-
pany’s sales contracts were structured so that
natural-gas prices were treated as a pass-
through (for example, with an index-based pricing
mechanism). The company’s natural position
had little exposure to gas price movements, since
price fuctuations were adjusted, or hedged, in
its sales contracts. By adding a fnancial hedge to
its input costs, the company was signifcantly
increasing its exposure to natural-gas prices—
essentially locking in an input price for gas with a
foating sales price. If the oversight had gone
unnoticed, a 20 percent decrease in gas prices
would have wiped out all of the company’s
projected earnings.
Keep in mind that net economic exposure includes
indirect risks, which in some cases account
for the bulk of a company’s total risk exposure.
2
Companies can be exposed to indirect risks
through both business practices (such as contract-
ing terms with customers) and market factors
(for instance, changes in the competitive environ-
ment). When a snowmobile manufacturer in
Canada hedged the foreign-exchange exposure of
its supply costs, denominated in Canadian dollars,
for example, the hedge successfully protected
it from cost increases when the Canadian dollar
rose against the US dollar. However, the costs
for the company’s US competitors were in depreci-
ating US dollars. The snowmobile maker’s
net economic exposure to a rising Canadian dollar
therefore came not just from higher manufac-
turing costs but also from lower sales as Canadian
customers rushed to buy cheaper snowmobiles
from competitors in the United States.
In some cases, a company’s net economic
exposure can be lower than its apparent nominal
exposure. An oil refnery, for example, faces
a large nominal exposure to crude-oil costs, which
make up about 85 percent of the cost of its out-
put, such as gasoline and diesel. Yet the company’s
true economic exposure is much lower, since
the refneries across the industry largely face the
same crude price exposure (with some minor
51
differences for confguration) and they typically
pass changes in crude oil prices through to
customers. So in practice, each refnery’s true
economic exposure is a small fraction of
its nominal exposure because of the industry
structure and competitive environment.
To identify a company’s true economic exposure,
start by determining the natural offsets across
businesses to ensure that hedging activities don’t
actually increase it. Typically, the critical task
of identifying and aggregating exposure to risk
on a company-wide basis involves compiling
a global risk “book” (similar to those used by
fnancial and other trading institutions) to see the
big picture—the different elements of risk—on
a consistent basis.
Calculate total costs and benefits
Many risk managers underestimate the true
cost of hedging, typically focusing only on the
direct transactional costs, such as bid–ask
spreads and broker fees. These components are
often only a small portion of total hedge
costs (Exhibit 1), leaving out indirect ones, which
can be the largest portion of the total. As
a result, the cost of many hedging programs far
exceeds their beneft.
Two kinds of indirect costs are worth discussing:
the opportunity cost of holding margin capital
and lost upside. First, when a company enters into
some fnancial-hedging arrangements, it often
must hold additional capital on its balance sheet
against potential future obligations. This
requirement ties up signifcant capital that might
have been better applied to other projects,
creating an opportunity cost that managers often
overlook. A natural-gas producer that hedges
its entire annual production output, valued at
$3 billion in sales, for example, would be required
to hold or post capital of around $1 billion,
since gas prices can fuctuate up to 30 to 35 percent
in a given year. At a 6 percent interest rate,
the cost of holding or posting margin capital
translates to $60 million per year.
Exhibit 1 Direct costs account for only a fraction
of the total cost of hedging.
McKinsey on Finance #36
Hedging
Exhibit 1 of 2
Example: A gas producer hedged 3 years of its gas production
with a forward contract on a ?nancial exchange
Estimated costs of hedging, % of total
value of revenues or costs hedged
Description
4.1–10.4 Total
Direct costs 0.1–0.4
• Bid–ask spread
• Marketing/origination fees
Opportunity cost
of margin capital
3.0–7.0
• Opportunity cost of margin capital required to withstand signi?cant
price moves (in this case, a two-sigma event—5% likelihood)
• Counterparty risk for in-the-money positions
Net asymmetric
upside lost
1.0–3.0
• The asymmetric exposure to varying gas prices makes the
protected downside less than the lost upside
Governance and risk
52 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Another indirect cost is lost upside. When the
probability that prices will move favorably (rise,
for example) is higher than the probability
that they’ll move unfavorably (fall, for example),
hedging to lock in current prices can cost more
in forgone upside than the value of the downside
protection. This cost depends on an organiza-
tion’s view of commodity price foors and ceilings.
A large independent natural-gas producer,
for example, was evaluating a hedge for its produc-
tion during the coming two years. The price of
natural gas in the futures markets was $5.50 per
million British thermal units (BTUs). The
company’s fundamental perspective was that gas
prices in the next two years would stay within
a range of $5.00 to $8.00 per million BTUs. By
hedging production at $5.50 per million BTUs,
the company protected itself from only a
$0.50 decline in prices and gave up a potential
upside of $2.50 if prices rose to $8.00.
Hedge only what matters
Companies should hedge only exposures that
pose a material risk to their fnancial health or
threaten their strategic plans. Yet too often
we fnd that companies (under pressure from the
capital markets) or individual business units
(under pressure from management to provide
earnings certainty) adopt hedging programs
that create little or no value for shareholders. An
integrated aluminum company, for example,
hedged its exposure to crude oil and natural gas
for years, even though they had a very limited
impact on its overall margins. Yet it did not hedge
its exposure to aluminum, which drove more than
75 percent of margin volatility. Large conglom-
erates are particularly susceptible to this problem
when individual business units hedge to protect
their performance against risks that are immaterial
at a portfolio level. Hedging these smaller
exposures affects a company’s risk profle only
Exhibit 2 Companies should develop a pro?le of probable cash ?ows—
one that re?ects a company-wide calculation of risk exposures and
sources of cash.
McKinsey on Finance #36
Exhibit < > of < >
Cash ?ow distribution and cash needs
Probability
Interest
and
principal
Dividend
Avoid
distress
Provide
reliability
Protect
investments/
growth
Keep
strategic
?exibility
Strategic
capital
expenditure
R&D and
marketing
Maintenance
capital
expenditures
Project
capital
expenditures
High
Low
Probability of meeting
cash obligations (eg,
interest, dividends)
Distribution of potential cash
?ows to meet these cash
obligations
53
marginally—and isn’t worth the management
time and focus they require.
To determine whether exposure to a given risk
is material, it is important to understand whether
a company’s cash fows are adequate for its cash
needs. Most managers base their assessments of
cash fows on scenarios without considering
how likely those scenarios are. This approach
would help managers evaluate a company’s
fnancial resilience if those scenarios came to
pass, but it doesn’t determine how material
certain risks are to the fnancial health of the
company or how susceptible it is to fnan-
cial distress. That assessment would require
managers to develop a profle of probable
cash fows—a profle that refects a company-wide
calculation of risk exposures and sources of cash.
Managers should then compare the company’s
cash needs (starting with the least discretionary
and moving to the most discretionary) with
the cash fow profle to quantify the likelihood
of a cash shortfall. They should also be sure
to conduct this analysis at the portfolio level to
account for the diversifcation of risks across
different business lines (Exhibit 2).
A high probability of a cash shortfall given
nondiscretionary cash requirements, such as
debt obligations or maintenance capital
expenditures, indicates a high risk of fnancial
distress. Companies in this position should
take aggressive steps, including hedging, to
mitigate risk. If, on the other hand, a company
fnds that it can fnance its strategic plans
with a high degree of certainty even without
hedging, it should avoid (or unwind) an
expensive hedging program.
Look beyond financial hedges
An effective risk-management program often
includes a combination of fnancial hedges and
nonfnancial levers to alleviate risk. Yet few
companies fully explore alternatives to fnancial
hedging, which include commercial or opera-
tional tactics that can reduce risks more effectively
and inexpensively. Among them: contracting
decisions that pass risk through to a counterparty;
strategic moves, such as vertical integration;
and operational changes, such as revising product
specifcations, shutting down manufacturing
facilities when input costs peak, or holding
additional cash reserves. Companies should test
the effectiveness of different risk mitigation
strategies by quantitatively comparing the total
cost of each approach with the benefts.
The complexity of day-to-day hedging in
commodities can easily overwhelm its logic and
value. To avoid such problems, a broad stra-
tegic perspective and a commonsense analysis are
often good places to start.
1
See Eric Lamarre and Martin Pergler, “Risk: Seeing
around the corners,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 33,
Autumn 2009, pp. 2–7.
2
Indirect risks arise as a result of changes in competitors’ cost
structures, disruption in the supply chain, disruption
of distribution channels, and shifts in customer behavior.
Governance and risk
54 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Risk: Seeing around the corners
Number 33,
Autumn 2009
Clearly, companies must look beyond immediate, obvious risks and learn to evaluate aftereffects
that could destabilize whole value chains, including all direct as well as indirect risks in several areas:
Competitors. Often the most important area to investigate is the way risks might change a company’s
cost position versus its competitors or substitute products. Companies are particularly vulnerable
when their currency exposures, supply bases, or cost structures differ from those of their rivals. In fact, all
differences in business models create the potential for a competitive risk exposure, favorable or
unfavorable. The point isn’t that a company should imitate its competitors but rather that it should think
about the risks it implicitly assumes when its strategy departs from theirs.
Supply chains. Classic examples of risk cascading through supply chains include disruptions in the
availability of parts or raw materials, changes in the cost structures of suppliers, and shifts in logistics
costs. When the price of oil reached $150 a barrel in 2008, for example, many offshore suppliers
became substantially less cost competitive in the US market. Consider the case of steel. Since Chinese
imports were the marginal price setters in the United States, prices for steel rose 20 percent there
as the cost of shipping it from China rose by nearly $100 a ton. The fact that logistics costs depend
signi?cantly on oil prices is hardly surprising, but few companies that buy substantial amounts
of steel considered their second-order oil price exposure through the supply chain.
Distribution channels. Indirect risks can also lurk in distribution channels, and effects may include an
inability to reach end customers, changed distribution costs, or even radically rede?ned business models.
For example, the bankruptcy and liquidation of the major US big-box consumer electronics retailer
Circuit City, in 2008, had a cascading impact on the industry. Most directly, electronics manufacturers
held some $600 million in unpaid receivables that were suddenly at risk. The bankruptcy also
created indirect risks for these companies, in the form of price pressures and bargain-hunting behavior as
liquidators sold off discounted merchandise right in the middle of the peak Christmas buying season.
Customer response. Often, the most complex knock-on effects are the responses from customers,
because those responses can be so diverse and involve so many factors. One typical cascading effect is
a shift in buying patterns, as in the case of the Canadians who went shopping in the United States
with their stronger currency. Another is changed demand levels, such as the impact of higher fuel prices
on the auto market: as the price of gasoline increased in recent years, there was a clear shift from
large SUVs to compact cars, with hybrids rapidly becoming serious contenders.
Eric Lamarre and Martin Pergler
55
Excerpt from
Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think
Number 7,
Spring 2003
Marc H. Goedhart and Peter Haden
No question, emerging-market investments are exposed to additional risks, including accelerated in?ation,
exchange rate changes, adverse repatriation and ?scal measures, and macroeconomic and political
distress. These elements clearly call for a different approach to investment decisions.
However, while individual country risks may be high, they actually have low correlations with each other.
As a result, the overall performance of an emerging-market portfolio can be quite stable if invest-
ments are spread out over several countries. At one international consumer goods company, for example,
returns on invested capital for the combined portfolio of emerging-market businesses have been
as stable as those for developed markets in North America and Europe over the last 20 years.
1
We found
similarly low correlations of GDP growth across emerging-market economies and the United States
and Europe over the last 15 years (exhibit). These ?ndings, we believe, also hold for other sectors.
Country-speci?c risks can also affect different businesses differently. For one parent company, sustaining
its emerging-market businesses during a crisis not only demonstrated that it could counter country
speci?c risk but also strengthened its position as local funding for competitors dried up. For this company,
sales growth, when measured in a stable currency, tended to pick up strongly after a crisis, a pattern
that played out consistently through all the crises it encountered in emerging markets.
Return on invested capital (ROIC) for international consumer goods company; index: combined-portfolio ROIC
for developed markets = 100 in 1981
Smoothing out the risks
McKinsey on Finance
Emerging Markets
Exhibit 1 of 3
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
–100
ROIC
1
for combined portfolios ROIC
1
for selected individual emerging markets
1
Expressed in stable currency prior to indexing and adjusted for local accounting differences; combined portfolio includes
additional countries not reflected in exhibit.
1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
–100
1981 1985 1989
Emerging
markets
Developed
markets
1993 1997 2001
Country D
Country E
Country A
Country B
Country C
Governance and risk
56
Dealing with investors
57
In this section:
Robert N. Palter, Werner Rehm, and Jonathan Shih
Communicating with
the right investors
Executives spend too much time talking with investors who don’t matter.
Here’s how to identify those who do.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Features
57 Communicating with the right investors (Spring 2008)
64 Do fundamentals—or emotions—drive the stock market? (Spring 2005)
Excerpts from
60 Inside a hedge fund: An interview with the managing partner of
Maverick Capital (Spring 2006)
62 Numbers investors can trust (Summer 2003)
63 The misguided practice of earnings guidance (Spring 2006)
69 The truth about growth and value stocks (Winter 2007)
Many executives spend too much time communi-
cating with investors they would be better off ignor-
ing. CEOs and CFOs, in particular, devote an
inordinate amount of time to one-on-one meetings
with investors, investment conferences, and other
shareholder communications,
1
often without having
a clear picture of which investors really count.
The reason, in part, is that too many companies
segment investors using traditional methods
that yield only a shallow understanding of their
motives and behavior; for example, we repeatedly
run across investor relations groups that try
to position investors as growth or value investors—
mirroring the classic approach that investors
use to segment companies. The expectation is that
growth investors will pay more, so if a company
can persuade them to buy its stock, its share price
will rise. That expectation is false: many
growth investors buy after an increase in share
58 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit When intrinsic investors trade, they trade more per
day than other investors do.
McKinsey on 27
Investor Communications
Exhibit 2 of 2
1
Includes only days when investor traded.
Annual trading
activity per
segment, $ trillion
Investor
segment
Annual trading
activity per investor
in segment, $ billion
Annual trading
activity per investor
in segment per
investment, $ million
Trading activity per
investor in segment
per investment per
day,
1
$ million
Trading
oriented
11 88 277 1
Mechanical 6 6 17 2
Intrinsic 6 72 79–109 3
prices. More important, traditional segmenta-
tion approaches reveal little about the way
investors decide to buy and sell shares. How long
does an investor typically hold onto a position,
for example? How concentrated is the investor’s
portfolio? Which fnancial and operational
data are most helpful for the investor? We believe
that the answers to these and similar
questions provide better insights for classi-
fying investors.
Once a company segments investors along the
right lines, it can quickly identify those who
matter most. These important investors, whom
we call “intrinsic” investors, base their deci-
sions on a deep understanding of a company’s
strategy, its current performance, and its
potential to create long-term value. They are also
more likely than other investors to support
management through short-term volatility.
Executives who reach out to intrinsic investors,
leaving others to the investor relations
department,
2
will devote less time to investor
relations and communicate a clearer, more
focused message. The result should be a better
alignment between a company’s intrinsic
value and its market value, one of the core goals of
investor relations.
3
A better segmentation
No executive would talk to important customers
without understanding how they make
purchase decisions, yet many routinely talk to
investors without understanding their
investment criteria. Our analysis of typical
holding periods, investment portfolio
concentrations, the number of professionals
involved in decisions, and average trading
volumes—as well as the level of detail investors
require when they undertake research
on a company—suggests that investors can be
distributed among three broad categories.
Intrinsic investors
Intrinsic investors take a position in a company
only after rigorous due diligence of its
intrinsic ability to create long-term value. This
scrutiny typically takes more than a month.
59
We estimate that these investors hold 20 percent
of US assets and contribute 10 percent of the
trading volume in the US market.
In interviews with more than 20 intrinsic
investors, we found that they have concentrated
portfolios—each position, on average, makes
up 2 to 3 percent of their portfolios and perhaps
as much as 10 percent; the average position
of other investors is less than 1 percent. Intrinsic
investors also hold few positions per analyst
(from four to ten companies) and hold shares for
several years. Once they have invested, these
professionals support the current management
and strategy through short-term volatility.
In view of all the effort intrinsic investors expend,
executives can expect to have their full
attention while reaching out to them, for they
take the time to listen, to analyze, and to
ask insightful questions.
These investors also have a large impact on
the way a company’s intrinsic value lines up with
its market value—an effect that occurs
mechanically because when they trade, they trade
in high volumes (exhibit). They also have a
psychological effect on the market because their
reputation for very well-timed trades magnifes
their infuence on other investors. One indication
of their infuence: there are entire Web sites
(such as GuruFocus.com, Stockpickr.com, and
Mffais.com) that follow the portfolios of
well-known intrinsic investors.
Mechanical investors
Mechanical investors, including computer-run
index funds and investors who use computer
models to drive their trades, make decisions based
on strict criteria or rules. We also include
in this category the so-called closet index funds.
These are large institutional investors whose
portfolios resemble those of an index fund because
of their size, even though they don’t position
themselves in that way.
4
We estimate that around 32 percent of the
total equity in the United States sits in purely
mechanical investment funds of all kinds.
Because their approach offers no real room for
qualitative decision criteria, such as the
strength of a management team or a strategy,
investor relations can’t infuence them to
include a company’s shares in an index fund.
Similarly, these investors’ quantitative criteria,
such as buying stocks with low price-to-
equity ratios or the shares of companies below
a certain size, are based on mathematical
models of greater or lesser sophistication, not
on insights about fundamental strategy and
value creation.
In the case of closet index funds, each investment
professional handles, on average, 100 to
150 positions, making it impossible to do in-depth
research that could be infuenced by meetings
with an investment target’s management. In part,
the high number of positions per professional
refects the fact that most closet index funds are
part of larger investment houses that sepa-
rate the roles of fund manager and researcher.
The managers of intrinsic investors, by
contrast, know every company in their portfolios
in depth.
Traders
The investment professionals in the trader
group seek short-term fnancial gain by betting on
news items, such as the possibility that a com-
pany’s quarterly earnings per share (EPS) will be
above or below the consensus view or, in the
case of a drug maker, recent reports that a clinical
trial has gone badly. Traders control about
35 percent of US equity holdings. Such investors
don’t really want to understand companies
Dealing with investors
60 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Inside a hedge fund
Number 19,
Spring 2006
First and foremost, we’re trying to understand
the business. How sustainable is growth?
How sustainable are returns on capital? How
intelligently is it deploying that capital?
Our goal is to know more about every one of
the companies in which we invest than
any noninsider does. On average, we hold
fewer than ?ve positions per investment
professional—a ratio that is far lower than most
hedge funds and even large mutual-fund
complexes. And our sector heads, who on
average have over 15 years of investment
experience, have typically spent their entire
careers focused on just one industry,
allowing them to develop long-term relationships
not only with the senior management of
most of the signi?cant companies but also with
employees several levels below.
‘
’
Lee Ainslie
Managing partner of
Maverick Capital
on a deep level—they just seek better information
for making trades. Not that traders don’t
understand companies or industries; on the con-
trary, these investors follow the news about
them closely and often approach companies
directly, seeking nuances or insights that could
matter greatly in the short term. The average
investment professional in this segment has 20 or
more positions to follow, however, and trades
in and out of them quickly to capture small gains
over short periods—as short as a few days or
even hours. Executives therefore have no reason
to spend time with traders.
Focused communications
Most investor relations departments could create
the kind of segmentation we describe. They
should also consider several additional layers of
information, such as whether an investor
does (or plans to) hold shares in a company or
has already invested elsewhere in its sector.
A thorough segmentation that identifes sophisti-
cated intrinsic investors will allow companies to
manage their investor relations more successfully.
Don’t oversimplify your message
Intrinsic investors have spent considerable effort
to understand your business, so don’t boil down
a discussion of strategy and performance to
a ten-second sound bite for the press or traders.
Management should also be open about the
relevant details of the company’s current
performance and how it relates to strategy. Says
one portfolio manager, “I don’t want inside
information. But I do want management to look
me in the eye when they talk about their
performance. If they avoid a discussion or
explanation, we will not invest, no matter how
attractive the numbers look.”
Interpret feedback in the right context
Most companies agree that it is useful to
understand the views of investors while develop-
ing strategies and investor communications.
Yet management often relies on simple summaries
of interviews with investors and sell-side analysts
about everything from strategy to quarterly
earnings to share repurchases. This approach
gives management no way of linking the
views of investors to their importance for the
company or to their investment strategies.
A segmented approach, which clarifes each
investor’s goals and needs, lets execu-
tives interpret feedback in context and weigh
messages accordingly.
61
Prioritize management’s time
A CEO or CFO should devote time to
communicating only with the most important and
knowledgeable intrinsic investors that have
professionals specializing in the company’s sector.
Moreover, a CEO should think twice before
attending conferences if equity analysts have
arranged the guest lists, unless manage-
ment regards those guests as intrinsic investors.
When a company focuses its communica-
tions on them, it may well have more impact in
a shorter amount of time.
In our experience, intrinsic investors think
that executives should spend no more than about
10 percent of their time on investor-related
activities, so management should be actively
engaging with 15 to 20 investors at most.
The investor relations department ought to
identify the most important ones, review
the list regularly, and protect management from
the telephone calls of analysts and mechanical
investors, who are not a high priority. Executives
should talk to equity analysts only if their
reports are important channels for interpreting
complicated news; otherwise, investor
relations can give them any relevant data they
require, if available.
Marketing executives routinely segment customers
by the decision processes those customers use
and tailor the corporate image and ad campaigns
to the most important ones. Companies
could beneft from a similar kind of analytic rigor
in their investor relations.
1
Including a wide range of communications activities,
such as annual shareholder meetings, conferences with sell-side
analysts, quarterly earnings calls, and market updates.
2
This article deals only with institutional investors, since
management usually spends the most time with them.
We also exclude activist investors, as they represent a different
investor relations issue for management.
3
If this goal sounds counterintuitive, consider the alternatives.
Clearly, undervaluation isn’t desirable. An overvaluation
is going to be corrected sooner or later, and the correction will,
among other things, distress board members and employees
with worthless stock options issued when the shares
were overvalued.
4
For more on closet index funds, see Martijn Cremers and
Antti Petajist, “How active is your fund manager? A new measure
that predicts performance,” AFA Chicago Meetings Paper,
January 15, 2007.
Dealing with investors
62 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Numbers investors can trust
Number 8,
Summer 2003
Tim Koller
Financial statements should be organized with more detail and with an aim to clearly separating operating
from nonoperating items. It’s not easy. In fact, current accounting rules exhibit something less than
common sense in de?ning operating versus nonoperating or nonrecurring items. As a start, however,
company income statements should close the biggest gaps in the current system by separately
identifying the following items.
Nonrecurring pension expense adjustments. These often have more to do with the performance of
the pension fund than the operating performance of the company. Investors would bene?t from being able
to assess a company’s operating performance compared to peers over time separately from its skills
at managing its pension assets.
Gains and losses from assets sales that are not recurring. Large companies like to bury gains from asset
sales in operating results because it makes their operating performance look better, often arguing that
the impact is immaterial. But investors should be the ones who decide what is material. Companies should
also separate out gains from losses. Now companies sometimes sell assets to create gains to offset
losses from asset sales, and some top-ranked multinationals are well known for doing this on a regular basis.
This is a perverse incentive that would go away if companies were required to disclose gains and losses.
In a more useful income statement, complex or nonrecurring items such as pension expenses, stock
options, changes in restructuring reserves, and asset gains or losses would be separately disclosed,
regardless of materiality. Similarly, balance sheets should separate assets and liabilities that are used in the
operations of the business from other assets and liabilities, such as excess cash not needed to fund
the operations, or investments in unrelated activities.
A more useful approach to reporting would also include a focus on business units. Today’s large companies
are complex, with multiple business units that rarely have the same growth potential and pro?tability.
Sophisticated investors will try to value each business unit separately or build up consolidated forecasts
from the sum of the individual business units. Yet many companies report only the minimum required
information and often not enough for investors to understand the underlying health of the business units.
Nearly always, business unit results are relegated to the footnotes at the back of the annual report,
though a good case can be made that business unit reporting is in fact more important than the
consolidated results and should be the focus of corporate reporting. At a minimum, companies should
produce a clear operating-income statement.
63
Excerpt from
The misguided practice of earnings guidance
Number 19,
Spring 2006
Peggy Hsieh, Tim Koller, and S. R. Rajan
Most companies view the quarterly ritual of issuing earnings guidance as a necessary, if sometimes
onerous, part of investor relations. The bene?ts, they hope, are improved communications with
?nancial markets, lower share price volatility, and higher valuations. At the least, companies expect
frequent earnings guidance to boost their stock’s liquidity.
Yet our analysis of companies across all sectors and an in-depth examination of two mature represen-
tative industries—consumer packaged goods (CPG) and pharmaceuticals—found no evidence to support
those expectations. The ?ndings fell into three categories:
Valuations. Contrary to what some companies believe, frequent guidance does not result in
superior valuations in the marketplace; indeed, guidance appears to have no signi?cant relationship
with valuations—regardless of the year, the industry, or the size of the company in question.
Volatility. When a company begins to issue earnings guidance, its share price volatility is as likely to
increase as to decrease compared with that of companies that don’t issue guidance.
Liquidity. When companies begin issuing quarterly earnings guidance, they experience increases
in trading volumes relative to companies that don’t provide it. However, the relative increase in trading
volumes—which is more prevalent for companies with revenues in excess of $2 billion—wears off
the following year.
With scant evidence of any shareholder bene?ts to be gained from providing frequent earnings
guidance but clear evidence of increased costs, managers should consider whether there is a better way
to communicate with analysts and investors.
We believe there is. Instead of providing frequent earnings guidance, companies can help the market to
understand their business, the underlying value drivers, the expected business climate, and their
strategy—in short, to understand their long-term health as well as their short-term performance. Analysts
and investors would then be better equipped to forecast the ?nancial performance of these companies
and to reach conclusions about their value.
Dealing with investors
64 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
There’s never been a better time to be a behav-
iorist. During four decades, the academic theory
that fnancial markets accurately refect a
stock’s underlying value was all but unassailable.
But lately, the view that investors can fun-
damentally change a market’s course through
irrational decisions has been moving into
the mainstream.
With the exuberance of the high-tech stock bubble
and the crash of the late 1990s still fresh in
investors’ memories, adherents of the behaviorist
school are fnding it easier than ever to spread
the belief that markets can be something less than
effcient in immediately distilling new infor-
mation and that investors, driven by emotion, can
indeed lead markets awry. Some behaviorists
would even assert that stock markets lead lives of
their own, detached from economic growth
and business proftability. A number of fnance
scholars and practitioners have argued that
stock markets are not effcient—that is, that they
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and David Wessels
Do fundamentals—
or emotions—drive the
stock market?
Emotions can drive market behavior in a few short-lived situations. But fundamentals still rule. Number 15,
Spring 2005
65
don’t necessarily refect economic fundamentals.
1
According to this point of view, signifcant and
lasting deviations from the intrinsic value of a com-
pany’s share price occur in market valuations.
The argument is more than academic. In the
1980s, the rise of stock market index funds, which
now hold some $1 trillion in assets, was caused
in large part by the conviction among investors
that effcient-market theories were valuable.
And current debates in the United States and else-
where about privatizing Social Security and
other retirement systems may hinge on
assumptions about how investors are likely to
handle their retirement options.
We agree that behavioral fnance offers some
valuable insights—chief among them the idea that
markets are not always right, since rational
investors can’t always correct for mispricing by
irrational ones. But for managers, the critical
question is how often these deviations arise and
whether they are so frequent and signifcant
that they should affect the process of fnancial
decision making. In fact, signifcant devia-
tions from intrinsic value are rare, and markets
usually revert rapidly to share prices commen-
surate with economic fundamentals. Therefore,
managers should continue to use the tried-
and-true analysis of a company’s discounted cash
fow to make their valuation decisions.
When markets deviate
Behavioral-fnance theory holds that markets
might fail to refect economic fundamentals under
three conditions. When all three apply, the
theory predicts that pricing biases in fnancial
markets can be both signifcant and persistent.
Irrational behavior
Investors behave irrationally when they don’t
correctly process all the available information
while forming their expectations of a company’s
future performance. Some investors, for example,
attach too much importance to recent events
and results, an error that leads them to overprice
companies with strong recent performance.
Others are excessively conservative and under-
price stocks of companies that have released
positive news.
Systematic patterns of behavior
Even if individual investors decided to buy or sell
without consulting economic fundamentals, the
impact on share prices would still be limited. Only
when their irrational behavior is also systematic
(that is, when large groups of investors share
particular patterns of behavior) should persistent
price deviations occur. Hence behavioral-fnance
theory argues that patterns of overconfdence,
overreaction, and overrepresentation are common
to many investors and that such groups can be
large enough to prevent a company’s share price
from refecting underlying economic
fundamentals—at least for some stocks, some
of the time.
Limits to arbitrage in financial markets
When investors assume that a company’s recent
strong performance alone is an indication
of future performance, they may start bidding
for shares and drive up the price. Some
investors might expect a company that surprises
the market in one quarter to go on exceeding
expectations. As long as enough other investors
notice this myopic overpricing and respond
by taking short positions, the share price will fall
in line with its underlying indicators.
This sort of arbitrage doesn’t always occur,
however. In practice, the costs, complexity, and
risks involved in setting up a short position
can be too high for individual investors. If, for
example, the share price doesn’t return to
Dealing with investors
66 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
its fundamental value while they can still hold
on to a short position—the so-called noise-
trader risk—they may have to sell their holdings
at a loss.
Persistent mispricing in carve-outs and
dual-listed companies
Two well-documented types of market deviation—
the mispricing of carve-outs and of dual-
listed companies—are used to support behavioral-
fnance theory. The classic example is the
pricing of 3Com and Palm after the latter’s
carve-out in March 2000.
In anticipation of a full spin-off within nine
months, 3Com foated 5 percent of its Palm
subsidiary. Almost immediately, Palm’s market
capitalization was higher than the entire
market value of 3Com, implying that 3Com’s other
businesses had a negative value. Given the size
and proftability of the rest of 3Com’s businesses,
this result would clearly indicate mispricing.
Why did rational investors fail to exploit the
anomaly by going short on Palm’s shares and long
on 3Com’s? The reason was that the number
of available Palm shares was extremely small after
the carve-out: 3Com still held 95 percent
of them. As a result, it was extremely diffcult
to establish a short position, which
would have required borrowing shares from
a Palm shareholder.
During the months following the carve-out,
the mispricing gradually became less pronounced
as the supply of shares through short sales
increased steadily. Yet while many investors and
analysts knew about the price difference,
it persisted for two months—until the Internal
Revenue Service formally approved the
carve-out’s tax-free status in early May 2002.
At that point, a signifcant part of the uncertainty
around the spin-off was removed and
the price discrepancy disappeared. This correction
suggests that at least part of the mispricing was
caused by the risk that the spin-off wouldn’t occur.
Additional cases of mispricing between parent
companies and their carved-out subsidiaries are
well documented.
2
In general, these cases
involve diffculties setting up short positions to
exploit the price differences, which persist
until the spin-off takes place or is abandoned. In
all cases, the mispricing was corrected within
several months.
A second classic example of investors deviating
from fundamentals is the price disparity between
the shares of the same company traded on two
different exchanges. Does this indict the market
for mispricing? We don’t think so. In recent
years, the price differences for Royal Dutch/Shell
and other twin-share stocks have all become
smaller. Furthermore, some of these share
structures (and price differences) disappeared
because the corporations formally merged,
a development that underlines the signifcance of
noise-trader risk: as soon as a formal date was
set for defnitive price convergence, arbitrageurs
stepped in to correct any discrepancy.
This pattern provides additional evidence that
mispricing occurs only under special
circumstances—and is by no means a common
or long-lasting phenomenon.
Markets and fundamentals:
The bubble of the 1990s
Do markets refect economic fundamentals? We
believe so. Long-term returns on capital and
growth have been remarkably consistent for the
past 35 years, in spite of some deep recessions
and periods of very strong economic growth. The
median return on equity for all US compa-
nies has been a very stable 12 to 15 percent, and
long-term GDP growth for the US economy in real
67
terms has been about 3 percent a year since
1945.
3
We also estimate that the infation-adjusted
cost of equity since 1965 has been fairly stable,
at about 7 percent.
4
We used this information to estimate the intrinsic
P/E ratios for the US and UK stock markets and
then compared them with the actual values.
5
This
analysis has led us to three important conclu-
sions. The frst is that US and UK stock markets,
by and large, have been fairly priced, hover-
ing near their intrinsic P/E ratios. This fgure was
typically around 15, with the exception of the
high-infation years of the late 1970s and early
1980s, when it was closer to 10 (exhibit).
Second, the late 1970s and late 1990s produced
signifcant deviations from intrinsic valuations. In
the late 1970s, when investors were obsessed
with high short-term infation rates, the market
was probably undervalued; long-term real
GDP growth and returns on equity indicate
that it shouldn’t have bottomed out at P/E
levels of around 7. The other well-known deviation
occurred in the late 1990s, when the market
reached a P/E ratio of around 30—a level that
couldn’t be justifed by 3 percent long-term
real GDP growth or by 13 percent returns on
book equity.
Third, when such deviations occurred, the stock
market returned to its intrinsic-valuation
level within about three years. Thus, although
valuations have been wrong from time
to time—even for the stock market as a whole—
eventually they have fallen back in line
with economic fundamentals.
Focus on intrinsic value
What are the implications for corporate managers?
Paradoxically, we believe that such market
deviations make it even more important for the
executives of a company to understand
the intrinsic value of its shares. This knowledge
allows it to exploit any deviations, if and
when they occur, to time the implementation of
strategic decisions more successfully. Here
are some examples of how corporate managers
can take advantage of market deviations:
• issuing additional share capital when
the stock market attaches too high a value to
the company’s shares relative to their
intrinsic value
Exhibit Trends for P/E ratios reveal some ?uctuation followed
by a return to intrinsic valuation levels.
McKinsey on Finance
Behavior
Exhibit 2 of 2
1
Weighted average P/E of constituent companies.
Source: Standard & Poor’s; McKinsey analysis
1980 2002 1990 1999
P/E for S&P 500 overall
1
9 15 30 19
All other companies 9 15 23 16
30 largest companies 9 15 46 20
P/ E ratio for listed companies in United States
Dealing with investors
68 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
• repurchasing shares when the market under-
prices them relative to their intrinsic value
• paying for acquisitions with shares instead of
cash when the market overprices them relative
to their intrinsic value
• divesting particular businesses at times
when trading and transaction multiples are
higher than can be justifed by underly-
ing fundamentals
Bear two things in mind. First, we don’t
recommend that companies base decisions to
issue or repurchase their shares, to divest or
acquire businesses, or to settle transactions with
cash or shares solely on an assumed difference
between the market and intrinsic value of their
shares. Instead, these decisions must be
grounded in a strong business strategy driven
by the goal of creating shareholder value.
Market deviations are more relevant as tactical
considerations when companies time and
execute such decisions—for example, when to
issue additional capital or how to pay for
a particular transaction.
Second, managers should be wary of analyses
claiming to highlight market deviations. Most of
the alleged cases that we have come across in
our client experience proved to be insignifcant or
even nonexistent, so the evidence should be
compelling. Furthermore, the deviations should
be signifcant in both size and duration, given
the capital and time needed to take advantage of
the types of opportunities listed previously.
Provided that a company’s share price eventually
returns to its intrinsic value in the long run,
managers would beneft from using a discounted-
cash-fow approach for strategic decisions.
What should matter is the long-term behavior of
the share price of a company, not whether it
is undervalued by 5 or 10 percent at any given
time. For strategic business decisions, the
evidence strongly suggests that the market
refects intrinsic value.
1
For an overview of behavioral fnance, see Jay R. Ritter,
“Behavioral fnance,” Pacifc-Basin Finance Journal,
2003, Volume 11, Number 4, pp. 429–37; and Nicholas Barberis
and Richard H. Thaler, “A survey of behavioral fnance,” in
Handbook of the Economics of Finance: Financial Markets and
Asset Pricing, G. M. Constantinides et al. (eds.), New York:
Elsevier North-Holland, 2003, pp. 1054–123.
2
Owen A. Lamont and Richard H. Thaler, “Can the market
add and subtract? Mispricing in tech stock carve-outs,”
Journal of Political Economy, 2003, Volume 111, Number 2,
pp. 227–68; and Mark L. Mitchell, Todd C. Pulvino, and
Erik Stafford, “Limited arbitrage in equity markets,” Journal of
Finance, 2002, Volume 57, Number 2, pp. 551–84.
3
US corporate earnings as a percentage of GDP have
been remarkably constant over the past 35 years, at around
6 percent.
4
Marc H. Goedhart, Timothy M. Koller, and Zane D. Williams,
“The real cost of equity,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 5,
Autumn 2002, pp. 11–5.
5
Marc H. Goedhart, Timothy M. Koller, and Zane D. Williams,
“Living with lower market expectations,” McKinsey on
Finance, Number 8, Summer 2003, pp. 7–11.
69
Excerpt from
The truth about growth and value stocks
Number 22,
Winter 2007
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
What’s in a name? In the vernacular of equity markets, the words “growth” and “value” convey the speci?c
characteristics of stock categories that are deeply embedded in the investment strategies of investors
and fund managers. Leading US market indexes, such as the S&P 500, the Russell 1000, and the Dow
Jones Wilshire 2500, all divide themselves into growth- and value-style indexes.
It’s not illogical to assume that having the label growth or value attached to a company’s shares can
actually drive prices up or push them lower. In our experience, many executives have expended
considerable effort plotting to attract more growth investors, believing that an in?ux of growth investors
leads to higher valuations of a stock. Some executives even turn this assumption into a rationale
for using a high share price to defend risky acquisition programs—for example, in deference to presumed
shareholder expectations of growth.
The trouble is that such thinking is wrong in both cases. Although growth stocks are indeed valued at
a higher level than value stocks on average, as measured by market-to-book ratios (M/Bs), their revenue
growth rates are virtually indistinguishable from those of value stocks (exhibit). The growth index’s
10.1 percent median compounded revenue growth rate for 2002 to 2005 is not statistically different from
the 8.7 percent median of the value index. Thus, the probability that a company designated as
a growth stock will deliver a given growth rate is virtually indistinguishable from the probability that a value
company will do so.
Companies that show up on growth indexes actually don’t grow
appreciably faster than those that show up on value indexes.
McKinsey on Finance 22
Growth stocks
Exhibit 1 of 2
1
S&P 500/Barra Growth Index and S&P 500/Barra Value Index as of Dec 2005.
2
Excluding goodwill; does not include financial-sector stocks; 3-year average adjusts for annual volatility.
Growth rate, 3-year average, 2002–05,
2
%
Median value = 8.7% Median growth = 10.1%
–3 –1 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 >25
8
10
12
14
6
4
2
0
Value stocks
Growth stocks
Frequency of growth
and value stocks exhibiting
given growth rate,
1
%
Dealing with investors
70
The CFO
71
In this section:
Bertil E. Chappuis, Aimee Kim, and Paul J. Roche
There are a few critical tasks that all finance chiefs must tackle in their
first hundred days.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Features
71 Starting up as CFO (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
72 Toward a leaner finance department (Spring 2006)
75 Organizing for value (Summer 2008)
Starting up as CFO
In recent years, CFOs have assumed increasingly
complex, strategic roles focused on driving the
creation of value across the entire business. Growing
shareholder expectations and activism, more
intense M&A, mounting regulatory scrutiny over
corporate conduct and compliance, and evolv-
ing expectations for the fnance function have put
CFOs in the middle of many corporate decisions—
and made them more directly accountable
for the performance of companies.
Not only is the job more complicated, but a lot of
CFOs are new at it—turnover in 2006 for Fortune
500 companies was estimated at 13 percent.
1
Compounding the pressures, companies are also
more likely to reach outside the organization
to recruit new CFOs, who may therefore have to
learn a new industry as well as a new role.
To show how it is changing—and how to work
through the evolving expectations—we surveyed
72 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Toward a leaner finance department
Number 19,
Spring 2006
Richard Dobbs, Herbert Pohl, and Florian Wolff
Three ideas from the lean-manufacturing world are particularly helpful in eliminating waste and improving
ef?ciency in the ?nance function:
Focusing on external customers. Many ?nance departments can implement a more ef?ciency-minded
approach by making the external customers of their companies the ultimate referee of which activities add
value and which create waste. By contrast, the ?nance function typically relies on some internal entity to
determine which reports are necessary—an approach that often unwittingly produces waste.
Exploiting chain reactions. The value of introducing a more ef?ciency-focused mind-set isn’t always
evident from just one step in the process—in fact, the payoff from a single step may be rather
disappointing. The real power is cumulative, for a single initiative frequently exposes deeper problems
that, once addressed, lead to a more comprehensive solution.
Drilling down to root causes. No matter what problem an organization faces, the ?nance function’s
default answer is often to add a new system or data warehouse to deal with complexity and
increase ef?ciency. While such moves may indeed help companies deal with dif?cult situations, they
seldom tackle the real issues.
164 CFOs of many different tenures
2
and
interviewed 20 of them. From these sources, as
well as our years of experience working with
experienced CFOs, we have distilled lessons that
shed light on what it takes to succeed. We
emphasize the initial transition period: the frst
three to six months.
Early priorities
Newly appointed CFOs are invariably interested,
often anxiously, in making their mark. Where
they should focus varies from company to company.
In some, enterprise-wide strategic and
transformational initiatives (such as value-based
management, corporate-center strategy, or
portfolio optimization) require considerable CFO
involvement. In others, day-to-day business needs
can be more demanding and time sensitive—
especially in the Sarbanes–Oxley environment—
creating signifcant distractions unless they
are carefully managed. When CFOs inherit an
organization under stress, they may have
no choice but to lead a turnaround, which requires
large amounts of time to cut costs and
reassure investors.
Yet some activities should make almost every
CFO’s short list of priorities. Getting them defned
in a company-specifc way is a critical step in
balancing efforts to achieve technical excellence
in the fnance function with strategic initiatives
to create value.
73
Conduct a value creation audit
The most critical activity during a CFO’s frst
hundred days, according to more than 55 percent
of our survey respondents, is understanding
what drives their company’s business. These
drivers include the way a company makes money,
its margin advantage, its returns on invested
capital (ROIC), and the reasons for them. At the
same time, the CFO must also consider
potential ways to improve these drivers, such as
sources of growth, operational improvements,
and changes in the business model, as well as how
much the company might gain from all of them.
To develop that understanding, several CFOs we
interviewed conducted a strategy and value
audit soon after assuming the position. They evalu-
ated their companies from an investor’s
perspective to understand how the capital markets
would value the relative impact of revenue
versus higher margins or capital effciency and
assessed whether efforts to adjust prices,
cut costs, and the like would create value, and if
so how much.
Although this kind of effort would clearly be a
priority for external hires, it can also be useful for
internal ones. As a CFO promoted internally
at one high-tech company explained, “When I was
the CFO of a business unit, I never worried
about corporate taxation. I never thought about
portfolio-level risk exposure in terms of products
and geographies. When I became corporate
CFO, I had to learn about business drivers that
are less important to individual business
unit performance.”
The choice of information sources for getting up to
speed on business drivers can vary. As CFOs
The CFO
Exhibit 1 The majority of CFOs in our survey wished they’d had
even more time with business unit heads.
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 1 of 3
If you could change the amount of time you spent with each of the
following individuals or groups during your ?rst 100 days as CFO, what
changes would you make?
Business unit heads 61 35
Former CFO 10 52 15 23
External investors or analysts 26 46 11 17
2 1
Finance staff 43 48 9
CEO 43 52 5
Board of directors 36 56 4 5
Executive committee 38 52 8
Less time Don’t know No change More time
2
1
0
% of respondents,
1
n = 164
1
Figures may not sum to 100%, because of rounding.
74 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
conducted their value audit, they typically started
by mastering existing information, usually
by meeting with business unit heads, who not only
shared the specifcs of product lines or markets
but are also important because they use the
fnance function’s services. Indeed, a majority of
CFOs in our survey, and particularly those in
private companies, wished that they had spent
even more time with this group (Exhibit 1).
Such meetings allow CFOs to start building rela-
tionships with these key stakeholders of the
fnance function and to understand their needs.
Other CFOs look for external perspectives
on their companies and on the marketplace by
talking to customers, investors, or professional
service providers. The CFO at one pharma
company reported spending his frst month on
the job “riding around with a sales rep and
meeting up with our key customers. It’s amazing
how much I actually learned from these
discussions. This was information that no one
inside the company could have told me.”
Lead the leaders
Experienced CFOs not only understand and try to
drive the CEO’s agenda but also know they
must help to shape it. CFOs often begin aligning
themselves with the CEO and board members
well before taking offce. During the recruiting
process, most CFOs we interviewed received
very explicit guidance from them about the issues
they considered important, as well as where
Exhibit 2 Many CFOs received very explicit guidance from their CEOs
on the key issues of concern.
What was expected of CFOs
Being an active member of
senior-management team
Contributing to company’s
performance
Improving quality of ?nance
organization
Challenging company’s strategy
Bringing in a capital markets
perspective
Other
88
40
7
3
84
34
68
74
52
29
29
14
70
80
Ensuring ef?ciency of ?nance
organization
By CEO (n = 128)
By ?nance staff (n = 35)
% of responses
1
from respondents who said CEO and ?nancial staff
gave explicit guidance on expectations,
n = 163
1
Respondents could select more than 1 answer.
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 2 of 3
75
Excerpt from
Organizing for value
Number 28,
Summer 2008
Massimo Giordano and Felix Wenger
The CFO
the CFO would have to assume a leadership role.
Similarly, nearly four-ffths of the CFOs in
our survey reported that the CEO explained what
was expected from them—particularly that
they serve as active members of the senior-
management team, contribute to the company’s
performance, and make the fnance organi-
zation effcient (Exhibit 2). When one new CFO
asked the CEO what he expected at the
one-year mark, the response was, “When you’re
able to fnish my sentences, you’ll know
you’re on the right track.”
Building that kind of alignment is a challenge
for CFOs, who must have a certain ultimate
independence as the voice of the shareholder. That
means they must immediately begin to shape
the CEO’s agenda around their own focus on value
creation. Among the CFOs we interviewed,
those who had conducted a value audit could
immediately pitch their insights to the CEO
and the board—thus gaining credibility and start-
ing to shape the dialogue. In some cases, facts
that surfaced during the process enabled CFOs to
challenge business unit orthodoxies. What’s
more, the CFO is in a unique position to put
numbers against a company’s strategic options
in a way that lends a sharp edge to decision
making. The CFO at a high-tech company, for
example, created a plan that identifed
several key issues for the long-term health of
the business, including how large enterprises
could use its product more effciently.
This CFO then prodded sales and service to
develop a new strategy and team to drive
the product’s adoption.
To play these roles, a CFO must establish
trust with the board and the CEO, avoiding any
appearance of confict with them while
challenging their decisions and the company’s
direction if necessary. Maintaining the right
balance is an art, not a science. As the CFO at a
leading software company told us, “It’s impor-
tant to be always aligned with the CEO and also to
be able to factually call the balls and strikes
as you see them. When you cannot balance the
two, you need to fnd a new role.”
Strengthen the core
To gain the time for agenda-shaping priorities,
CFOs must have a well-functioning fnance group
behind them; otherwise, they won’t have the
credibility and hard data to make the diffcult
One way companies can compensate for
the blunt tools of traditional planning is to take
a ?ner-grained perspective on businesses
within large divisions. By identifying and de?ning
smaller units built around activities that
create value by serving related customer needs,
executives can better assess and manage
performance by focusing on growth and value
creation. These units, which we call “value
cells,” offer managers a more detailed, more
tangible way of gauging business value
and economic activity, allow CEOs to spend
more time on in-depth strategy discus-
sions, and make possible more ?nely tuned
responses to the demands of balancing
growth and short-term earnings. In our
experience, a company of above $10 billion
market capitalization should probably
be managed at the level of 20 to 50 value
cells, rather than the more typical three
to ?ve divisions.
76 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
arguments. Many new CFOs fnd that disparate IT
systems, highly manual processes, an unskilled
fnance staff, or unwieldy organizational structures
hamper their ability to do anything beyond
closing the quarter on time. In order to strengthen
the core team, during the frst hundred days
about three-quarters of the new CFOs we
surveyed initiated (or developed a plan to initiate)
fundamental changes in the function’s core
activities (Exhibit 3).
Several of our CFOs launched a rigorous look
at the fnance organization and operations they
had just taken over, and many experienced
CFOs said they wished they had done so. In these
reviews, the CFOs assessed the reporting
structure; evaluated the ft and capabilities of the
fnance executives they had inherited; vali-
dated the fnance organization’s cost benchmarks;
and identifed any gaps in the effectiveness or
effciency of key systems, processes, and reports.
The results of such a review can help CFOs
gauge how much energy they will need to invest in
the fnance organization during their initial
6 to 12 months in offce—and to fx any problems
they fnd.
Transitions offer a rare opportunity: the
organization is usually open to change. More than
half of our respondents made at least moderate
alterations in the core fnance team early in their
tenure. As one CFO of a global software com-
pany put it, “If there is a burning platform,
then you need to fnd it and tackle it. If you know
you will need to make people changes, make
them as fast as you can. Waiting only gets you into
more trouble.”
Manage performance actively
CFOs can play a critical role in enhancing
the performance dialogue of the corporate center,
the business units, and corporate functions.
They have a number of tools at their disposal,
including dashboards, performance targets,
enhanced planning processes, the corporate
review calendar, and even their own
Exhibit 3 New CFOs often initiate fundamental
changes to core activities.
1
Respondents could select more than 1 answer; those who answered “none of these” are not shown.
In which of the given areas did you initiate (or develop
a plan to initiate) fundamental changes during your ?rst
100 days as CFO?
Financial planning, budgeting, analysis 79
Management reporting,
performance management
73
Finance IT systems 34
Tax, group capital structure, treasury,
including risk management
32
53
Financial accounting, reporting
(including audit, compliance)
% of responses,
1
n = 164
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 3 of 3
77
relationships with the leaders of business units
and functions.
Among the CFOs we interviewed, some use
these tools, as well as facts and insights derived
from the CFO’s unique access to information
about the business, to challenge other executives.
A number of interviewees take a different
approach, however, exploiting what they call the
“rhythm of the business” by using the corporate-
planning calendar to shape the performance
dialogue through discussions, their own agendas,
and metrics. Still other CFOs, we have
observed, exert infuence through their personal
credibility at performance reviews.
While no consensus emerged from our discus-
sions, the more experienced CFOs stressed
the importance of learning about a company’s
current performance dialogues early on,
understanding where its performance must be
improved, and developing a long-term
strategy to infuence efforts to do so. Such a
strategy might use the CFO’s ability to
engage with other senior executives, as well as
changed systems and processes that could spur
performance and create accountability.
First steps
Given the magnitude of what CFOs may
be required to do, it is no surprise that the frst
100 to 200 days can be taxing. Yet those who
have passed through this transition suggest
several useful tactics. Some would be applicable
to any major corporate leadership role but
are nevertheless highly relevant for new CFOs—
in particular, those who come from
functional roles.
Get a mentor
Although a majority of the CFOs we interviewed
said that their early days on the job were
satisfactory, the transition wasn’t without specifc
challenges. A common complaint we hear about
is the lack of mentors—an issue that also came up
in our recent survey results, which showed that
32 percent of the responding CFOs didn’t have one.
Forty-six percent of the respondents said that
the CEO had mentored them, but the relationship
appeared to be quite different from the traditional
mentorship model, because many CFOs felt
uncomfortable telling the boss everything about
the challenges they faced. As one CFO put
it during an interview, “being a CFO is probably
one of the loneliest jobs out there.” Many of
The CFO
78 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
the CFOs we spoke with mentioned the value
of having one or two mentors outside the company
to serve as a sounding board. We also know
CFOs who have joined high-value roundtables
and other such forums to build networks
and share ideas.
Listen first . . . then act
Given the declining average tenure in offce
of corporate leaders, and the high turnover among
CFOs in particular, fnance executives
often feel pressure to make their mark sooner
rather than later. This pressure creates
a potentially unhealthy bias toward acting with
incomplete—or, worse, inaccurate—information.
While we believe strongly that CFOs should
be aggressive and action oriented, they must use
their energy and enthusiasm effectively. As
one CFO refected in hindsight, “I would have
spent even more time listening and less
time doing. People do anticipate change from
a new CFO, but they also respect you more
if you take the time to listen and learn and get
it right when you act.”
Make a few themes your priority—consistently
Supplement your day-to-day activities
with no more than three to four major change
initiatives, and focus on them consistently.
To make change happen, you will have to repeat
your message over and over—internally, to the
fnance staff, and externally, to other stakeholders.
Communicate your changes by stressing broad
themes that, over time, could encompass newly
identifed issues and actions. One element
of your agenda, for example, might be the broad
theme of improving the effciency of fnan-
cial operations rather than just the narrow one
of offshoring.
Invest time up front to gain credibility
Gaining credibility early on is a common
challenge—particularly, according to our survey,
for a CFO hired from outside a company. In
some cases, it’s suffcient to invest enough time
to know the numbers cold, as well as the
company’s products, markets, and plans. In other
cases, gaining credibility may force you to
adjust your mind-set fundamentally.
The CFOs we interviewed told us that it’s hard
to win support and respect from other corporate
offcers without making a conscious effort to
think like a CFO. Clearly, one with the mentality
of a lead controller, focused on compliance
and control, isn’t likely to make the kind of risky
but thoughtful decisions needed to help
a company grow. Challenging a business plan and
a strategy isn’t always about reducing invest-
ments and squeezing incremental margins. The
CFO has an opportunity to apply a fnance
lens to management’s approach and to ensure that
Finance executives often feel pressure to make
their mark sooner rather than later. This
pressure creates a potentially unhealthy bias
toward acting with incomplete—or, worse,
inaccurate—information.
79
1
Financial Officers’ Turnover, 2007 Study, Russell
Reynolds Associates.
2
We surveyed 164 current or former CFOs across
industries, geographies, revenue categories, and ownership
structures. For more of our conclusions, see “The
CFO’s first hundred days: A McKinsey Global Survey,”
mckinseyquarterly.com, December 2007.
a company thoroughly examines all possible
ways of accelerating and maximizing the capture
of value.
As an increasing number of executives become
new CFOs, their ability to gain an understanding
of where value is created and to develop
a strategy for infuencing both executives and
ongoing performance management will
shape their future legacies. While day-to-day
operations can quickly absorb the time of
any new CFO, continued focus on these issues and
the underlying quality of the fnance operation
defnes world class CFOs.
The CFO
80 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Viral Acharya is a professor of fnance at New York
University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business.
Patrick Beitel ([email protected]) is
a partner in McKinsey’s Frankfurt offce.
Nidhi Chadda is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Bertil Chappuis ([email protected])
is a partner in the Silicon Valley offce.
Richard Dobbs ([email protected])
is a director of the McKinsey Global Institute and
a partner in the Seoul offce.
Bryan Fisher ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Houston offce.
Massimo Giordano (Massimo_Giordano@
McKinsey.com) is a partner in the Milan offce.
Marc Goedhart ([email protected]) is
a senior expert in the Amsterdam offce.
Peter Haden ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Amsterdam offce.
Neil Harper is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Peggy Hsieh is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Bill Huyett ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Boston offce.
Bin Jiang ([email protected]) is
a consultant in the New York offce.
Conor Kehoe ([email protected]) is
a partner in the London offce.
Aimee Kim ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Seoul offce.
Tim Koller ([email protected]) is a partner
in the New York offce.
Ankush Kumar ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Houston offce.
Eric Lamarre ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Montréal offce.
Nick Lawler is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Rob McNish ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Washington, DC, offce.
Jean-Hugues Monier (Jean-Hugues_Monier@
McKinsey.com) is a partner in the New York offce.
Robert Palter ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Toronto offce.
Martin Pergler ([email protected]) is
a consultant in the Singapore offce.
Herbert Pohl ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Dubai offce.
S. R. Rajan is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Werner Rehm ([email protected]) is
a senior expert in the New York offce.
Michael Reyner is an alumnus of the London offce.
Paul Roche ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Silicon Valley offce.
Michael Shelton is an alumnus of the
Chicago offce.
Jonathan Shih is an alumnus of the New
York offce.
Robert Uhlaner ([email protected]) is
a partner in the San Francisco offce.
Felix Wenger ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Zurich offce.
David Wessels is an alumnus of the New
York offce.
Andy West ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Boston offce.
Florian Wolff is an alumnus of the Munich offce.
Contributors
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doc_622956929.pdf
The best-owner life cycle means that executives must continually seek out new acquisitions for which their companies could be the best owner. Applying the best-owner principle often leads acquirers toward targets very different from those that traditional target-screening approaches might uncover.
The enduring value of fundamentals
Special 10-year
anniversary issue
2001–2011
Number 40,
Summer 2011
McKinsey on Finance
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McKinsey on Finance is a quarterly
publication written by experts and
practitioners in McKinsey & Company’s
corporate ?nance practice. This
publication offers readers insights
into value-creating strategies
and the translation of those strategies
into company performance.
This and archived issues of McKinsey
on Finance are available online at
corporate?nance.mckinsey.com, where
selected articles are also available
in audio format. A series of McKinsey on
Finance podcasts is also available
on iTunes.
Editorial Contact: McKinsey_on_
[email protected]
To request permission to republish an
article, send an e-mail to
[email protected].
Editorial Board: David Cogman,
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Bill Huyett, Bill Javetski, Tim Koller,
Werner Rehm, Dennis Swinford
Editor: Dennis Swinford
Art Direction: Veronica Belsuzarri
Design and layout:
Veronica Belsuzarri, Cary Shoda
Managing Editor: Drew Holzfeind
Information Design Editor:
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Editorial Production: Kelsey Bjelland,
Roger Draper
Circulation: Diane Black
Illustrations by Brian Stauffer
The editors would also like to thank
past members of the McKinsey
on Finance editorial board who have
contributed to many of the articles
included in this anniversary edition. They
include James Ahn, Richard Dobbs,
Massimo Giordano, Keiko Honda, Rob
McNish, Jean-Hugues Monier,
Herbert Pohl, and Michelle Soudier.
Copyright © 2011 McKinsey & Company.
All rights reserved.
This publication is not intended to be
used as the basis for trading
in the shares of any company or for
undertaking any other complex
or signi?cant ?nancial transaction
without consulting appropriate
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No part of this publication may
be copied or redistributed in any form
without the prior written consent of
McKinsey & Company.
The enduring value of fundamentals
McKinsey on Finance
Special 10-year
anniversary issue
2001–2011
Number 40,
Summer 2011
2
When we published the inaugural issue of
McKinsey on Finance, in the summer of 2001,
CFOs were facing the challenges of navigat-
ing a global economy recovering from a downturn
and bruised by corporate misbehavior during
the dot-com market crash. The outlook for growth,
valuation, and fnancial regulation was
uncertain at best.
The philosophy of the new publication’s
editorial board was that companies could best
improve their performance in the face of
these uncertainties by drawing on the established
principles of fnance. After a decade marked
by both crisis and profound changes in global
fnancial markets, that remains our approach.
If a single theme has run through the pages of
McKinsey on Finance over the past ten years, it
has been the importance of challenging the
many and recurring incomplete, misleading, and
faddish interpretations of fnance. We have
advanced interpretations of value creation that
respect the long-term effectiveness of capital
markets—and are cautious about mistaking short-
term “noise” for indications of long-term value
creation. Our authors have also sought to provide
specifc tools to help fnance leaders run their
varied functions more effectively and effciently,
and thus to infuence the direction of
their companies.
For this special anniversary anthology, we’ve
compiled a selection of articles and excerpts from
the past decade that we believe remain useful
for driving performance even today.
Editors’ note
3
In this issue, you’ll fnd “The CEO’s guide to
corporate fnance,” which applies the four corner-
stones of corporate fnance to decisions in
mergers and acquisitions, divestitures, project
analysis and downside risk, and executive
compensation. The section on growth examines
the diffculty that large successful companies
have in sustaining it, as well as some of the prac-
tical trade-offs afforded by different types
of growth.
Further in, you’ll fnd a section on governance
and risk, articles that draw from our experience
with active managers in private equity and
from fundamental analysis of hedging and risk
management. There’s also a section on dealing
with investors: describing a better way to
communicate with different segments of investors,
considering the value of transparency in
accounting and investor communications,
and examining the clearest indication of investor
thinking—the movement of stock markets.
Finally, the anthology ends with a practical look
at the role of the CFO and how to improve
the effciency of the fnance function.
We hope that the articles and excerpts that follow
will help you to explore the value and creative
application of tested fnance fundamentals in a
rapidly changing world. Additional related
reading, as well as this collection and the full
versions of excerpted articles, can be found
on mckinseyquarterly.com.
Bill Huyett and Tim Koller
Finance and strategy
Features
7 The CEO’s guide to corporate finance (Autumn 2010)
16 Making capital structure support strategy (Winter 2006)
Excerpts from
8 Are you still the best owner of your assets? (Winter 2010)
15 Stock options—the right debate (Summer 2002)
23 The value of share buybacks (Summer 2005)
24 Paying back your shareholders (Spring 2011)
How to grow
Features
27 Why the biggest and best struggle to grow (Winter 2004)
35 Running a winning M&A shop (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
32 How to choose between growth and ROIC (Autumn 2007)
34 All P/Es are not created equal (Spring 2004)
36 M&A teams: When small is beautiful (Winter 2010)
39 Managing your integration manager (Summer 2003)
41 The five types of successful acquisitions (Summer 2010)
Governance and risk
Features
43 The voice of experience: Public versus private equity (Spring 2009)
49 The right way to hedge (Summer 2010)
Excerpts from
54 Risk: Seeing around the corners (Autumn 2009)
55 Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think (Spring 2003)
Contents
Dealing with investors
Features
57 Communicating with the right investors (Spring 2008)
64 Do fundamentals—or emotions—drive the stock market? (Spring 2005)
Excerpts from
60 Inside a hedge fund: An interview with the managing partner of
Maverick Capital (Spring 2006)
62 Numbers investors can trust (Summer 2003)
63 The misguided practice of earnings guidance (Spring 2006)
69 The truth about growth and value stocks (Winter 2007)
The CFO
Features
71 Starting up as CFO (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
72 Toward a leaner finance department (Spring 2006)
75 Organizing for value (Summer 2008)
6
Finance
and strategy
7
Richard Dobbs, Bill Huyett, and Tim Koller
The CEO’s guide
to corporate ?nance
Four principles can help you make great financial decisions—even when
the CFO’s not in the room.
Number 37,
Autumn 2010
It’s one thing for a CFO to understand the
technical methods of valuation—and for
members of the fnance organization to apply
them to help line managers monitor and
improve company performance. But it’s still
more powerful when CEOs, board members, and
other nonfnancial executives internalize
the principles of value creation. Doing so allows
them to make independent, courageous,
and even unpopular business decisions in the
face of myths and misconceptions about what
creates value.
When an organization’s senior leaders have a strong
fnancial compass, it’s easier for them to resist the
siren songs of fnancial engineering, excessive
leverage, and the idea (common during boom times)
that somehow the established rules of economics
no longer apply. Misconceptions like these—which
can lead companies to make value-destroying
In this section: Features
7 The CEO’s guide to corporate finance (Autumn 2010)
16 Making capital structure support strategy (Winter 2006)
Excerpts from
8 Are you still the best owner of your assets? (Winter 2010)
15 Stock options—the right debate (Summer 2002)
23 The value of share buybacks (Summer 2005)
24 Paying back your shareholders (Spring 2011)
8 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
decisions and slow down entire economies—take
hold with surprising and disturbing ease.
What we hope to do in this article is show how
four principles, or cornerstones, can help
senior executives and board members make some
of their most important decisions. The four
cornerstones are disarmingly simple:
1. The core-of-value principle establishes that
value creation is a function of returns on
capital and growth, while highlighting some
important subtleties associated with
applying these concepts.
2. The conservation-of-value principle says that
it doesn’t matter how you slice the fnancial pie
with fnancial engineering, share repurchases,
or acquisitions; only improving cash fows will
create value.
3. The expectations treadmill principle explains
how movements in a company’s share
price refect changes in the stock market’s
expectations about performance, not
just the company’s actual performance (in
terms of growth and returns on invested
capital). The higher those expectations, the
better that company must perform just
to keep up.
4. The best-owner principle states that no
business has an inherent value in and of itself;
it has a different value to different owners
The best-owner life cycle means that executives must continually seek out new acquisitions for which their
companies could be the best owner. Applying the best-owner principle often leads acquirers toward
targets very different from those that traditional target-screening approaches might uncover. Traditional
ones often focus on targets that perform well ?nancially and are somehow related to the acquirer’s
business lines. But through the best-owner lens, such characteristics might have little or no importance. It
might be better, for instance, to seek out a ?nancially weak company that has great potential for
improvement, especially if the acquirer has proven performance-improvement expertise. Or it might be
better to focus attention on tangible opportunities to cut costs or on the existence of common customers
than on vague notions such as how related the target may be to the acquirer.
Keeping the best-owner principle front and center can also help with negotiations for an acquisition
by keeping managers focused on what the target is worth speci?cally to their own company—as well as to
other bidders. Many managers err in M&A by estimating only an acquisition’s value to their own com-
pany. Because they are unaware of the target’s value to other potential better owners—or how high those
other owners might be willing to bid—they get lulled into conducting negotiations right up to their
breakeven point, creating less value for their own shareholders. Instead of asking how much they can pay,
they should be asking what’s the least they need to pay to win the deal and create the most value.
Excerpt from
Are you still the best owner of your assets?
Number 34,
Winter 2010
Richard Dobbs, Bill Huyett, and Tim Koller
9
or potential owners—a value based on how they
manage it and what strategy they pursue.
Ignoring these cornerstones can lead to poor
decisions that erode the value of companies. Con-
sider what happened during the run-up to the
fnancial crisis that began in 2007. Participants in
the securitized-mortgage market all assumed
that securitizing risky home loans made them more
valuable because it reduced the risk of the assets.
But this notion violates the conservation-of-value
rule. Securitization did not increase the aggre-
gated cash fows of the home loans, so no value
was created, and the initial risks remained.
Securitizing the assets simply enabled the risks to
be passed on to other owners: some investors,
somewhere, had to be holding them.
Obvious as this seems in hindsight, a great many
smart people missed it at the time. And the same
thing happens every day in executive suites and
boardrooms as managers and company directors
evaluate acquisitions, divestitures, projects,
and executive compensation. As we’ll see, the four
cornerstones of fnance provide a perennially
stable frame of reference for managerial decisions
like these.
Mergers and acquisitions
Acquisitions are both an important source of
growth for companies and an important element
of a dynamic economy. Acquisitions that put
companies in the hands of better owners or man-
agers or that reduce excess capacity typically
create substantial value both for the economy
as a whole and for investors.
You can see this effect in the increased combined
cash fows of the many companies involved in
acquisitions. But although they create value overall,
Exhibit 1
1.0
0.4
1.4
Value received
0.1
Value created
for acquirer
1.0
0.3
1.3
Price paid
MoF 37 2010
Stakeholders
Exhibit 1 of 2
To create value, an acquirer must achieve performance
improvements that are greater than the premium paid.
Premium paid
by acquirer
Target’s market
value
Target’s stand-
alone value
$ billion
Value of
performance
improvements
Finance and strategy
10 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit 2
MoF 37 2010
Stakeholders
Exhibit 2 of 2
Present value of announced
performance improvements as
% of target’s stand-alone value
Net value created
from acquisition as %
of purchase price
Premium paid as
% of target’s
stand-alone value
Kellogg acquires
Keebler (2000)
45–70 30–50 15
PepsiCo acquires
Quaker Oats (2000)
35–55 25–40 10
Clorox acquires
First Brands (1998)
70–105 5–25 60
Henkel acquires
National Starch (2007)
60–90 55 5–25
Dramatic performance improvements created
signi?cant value in these four acquisitions.
the distribution of that value tends to be lopsided,
accruing primarily to the selling companies’
shareholders. In fact, most empirical research
shows that just half of the acquiring com-
panies create value for their own shareholders.
The conservation-of-value principle is an excellent
reality check for executives who want to
make sure their acquisitions create value for their
shareholders. The principle reminds us that
acquisitions create value when the cash fows of
the combined companies are greater than
they would otherwise have been. Some of that
value will accrue to the acquirer’s shareholders if
it doesn’t pay too much for the acquisition.
Exhibit 1 shows how this process works. Company
A buys Company B for $1.3 billion—a transaction
that includes a 30 percent premium over its
market value. Company A expects to increase the
value of Company B by 40 percent through
various operating improvements, so the value of
Company B to Company A is $1.4 billion.
Subtracting the purchase price of $1.3 billion from
$1.4 billion leaves $100 million of value creation
for Company A’s shareholders.
In other words, when the stand-alone value of the
target equals the market value, the acquirer creates
value for its shareholders only when the value
of improvements is greater than the premium paid.
With this in mind, it’s easy to see why most
of the value creation from acquisitions goes to the
sellers’ shareholders: if a company pays
a 30 percent premium, it must increase the target’s
value by at least 30 percent to create any value.
While a 30 or 40 percent performance improve-
ment sounds steep, that’s what acquirers
often achieve. For example, Exhibit 2 highlights
four large deals in the consumer products
sector. Performance improvements typically
exceeded 50 percent of the target’s value.
Our example also shows why it’s diffcult for
an acquirer to create a substantial amount
of value from acquisitions. Let’s assume that
Company A was worth about three times
Company B at the time of the acquisition. Signif-
cant as such a deal would be, it’s likely to
increase Company A’s value by only 3 percent—
the $100 million of value creation depicted in
Exhibit 1, divided by Company A’s value, $3 billion.
11
Finally, it’s worth noting that we have not
mentioned an acquisition’s effect on earnings per
share (EPS). Although this metric is often
considered, no empirical link shows that expected
EPS accretion or dilution is an important
indicator of whether an acquisition will create
or destroy value. Deals that strengthen near-term
EPS and deals that dilute near-term EPS are
equally likely to create or destroy value. Bankers
and other fnance professionals know all this,
but as one told us recently, many nonetheless “use
it as a simple way to communicate with boards
of directors.” To avoid confusion during such com-
munications, executives should remind
themselves and their colleagues that EPS has
nothing to say about which company is the
best owner of specifc corporate assets or about
how merging two entities will change the
cash fows they generate.
Divestitures
Executives are often concerned that divestitures
will look like an admission of failure, make
their company smaller, and reduce its stock market
value. Yet the research shows that, on the
contrary, the stock market consistently reacts
positively to divestiture announcements.
1
The divested business units also beneft. Research
has shown that the proft margins of spun-off
businesses tend to increase by one-third during the
three years after the transactions are complete.
2
These fndings illustrate the beneft of continually
applying the best-owner principle: the
attractiveness of a business and its best owner
will probably change over time. At different
stages of an industry’s or company’s lifespan,
resource decisions that once made economic
sense can become problematic. For instance, the
company that invented a groundbreaking
innovation may not be best suited to exploit it.
Similarly, as demand falls off in a mature
industry, companies that have been in it
a long time are likely to have excess capacity and
therefore may no longer be the best owners.
A value-creating approach to divestitures can
lead to the pruning of good and bad businesses at
any stage of their life cycles. Clearly, divesting
a good business is often not an intuitive choice
and may be diffcult for managers—even if
that business would be better owned by another
company. It therefore makes sense to enforce
some discipline in active portfolio management.
One way to do so is to hold regular review
meetings specifcally devoted to business exits,
ensuring that the topic remains on the
executive agenda and that each unit receives
a date stamp, or estimated time of exit.
This practice has the advantage of obliging
executives to evaluate all businesses as
the “sell-by date” approaches.
Executives and boards often worry that dives-
titures will reduce their company’s size and thus
cut its value in the capital markets. There
follows a misconception that the markets value
larger companies more than smaller ones.
But this notion holds only for very small frms,
with some evidence that companies with
a market capitalization of less than $500 million
might have slightly higher costs of capital.
3
Finally, executives shouldn’t worry that
a divestiture will dilute EPS multiples. A company
selling a business with a lower P/E ratio than
that of its remaining businesses will see an overall
reduction in earnings per share. But don’t
forget that a divested underperforming unit’s
lower growth and return on invested capital
(ROIC) potential would have previously depressed
the entire company’s P/E. With this unit gone,
the company that remains will have a higher
growth and ROIC potential—and will be valued at
Finance and strategy
12 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
a correspondingly higher P/E ratio.
4
As the
core-of-value principle would predict, fnancial
mechanics, on their own, do not create or
destroy value. By the way, the math works out
regardless of whether the proceeds from
a sale are used to pay down debt or to repurchase
shares. What matters for value is the business
logic of the divestiture.
Project analysis and downside risks
Reviewing the fnancial attractiveness of project
proposals is a common task for senior executives.
The sophisticated tools used to support them—
discounted cash fows, scenario analyses—often
lull top management into a false sense of
security. For example, one company we know
analyzed projects by using advanced statis-
tical techniques that always showed a zero
probability of a project with negative net present
value (NPV). The organization did not have
the ability to discuss failure, only varying degrees
of success.
Such an approach ignores the core-of-value
principle’s laserlike focus on the future cash fows
underlying returns on capital and growth, not
just for a project but for the enterprise as a whole.
Actively considering downside risks to future
cash fows for both is a crucial subtlety of project
analysis—and one that often isn’t undertaken.
For a moment, put yourself in the mind
of an executive deciding whether to undertake
a project with an upside of $80 million,
a downside of –$20 million, and an expected
value of $60 million. Generally accepted
fnance theory says that companies should take on
all projects with a positive expected value,
regardless of the upside-versus-downside risk.
But what if the downside would bankrupt the
company? That might be the case for an electric-
power utility considering the construction
of a nuclear facility for $15 billion (a rough 2009
estimate for a facility with two reactors).
Suppose there is an 80 percent chance the plant
will be successfully constructed, brought
in on time, and worth, net of investment costs,
$13 billion. Suppose further that there is also
a 20 percent chance that the utility company will
fail to receive regulatory approval to start
operating the new facility, which will then be
worth –$15 billion. That means the net expected
value of the facility is more than $7 billion—
seemingly an attractive investment.
5
The decision gets more complicated if the cash
fow from the company’s existing plants will
be insuffcient to cover its existing debt plus the
debt on the new plant if it fails. The economics
of the nuclear plant will then spill over into the
13
value of the rest of the company—which has
$25 billion in existing debt and $25 billion in
equity market capitalization. Failure will
wipe out all the company’s equity, not just the
$15 billion invested in the plant.
As this example makes clear, we can extend the
core-of-value principle to say that a company
should not take on a risk that will put its future
cash fows in danger. In other words, don’t do
anything that has large negative spillover effects
on the rest of the company. This caveat should
be enough to guide managers in the earlier
example of a project with an $80 million upside,
a –$20 million downside, and a $60 million
expected value. If a $20 million loss would
endanger the company as a whole, the managers
should forgo the project. On the other hand,
if the project doesn’t endanger the company, they
should be willing to risk the $20 million loss
for a far greater potential gain.
Executive compensation
Establishing performance-based compensation
systems is a daunting task, both for board
directors concerned with the CEO and the senior
team and for human-resource leaders and other
executives focused on, say, the top 500 managers.
Although an entire industry has grown up
around the compensation of executives, many
companies continue to reward them for
short-term total returns to shareholders (TRS).
TRS, however, is driven more by movements
in a company’s industry and in the broader market
(or by stock market expectations) than
by individual performance. For example, many
executives who became wealthy from stock
options during the 1980s and 1990s saw these
gains wiped out in 2008. Yet the underlying
causes of share price changes—such as falling
interest rates in the earlier period and the
fnancial crisis more recently—were frequently
disconnected from anything managers did or
didn’t do.
Using TRS as the basis of executive compensation
refects a fundamental misunderstanding of
the third cornerstone of fnance: the expectations
treadmill. If investors have low expectations
for a company at the beginning of a period of stock
market growth, it may be relatively easy for
the company’s managers to beat them. But that
also increases the expectations of new share-
holders, so the company has to improve ever faster
just to keep up and maintain its new stock price.
At some point, it becomes diffcult if not
impossible for managers to deliver on these
accelerating expectations without faltering, much
as anyone would eventually stumble on a
treadmill that kept getting faster.
This dynamic underscores why it’s diffcult
to use TRS as a performance-measurement tool:
extraordinary managers may deliver only
ordinary TRS because it is extremely diffcult
to keep beating ever-higher share price
expectations. Conversely, if markets have low
performance expectations for a company,
its managers might fnd it easy to earn a high TRS,
at least for a short time, by raising market
expectations up to the level for its peers.
Instead, compensation programs should focus
on growth, returns on capital, and TRS
performance, relative to peers (an important
point) rather than an absolute target. That
approach would eliminate much of the TRS that is
not driven by company-specifc performance.
Such a solution sounds simple but, until recently,
was made impractical by accounting rules
and, in some countries, tax policies. Prior to 2004,
for example, companies using US generally
accepted accounting principles (GAAP) could
avoid listing stock options as an expense
Finance and strategy
14 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
on their income statements provided they met
certain criteria, one of which was that the exercise
price had to be fxed. To avoid taking an
earnings hit, companies avoided compensation
systems based on relative performance,
which would have required more fexibility in
structuring options.
Since 2004, a few companies have moved to
share-based compensation systems tied
to relative performance. GE, for one, granted its
CEO a performance award based on the
company’s TRS relative to the TRS of the S&P
500 index. We hope that more companies
will follow this direction.
Applying the four cornerstones of fnance
sometimes means going against the crowd. It
means accepting that there are no free
lunches. It means relying on data, thoughtful
analysis, and a deep understanding of the
competitive dynamics of an industry. None of this
is easy, but the payoff—the creation of value
for a company’s stakeholders and for society at
large—is enormous.
1
J. Mulherin and Audra Boone, “Comparing acquisitions and
divestitures,” Journal of Corporate Finance, 2000, Volume 6,
Number 2, pp. 117–39.
2
Patrick Cusatis, James Miles, and J. Woolridge, “Some new
evidence that spinoffs create value,” Journal of Applied
Corporate Finance, 1994, Volume 7, Number 2, pp. 100–107.
3
See Robert S. McNish and Michael W. Palys, “Does scale
matter to capital markets?” McKinsey on Finance, Number 16,
Summer 2005, pp. 21–23.
4
Similarly, if a company sells a unit with a high P/E relative
to its other units, the earnings per share (EPS) will increase but
the P/E will decline proportionately.
5
The expected value is $7.4 billion, which represents the sum of
80 percent of $13 billion ($28 billion, the expected value
of the plant, less the $15 billion investment) and 20 percent
of –$15 billion ($0, less the $15 billion investment).
15
Excerpt from
Stock options—the right debate
Number 4,
Summer 2002
Neil W. C. Harper
A valuable debate for shareholders would be to examine the structure of stock options. Consider that
in recent years stock options have reached 50 to 60 percent of the total compensation of CEOs of large
US corporations. Most are issued with an exercise price at or above current market price, and as
the share price rises, the management team earns additional compensation. At ?rst glance, this seems
a logical way to align the interests of managers and shareholders, since in theory option-holding
executives would have a common interest with shareholders in seeing stock price appreciation. But
the theory can be thwarted in two important ways.
Not all stock price appreciation is equal. When a stock rises as a result of good strategic or operational
decision making by the management team, additional compensation through option value gains is
well deserved. However, stock options can also gain signi?cantly in value as a result of several additional
factors—the general economic environment, interest rates, leverage, and business risk. All else being
equal, as the economic environment improves, as interest rates fall, as leverage rises, and as business
risk rises, the value of an executive’s options will also rise. However, many such gains are not the
result of management’s actions, and increasing leverage or business risk is not necessarily in the best
interests of shareholders.
There are limits to downside risk. Even if option contracts were structured to more closely tie executive
reward to value-creating actions, the current structure of most company options plans places less
risk on managers in the case of poor performance than on shareholders. If unsuccessful strategic and
operational decision making leads to a stock price decline, shareholders continue to lose until the
decline bottoms out. Managers, though, have a limit to their downside exposure through option holdings;
once the stock price falls signi?cantly below option exercise price, their options are essentially
worthless (unless there remains a signi?cant time period before exercise date). Their downside to this
extent is limited. Furthermore, they can frequently expect to be issued repriced options at the new
lower stock price, further limiting their overall downside. Correcting for interest rate movements, economic
cycles, and other environmental issues is not as straightforward as it appears.
Many have pondered the issue for decades without coming up with easy solutions, precisely because
fully aligning incentives via a compensation plan is so complex. Executive option contracts could
be structured to adjust for economic conditions as re?ected, for example, by overall market or sector
performance, interest rates, leverage, and risk. Some have even proposed so-called outperformance
options, in which value creation is linked to an executive’s ability to generate returns above their
peers. These approaches can improve alignment between shareholder and manager interests, but only
to some extent.
Finance and strategy
16 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
CFOs invariably ask themselves two related
questions when managing their balance sheets:
should they return excess cash to share-
holders or invest it, and should they fnance new
projects by adding debt or drawing on equity?
Indeed, achieving the right capital structure—
the composition of debt and equity that
a company uses to fnance its operations and
strategic investments—has long vexed
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and Werner Rehm
Making capital structure
support strategy
academics and practitioners alike.
1
Some focus
on the theoretical tax beneft of debt, since
interest expenses are often tax deductible. More
recently, executives of public companies have
wondered if they, like some private-equity frms,
should use debt to increase their returns.
Meanwhile, many companies are holding sub-
stantial amounts of cash and deliberating
on what to do with it.
A company’s ratio of debt to equity should support its business strategy, not help it
pursue tax breaks. Here’s how to get the balance right.
Number 18,
Winter 2006
17
The issue is more nuanced than some pundits
suggest. In theory, it may be possible to reduce
capital structure to a fnancial calculation—
to get the most tax benefts by favoring debt, for
example, or to boost earnings per share
superfcially through share buybacks. The result,
however, may not be consistent with a com-
pany’s business strategy, particularly if executives
add too much debt.
2
In the 1990s, for example,
many telecommunications companies fnanced
the acquisition of third-generation (3G)
licenses entirely with debt, instead of with equity
or some combination of debt and equity, and
they found their strategic options constrained
when the market fell.
Indeed, the potential harm to a company’s
operations and business strategy from a bad
capital structure is greater than the potential
benefts from tax and fnancial leverage. Instead
of relying on capital structure to create value
on its own, companies should try to make it work
hand in hand with their business strategy, by
striking a balance between the discipline and tax
savings that debt can deliver and the greater
fexibility of equity. In the end, most industrial
companies can create more value by making
their operations more effcient than they can with
clever fnancing.
3
Capital structure’s long-term impact
Capital structure affects a company’s overall value
through its impact on operating cash fows
and the cost of capital. Since the interest expense
on debt is tax deductible in most countries,
a company can reduce its after-tax cost of capital
Exhibit 1 Tax bene?ts of debt are often negligible.
McKinsey on
Exhibit < > of < >
1
Earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
2
Companies with ~A to BBB rating.
Ratio of enterprise value to EBITA
1
10
5
0
15
20
0 2 6 8 10
Interest coverage ratio (EBITA
1
÷ annual interest expense)
Investment-grade companies
2
4
6% growth in
revenues
3% growth in
revenues
Finance and strategy
18 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
by increasing debt relative to equity, thereby
directly increasing its intrinsic value. While
fnance textbooks often show how the tax benefts
of debt have a wide-ranging impact on value,
they often use too low a discount rate for those
benefts. In practice, the impact is much less
signifcant for large investment-grade companies
(which have a small relevant range of capital
structures). Overall, the value of tax benefts is
quite small over the relevant levels of interest
coverage (Exhibit 1). For a typical investment-
grade company, the change in value over the range
of interest coverage is less than 5 percent.
The effect of debt on cash fow is less direct but
more signifcant. Carrying some debt increases a
company’s intrinsic value because debt imposes
discipline; a company must make regular interest
and principal payments, so it is less likely to
pursue frivolous investments or acquisitions that
don’t create value. Having too much debt,
however, can reduce a company’s intrinsic value
by limiting its fexibility to make value-creating
investments of all kinds, including capital
expenditures, acquisitions, and, just as important,
investments in intangibles such as business
building, R&D, and sales and marketing.
Managing capital structure thus becomes a
balancing act. In our view, the trade-off
a company makes between fnancial fexibility
and fscal discipline is the most important
consideration in determining its capital structure
and far outweighs any tax benefts, which are
negligible for most large companies unless they
have extremely low debt.
4
Mature companies with stable and predictable
cash fows as well as limited investment
opportunities should include more debt in their
capital structure, since the discipline that
debt often brings outweighs the need for
fexibility. Companies that face high uncertainty
because of vigorous growth or the cyclical
nature of their industries should carry less debt,
so that they have enough fexibility to take
advantage of investment opportunities or to deal
with negative events.
Not that a company’s underlying capital structure
never creates intrinsic value; sometimes it does.
When executives have good reason to believe that
a company’s shares are under- or overvalued,
for example, they might change the company’s
underlying capital structure to create value—
either by buying back undervalued shares or by
using overvalued shares instead of cash to
pay for acquisitions. Other examples can be found
in cyclical industries, such as commodity
chemicals, where investment spending typically
follows profts. Companies invest in new
manufacturing capacity when their profts are
high and they have cash.
5
Unfortunately,
the chemical industry’s historical pattern has
been that all players invest at the same
time, which leads to excess capacity when all of
The trade-off a company makes between
fnancial fexibility and fscal discipline is the most
important consideration in determining
its capital structure.
19
the plants come on line simultaneously. Over
the cycle, a company could earn substantially
more than its competitors if it developed
a countercyclical strategic capital structure and
maintained less debt than might otherwise
be optimal. During bad times, it would then have
the ability to make investments when its
competitors couldn’t.
A practical framework for developing
capital structure
A company can’t develop its capital structure
without understanding its future revenues and
investment requirements. Once those pre-
requisites are in place, it can begin to consider
changing its capital structure in ways that support
the broader strategy. A systematic approach can
pull together steps that many companies already
take, along with some more novel ones.
The case of one global consumer product business
is illustrative. Growth at this company—we’ll
call it Consumerco—has been modest. Excluding
the effect of acquisitions and currency move-
ments, its revenues have grown by about 5 percent
a year over the past fve years. Acquisitions
added a further 7 percent annually, and the operat-
ing proft margin has been stable at around
14 percent. Traditionally, Consumerco held little
debt: until 2001, its debt to enterprise value
was less than 10 percent. In recent years, however,
the company increased its debt levels to
around 25 percent of its total enterprise value in
order to pay for acquisitions. Once they were
complete, management had to decide whether to
use the company’s cash fows, over the next
several years, to restore its previous low levels
of debt or to return cash to its shareholders
and hold debt stable at the higher level. The com-
pany’s decision-making process included
the following steps.
1. Estimate the financing deficit or surplus. First,
Consumerco’s executives forecast the fnancing
defcit or surplus from its operations and
strategic investments over the course of the
industry’s business cycle—in this case,
three to fve years.
Finance and strategy
20 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
In the base case forecasts, Consumerco’s execu-
tives projected organic revenue growth of
5 percent at proft margins of around 14 percent.
They did not plan for any acquisitions over
the next four years, since no large target compa-
nies remain in Consumerco’s relevant product
segments. As Exhibit 2 shows, the company’s
cash fow after dividends and interest
will be positive in 2006 and then grow steadily
until 2008. You can see on the right-hand
side of Exhibit 2 that EBITA (earnings before
interest, taxes, and amortization) interest
Exhibit 2
Disguised global consumer product company
Consumerco started by forecasting its ?nancing debt or surplus.
McKinsey on Finance
Capital structure
Exhibit 2 of 3
1.4
0.9
0.4
–0.1
–0.6
–1.1
–1.6
Interest coverage ratio (EBITA
1
÷ annual
interest expense)
Free cash ?ow (FCF),
€ billion
2000 2002 2004 2006
2
2008
2
2000 2002 2004 2006
2
2008
2
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
Projected 2008 EBITA,
1
€ billion
Target interest coverage ratio
Target 2008 interest expense, € billion
2008 debt at target coverage, € billion
Extra cushion, € billion
Base case
scenario
3
Downside
scenario
3
1.9
4.5x
0.4
8.3
–0.5
1.4
4.5x
0.3
6.2
Interest rate on debt 5% 5%
–0.5
Target 2008 debt level, € billion 7.8 5.7
FCF
FCF after dividends,
interest
1
Earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
2
Projected.
3
Assumes organic revenue growth of % at profit margins of around % and no acquisitions over next years.
Source: Analysts’ reports; Standard & Poor’s; McKinsey analysis
21
coverage will quickly return to historically
high levels—even exceeding ten times
interest expenses.
2. Set a target credit rating. Next, Consumerco
set a target credit rating and estimated
the corresponding capital structure ratios.
Consumerco’s operating performance is
normally stable. Executives targeted the high
end of a BBB credit rating because the
company, as an exporter, is periodically
exposed to signifcant currency risk (otherwise
they might have gone further, to a low BBB
rating). They then translated the target credit
rating to a target interest coverage ratio
(EBITA to interest expense) of 4.5. Empirical
analysis shows that credit ratings can be
modeled well with three factors: industry, size,
and interest coverage. By analyzing other
large consumer product companies, it is
possible to estimate the likely credit rating at
different levels of coverage.
3. Develop a target debt level over the business
cycle. Finally, executives set a target debt level
of €5.7 billion for 2008. For the base case
scenario in the left-hand column at the bottom
half of Exhibit 2, they projected €1.9 billion
of EBITA in 2008. The target coverage ratio of
4.5 results in a debt level of €8.3 billion.
A fnancing cushion of spare debt capacity for
contingencies and unforeseen events
adds €0.5 billion, for a target 2008 debt level
of €7.8 billion.
Executives then tested this forecast against
a downside scenario, in which EBITA would
reach only €1.4 billion in 2008. Following
the same logic, they arrived at a target debt
level of €5.7 billion in order to maintain
an investment-grade rating under the down-
side scenario.
In the example of Consumerco, executives used
a simple downside scenario relative to the
base case to adjust for the uncertainty of future
cash fows. A more sophisticated approach
might be useful in some industries such as com-
modities, where future cash fows could be
modeled using stochastic-simulation techniques
to estimate the probability of fnancial distress
at various debt levels.
The fnal step in this approach is to determine
how the company should move to the
target capital structure. This transition involves
deciding on the appropriate mix of new
borrowing, debt repayment, dividends, share
repurchases, and share issuances over
the ensuing years.
A company with a surplus of funds, such as
Consumerco, would return cash to shareholders
either as dividends or share repurchases.
Even in the downside scenario, Consumerco will
generate €1.7 billion of cash above its target
EBITA-to-interest-expense ratio.
For one approach to distributing those funds to
shareholders, consider the dividend policy of
Consumerco. Given its modest growth and strong
cash fow, its dividend payout ratio is currently
low. The company could easily raise that ratio to
45 percent of earnings, from 30 percent.
Increasing the regular dividend sends the stock
market a strong signal that Consumerco
thinks it can pay the higher dividend comfortably.
The remaining €1.3 billion would then
typically be returned to shareholders through
share repurchases over the next several
years. Because of liquidity issues in the stock
market, Consumerco might be able to
repurchase only about €1 billion, but it could
consider issuing a one-time dividend for
the remainder.
Finance and strategy
22 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
The signaling effect
6
is probably the most
important consideration in deciding between
dividends and share repurchases. Companies
should also consider differences in the taxation
of dividends and share buybacks, as well as
the fact that shareholders have the option of not
participating in a repurchase, since the cash
they receive must be reinvested.
While these tax and signaling effects are real, they
mainly affect tactical choices about how to
move toward a defned long-term target capital
structure, which should ultimately support
a company’s business strategies by balancing the
fexibility of lower debt with the discipline
(and tax savings) of higher debt.
1
Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller, “The cost of capital,
corporate fnance, and the theory of investment,”
American Economic Review, June 1958, Volume 48, Number 3,
pp. 261–97.
2
There is also some potential for too little debt, though the
consequences aren’t as dire.
3
Richard Dobbs and Werner Rehm, “The value of share
buybacks,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 16, Summer 2005,
pp. 16–20.
4
At extremely low levels of debt, companies can create greater
value by increasing debt to more typical levels.
5
Thomas Augat, Eric Bartels, and Florian Budde, “Multiple
choice for the chemical industry,” mckinseyquarterly.com,
August 2003.
6
The market’s perception that a buyback shows how
confdent management is that the company’s shares are
undervalued, for example, or that it doesn’t need
the cash to cover future commitments, such as interest
payments and capital expenditures.
23
The share price increase from a buyback in theory results purely from the tax bene?ts of a company’s
new capital structure rather than from any underlying operational improvement. Take, for example, a
company with €200 million in excess cash, a 3 percent interest rate, a 30 percent tax rate, and a discount
rate at the cost of equity (10 percent). Assuming that the amount of cash doesn’t grow and that it is
held in perpetuity, the company incurs a value penalty of €18 million from additional taxes on the income
of its cash reserves. A buyback removes this tax penalty and so results in a 1.4 percent rise in the
share price. In this case, repurchasing more than 13 percent of the shares results in an increase of less
than 2 percent. A similar boost occurs when a company takes on more debt to buy back shares.
Yet while such increases in earnings per share help managers hit EPS-based compensation targets,
boosting EPS in this way doesn’t signify an increase in underlying performance or value. Moreover, a
company’s ?xation on buybacks might come at the cost of investments in its long-term health.
Share buyback analysis (including tax), hypothetical example
Analyzing the value of a share buyback (including tax)
McKinsey on Finance 16
Share buyback
Exhibit 2 of 4
1
Posttax EBIT ÷ operating capital.
Balance sheet
Cash, € million
Before After
Operating assets, € million
Total assets, € million
Equity, € million
200 0
580 580
780 580
780 580
Value
Value of operations, € million
Cash, € million
Tax penalty of cash, € million
1,300 1,300
200 0
–18 0
Total equity value, € million 1,482 1,300
Income statement
Before After
Interest, € million
Earnings before taxes,
€ million
Tax, € million
134 134
6 0
140 134
–42 –40
Net income, € million 98 94
Shares outstanding, million 100 86.5
Share price, €
Earnings per share (EPS), €
P/E
14.80 15.00
0.98 1.09
15.1 13.8
Return on invested
capital (ROIC)
1
16% 16%
Earnings before interest,
taxes (EBIT), € million
Excerpt from
The value of share buybacks
Number 16,
Summer 2005
Richard Dobbs and Werner Rehm
Finance and strategy
24 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
In most cases, simple math leaves successful companies with little choice: if they have moderate growth
and high returns on capital, it’s functionally impossible for them to reinvest every dollar they earn.
Consider this example: a company earning $1 billion a year in after-tax pro?ts, with a 25 percent return
on invested capital (ROIC) and projected revenue growth of 5 percent a year, needs to invest about
$200 million annually to continue growing at the same rate. That leaves $800 million of additional cash
?ow available for still more investment or returning to shareholders. Yet ?nding $800 million of
new value-creating investment opportunities every year is no simple task—in any sector of the economy.
Furthermore, at a 25 percent ROIC, the company would need to increase its revenues by 25 percent
a year to absorb all of its cash ?ow. It has no choice but to return a substantial amount of cash
to shareholders.
Does it matter whether distributions take the form of dividends or share repurchases? Empirically,
the answer is no. Whichever method is used, earnings multiples are essentially the same for companies
when compared with others that have similar total payouts (Exhibit A). Total returns to shareholders
(TRS) are also the same regardless of the mix of dividends and share repurchases (Exhibit B). These
results should not be surprising. What drives value is the cash ?ow generated by operations. That
cash ?ow is in turn driven by the combination of growth and returns on capital—not the mix of how excess
cash is paid out.
So how should a company decide between repurchases and dividends? That depends on how con?dent
management is of future cash ?ows—and how much ?exibility it needs. Share repurchases offer
companies more ?exibility to hold onto cash for unexpected investment opportunities or shifts in a volatile
economic environment. In contrast, companies that pay dividends enjoy less ?exibility because
investors have been conditioned to expect cuts in them only in the most dire circumstances. Thus,
managers should employ dividends only when they are certain they can continue to do so. Even
increasing a dividend sends signals to investors that managers are con?dent that they will be able to
continue paying the new, higher dividend level.
Share repurchases also signal con?dence but offer more ?exibility because they don’t create
a tacit commitment to additional purchases in future years. As you would expect, changing the proportion
of dividends to share buybacks has no impact on a company’s valuation multiples or TRS, regardless
of payout level.
Excerpt from
Paying back your shareholders
Number 39,
Spring 2011
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
25
Earnings multiples are not affected by the payout mix.
MoF 2011
Payback
Exhibit 3 of 4
Payout mix: average share of dividends
in total payouts, 2002–07, %
1
Insufficient data for payout levels of 96–130% at payout mix of >65 to 100% dividends and for payout levels of
>130% for all payout mixes.
2
For 279 non?nancial companies that were in the S&P 500 at the end of 2009, were continuously in operation since
1999, and paid dividends or repurchased shares. EBITA = earnings before interest, taxes, and amortization.
Ratio of median enterprise value to EBITA multiple,
year-end 2007
2
0–65% 66–95% 96–130%
0 5 10 15 20 25
0 (100% share repurchases)
>20 to 40%
>40 to 65%
>0 to 20%
>65 to 100%
Level of total payouts: average annual payouts (dividends +
share repurchases) as % of total net income,
1
2002–07
0 (100% share repurchases)
>20 to 40%
>40 to 65%
>0 to 20%
>65 to 100%
Returns to shareholders are unrelated to the payout mix.
MoF 2011
Payback
Exhibit 4 of 4
Level of total payouts: average annual payouts (dividends +
share repurchases) as % of total net income,
1
2002–07
1
Insufficient data for payout level of 66–95% at payout mix of zero dividends (100% share repurchase).
2
For 293 non?nancial companies that were in the S&P 500 at the end of 2009, were continuously in operation since
1999, and paid dividends or repurchased shares. CAGR = compound annual growth rate.
Median total returns to shareholders (TRS),
CAGR, 2002–07,
2
%
0–65% 66–95% 96–130% >130%
0 5 –5 10 15 20 25
Payout mix: average share of
dividends in total payouts, 2002–07, %
Exhibit A
Exhibit B
Finance and strategy
26
How to grow
27
The largest, most successful companies would
seem to be ideally positioned to create value for
their shareholders through growth. After all,
they command leading market and channel posi-
tions in multiple industries and geographies;
they employ deep benches of top management
talent utilizing proven management processes;
and they often have healthy balance sheets to fund
the investments most likely to produce growth.
Yet after years of impressive top- and bottom-line
growth that propelled them to the top of their
markets, these companies eventually fnd they can
no longer sustain their pace. Indeed, over the
past 40 years North America’s largest companies—
those, say, with more than about $25 billion in
market capitalization—have consistently under-
performed the S&P 500,
1
with only two
short-lived exceptions.
In this section: Features
27 Why the biggest and best struggle to grow (Winter 2004)
35 Running a winning M&A shop (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
32 How to choose between growth and ROIC (Autumn 2007)
34 All P/Es are not created equal (Spring 2004)
36 M&A teams: When small is beautiful (Winter 2010)
39 Managing your integration manager (Summer 2003)
41 The five types of successful acquisitions (Summer 2010)
Nicholas F. Lawler, Robert S. McNish, and Jean-Hugues J. Monier
Why the biggest and best
struggle to grow
The largest companies eventually find size itself an impediment to creating new value.
They must recognize that not all forms of growth are equal.
Number 10,
Winter 2004
28 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Talk to senior executives at these organizations,
however, and it is diffcult to fnd many willing to
back off from ambitious growth programs that
are typically intended to double their company’s
share price over three to fve years. Yet in all
but the rarest of cases, such aggressive targets are
unreasonable as a way to motivate growth
programs that create value for shareholders—and
may even be risky, tempting executives to scale
back value creating organic growth initiatives that
may be small or long-term propositions, some-
times in favor of larger, nearer-term, but less
reliable acquisitions.
In our experience, executives would be better
off recognizing the limitations of size and
revisiting the fundamentals of how growth creates
shareholder value. By understanding that
not all types of growth are equal when it comes to
creating value for shareholders, even the
largest companies can avoid bulking up on the
business equivalent of empty calories and
instead nourish themselves on the types of growth
most likely to create shareholder value.
What holds them back?
At even well-run big companies, growth slows or
stops—and for complex reasons. Ironically,
for some it’s the natural result of past success:
their portfolios are weighed down by large,
leading businesses that may have once delivered
considerable growth, but that have since
matured with their industries and now have fewer
natural avenues for growth. At others, man-
agement talent and processes are more grooved
to maintain, not build, businesses; and their
equity- and cash-rich balance sheets dampen
the impact growth has on shareholder value.
For all of them, their most formidable growth
challenge may be their sheer size: it takes
large increments of value creation to have a
meaningful impact on their share price.
The other crucial factor is how management
responds when organic growth starts to falter.
This is often a function of compensation
that ties bonuses to bottom-line growth. In any
case, management is often tempted to
respond as if the slowing organic growth were
merely temporary, rejecting any downward
adjustment to near-term bottom-line growth.
That may work in the short run, but as individual
businesses strip out controllable costs, they
soon begin to cut into the muscle and bone behind
whatever value-rich organic growth potential
remains—sales and marketing, new-product
development, new business development, R&D.
At one industrial company we are familiar
with, management proudly points to each savings
initiative that allows them to meet quarterly
earnings forecasts.
But the short-term focus on meeting
unrealistically high growth expectations can
undermine long-term growth. Ultimately,
the scramble to meet quarterly numbers will
continue to intensify as cost cutting further
decelerates organic growth. If the situation gets
more desperate, management may turn to
acquisitions to keep bottom-line growth going.
But acquisitions, on average, create relatively
little value compared to the investment required,
while adding enormous integration challenges
and portfolio complexity into the mix. Struggling
under the workload, management can lose
focus on operations. In this downward spiral
management chases growth in ways that
create less and less value—and in the end winds
up effectively trading value for growth.
Some companies seem to have recognized the
danger in constantly striving to exceed
expectations. One company’s recent decision
to vest half of its CEO’s stock award for
29 How to grow
simply meeting (rather than handily beating)
the fve-year share price appreciation of the S&P
500 may be one such bow to good reason.
Ironically, relieving the CEO of the pressure to
substantially outperform the market may
have given him the freedom he needs to focus on
longer-term investments in value-creating
organic growth.
All growth is not created equal
The right way for large companies to focus on
growth, we believe, is to differentiate among
entire classes of growth on the basis of what we
call their value creation intensity.
2
The value
creation intensity of a dollar of top-line growth
directly depends on how much invested
capital is required to fuel that growth—the more
invested capital, the lower the value creation
intensity. Sorting growth initiatives this way
requires understanding the time frame in
which shareholder value can be created—as short
as a matter of months for some acquisitions or
more than a decade for some R&D investments. It
also requires assessing the size of an oppor-
tunity by the amount of value it creates for share-
holders, not merely how much top-line revenues
it adds. These are the particularly crucial factors
for very large companies, where smaller
investments can get lost on the management
agenda, long-term investments fail to
capture management’s imagination, and the
temptation is to invest in highly visible near-term
projects with low value creation intensity.
To illustrate, we dipped into M&A research
to see how much value creation even top-notch
acquirers can reasonably expect. We have
also modeled the value creation intensity of four
different modes of organic growth, by estimating
results for prototypical organic growth oppor-
tunities in the consumer goods industry. While
this specifc hierarchy of value creation
intensity may not hold for every industry, it can
serve as a useful example.
New product/market development tends to
have the highest value creation intensity.
It provides top-line growth at attractive margins,
since competition is limited and the market
is growing. We estimate that the prototypical new
product in the consumer goods industry
can create between $1.75 and $2.00 in share-
holder value for every dollar of new revenue.
Ironically, while this type of growth creates the
most value, it’s particularly diffcult for
really large companies. Creating new demand
for a product that did not previously exist
requires outstanding innovation capabilities—
and big companies that have tightened
the screws on operational performance are
notorious for cutting away at research
and development spending.
Expanding into adjacent markets typically
requires incremental invested capital that leads to
lower, though still very attractive, value creation
intensity in the range of $0.30 to $0.75 per dollar
of new revenue. Facilitating adjacent market
expansion requires outstanding execution skills
and organizational fexibility.
Maintaining or growing share in a growing market
requires substantial incremental investments
to make the product and its value distinctive. But
as long as the market is still growing, margins
are not competed away. As a result, we estimate
value creation in the range of $0.10 to $0.50
per dollar of new revenue.
Growing share in a stable market does not always
create value. While incremental investments
are not always material, competition for share in
order to maintain scale is typically intense,
leading to lower margins. We estimate that
30 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit The intensity of value creation varies by mode of growth.
McKinsey on
Exhibit < > of < >
1
Stylized results based on consumer products examples.
2
Assumes a $50 billion market cap, all-stock company with $23 billion of revenue expected to grow at GDP rates and constant
return on invested capital (ROIC).
3
Examination of 338 deals revealed short-term value creation for acquirer of 11% for 75th percentile deals and –1% for 50th
percentile deals.
Acquisition (25th to
75th percentile result)
3
–0.5–0.20 n/m–50
Category of growth
Shareholder value
created for incremental
$1 million of growth/
target acquisition size
1
Revenue growth/
acquisition size necessary
to double typical company’s
share price,
2
$ billions
Competing for share
in a stable market
–0.25–0.40 n/m–25
Expanding an
existing market
0.30–0.75 13–33
Maintaining/growing
share in a growing market
0.10–0.50 20–100
New-product
market development
1.75–2.00 5–6
Consumer goods industry
increasing share in a relatively mature market
may destroy as much as $0.25 or create
as much as $0.40 of shareholder value for every
dollar of new revenue. And for companies
whose growth is already stalling, growth in
a stable market merely postpones
the inevitable.
Acquisitions. While they can drive a material
amount of top-line growth in the relatively
short order, it is now widely accepted that the
average acquirer captures relatively little
shareholder value from its deals.
3
In fact, the
numbers suggest that even an acquirer
who consistently enjoys a top-quartile market
reaction in each of its deals will create
only about $0.20 in shareholder value for every
$1 million in revenues acquired.
4
Obviously, the size and timing of growth oppor-
tunities are determined by business fundamentals
within each industry. Typically, though, they
tend to come in relatively small increments and
mature over multiple years. In the consumer
goods industry, one study
5
found that almost half
of product launches had frst-year sales of less
than $25 million, and the largest was only a little
more than $200 million. The number of these
sorts of top-line growth projects needed to move
the needle for the biggest companies is daunt-
ing. When we stand back from this analysis, we
can’t help but draw a very dispiriting obser-
31
vation for very large companies: there are remark-
ably few growth opportunities that are large
and near-term and highly value creating all at the
same time. Put another way, the amount
of top-line growth required to achieve a doubling
in shareholder value varies dramatically by
mode of growth, and is huge in even the most
favorable modes of growth (exhibit).
Some executives will no doubt fnd uncomfortable
the shift to a perspective that emphasizes
the value creation intensity of growth initiatives.
Though such a shift would serve shareholders
well, it may also lead to lower overall levels of top-
line and earnings-per-share (EPS) growth.
Executive credibility will be on the line in
communicating this message to the markets. One
executive we’ve worked with, for example,
recognized that his company lacked the credibility
to quickly lower his overall EPS growth targets
in favor of a richer mix of value-creating growth
without getting pummeled by the markets.
Instead, the company made one more big push on
operations, letting only enough of the savings
fall to the bottom line to meet the company’s short-
term growth projections. The rest of the savings
was redirected toward slower, but more value
creating, organic growth, with the expectation that
once the company had built some credibility
in that respect with shareholders, it could more
easily make its case to the markets.
When growing gets tough in the largest companies,
tough executives must learn to get growing
in value-creating ways. Rather than bulk up on
the business equivalent of empty calories,
they should explore the value creation intensity of
different modes of growth to build shareholder
value muscle.
1
Credit Suisse First Boston, “The pyramid of numbers,” The
Consilient Observer, Volume 2, Number 17, September 23, 2003.
2
Shareholder value creation per dollar of top-line revenue growth.
3
See, for example, Hans Bieshaar, Jeremy Knight,
and Alexander van Wassenaer, “Deals that create value,”
mckinseyquarterly.com, February 2001.
4
It is important to note, however, that market-entering or
capability-building acquisitions designed to fuel subsequent
organic growth are more likely to create value than
market-consolidating acquisitions designed to capture
cost effciencies.
5
Steve Innen, “Innovation awards 2002,” Food Processing,
December 2002, pp. 35–40.
How to grow
32 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
How to choose between growth and ROIC
Number 25,
Autumn 2007
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
Value-minded executives know that although growth is good, returns on invested capital (ROIC) can be an
equally—or still more—important indicator of value creation. To understand better how value is created
over time, we identi?ed all non?nancial US companies that had a market cap over $2 billion
1
in 1995 and
had been listed for at least a decade as of that year. When we examined their growth and ROIC
performance over the subsequent decade, we found clear patterns in the interaction between the two
measures. These patterns can help guide value creation strategies suited to a company’s current
performance. For companies that already have high ROICs,
2
raising revenues faster than the market
generates higher total returns to shareholders (TRS) than further improvements to ROIC do.
This ?nding doesn’t mean that companies with high ROICs can disregard the impact of growth on their
pro?tability and capital returns. But executives do have the latitude to invest in growth even if ROIC
and pro?tability erode as a result—as long as they can keep ROIC levels in or above the medium band.
Companies that fall in the middle of the ROIC scale
3
have no latitude to let their performance on
either measure decline. For these companies, improving ROIC without maintaining growth at the pace of
the market or generating growth at the cost of a lower ROIC usually results in a below-market TRS. In
most cases, the market rewarded these companies with above-market returns only when they maintained
their growth and improved their ROIC.
4
The pattern continues for companies with a low ROIC.
5
Although both ROIC and growth are still important,
an improvement in ROIC is clearly more important: companies that increased their ROIC generated,
on average, a TRS 5 to 8 percent higher than those that didn’t. Growth relative to the market made less
difference (1 to 4 percent) for shareholders, particularly if the company improved its ROIC. This
result isn’t surprising. Because such companies were generating returns at or below their weighted-
average cost of capital, they would have had dif?culty accessing capital to ?nance further growth
unless they improved their operations and earned the right to grow. Indeed, nearly one-third of the com-
panies in this category from 1995 were acquired or went bankrupt within the following decade.
1
Normalized to 2003 dollars.
2
Those with a ten-year average ROIC greater than or equal to 20 percent in 1995.
3
Those with a ten-year average ROIC in 1995 greater than or equal to 9 percent but less than 20 percent.
4
Because our data represent the median of a group, a company could achieve above-market TRS even though its growth was below
market or its ROIC had declined.
5
Those with a ten-year average ROIC in 1995 greater than or equal to 6 percent but less than 9 percent.
33
Increased
Decreased
Total returns to shareholders (TRS),
1
1996–2005, compared with returns on invested capital (ROIC)
Companies with
high ROIC
2
Companies with
medium ROIC
3
Companies with
low ROIC
4
McKinsey on Finance
Growth
Exhibit 1 of 3
1
Median of compound average annual TRS from 1996 to 2005 for each group of companies, adjusted for compound
1996–2005 average TRS of S&P 500 index companies (6.9%).
2
78 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?20% and market capitalization >$2 billion in 1995.
3
129 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?9% and market capitalization >$2 billion in 1995.
4
64 companies with 10-year average ROIC ?6% but $2 billion in 1995.
5
Compound annual growth rate.
Below
ROIC
(excluding
goodwill)
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
Above
6
11
7
15
Median TRS exceeds market
Below
Growth, CAGR
5
of revenues
Above
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
2
7
6
10
Below Above
S&P 500 average TRS = 6.9
3
7
11
12
How to grow
34 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
All P/Es are not created equal
Number 11,
Spring 2004
Nidhi Chadda, Robert S. McNish, and Werner Rehm
The relationship between P/E multiples and growth is basic arithmetic:
1
high multiples can result from high
returns on capital in average- or low-growth businesses just as easily as they can result from high
growth. But beware: any amount of growth at low returns on capital will not lead to a high P/E, because
such growth does not create shareholder value.
To illustrate, consider two companies with identical P/E multiples of 17 but with different mechanisms for
creating value. Growth, Inc., is expected to grow at an average annual rate of 13 percent over the
next ten years, while generating a 14 percent return on invested capital (ROIC), which is modestly higher
than its 10 percent cost of capital. To sustain that level of growth, it must reinvest 93 cents from each
dollar of income. The relatively high reinvestment rate means that Growth, Inc., turns only a small amount
of earnings growth into free cash ?ow growth. Many companies ?t this growth pro?le, including
some that need to reinvest more than 100 percent of their earnings to support their growth rate. In con-
trast, Returns, Inc., is expected to grow at only 5 percent per year, a rate similar to long-term nominal
GDP growth in the United States.
2
Unlike Growth, Inc., however, Returns, Inc., invests its capital extremely
ef?ciently. With a return on capital of 35 percent, it needs to reinvest only 14 cents of each dollar to
sustain its growth. As its earnings grow, Returns, Inc., methodically turns them into free cash ?ow.
McKinsey on Finance
Exhibit 2 of < >
Growth, Inc
1
Returns, Inc
1
Reinvestment rate 93% Reinvestment rate 14%
Year 1 Year 2 Year 1 Year 2
Operating pro?t less taxes 100 113 100 105
93 105 14 15 Reinvestment
7 8 86 90 Free cash ?ow
1
Assuming 10% cost of equity, no debt, and 10 year’s excessive growth followed by 5% growth at historic levels of ROIC.
1
For instance, assuming perpetuity growth for a company without any fnancial leverage, P/E = (1 – growth ÷ return on
capital) ÷ (cost of capital – growth).
2
Real GDP growth over the past 40 years in the United States was 3.5 percent.
Because Growth, Inc., and Returns, Inc., take very different routes to the same P/E multiple, it would
make sense for a savvy executive to pursue different growth and investment strategies to increase
each business’s P/E. Obviously, the rare company that can combine high growth with high returns on
capital should enjoy extremely high multiples.
35
Robert T. Uhlaner and Andrew S. West
Running a winning
M&A shop
Picking up the pace of M&A requires big changes in a company’s processes and
organization—even if the deals are smaller.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Corporate deal making has a new look—smaller,
busier, and focused on growth. Not so long
ago, M&A experts sequenced, at most, 3 or 4 major
deals a year, typically with an eye on the benefts
of industry consolidation and cost cutting. Today
we regularly come across executives hoping to
close 10 to 20 smaller deals in the same amount of
time, often simultaneously. Their objective:
combining a number of complementary deals into
a single strategic platform to pursue growth—
for example, by acquiring a string of smaller
businesses and melding them into a unit whose
growth potential exceeds the sum of its parts.
Naturally, when executives try to juggle more
and different kinds of deals simultaneously,
productivity may suffer as managers struggle to
get the underlying process right.
1
Most com-
panies, we have found, are not prepared for the
intense work of completing so many deals—
How to grow
36 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
and fumbling with the process can jeopardize
the very growth companies seek. In fact, most of
them lack focus, make unclear decisions,
and identify potential acquisition targets in
a purely reactive way. Completing deals
at the expected pace just can’t happen without
an effcient end-to-end process.
Even companies with established deal-making
capabilities may have to adjust them to play in
this new game. Our research shows that
successful practitioners follow a number of
principles that can make the adjustment
easier and more rewarding. They include linking
every deal explicitly to the strategy it supports
and forging a process that companies can readily
adapt to the fundamentally different requirements
of different types of deals.
Eyes on the (strategic) prize
One of the most often overlooked, though
seemingly obvious, elements of an effective M&A
program is ensuring that every deal supports
the corporate strategy. Many companies, we have
found, believe that they are following an
M&A strategy even if their deals are only generally
related to their strategic direction and the
connections are neither specifc nor quantifable.
Instead, those who advocate a deal should
explicitly show, through a few targeted M&A
themes, how it advances the growth strategy.
A specifc deal should, for example, be linked to
strategic goals, such as market share and
the company’s ability to build a leading position.
Bolder, clearer goals encourage companies
to be truly proactive in sourcing deals and help to
establish the scale, urgency, and valuation
approach for growth platforms that require a
number of them. Executives should also
ask themselves if they have enough people develop-
ing and evaluating the deal pipeline, which
might include small companies to be assembled
into a single business, carve-outs, and more
obvious targets, such as large public companies
actively shopping for buyers.
Furthermore, many deals underperform because
executives take a one-size-fts-all approach
to them—for example, by using the same process
to integrate acquisitions for back-offce
cost synergies and acquisitions for sales force
synergies. Certain deals, particularly those
focused on raising revenues or building new
capabilities, require fundamentally dif-
ferent approaches to sourcing, valuation, due
diligence, and integration. It is therefore
Excerpt from
M&A teams:
When small is beautiful
Number 34,
Winter 2010
Patrick Beitel and Werner Rehm
Executives at companies that don’t have
large, standing teams may wonder if they are
really essential for successful deal making.
We don’t think they are. If the essentials for the
governance and execution of M&A are in
place, many companies can carry it out
successfully with a small, experienced team that
pulls in resources project by project. In an
ongoing series of executive interviews on M&A,
we’ve run across a number of companies
that have small M&A teams—with as few as
two to three core team members, led
by the head of M&A—which take this kind of
project-driven approach.
Indeed, it may even be more suitable than the
use of large, standing teams—at least for
companies in certain industries, depending on
the number of strategic M&A opportunities.
37
critical for managers not only to understand
what types of deals they seek for shorter-term cost
synergies or longer-term top-line synergies
(exhibit) but also to assess candidly which types
of deals they really know how to execute and
whether a particular transaction goes against a
company’s traditional norms or experience.
Companies with successful M&A programs
typically adapt their approach to the type of deal
at hand. For example, over the past six years,
IBM has acquired 50 software companies, nearly
20 percent of them market leaders in their
segments. It executes many different types of
deals to drive its software strategy, targeting
companies in high-value, high-growth segments
that would extend its current portfolio into
new or related markets. IBM also looks for
technology acquisitions that would accelerate
the development of the capabilities it needs.
Deal sponsors use a comprehensive software-
segment strategy review and gap analysis
to determine when M&A (rather than in-house
development) is called for, to identify targets,
Exhibit Managers must understand not only which types of deals they
desire but also which they know how to execute.
McKinsey on Finance 27
Proactive M&A
Exhibit 1 of 2
Types of M&A deals
Large
Small
Stand-alone cost
improvements
Size of acquired
company relative
to acquirer
Need to expand current capabilities
Cross-selling
existing products
Building
new customer
relationships
Creating new
products
Building a
new business
Overcapacity
• Reduce industry capacity
and overhead
• Present fundamentally
similar product offering
Product/market
consolidation
• Create economies of
scale and consolidate
back of?ce; expand
market presence
Transformation/
convergence
• Use deal to transform
the way industry works
• Create new value
proposition
Roll-up
• Transfer core strengths to
target business(es)
Short-term
cost synergies
Long-term top-line
synergies
Low High
Acquire
products/markets
• Expansion of market offering
and/or geographic reach
Strategic-growth bet
• Seek skill transfer into new
and/or noncore business
Pay mainly for clear
cost synergies
Pay for some growth
and channel access
Pay for opportunity to
attack new markets
and grow through new
capabilities
Pay for lower cost of
operating new businesses,
potential to increase
revenue by leveraging
brand strength
Pay largely for growth and
channel access; revenue
synergy potential via
pull-through also exists
Pay for high-risk option
value and ability to act in
market space
How to grow
38 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
and to determine which acquisitions should
be executed.
IBM has developed the methods, skills, and
resources needed to execute its growth strategy
through M&A and can reshape them to suit
different types of deals. A substantial investment
of money, people, and time has been necessary.
In 2007, IBM’s software group alone was concur-
rently integrating 18 acquisitions; more than
100 full-time experts in a variety of functions and
geographies were involved, in addition to
specialized teams mobilized for each deal. IBM’s
ability to tailor its approach has been critical
in driving the performance of these businesses.
Collectively, IBM’s 39 acquisitions below
$500 million from 2002 to 2005 doubled their
direct revenue within two years.
Organization and process
When companies increase the number and pace
of their acquisitions, the biggest practical
challenge most of them face is getting not only
the right people but also the right number
of people involved in M&A. If they don’t, they may
buy the wrong assets, underinvest in appropriate
ones, or manage their deals and integration
efforts poorly. Organizations must invest to build
their skills and capabilities before launching
an aggressive M&A agenda.
Support from senior management
In many companies, senior managers are often
too impressed by what appears to be a low price
for a deal or the allure of a new product. They
then fail to look beyond the fnancials or to provide
support for integration. At companies that
handle M&A more productively, the CEO and
senior managers explicitly identify it as a
pillar of the overall corporate strategy. At GE, for
example, the CEO requires all business units to
submit a review of each deal. In addition to
the fnancial justifcation, the review must articu-
late a rationale that fts the story line of the
entire organization and spell out the requirements
for integration. A senior vice president then
coaches the business unit through each phase of a
stage gate process. Because the strict process
preceding the close of the deal outlines what the
company must do to integrate the acquisition,
senior management’s involvement with it after
the close is defned clearly.
The most common challenge executives face in
a deal is remaining involved with it and
accountable for its success from inception through
integration. They tend to focus on sourcing
deals and ensuring that the terms are acceptable,
quickly moving on to other things once the
letter of intent is signed and leaving the integration
work to anyone who happens to have the
time. To improve the process and the outcome,
executives must give more thought to the
appointment of key operational players, such as
the deal owner and the integration manager.
2
The deal owner
Deal owners are typically high-performing
managers or executives accountable for specifc
acquisitions, beginning with the identifca-
tion of a target and running through its eventual
integration. The most successful acquirers
appoint the deal owner very early in the process,
often as a prerequisite for granting approval
to negotiate with a target. This assignment, which
may be full or part time, could go to someone
from the business-development team or even a line
organization, depending on the type of deal.
For a large one regarded as a possible platform for
a new business unit or geography, the right deal
owner might be a vice president who can continue
to lead the business once the acquisition is
complete. For a smaller deal focused on acquiring
a specifc technology, the right person might be
39
a director in the R&D function or someone from
the business-development organization.
The integration manager
Often, the most underappreciated and poorly
resourced role is that of the integration manager—
in effect, the deal owner’s chief of staff.
Typically, integration managers are not suffciently
involved early in the deal process. Moreover,
many of them are chosen for their skills as
process managers, not as general managers who
can make decisions, work with people throughout
the organization, and manage complicated
situations independently.
Integration managers, our experience shows,
ought to become involved as soon as
the target has been identifed but before the
evaluation or negotiations begin. They
should drive the end-to-end merger-management
process to assure that the strategic rationale
of a deal informs the due diligence as well as the
planning and implementation of the integra-
tion effort. During IBM’s acquisition of Micromuse,
for example, a vice president–level executive
was chosen to take responsibility for integration.
This executive was brought into the process
well before due diligence and remains involved
almost two years after the deal closed.
IBM managers attribute its strong performance
to the focused leadership of the integra-
tion executive.
Sizing a professional
merger-management function
Companies that conclude deals only occasionally
may be able to tap functional and business
experts to conduct due diligence and then build
integration teams around specifc deals. But
a more ambitious M&A program entails a volume
of work—to source and screen candidates,
conduct preliminary and fnal due diligence, close
deals, and drive integration—that demands
capabilities and processes on the scale of any
other corporate function. Indeed, our
experience with several active acquirers has
taught us that the number of resources
required can be quite large. To do 10 deals a year,
a company must identify roughly 100 candi-
dates, conduct due diligence on around 40, and
ultimately integrate the fnal 10. This kind of
effort requires the capacity to sift through many
deals while simultaneously managing three
or four data rooms and several parallel integration
efforts. Without a suffcient (and effective)
investment in resources, individual deals are
doomed to fail.
Excerpt from
Managing your
integration manager
Number 8,
Summer 2003
Michael J. Shelton
No surprise that the effectiveness of integration
managers varies widely. Many CEOs see them
simply as process coordinators or project
managers. But the best play a far more pivotal
role, helping mergers to succeed by keeping
everyone focused on the issues that have the
greatest potential for creating value and by
infusing integration efforts with the necessary
momentum. Unfortunately, however, too
many integration managers never assume such
a role or, if they do, ?nd it hard to succeed
in it. Our experience during the past ?ve years
with more than 300 integration efforts—
most involving Global 500 corporations—
suggests three reasons: CEOs fail to recruit the
right people for the job, integration managers
don’t become involved in the merger process
early enough, and CEOs fail to give them
adequate support.
How to grow
40 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
A rigorous stage gate process
A company that transacts large numbers
of deals must take a clearly defned stage gate
approach to making and managing decisions.
Many organizations have poorly defned processes
or are plagued with choke points, and either
fault can make good targets walk away or turn to
competitive bids. Even closed deals can get
off to a bad start if a target’s management team
assumes that a sloppy M&A process shows
what life would be like under the acquirer.
An effective stage gate system involves three
separate phases of review and evaluation.
At the strategy approval stage, the business-
development team (which includes one
or two members from both the business unit and
corporate development) evaluates targets
outside-in to assess whether they could help the
company grow, how much they are worth,
and their attractiveness as compared with other
targets. Even at this point, the team should
discuss key due diligence objectives and integra-
tion issues. A subset of the team then drives
the process and assigns key roles, including that
of the deal owner. The crucial decision at
this point is whether a target is compatible with
the corporate strategy, has strong support
from the acquiring company, and can be
integrated into it.
At the approval-to-negotiate stage, the team
decides on a price range that will allow the com-
pany to maintain pricing discipline. The
results of preliminary due diligence (including the
limited exchange of data and early manage-
ment discussions with the target) are critical here,
as are integration issues that have been reviewed,
at least to some extent, by the corporate functions.
A vision for incorporating the target into
the acquirer’s business plan, a clear operating
program, and an understanding of the
acquisition’s key synergies are important as well,
no matter what the size or type of deal. At
the end of this stage, the team should have pro-
duced a nonbinding term sheet or letter of
intent and a roadmap for negotiations, confrma-
tory due diligence, and process to close.
The board of directors must endorse the defnitive
agreement in the deal approval stage. It should
resemble the approval-to-negotiate stage if the
process has been executed well; the focus ought to
be on answering key questions rather than
raising new strategic issues, debating valuations,
or looking ahead to integration and discussing
how to estimate the deal’s execution risk.
Each stage should be tailored to the type of deal
at hand. Small R&D deals don’t have to pass
through a detailed board approval process but
may instead be authorized at the business
or product unit level. Large deals that require
signifcant regulatory scrutiny must cer-
tainly meet detailed approval criteria before
moving forward. Determining in advance
what types of deals a company intends to pursue
and how to manage them will allow it to
articulate the trade-offs and greatly increase its
ability to handle a larger number of deals
with less time and effort.
As companies adapt to a faster-paced, more
complicated era of M&A deal making, they must
fortify themselves with a menu of process and
organizational skills to accommodate the variety
of deals available to them.
1
These results were among the fndings of our June 2007 survey
of business-development and merger integration leaders.
2
In some smaller deals, the integration manager and deal owner
can be the same person in complementary roles.
41
Excerpt from
The five types of successful acquisitions
Number 36,
Summer 2010
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and David Wessels
In our experience, the strategic rationale for an acquisition that creates value typically conforms to at least
one of the following ?ve archetypes.
Improve the target company’s performance. This is one of the most common value-creating acquisition
strategies. Put simply, you buy a company and radically reduce costs to improve margins and cash ?ows.
In some cases, the acquirer may also take steps to accelerate revenue growth.
Consolidate to remove excess capacity from industry. The combination of higher production from existing
capacity and new capacity from recent entrants often generates more supply than demand. It is in
no individual competitor’s interest to shut a plant, however. Companies often ?nd it easier to shut plants
across the larger combined entity resulting from an acquisition than to shut their least productive
plants without one and end up with a smaller company.
Accelerate market access for the target’s (or buyer’s) products. Often, relatively small companies
with innovative products have dif?culty reaching the entire potential market for their products. Small
pharmaceutical companies, for example, typically lack the large sales forces required to cultivate
relationships with the many doctors they need to promote their products. Bigger pharmaceutical
companies sometimes purchase these smaller companies and use their own large-scale sales forces to
accelerate the sales of the smaller companies’ products.
Get skills or technologies faster or at lower cost than they can be built. Cisco Systems has used
acquisitions to close gaps in its technologies, allowing it to assemble a broad line of networking products
and to grow very quickly from a company with a single product line into the key player in Internet
equipment. From 1993 to 2001, Cisco acquired 71 companies, at an average price of approximately
$350 million. Cisco’s sales increased from $650 million in 1993 to $22 billion in 2001, with nearly
40 percent of its 2001 revenue coming directly from these acquisitions. By 2009, Cisco had more than
$36 billion in revenues and a market cap of approximately $150 billion.
Pick winners early and help them develop their businesses. The ?nal winning strategy involves making
acquisitions early in the life cycle of a new industry or product line, long before most others recognize that
it will grow signi?cantly. Johnson & Johnson pursued this strategy in its early acquisitions of medical-
device businesses. When J&J bought device manufacturer Cordis, in 1996, Cordis had $500 million in
revenues. By 2007, its revenues had increased to $3.8 billion, re?ecting a 20 percent annual growth
rate. J&J purchased orthopedic device manufacturer DePuy in 1998, when DePuy had $900 million in
revenues. By 2007, they had grown to $4.6 billion, also at an annual growth rate of 20 percent.
How to grow
42
Governance and risk
43
In this section: Features
43 The voice of experience: Public versus private equity (Spring 2009)
49 The right way to hedge (Summer 2010)
Excerpts from
54 Risk: Seeing around the corners (Autumn 2009)
55 Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think (Spring 2003)
Viral Acharya, Conor Kehoe, and Michael Reyner
The voice of experience:
Public versus private equity
Few directors have served on the boards of both private and public companies.
Those who have give their views here about which model works best.
Number 31,
Spring 2009
Advocates of the private-equity model have
long argued that the better PE frms perform
better than public companies do. This
advantage, these advocates say, stems not only
from fnancial engineering but also from
stronger operational performance.
Directors who have served on the boards of both
public and private companies agree—and add
that the behavior of the board is one key element
in driving superior operational performance.
Among the 20 chairmen or CEOs we recently
interviewed as part of a study in the United
Kingdom,
1
most said that PE boards were signif-
cantly more effective than were those of their
public counterparts. The results are not compre-
hensive, nor do they fully refect the wide
diversity of public- and private-company boards.
Nevertheless, our fndings raise some important
issues for public boards and their chairmen.
44 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit 1 Private-equity boards are considered effective overall
even if public boards have some advantages.
McKinsey on Finance
PE Directors
Exhibit 1 of 2
Source: Interviews with about 20 UK-based directors who have served, over the past 5 years, on the boards of both private and
public companies (FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses and private-equity owned), most with an enterprise value of >£500 million
Interviewees’ rating of boards (on a scale of 1 to 5, where 1= poor, 5 = world class)
Boards of private-equity
portfolio companies
Boards of public limited
companies (PLCs)
Overall effectiveness 4.6 3.5
Strategic leadership 4.3 3.3
3.1 4.8
Performance
management
4.1 3.8
Development/succession
management
4.8 3.3
Stakeholder
management
3.8 4.2
Governance (audit,
compliance, and risk)
When asked to compare the overall effectiveness
of PE and public boards, 15 of the 20 respondents
said that PE boards clearly added more value;
none said that their public counterparts were
better. This sentiment was refected in the scores
the respondents gave each type of board,
on a fve-point scale (where 1 was poor and 5 was
world class): PE boards averaged 4.6, public
boards 3.5.
Clearly, public boards cannot (and should not)
seek to replicate all elements of the PE model: the
public-company one offers superior access to
capital and liquidity but in return requires a more
extensive and transparent approach to gover-
nance and a more explicit balancing of stakeholder
interests. Nevertheless, our survey raises many
questions about the two ownership models and
how best to enhance a board’s effectiveness. How,
for example, can public boards be structured
so that their members can put more time into
managing strategy and performance?
Moreover, can—and should—the interests of
public-board members be better aligned
with those of executives?
How both models add value
Respondents observed that the differences
in the way public and PE boards operate—and are
expected to operate—arise from differences in
ownership structure and governance expectations.
Because public companies need to protect the
interests of arm’s-length shareholders and ensure
the fow of accurate and equal information to
the capital markets, governance issues such as
audit, compliance, remuneration, and risk
management inevitably (and appropriately) loom
much larger in the minds of public-board
members. Our research did indeed suggest that
public-company boards scored higher on
45
governance and on management development.
However, respondents saw PE boards as
more effective overall because of their stronger
strategic leadership and more effective
performance oversight, as well as their manage-
ment of key stakeholders (Exhibit 1).
Strategic leadership
In almost all cases, our respondents described PE
boards as leading the formulation of strategy,
with all directors working together to shape it and
defne the resulting priorities. Key elements
of the strategic plan are likely to have been laid
out during the due-diligence process. Private-
equity boards are often the source of strategic
initiatives and ideas (for example, on M&A) and
assume the role of stimulating the executive
team to think more broadly and creatively about
opportunities. The role of the executive-
management team is to implement this plan and
report back on the progress.
By contrast, though most public companies state
that the board’s responsibility includes overseeing
strategy, the reality is that the executive team
typically takes the lead in proposing and
developing it, and the board’s role is to challenge
and shape management’s proposals. None of
our interviewees said that their public boards led
strategy: 70 percent described the board as
“accompanying” management in defning it, while
30 percent said that the board played only a
following role. Few respondents saw these boards
as actively and effectively shaping strategy.
Performance management
Interviewees also believed that PE boards
were far more active in managing performance
than were their public counterparts: indeed
the nature and intensity of the performance-
management culture is perhaps the most striking
difference between the two environments.
Private-equity boards have what one respondent
described as a “relentless focus on value creation
levers,” and this focus leads them to identify
critical initiatives and to decide which key perfor-
mance indicators (KPIs) to monitor. These
KPIs not only are defned more explicitly than
they are in public companies but also focus
much more strongly on cash metrics and speed of
delivery. Having set these KPIs, PE boards
monitor them much more intensively—reviewing
progress in great detail, focusing intently on
one or two areas at each meeting, and intervening
in cases of underperformance. “This performance-
management focus is the board’s real raison
d’être,” one respondent commented.
In contrast, public boards were described as
much less engaged in detail: their scrutiny was
seen at best as being on a higher level (“more
macro than micro,” one interviewee said) and at
worst as superfcial. Moreover, public boards
focus much less on fundamental value creation
levers and much more on meeting quarterly
proft targets and market expectations. Given the
importance of ensuring that shareholders
get an accurate picture of a business’s short-term
performance prospects, this emphasis is
perhaps understandable. But what it produces is
a board focused more on budgetary control,
the delivery of short-term accounting profts, and
avoiding surprises for investors.
Management development
and succession
Private-equity boards scored less well on their
development of human capital—both absolutely
and relative to public boards. PE boards do
focus intensely on the quality of the top-executive
team, in particular the CEO and the CFO, and
are quick to replace underperformers. But such
boards invest little or no time exploring
broader and longer-term issues, such as the
Governance and risk
46 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
strength of the management team, succession
plans, and developing management.
“Their interest in management development is
frustratingly narrow,” one interviewee said.
Public boards, by comparison, were seen as more
committed to and effective for people issues. Such
boards insist on thorough management-review
processes, discuss not only the top team but also
its potential successors, debate the key capa-
bilities needed for long-term success, are more
likely to challenge and infuence management-
development processes, and play a more active
role in defning remuneration policies and
plans. There are weaknesses, however: public
boards can be slower to react when change
is needed, and their voice on everything but the
CEO succession tends to be more advisory
than directive. Remuneration discussions are
thorough, but public boards can seem
more concerned about the reaction of external
stakeholders to potential plans than about
their impact on performance. Overall, however,
public boards are more focused on people,
tackle a broader range of issues, and work in
a more sophisticated way.
Stakeholder management
Our respondents felt that PE boards were
much more effective at managing stakeholders,
largely as a result of structural differences
between the two models. Public boards operate
in a more complex environment, managing a
broader range of stakeholders and dealing with
a disparate group of investors, including large
institutions and small shareholders, value and
growth investors, and long-term stockholders
and short-term hedge funds. These groups have
different priorities and demands (and, in the
case of short-selling hedge funds, fundamentally
misaligned interests). The chairmen and
CEOs of public companies therefore have to put
a lot of effort into communicating with
diverse groups.
The challenge for PE boards is more straight-
forward. Their effective shareholders
(the investors in PE funds) are locked in for the
duration of the fund. The shareholders’
representatives (the PE house) are in effect
a single bloc (or a very small number of
blocs in a club deal) and so act in alignment.
Furthermore, these representatives are
more engaged than board members in the public
world are—they are literally “in the room”
with executives and are much better informed
about business realities than are investors
in public companies. Unsurprisingly, therefore,
the burden of investor management is much
less onerous for PE boards and the quality of
the dialogue much better.
Yet PE boards are much less experienced in
engaging with broader stakeholders, such as the
media, unions, and other pressure groups.
This inexperience was evident in the initial
response of these boards to the greater scrutiny
they attracted in 2007. The Walker Report
2
and the changes PE houses subsequently made to
increase the frequency and transparency
of their communications do go some way in
addressing the shortcomings, but public
boards typically are still more sophisticated and
effective in this area.
Governance and risk management
Public boards earned their best scores in
governance and risk management, a result that
refected the drive to improve governance
standards and controls in the wake of the various
scandals that led to the Sarbanes–Oxley
legislation and the initiatives suggested in the
Higgs Report.
3
The typical board subcommittees
(audit, nomination, remuneration, and
47
corporate social responsibility) are seen as
conducting a thorough, professional scrutiny of
the agreed-upon areas of focus, while the overall
board supervises effectively and can draw
on a broad range of insights and experiences to
identify potential risks. Compliance with the
United Kingdom’s Combined Code on Corporate
Governance is high—an important factor in
building investor confdence.
Yet there are important underlying concerns.
Unsurprisingly, many respondents held that some
elements of governance are overengineered and,
as a result, consume much time while generating
little value. Of greater concern, perhaps, many
respondents felt that, in emphasizing governance,
public boards had become too conservative.
“Boards seek to follow precedent and avoid confict
with investors rather than exploring what
could maximize value,” commented one respon-
dent. “The focus is on box-ticking and covering
the right inputs, not delivering the right outputs,”
said another.
Private-equity boards scored lower on governance,
refecting their lower level of emphasis on it
and their typically less sophisticated processes
for managing it. In every case, governance
efforts focused on a narrower set of activities,
though almost all PE boards embraced the
need for a formal audit committee. Interestingly,
though, PE boards in general were seen as
having a deeper understanding of operational busi-
ness risks and fnancial risks. They were also
perceived to be more focused on, and skilled in,
risk management as opposed to risk avoidance.
Sources of difference?
Since our respondents felt that PE boards were
typically more effective than public ones were
Exhibit 2 Private-equity boards lead on value creation, while public
boards excel at governance and risk management.
McKinsey on Finance
PE Directors
Exhibit 2 of 2
Source: Interviews with about 20 UK-based directors who have served, over the past 5 years, on the boards of both private and
public companies (FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses and private-equity owned), most with an enterprise value of >£500 million
Top 3 board priorities, number of respondents
Boards of private-equity
portfolio companies
Boards of public limited
companies (PLCs)
Value creation 18 5
External relations 4 5
Exit strategy 11 0
100-day plan 5 0
5 9
Strategic initiatives
(including M&A)
9 0
Governance,
compliance, and risk
0 7
Organization design
and succession
Governance and risk
48 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
in adding value, we sought to learn why.
The comments of the respondents suggest two key
differences. First, nonexecutive directors of
public companies are more focused on risk
avoidance than on value creation (Exhibit 2). This
attitude isn’t necessarily illogical: such
directors are not fnancially rewarded by a
company’s success, and they may lose
their hard-earned reputations if investors
are disappointed.
Second, our respondents noted a greater level of
engagement by nonexecutive directors at
PE-backed companies. The survey suggested that
PE directors spend, on average, nearly three
times as many days on their roles as do those at
public companies (54 versus 19). Even in
the bigger FTSE 100 companies, the average
commitment is only 25 days a year. Respondents
also observed differences in the way non-
executive directors invest their time. In both
models of ownership, they spend around
15 to 20 days a year on formal sessions, such as
board and committee meetings. However,
PE nonexecutives devote an additional 35 to 40
days to hands-on, informal interactions
(such as feld visits, ad hoc meetings with execu-
tives, phone calls, and e-mails), compared
with only 3 to 5 days a year for nonexecutive
directors at public companies.
1
We interviewed directors who had, over the past fve years,
served on the boards both of FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 businesses
and PE-owned companies with a typical value of more than
£500 million. While the number of interviewees may seem small,
it is probably a large proportion of the limited population of
such directors.
2
See David Walker, Guidelines for Disclosure and Transparency
in Private Equity, Walker Working Group, 2007.
3
See Derek Higgs, Review on the Role and Effectiveness
of Non-Executive Directors, UK Department of Trade and
Industry, 2003.
49
Hedging is hot. Shifts in supply-and-demand
dynamics and global fnancial turmoil have created
unprecedented volatility in commodity prices in
recent years. Meanwhile, executives at companies
that buy, sell, or produce commodities have
faced equally dramatic swings in proftability.
Many have stepped up their use of hedging
to attempt to manage this volatility and, in some
instances, to avoid situations that could put
a company’s survival in jeopardy.
When done well, the fnancial, strategic, and oper-
ational benefts of hedging can go beyond
merely avoiding fnancial distress, by opening up
options to preserve and create value as well.
But done poorly, hedging in commodities often
overwhelms the logic behind it and can
actually destroy more value than was originally
at risk. Perhaps individual business units
hedge opposite sides of the same risk, or managers
expend too much effort hedging risks that are
Bryan Fisher and Ankush Kumar
The right way to hedge
Deciding how and what to hedge requires a company-wide look at the total
costs and benefits.
Number 36,
Summer 2010
Governance and risk
50 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
immaterial to a company’s health. Managers can
also underestimate the full costs of hedging
or overlook natural hedges in deference to costly
fnancial ones. No question, hedging can entail
complex calculations and diffcult trade-offs. But
in our experience, keeping in mind a few
simple pointers can help nip problems early and
make hedging strategies more effective.
Hedge net economic exposure
Too many hedging programs target the nominal
risks of “siloed” businesses rather than a
company’s net economic exposure—aggregated
risk across the broad enterprise that also
includes the indirect risks.
1
This siloed approach
is a problem, especially in large multibusiness
organizations: managers of business units
or divisions focus on their own risks without con-
sidering risks and hedging activities elsewhere
in the company.
At a large international industrial company, for
example, one business unit decided to hedge
its foreign-exchange exposure from the sale of
$700 million in goods to Brazil, inadvertently
increasing the company’s net exposure to fuctu-
ations in foreign currency. The unit’s managers
hadn’t known that a second business unit was at
the same time sourcing about $500 million
of goods from Brazil, so instead of the company’s
natural $200 million exposure, it ended up
with a net exposure of $500 million—a signifcant
risk for this company.
Elsewhere, the purchasing manager of a large
chemical company used the fnancial markets to
hedge its direct natural-gas costs—which
amounted to more than $1 billion, or half of its
input costs for the year. However, the com-
pany’s sales contracts were structured so that
natural-gas prices were treated as a pass-
through (for example, with an index-based pricing
mechanism). The company’s natural position
had little exposure to gas price movements, since
price fuctuations were adjusted, or hedged, in
its sales contracts. By adding a fnancial hedge to
its input costs, the company was signifcantly
increasing its exposure to natural-gas prices—
essentially locking in an input price for gas with a
foating sales price. If the oversight had gone
unnoticed, a 20 percent decrease in gas prices
would have wiped out all of the company’s
projected earnings.
Keep in mind that net economic exposure includes
indirect risks, which in some cases account
for the bulk of a company’s total risk exposure.
2
Companies can be exposed to indirect risks
through both business practices (such as contract-
ing terms with customers) and market factors
(for instance, changes in the competitive environ-
ment). When a snowmobile manufacturer in
Canada hedged the foreign-exchange exposure of
its supply costs, denominated in Canadian dollars,
for example, the hedge successfully protected
it from cost increases when the Canadian dollar
rose against the US dollar. However, the costs
for the company’s US competitors were in depreci-
ating US dollars. The snowmobile maker’s
net economic exposure to a rising Canadian dollar
therefore came not just from higher manufac-
turing costs but also from lower sales as Canadian
customers rushed to buy cheaper snowmobiles
from competitors in the United States.
In some cases, a company’s net economic
exposure can be lower than its apparent nominal
exposure. An oil refnery, for example, faces
a large nominal exposure to crude-oil costs, which
make up about 85 percent of the cost of its out-
put, such as gasoline and diesel. Yet the company’s
true economic exposure is much lower, since
the refneries across the industry largely face the
same crude price exposure (with some minor
51
differences for confguration) and they typically
pass changes in crude oil prices through to
customers. So in practice, each refnery’s true
economic exposure is a small fraction of
its nominal exposure because of the industry
structure and competitive environment.
To identify a company’s true economic exposure,
start by determining the natural offsets across
businesses to ensure that hedging activities don’t
actually increase it. Typically, the critical task
of identifying and aggregating exposure to risk
on a company-wide basis involves compiling
a global risk “book” (similar to those used by
fnancial and other trading institutions) to see the
big picture—the different elements of risk—on
a consistent basis.
Calculate total costs and benefits
Many risk managers underestimate the true
cost of hedging, typically focusing only on the
direct transactional costs, such as bid–ask
spreads and broker fees. These components are
often only a small portion of total hedge
costs (Exhibit 1), leaving out indirect ones, which
can be the largest portion of the total. As
a result, the cost of many hedging programs far
exceeds their beneft.
Two kinds of indirect costs are worth discussing:
the opportunity cost of holding margin capital
and lost upside. First, when a company enters into
some fnancial-hedging arrangements, it often
must hold additional capital on its balance sheet
against potential future obligations. This
requirement ties up signifcant capital that might
have been better applied to other projects,
creating an opportunity cost that managers often
overlook. A natural-gas producer that hedges
its entire annual production output, valued at
$3 billion in sales, for example, would be required
to hold or post capital of around $1 billion,
since gas prices can fuctuate up to 30 to 35 percent
in a given year. At a 6 percent interest rate,
the cost of holding or posting margin capital
translates to $60 million per year.
Exhibit 1 Direct costs account for only a fraction
of the total cost of hedging.
McKinsey on Finance #36
Hedging
Exhibit 1 of 2
Example: A gas producer hedged 3 years of its gas production
with a forward contract on a ?nancial exchange
Estimated costs of hedging, % of total
value of revenues or costs hedged
Description
4.1–10.4 Total
Direct costs 0.1–0.4
• Bid–ask spread
• Marketing/origination fees
Opportunity cost
of margin capital
3.0–7.0
• Opportunity cost of margin capital required to withstand signi?cant
price moves (in this case, a two-sigma event—5% likelihood)
• Counterparty risk for in-the-money positions
Net asymmetric
upside lost
1.0–3.0
• The asymmetric exposure to varying gas prices makes the
protected downside less than the lost upside
Governance and risk
52 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Another indirect cost is lost upside. When the
probability that prices will move favorably (rise,
for example) is higher than the probability
that they’ll move unfavorably (fall, for example),
hedging to lock in current prices can cost more
in forgone upside than the value of the downside
protection. This cost depends on an organiza-
tion’s view of commodity price foors and ceilings.
A large independent natural-gas producer,
for example, was evaluating a hedge for its produc-
tion during the coming two years. The price of
natural gas in the futures markets was $5.50 per
million British thermal units (BTUs). The
company’s fundamental perspective was that gas
prices in the next two years would stay within
a range of $5.00 to $8.00 per million BTUs. By
hedging production at $5.50 per million BTUs,
the company protected itself from only a
$0.50 decline in prices and gave up a potential
upside of $2.50 if prices rose to $8.00.
Hedge only what matters
Companies should hedge only exposures that
pose a material risk to their fnancial health or
threaten their strategic plans. Yet too often
we fnd that companies (under pressure from the
capital markets) or individual business units
(under pressure from management to provide
earnings certainty) adopt hedging programs
that create little or no value for shareholders. An
integrated aluminum company, for example,
hedged its exposure to crude oil and natural gas
for years, even though they had a very limited
impact on its overall margins. Yet it did not hedge
its exposure to aluminum, which drove more than
75 percent of margin volatility. Large conglom-
erates are particularly susceptible to this problem
when individual business units hedge to protect
their performance against risks that are immaterial
at a portfolio level. Hedging these smaller
exposures affects a company’s risk profle only
Exhibit 2 Companies should develop a pro?le of probable cash ?ows—
one that re?ects a company-wide calculation of risk exposures and
sources of cash.
McKinsey on Finance #36
Exhibit < > of < >
Cash ?ow distribution and cash needs
Probability
Interest
and
principal
Dividend
Avoid
distress
Provide
reliability
Protect
investments/
growth
Keep
strategic
?exibility
Strategic
capital
expenditure
R&D and
marketing
Maintenance
capital
expenditures
Project
capital
expenditures
High
Low
Probability of meeting
cash obligations (eg,
interest, dividends)
Distribution of potential cash
?ows to meet these cash
obligations
53
marginally—and isn’t worth the management
time and focus they require.
To determine whether exposure to a given risk
is material, it is important to understand whether
a company’s cash fows are adequate for its cash
needs. Most managers base their assessments of
cash fows on scenarios without considering
how likely those scenarios are. This approach
would help managers evaluate a company’s
fnancial resilience if those scenarios came to
pass, but it doesn’t determine how material
certain risks are to the fnancial health of the
company or how susceptible it is to fnan-
cial distress. That assessment would require
managers to develop a profle of probable
cash fows—a profle that refects a company-wide
calculation of risk exposures and sources of cash.
Managers should then compare the company’s
cash needs (starting with the least discretionary
and moving to the most discretionary) with
the cash fow profle to quantify the likelihood
of a cash shortfall. They should also be sure
to conduct this analysis at the portfolio level to
account for the diversifcation of risks across
different business lines (Exhibit 2).
A high probability of a cash shortfall given
nondiscretionary cash requirements, such as
debt obligations or maintenance capital
expenditures, indicates a high risk of fnancial
distress. Companies in this position should
take aggressive steps, including hedging, to
mitigate risk. If, on the other hand, a company
fnds that it can fnance its strategic plans
with a high degree of certainty even without
hedging, it should avoid (or unwind) an
expensive hedging program.
Look beyond financial hedges
An effective risk-management program often
includes a combination of fnancial hedges and
nonfnancial levers to alleviate risk. Yet few
companies fully explore alternatives to fnancial
hedging, which include commercial or opera-
tional tactics that can reduce risks more effectively
and inexpensively. Among them: contracting
decisions that pass risk through to a counterparty;
strategic moves, such as vertical integration;
and operational changes, such as revising product
specifcations, shutting down manufacturing
facilities when input costs peak, or holding
additional cash reserves. Companies should test
the effectiveness of different risk mitigation
strategies by quantitatively comparing the total
cost of each approach with the benefts.
The complexity of day-to-day hedging in
commodities can easily overwhelm its logic and
value. To avoid such problems, a broad stra-
tegic perspective and a commonsense analysis are
often good places to start.
1
See Eric Lamarre and Martin Pergler, “Risk: Seeing
around the corners,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 33,
Autumn 2009, pp. 2–7.
2
Indirect risks arise as a result of changes in competitors’ cost
structures, disruption in the supply chain, disruption
of distribution channels, and shifts in customer behavior.
Governance and risk
54 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Risk: Seeing around the corners
Number 33,
Autumn 2009
Clearly, companies must look beyond immediate, obvious risks and learn to evaluate aftereffects
that could destabilize whole value chains, including all direct as well as indirect risks in several areas:
Competitors. Often the most important area to investigate is the way risks might change a company’s
cost position versus its competitors or substitute products. Companies are particularly vulnerable
when their currency exposures, supply bases, or cost structures differ from those of their rivals. In fact, all
differences in business models create the potential for a competitive risk exposure, favorable or
unfavorable. The point isn’t that a company should imitate its competitors but rather that it should think
about the risks it implicitly assumes when its strategy departs from theirs.
Supply chains. Classic examples of risk cascading through supply chains include disruptions in the
availability of parts or raw materials, changes in the cost structures of suppliers, and shifts in logistics
costs. When the price of oil reached $150 a barrel in 2008, for example, many offshore suppliers
became substantially less cost competitive in the US market. Consider the case of steel. Since Chinese
imports were the marginal price setters in the United States, prices for steel rose 20 percent there
as the cost of shipping it from China rose by nearly $100 a ton. The fact that logistics costs depend
signi?cantly on oil prices is hardly surprising, but few companies that buy substantial amounts
of steel considered their second-order oil price exposure through the supply chain.
Distribution channels. Indirect risks can also lurk in distribution channels, and effects may include an
inability to reach end customers, changed distribution costs, or even radically rede?ned business models.
For example, the bankruptcy and liquidation of the major US big-box consumer electronics retailer
Circuit City, in 2008, had a cascading impact on the industry. Most directly, electronics manufacturers
held some $600 million in unpaid receivables that were suddenly at risk. The bankruptcy also
created indirect risks for these companies, in the form of price pressures and bargain-hunting behavior as
liquidators sold off discounted merchandise right in the middle of the peak Christmas buying season.
Customer response. Often, the most complex knock-on effects are the responses from customers,
because those responses can be so diverse and involve so many factors. One typical cascading effect is
a shift in buying patterns, as in the case of the Canadians who went shopping in the United States
with their stronger currency. Another is changed demand levels, such as the impact of higher fuel prices
on the auto market: as the price of gasoline increased in recent years, there was a clear shift from
large SUVs to compact cars, with hybrids rapidly becoming serious contenders.
Eric Lamarre and Martin Pergler
55
Excerpt from
Emerging markets aren’t as risky as you think
Number 7,
Spring 2003
Marc H. Goedhart and Peter Haden
No question, emerging-market investments are exposed to additional risks, including accelerated in?ation,
exchange rate changes, adverse repatriation and ?scal measures, and macroeconomic and political
distress. These elements clearly call for a different approach to investment decisions.
However, while individual country risks may be high, they actually have low correlations with each other.
As a result, the overall performance of an emerging-market portfolio can be quite stable if invest-
ments are spread out over several countries. At one international consumer goods company, for example,
returns on invested capital for the combined portfolio of emerging-market businesses have been
as stable as those for developed markets in North America and Europe over the last 20 years.
1
We found
similarly low correlations of GDP growth across emerging-market economies and the United States
and Europe over the last 15 years (exhibit). These ?ndings, we believe, also hold for other sectors.
Country-speci?c risks can also affect different businesses differently. For one parent company, sustaining
its emerging-market businesses during a crisis not only demonstrated that it could counter country
speci?c risk but also strengthened its position as local funding for competitors dried up. For this company,
sales growth, when measured in a stable currency, tended to pick up strongly after a crisis, a pattern
that played out consistently through all the crises it encountered in emerging markets.
Return on invested capital (ROIC) for international consumer goods company; index: combined-portfolio ROIC
for developed markets = 100 in 1981
Smoothing out the risks
McKinsey on Finance
Emerging Markets
Exhibit 1 of 3
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
–100
ROIC
1
for combined portfolios ROIC
1
for selected individual emerging markets
1
Expressed in stable currency prior to indexing and adjusted for local accounting differences; combined portfolio includes
additional countries not reflected in exhibit.
1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001
600
500
400
300
200
100
0
–100
1981 1985 1989
Emerging
markets
Developed
markets
1993 1997 2001
Country D
Country E
Country A
Country B
Country C
Governance and risk
56
Dealing with investors
57
In this section:
Robert N. Palter, Werner Rehm, and Jonathan Shih
Communicating with
the right investors
Executives spend too much time talking with investors who don’t matter.
Here’s how to identify those who do.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Features
57 Communicating with the right investors (Spring 2008)
64 Do fundamentals—or emotions—drive the stock market? (Spring 2005)
Excerpts from
60 Inside a hedge fund: An interview with the managing partner of
Maverick Capital (Spring 2006)
62 Numbers investors can trust (Summer 2003)
63 The misguided practice of earnings guidance (Spring 2006)
69 The truth about growth and value stocks (Winter 2007)
Many executives spend too much time communi-
cating with investors they would be better off ignor-
ing. CEOs and CFOs, in particular, devote an
inordinate amount of time to one-on-one meetings
with investors, investment conferences, and other
shareholder communications,
1
often without having
a clear picture of which investors really count.
The reason, in part, is that too many companies
segment investors using traditional methods
that yield only a shallow understanding of their
motives and behavior; for example, we repeatedly
run across investor relations groups that try
to position investors as growth or value investors—
mirroring the classic approach that investors
use to segment companies. The expectation is that
growth investors will pay more, so if a company
can persuade them to buy its stock, its share price
will rise. That expectation is false: many
growth investors buy after an increase in share
58 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Exhibit When intrinsic investors trade, they trade more per
day than other investors do.
McKinsey on 27
Investor Communications
Exhibit 2 of 2
1
Includes only days when investor traded.
Annual trading
activity per
segment, $ trillion
Investor
segment
Annual trading
activity per investor
in segment, $ billion
Annual trading
activity per investor
in segment per
investment, $ million
Trading activity per
investor in segment
per investment per
day,
1
$ million
Trading
oriented
11 88 277 1
Mechanical 6 6 17 2
Intrinsic 6 72 79–109 3
prices. More important, traditional segmenta-
tion approaches reveal little about the way
investors decide to buy and sell shares. How long
does an investor typically hold onto a position,
for example? How concentrated is the investor’s
portfolio? Which fnancial and operational
data are most helpful for the investor? We believe
that the answers to these and similar
questions provide better insights for classi-
fying investors.
Once a company segments investors along the
right lines, it can quickly identify those who
matter most. These important investors, whom
we call “intrinsic” investors, base their deci-
sions on a deep understanding of a company’s
strategy, its current performance, and its
potential to create long-term value. They are also
more likely than other investors to support
management through short-term volatility.
Executives who reach out to intrinsic investors,
leaving others to the investor relations
department,
2
will devote less time to investor
relations and communicate a clearer, more
focused message. The result should be a better
alignment between a company’s intrinsic
value and its market value, one of the core goals of
investor relations.
3
A better segmentation
No executive would talk to important customers
without understanding how they make
purchase decisions, yet many routinely talk to
investors without understanding their
investment criteria. Our analysis of typical
holding periods, investment portfolio
concentrations, the number of professionals
involved in decisions, and average trading
volumes—as well as the level of detail investors
require when they undertake research
on a company—suggests that investors can be
distributed among three broad categories.
Intrinsic investors
Intrinsic investors take a position in a company
only after rigorous due diligence of its
intrinsic ability to create long-term value. This
scrutiny typically takes more than a month.
59
We estimate that these investors hold 20 percent
of US assets and contribute 10 percent of the
trading volume in the US market.
In interviews with more than 20 intrinsic
investors, we found that they have concentrated
portfolios—each position, on average, makes
up 2 to 3 percent of their portfolios and perhaps
as much as 10 percent; the average position
of other investors is less than 1 percent. Intrinsic
investors also hold few positions per analyst
(from four to ten companies) and hold shares for
several years. Once they have invested, these
professionals support the current management
and strategy through short-term volatility.
In view of all the effort intrinsic investors expend,
executives can expect to have their full
attention while reaching out to them, for they
take the time to listen, to analyze, and to
ask insightful questions.
These investors also have a large impact on
the way a company’s intrinsic value lines up with
its market value—an effect that occurs
mechanically because when they trade, they trade
in high volumes (exhibit). They also have a
psychological effect on the market because their
reputation for very well-timed trades magnifes
their infuence on other investors. One indication
of their infuence: there are entire Web sites
(such as GuruFocus.com, Stockpickr.com, and
Mffais.com) that follow the portfolios of
well-known intrinsic investors.
Mechanical investors
Mechanical investors, including computer-run
index funds and investors who use computer
models to drive their trades, make decisions based
on strict criteria or rules. We also include
in this category the so-called closet index funds.
These are large institutional investors whose
portfolios resemble those of an index fund because
of their size, even though they don’t position
themselves in that way.
4
We estimate that around 32 percent of the
total equity in the United States sits in purely
mechanical investment funds of all kinds.
Because their approach offers no real room for
qualitative decision criteria, such as the
strength of a management team or a strategy,
investor relations can’t infuence them to
include a company’s shares in an index fund.
Similarly, these investors’ quantitative criteria,
such as buying stocks with low price-to-
equity ratios or the shares of companies below
a certain size, are based on mathematical
models of greater or lesser sophistication, not
on insights about fundamental strategy and
value creation.
In the case of closet index funds, each investment
professional handles, on average, 100 to
150 positions, making it impossible to do in-depth
research that could be infuenced by meetings
with an investment target’s management. In part,
the high number of positions per professional
refects the fact that most closet index funds are
part of larger investment houses that sepa-
rate the roles of fund manager and researcher.
The managers of intrinsic investors, by
contrast, know every company in their portfolios
in depth.
Traders
The investment professionals in the trader
group seek short-term fnancial gain by betting on
news items, such as the possibility that a com-
pany’s quarterly earnings per share (EPS) will be
above or below the consensus view or, in the
case of a drug maker, recent reports that a clinical
trial has gone badly. Traders control about
35 percent of US equity holdings. Such investors
don’t really want to understand companies
Dealing with investors
60 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Inside a hedge fund
Number 19,
Spring 2006
First and foremost, we’re trying to understand
the business. How sustainable is growth?
How sustainable are returns on capital? How
intelligently is it deploying that capital?
Our goal is to know more about every one of
the companies in which we invest than
any noninsider does. On average, we hold
fewer than ?ve positions per investment
professional—a ratio that is far lower than most
hedge funds and even large mutual-fund
complexes. And our sector heads, who on
average have over 15 years of investment
experience, have typically spent their entire
careers focused on just one industry,
allowing them to develop long-term relationships
not only with the senior management of
most of the signi?cant companies but also with
employees several levels below.
‘
’
Lee Ainslie
Managing partner of
Maverick Capital
on a deep level—they just seek better information
for making trades. Not that traders don’t
understand companies or industries; on the con-
trary, these investors follow the news about
them closely and often approach companies
directly, seeking nuances or insights that could
matter greatly in the short term. The average
investment professional in this segment has 20 or
more positions to follow, however, and trades
in and out of them quickly to capture small gains
over short periods—as short as a few days or
even hours. Executives therefore have no reason
to spend time with traders.
Focused communications
Most investor relations departments could create
the kind of segmentation we describe. They
should also consider several additional layers of
information, such as whether an investor
does (or plans to) hold shares in a company or
has already invested elsewhere in its sector.
A thorough segmentation that identifes sophisti-
cated intrinsic investors will allow companies to
manage their investor relations more successfully.
Don’t oversimplify your message
Intrinsic investors have spent considerable effort
to understand your business, so don’t boil down
a discussion of strategy and performance to
a ten-second sound bite for the press or traders.
Management should also be open about the
relevant details of the company’s current
performance and how it relates to strategy. Says
one portfolio manager, “I don’t want inside
information. But I do want management to look
me in the eye when they talk about their
performance. If they avoid a discussion or
explanation, we will not invest, no matter how
attractive the numbers look.”
Interpret feedback in the right context
Most companies agree that it is useful to
understand the views of investors while develop-
ing strategies and investor communications.
Yet management often relies on simple summaries
of interviews with investors and sell-side analysts
about everything from strategy to quarterly
earnings to share repurchases. This approach
gives management no way of linking the
views of investors to their importance for the
company or to their investment strategies.
A segmented approach, which clarifes each
investor’s goals and needs, lets execu-
tives interpret feedback in context and weigh
messages accordingly.
61
Prioritize management’s time
A CEO or CFO should devote time to
communicating only with the most important and
knowledgeable intrinsic investors that have
professionals specializing in the company’s sector.
Moreover, a CEO should think twice before
attending conferences if equity analysts have
arranged the guest lists, unless manage-
ment regards those guests as intrinsic investors.
When a company focuses its communica-
tions on them, it may well have more impact in
a shorter amount of time.
In our experience, intrinsic investors think
that executives should spend no more than about
10 percent of their time on investor-related
activities, so management should be actively
engaging with 15 to 20 investors at most.
The investor relations department ought to
identify the most important ones, review
the list regularly, and protect management from
the telephone calls of analysts and mechanical
investors, who are not a high priority. Executives
should talk to equity analysts only if their
reports are important channels for interpreting
complicated news; otherwise, investor
relations can give them any relevant data they
require, if available.
Marketing executives routinely segment customers
by the decision processes those customers use
and tailor the corporate image and ad campaigns
to the most important ones. Companies
could beneft from a similar kind of analytic rigor
in their investor relations.
1
Including a wide range of communications activities,
such as annual shareholder meetings, conferences with sell-side
analysts, quarterly earnings calls, and market updates.
2
This article deals only with institutional investors, since
management usually spends the most time with them.
We also exclude activist investors, as they represent a different
investor relations issue for management.
3
If this goal sounds counterintuitive, consider the alternatives.
Clearly, undervaluation isn’t desirable. An overvaluation
is going to be corrected sooner or later, and the correction will,
among other things, distress board members and employees
with worthless stock options issued when the shares
were overvalued.
4
For more on closet index funds, see Martijn Cremers and
Antti Petajist, “How active is your fund manager? A new measure
that predicts performance,” AFA Chicago Meetings Paper,
January 15, 2007.
Dealing with investors
62 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Numbers investors can trust
Number 8,
Summer 2003
Tim Koller
Financial statements should be organized with more detail and with an aim to clearly separating operating
from nonoperating items. It’s not easy. In fact, current accounting rules exhibit something less than
common sense in de?ning operating versus nonoperating or nonrecurring items. As a start, however,
company income statements should close the biggest gaps in the current system by separately
identifying the following items.
Nonrecurring pension expense adjustments. These often have more to do with the performance of
the pension fund than the operating performance of the company. Investors would bene?t from being able
to assess a company’s operating performance compared to peers over time separately from its skills
at managing its pension assets.
Gains and losses from assets sales that are not recurring. Large companies like to bury gains from asset
sales in operating results because it makes their operating performance look better, often arguing that
the impact is immaterial. But investors should be the ones who decide what is material. Companies should
also separate out gains from losses. Now companies sometimes sell assets to create gains to offset
losses from asset sales, and some top-ranked multinationals are well known for doing this on a regular basis.
This is a perverse incentive that would go away if companies were required to disclose gains and losses.
In a more useful income statement, complex or nonrecurring items such as pension expenses, stock
options, changes in restructuring reserves, and asset gains or losses would be separately disclosed,
regardless of materiality. Similarly, balance sheets should separate assets and liabilities that are used in the
operations of the business from other assets and liabilities, such as excess cash not needed to fund
the operations, or investments in unrelated activities.
A more useful approach to reporting would also include a focus on business units. Today’s large companies
are complex, with multiple business units that rarely have the same growth potential and pro?tability.
Sophisticated investors will try to value each business unit separately or build up consolidated forecasts
from the sum of the individual business units. Yet many companies report only the minimum required
information and often not enough for investors to understand the underlying health of the business units.
Nearly always, business unit results are relegated to the footnotes at the back of the annual report,
though a good case can be made that business unit reporting is in fact more important than the
consolidated results and should be the focus of corporate reporting. At a minimum, companies should
produce a clear operating-income statement.
63
Excerpt from
The misguided practice of earnings guidance
Number 19,
Spring 2006
Peggy Hsieh, Tim Koller, and S. R. Rajan
Most companies view the quarterly ritual of issuing earnings guidance as a necessary, if sometimes
onerous, part of investor relations. The bene?ts, they hope, are improved communications with
?nancial markets, lower share price volatility, and higher valuations. At the least, companies expect
frequent earnings guidance to boost their stock’s liquidity.
Yet our analysis of companies across all sectors and an in-depth examination of two mature represen-
tative industries—consumer packaged goods (CPG) and pharmaceuticals—found no evidence to support
those expectations. The ?ndings fell into three categories:
Valuations. Contrary to what some companies believe, frequent guidance does not result in
superior valuations in the marketplace; indeed, guidance appears to have no signi?cant relationship
with valuations—regardless of the year, the industry, or the size of the company in question.
Volatility. When a company begins to issue earnings guidance, its share price volatility is as likely to
increase as to decrease compared with that of companies that don’t issue guidance.
Liquidity. When companies begin issuing quarterly earnings guidance, they experience increases
in trading volumes relative to companies that don’t provide it. However, the relative increase in trading
volumes—which is more prevalent for companies with revenues in excess of $2 billion—wears off
the following year.
With scant evidence of any shareholder bene?ts to be gained from providing frequent earnings
guidance but clear evidence of increased costs, managers should consider whether there is a better way
to communicate with analysts and investors.
We believe there is. Instead of providing frequent earnings guidance, companies can help the market to
understand their business, the underlying value drivers, the expected business climate, and their
strategy—in short, to understand their long-term health as well as their short-term performance. Analysts
and investors would then be better equipped to forecast the ?nancial performance of these companies
and to reach conclusions about their value.
Dealing with investors
64 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
There’s never been a better time to be a behav-
iorist. During four decades, the academic theory
that fnancial markets accurately refect a
stock’s underlying value was all but unassailable.
But lately, the view that investors can fun-
damentally change a market’s course through
irrational decisions has been moving into
the mainstream.
With the exuberance of the high-tech stock bubble
and the crash of the late 1990s still fresh in
investors’ memories, adherents of the behaviorist
school are fnding it easier than ever to spread
the belief that markets can be something less than
effcient in immediately distilling new infor-
mation and that investors, driven by emotion, can
indeed lead markets awry. Some behaviorists
would even assert that stock markets lead lives of
their own, detached from economic growth
and business proftability. A number of fnance
scholars and practitioners have argued that
stock markets are not effcient—that is, that they
Marc H. Goedhart, Tim Koller, and David Wessels
Do fundamentals—
or emotions—drive the
stock market?
Emotions can drive market behavior in a few short-lived situations. But fundamentals still rule. Number 15,
Spring 2005
65
don’t necessarily refect economic fundamentals.
1
According to this point of view, signifcant and
lasting deviations from the intrinsic value of a com-
pany’s share price occur in market valuations.
The argument is more than academic. In the
1980s, the rise of stock market index funds, which
now hold some $1 trillion in assets, was caused
in large part by the conviction among investors
that effcient-market theories were valuable.
And current debates in the United States and else-
where about privatizing Social Security and
other retirement systems may hinge on
assumptions about how investors are likely to
handle their retirement options.
We agree that behavioral fnance offers some
valuable insights—chief among them the idea that
markets are not always right, since rational
investors can’t always correct for mispricing by
irrational ones. But for managers, the critical
question is how often these deviations arise and
whether they are so frequent and signifcant
that they should affect the process of fnancial
decision making. In fact, signifcant devia-
tions from intrinsic value are rare, and markets
usually revert rapidly to share prices commen-
surate with economic fundamentals. Therefore,
managers should continue to use the tried-
and-true analysis of a company’s discounted cash
fow to make their valuation decisions.
When markets deviate
Behavioral-fnance theory holds that markets
might fail to refect economic fundamentals under
three conditions. When all three apply, the
theory predicts that pricing biases in fnancial
markets can be both signifcant and persistent.
Irrational behavior
Investors behave irrationally when they don’t
correctly process all the available information
while forming their expectations of a company’s
future performance. Some investors, for example,
attach too much importance to recent events
and results, an error that leads them to overprice
companies with strong recent performance.
Others are excessively conservative and under-
price stocks of companies that have released
positive news.
Systematic patterns of behavior
Even if individual investors decided to buy or sell
without consulting economic fundamentals, the
impact on share prices would still be limited. Only
when their irrational behavior is also systematic
(that is, when large groups of investors share
particular patterns of behavior) should persistent
price deviations occur. Hence behavioral-fnance
theory argues that patterns of overconfdence,
overreaction, and overrepresentation are common
to many investors and that such groups can be
large enough to prevent a company’s share price
from refecting underlying economic
fundamentals—at least for some stocks, some
of the time.
Limits to arbitrage in financial markets
When investors assume that a company’s recent
strong performance alone is an indication
of future performance, they may start bidding
for shares and drive up the price. Some
investors might expect a company that surprises
the market in one quarter to go on exceeding
expectations. As long as enough other investors
notice this myopic overpricing and respond
by taking short positions, the share price will fall
in line with its underlying indicators.
This sort of arbitrage doesn’t always occur,
however. In practice, the costs, complexity, and
risks involved in setting up a short position
can be too high for individual investors. If, for
example, the share price doesn’t return to
Dealing with investors
66 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
its fundamental value while they can still hold
on to a short position—the so-called noise-
trader risk—they may have to sell their holdings
at a loss.
Persistent mispricing in carve-outs and
dual-listed companies
Two well-documented types of market deviation—
the mispricing of carve-outs and of dual-
listed companies—are used to support behavioral-
fnance theory. The classic example is the
pricing of 3Com and Palm after the latter’s
carve-out in March 2000.
In anticipation of a full spin-off within nine
months, 3Com foated 5 percent of its Palm
subsidiary. Almost immediately, Palm’s market
capitalization was higher than the entire
market value of 3Com, implying that 3Com’s other
businesses had a negative value. Given the size
and proftability of the rest of 3Com’s businesses,
this result would clearly indicate mispricing.
Why did rational investors fail to exploit the
anomaly by going short on Palm’s shares and long
on 3Com’s? The reason was that the number
of available Palm shares was extremely small after
the carve-out: 3Com still held 95 percent
of them. As a result, it was extremely diffcult
to establish a short position, which
would have required borrowing shares from
a Palm shareholder.
During the months following the carve-out,
the mispricing gradually became less pronounced
as the supply of shares through short sales
increased steadily. Yet while many investors and
analysts knew about the price difference,
it persisted for two months—until the Internal
Revenue Service formally approved the
carve-out’s tax-free status in early May 2002.
At that point, a signifcant part of the uncertainty
around the spin-off was removed and
the price discrepancy disappeared. This correction
suggests that at least part of the mispricing was
caused by the risk that the spin-off wouldn’t occur.
Additional cases of mispricing between parent
companies and their carved-out subsidiaries are
well documented.
2
In general, these cases
involve diffculties setting up short positions to
exploit the price differences, which persist
until the spin-off takes place or is abandoned. In
all cases, the mispricing was corrected within
several months.
A second classic example of investors deviating
from fundamentals is the price disparity between
the shares of the same company traded on two
different exchanges. Does this indict the market
for mispricing? We don’t think so. In recent
years, the price differences for Royal Dutch/Shell
and other twin-share stocks have all become
smaller. Furthermore, some of these share
structures (and price differences) disappeared
because the corporations formally merged,
a development that underlines the signifcance of
noise-trader risk: as soon as a formal date was
set for defnitive price convergence, arbitrageurs
stepped in to correct any discrepancy.
This pattern provides additional evidence that
mispricing occurs only under special
circumstances—and is by no means a common
or long-lasting phenomenon.
Markets and fundamentals:
The bubble of the 1990s
Do markets refect economic fundamentals? We
believe so. Long-term returns on capital and
growth have been remarkably consistent for the
past 35 years, in spite of some deep recessions
and periods of very strong economic growth. The
median return on equity for all US compa-
nies has been a very stable 12 to 15 percent, and
long-term GDP growth for the US economy in real
67
terms has been about 3 percent a year since
1945.
3
We also estimate that the infation-adjusted
cost of equity since 1965 has been fairly stable,
at about 7 percent.
4
We used this information to estimate the intrinsic
P/E ratios for the US and UK stock markets and
then compared them with the actual values.
5
This
analysis has led us to three important conclu-
sions. The frst is that US and UK stock markets,
by and large, have been fairly priced, hover-
ing near their intrinsic P/E ratios. This fgure was
typically around 15, with the exception of the
high-infation years of the late 1970s and early
1980s, when it was closer to 10 (exhibit).
Second, the late 1970s and late 1990s produced
signifcant deviations from intrinsic valuations. In
the late 1970s, when investors were obsessed
with high short-term infation rates, the market
was probably undervalued; long-term real
GDP growth and returns on equity indicate
that it shouldn’t have bottomed out at P/E
levels of around 7. The other well-known deviation
occurred in the late 1990s, when the market
reached a P/E ratio of around 30—a level that
couldn’t be justifed by 3 percent long-term
real GDP growth or by 13 percent returns on
book equity.
Third, when such deviations occurred, the stock
market returned to its intrinsic-valuation
level within about three years. Thus, although
valuations have been wrong from time
to time—even for the stock market as a whole—
eventually they have fallen back in line
with economic fundamentals.
Focus on intrinsic value
What are the implications for corporate managers?
Paradoxically, we believe that such market
deviations make it even more important for the
executives of a company to understand
the intrinsic value of its shares. This knowledge
allows it to exploit any deviations, if and
when they occur, to time the implementation of
strategic decisions more successfully. Here
are some examples of how corporate managers
can take advantage of market deviations:
• issuing additional share capital when
the stock market attaches too high a value to
the company’s shares relative to their
intrinsic value
Exhibit Trends for P/E ratios reveal some ?uctuation followed
by a return to intrinsic valuation levels.
McKinsey on Finance
Behavior
Exhibit 2 of 2
1
Weighted average P/E of constituent companies.
Source: Standard & Poor’s; McKinsey analysis
1980 2002 1990 1999
P/E for S&P 500 overall
1
9 15 30 19
All other companies 9 15 23 16
30 largest companies 9 15 46 20
P/ E ratio for listed companies in United States
Dealing with investors
68 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
• repurchasing shares when the market under-
prices them relative to their intrinsic value
• paying for acquisitions with shares instead of
cash when the market overprices them relative
to their intrinsic value
• divesting particular businesses at times
when trading and transaction multiples are
higher than can be justifed by underly-
ing fundamentals
Bear two things in mind. First, we don’t
recommend that companies base decisions to
issue or repurchase their shares, to divest or
acquire businesses, or to settle transactions with
cash or shares solely on an assumed difference
between the market and intrinsic value of their
shares. Instead, these decisions must be
grounded in a strong business strategy driven
by the goal of creating shareholder value.
Market deviations are more relevant as tactical
considerations when companies time and
execute such decisions—for example, when to
issue additional capital or how to pay for
a particular transaction.
Second, managers should be wary of analyses
claiming to highlight market deviations. Most of
the alleged cases that we have come across in
our client experience proved to be insignifcant or
even nonexistent, so the evidence should be
compelling. Furthermore, the deviations should
be signifcant in both size and duration, given
the capital and time needed to take advantage of
the types of opportunities listed previously.
Provided that a company’s share price eventually
returns to its intrinsic value in the long run,
managers would beneft from using a discounted-
cash-fow approach for strategic decisions.
What should matter is the long-term behavior of
the share price of a company, not whether it
is undervalued by 5 or 10 percent at any given
time. For strategic business decisions, the
evidence strongly suggests that the market
refects intrinsic value.
1
For an overview of behavioral fnance, see Jay R. Ritter,
“Behavioral fnance,” Pacifc-Basin Finance Journal,
2003, Volume 11, Number 4, pp. 429–37; and Nicholas Barberis
and Richard H. Thaler, “A survey of behavioral fnance,” in
Handbook of the Economics of Finance: Financial Markets and
Asset Pricing, G. M. Constantinides et al. (eds.), New York:
Elsevier North-Holland, 2003, pp. 1054–123.
2
Owen A. Lamont and Richard H. Thaler, “Can the market
add and subtract? Mispricing in tech stock carve-outs,”
Journal of Political Economy, 2003, Volume 111, Number 2,
pp. 227–68; and Mark L. Mitchell, Todd C. Pulvino, and
Erik Stafford, “Limited arbitrage in equity markets,” Journal of
Finance, 2002, Volume 57, Number 2, pp. 551–84.
3
US corporate earnings as a percentage of GDP have
been remarkably constant over the past 35 years, at around
6 percent.
4
Marc H. Goedhart, Timothy M. Koller, and Zane D. Williams,
“The real cost of equity,” McKinsey on Finance, Number 5,
Autumn 2002, pp. 11–5.
5
Marc H. Goedhart, Timothy M. Koller, and Zane D. Williams,
“Living with lower market expectations,” McKinsey on
Finance, Number 8, Summer 2003, pp. 7–11.
69
Excerpt from
The truth about growth and value stocks
Number 22,
Winter 2007
Bin Jiang and Tim Koller
What’s in a name? In the vernacular of equity markets, the words “growth” and “value” convey the speci?c
characteristics of stock categories that are deeply embedded in the investment strategies of investors
and fund managers. Leading US market indexes, such as the S&P 500, the Russell 1000, and the Dow
Jones Wilshire 2500, all divide themselves into growth- and value-style indexes.
It’s not illogical to assume that having the label growth or value attached to a company’s shares can
actually drive prices up or push them lower. In our experience, many executives have expended
considerable effort plotting to attract more growth investors, believing that an in?ux of growth investors
leads to higher valuations of a stock. Some executives even turn this assumption into a rationale
for using a high share price to defend risky acquisition programs—for example, in deference to presumed
shareholder expectations of growth.
The trouble is that such thinking is wrong in both cases. Although growth stocks are indeed valued at
a higher level than value stocks on average, as measured by market-to-book ratios (M/Bs), their revenue
growth rates are virtually indistinguishable from those of value stocks (exhibit). The growth index’s
10.1 percent median compounded revenue growth rate for 2002 to 2005 is not statistically different from
the 8.7 percent median of the value index. Thus, the probability that a company designated as
a growth stock will deliver a given growth rate is virtually indistinguishable from the probability that a value
company will do so.
Companies that show up on growth indexes actually don’t grow
appreciably faster than those that show up on value indexes.
McKinsey on Finance 22
Growth stocks
Exhibit 1 of 2
1
S&P 500/Barra Growth Index and S&P 500/Barra Value Index as of Dec 2005.
2
Excluding goodwill; does not include financial-sector stocks; 3-year average adjusts for annual volatility.
Growth rate, 3-year average, 2002–05,
2
%
Median value = 8.7% Median growth = 10.1%
–3 –1 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 >25
8
10
12
14
6
4
2
0
Value stocks
Growth stocks
Frequency of growth
and value stocks exhibiting
given growth rate,
1
%
Dealing with investors
70
The CFO
71
In this section:
Bertil E. Chappuis, Aimee Kim, and Paul J. Roche
There are a few critical tasks that all finance chiefs must tackle in their
first hundred days.
Number 27,
Spring 2008
Features
71 Starting up as CFO (Spring 2008)
Excerpts from
72 Toward a leaner finance department (Spring 2006)
75 Organizing for value (Summer 2008)
Starting up as CFO
In recent years, CFOs have assumed increasingly
complex, strategic roles focused on driving the
creation of value across the entire business. Growing
shareholder expectations and activism, more
intense M&A, mounting regulatory scrutiny over
corporate conduct and compliance, and evolv-
ing expectations for the fnance function have put
CFOs in the middle of many corporate decisions—
and made them more directly accountable
for the performance of companies.
Not only is the job more complicated, but a lot of
CFOs are new at it—turnover in 2006 for Fortune
500 companies was estimated at 13 percent.
1
Compounding the pressures, companies are also
more likely to reach outside the organization
to recruit new CFOs, who may therefore have to
learn a new industry as well as a new role.
To show how it is changing—and how to work
through the evolving expectations—we surveyed
72 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Excerpt from
Toward a leaner finance department
Number 19,
Spring 2006
Richard Dobbs, Herbert Pohl, and Florian Wolff
Three ideas from the lean-manufacturing world are particularly helpful in eliminating waste and improving
ef?ciency in the ?nance function:
Focusing on external customers. Many ?nance departments can implement a more ef?ciency-minded
approach by making the external customers of their companies the ultimate referee of which activities add
value and which create waste. By contrast, the ?nance function typically relies on some internal entity to
determine which reports are necessary—an approach that often unwittingly produces waste.
Exploiting chain reactions. The value of introducing a more ef?ciency-focused mind-set isn’t always
evident from just one step in the process—in fact, the payoff from a single step may be rather
disappointing. The real power is cumulative, for a single initiative frequently exposes deeper problems
that, once addressed, lead to a more comprehensive solution.
Drilling down to root causes. No matter what problem an organization faces, the ?nance function’s
default answer is often to add a new system or data warehouse to deal with complexity and
increase ef?ciency. While such moves may indeed help companies deal with dif?cult situations, they
seldom tackle the real issues.
164 CFOs of many different tenures
2
and
interviewed 20 of them. From these sources, as
well as our years of experience working with
experienced CFOs, we have distilled lessons that
shed light on what it takes to succeed. We
emphasize the initial transition period: the frst
three to six months.
Early priorities
Newly appointed CFOs are invariably interested,
often anxiously, in making their mark. Where
they should focus varies from company to company.
In some, enterprise-wide strategic and
transformational initiatives (such as value-based
management, corporate-center strategy, or
portfolio optimization) require considerable CFO
involvement. In others, day-to-day business needs
can be more demanding and time sensitive—
especially in the Sarbanes–Oxley environment—
creating signifcant distractions unless they
are carefully managed. When CFOs inherit an
organization under stress, they may have
no choice but to lead a turnaround, which requires
large amounts of time to cut costs and
reassure investors.
Yet some activities should make almost every
CFO’s short list of priorities. Getting them defned
in a company-specifc way is a critical step in
balancing efforts to achieve technical excellence
in the fnance function with strategic initiatives
to create value.
73
Conduct a value creation audit
The most critical activity during a CFO’s frst
hundred days, according to more than 55 percent
of our survey respondents, is understanding
what drives their company’s business. These
drivers include the way a company makes money,
its margin advantage, its returns on invested
capital (ROIC), and the reasons for them. At the
same time, the CFO must also consider
potential ways to improve these drivers, such as
sources of growth, operational improvements,
and changes in the business model, as well as how
much the company might gain from all of them.
To develop that understanding, several CFOs we
interviewed conducted a strategy and value
audit soon after assuming the position. They evalu-
ated their companies from an investor’s
perspective to understand how the capital markets
would value the relative impact of revenue
versus higher margins or capital effciency and
assessed whether efforts to adjust prices,
cut costs, and the like would create value, and if
so how much.
Although this kind of effort would clearly be a
priority for external hires, it can also be useful for
internal ones. As a CFO promoted internally
at one high-tech company explained, “When I was
the CFO of a business unit, I never worried
about corporate taxation. I never thought about
portfolio-level risk exposure in terms of products
and geographies. When I became corporate
CFO, I had to learn about business drivers that
are less important to individual business
unit performance.”
The choice of information sources for getting up to
speed on business drivers can vary. As CFOs
The CFO
Exhibit 1 The majority of CFOs in our survey wished they’d had
even more time with business unit heads.
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 1 of 3
If you could change the amount of time you spent with each of the
following individuals or groups during your ?rst 100 days as CFO, what
changes would you make?
Business unit heads 61 35
Former CFO 10 52 15 23
External investors or analysts 26 46 11 17
2 1
Finance staff 43 48 9
CEO 43 52 5
Board of directors 36 56 4 5
Executive committee 38 52 8
Less time Don’t know No change More time
2
1
0
% of respondents,
1
n = 164
1
Figures may not sum to 100%, because of rounding.
74 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
conducted their value audit, they typically started
by mastering existing information, usually
by meeting with business unit heads, who not only
shared the specifcs of product lines or markets
but are also important because they use the
fnance function’s services. Indeed, a majority of
CFOs in our survey, and particularly those in
private companies, wished that they had spent
even more time with this group (Exhibit 1).
Such meetings allow CFOs to start building rela-
tionships with these key stakeholders of the
fnance function and to understand their needs.
Other CFOs look for external perspectives
on their companies and on the marketplace by
talking to customers, investors, or professional
service providers. The CFO at one pharma
company reported spending his frst month on
the job “riding around with a sales rep and
meeting up with our key customers. It’s amazing
how much I actually learned from these
discussions. This was information that no one
inside the company could have told me.”
Lead the leaders
Experienced CFOs not only understand and try to
drive the CEO’s agenda but also know they
must help to shape it. CFOs often begin aligning
themselves with the CEO and board members
well before taking offce. During the recruiting
process, most CFOs we interviewed received
very explicit guidance from them about the issues
they considered important, as well as where
Exhibit 2 Many CFOs received very explicit guidance from their CEOs
on the key issues of concern.
What was expected of CFOs
Being an active member of
senior-management team
Contributing to company’s
performance
Improving quality of ?nance
organization
Challenging company’s strategy
Bringing in a capital markets
perspective
Other
88
40
7
3
84
34
68
74
52
29
29
14
70
80
Ensuring ef?ciency of ?nance
organization
By CEO (n = 128)
By ?nance staff (n = 35)
% of responses
1
from respondents who said CEO and ?nancial staff
gave explicit guidance on expectations,
n = 163
1
Respondents could select more than 1 answer.
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 2 of 3
75
Excerpt from
Organizing for value
Number 28,
Summer 2008
Massimo Giordano and Felix Wenger
The CFO
the CFO would have to assume a leadership role.
Similarly, nearly four-ffths of the CFOs in
our survey reported that the CEO explained what
was expected from them—particularly that
they serve as active members of the senior-
management team, contribute to the company’s
performance, and make the fnance organi-
zation effcient (Exhibit 2). When one new CFO
asked the CEO what he expected at the
one-year mark, the response was, “When you’re
able to fnish my sentences, you’ll know
you’re on the right track.”
Building that kind of alignment is a challenge
for CFOs, who must have a certain ultimate
independence as the voice of the shareholder. That
means they must immediately begin to shape
the CEO’s agenda around their own focus on value
creation. Among the CFOs we interviewed,
those who had conducted a value audit could
immediately pitch their insights to the CEO
and the board—thus gaining credibility and start-
ing to shape the dialogue. In some cases, facts
that surfaced during the process enabled CFOs to
challenge business unit orthodoxies. What’s
more, the CFO is in a unique position to put
numbers against a company’s strategic options
in a way that lends a sharp edge to decision
making. The CFO at a high-tech company, for
example, created a plan that identifed
several key issues for the long-term health of
the business, including how large enterprises
could use its product more effciently.
This CFO then prodded sales and service to
develop a new strategy and team to drive
the product’s adoption.
To play these roles, a CFO must establish
trust with the board and the CEO, avoiding any
appearance of confict with them while
challenging their decisions and the company’s
direction if necessary. Maintaining the right
balance is an art, not a science. As the CFO at a
leading software company told us, “It’s impor-
tant to be always aligned with the CEO and also to
be able to factually call the balls and strikes
as you see them. When you cannot balance the
two, you need to fnd a new role.”
Strengthen the core
To gain the time for agenda-shaping priorities,
CFOs must have a well-functioning fnance group
behind them; otherwise, they won’t have the
credibility and hard data to make the diffcult
One way companies can compensate for
the blunt tools of traditional planning is to take
a ?ner-grained perspective on businesses
within large divisions. By identifying and de?ning
smaller units built around activities that
create value by serving related customer needs,
executives can better assess and manage
performance by focusing on growth and value
creation. These units, which we call “value
cells,” offer managers a more detailed, more
tangible way of gauging business value
and economic activity, allow CEOs to spend
more time on in-depth strategy discus-
sions, and make possible more ?nely tuned
responses to the demands of balancing
growth and short-term earnings. In our
experience, a company of above $10 billion
market capitalization should probably
be managed at the level of 20 to 50 value
cells, rather than the more typical three
to ?ve divisions.
76 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
arguments. Many new CFOs fnd that disparate IT
systems, highly manual processes, an unskilled
fnance staff, or unwieldy organizational structures
hamper their ability to do anything beyond
closing the quarter on time. In order to strengthen
the core team, during the frst hundred days
about three-quarters of the new CFOs we
surveyed initiated (or developed a plan to initiate)
fundamental changes in the function’s core
activities (Exhibit 3).
Several of our CFOs launched a rigorous look
at the fnance organization and operations they
had just taken over, and many experienced
CFOs said they wished they had done so. In these
reviews, the CFOs assessed the reporting
structure; evaluated the ft and capabilities of the
fnance executives they had inherited; vali-
dated the fnance organization’s cost benchmarks;
and identifed any gaps in the effectiveness or
effciency of key systems, processes, and reports.
The results of such a review can help CFOs
gauge how much energy they will need to invest in
the fnance organization during their initial
6 to 12 months in offce—and to fx any problems
they fnd.
Transitions offer a rare opportunity: the
organization is usually open to change. More than
half of our respondents made at least moderate
alterations in the core fnance team early in their
tenure. As one CFO of a global software com-
pany put it, “If there is a burning platform,
then you need to fnd it and tackle it. If you know
you will need to make people changes, make
them as fast as you can. Waiting only gets you into
more trouble.”
Manage performance actively
CFOs can play a critical role in enhancing
the performance dialogue of the corporate center,
the business units, and corporate functions.
They have a number of tools at their disposal,
including dashboards, performance targets,
enhanced planning processes, the corporate
review calendar, and even their own
Exhibit 3 New CFOs often initiate fundamental
changes to core activities.
1
Respondents could select more than 1 answer; those who answered “none of these” are not shown.
In which of the given areas did you initiate (or develop
a plan to initiate) fundamental changes during your ?rst
100 days as CFO?
Financial planning, budgeting, analysis 79
Management reporting,
performance management
73
Finance IT systems 34
Tax, group capital structure, treasury,
including risk management
32
53
Financial accounting, reporting
(including audit, compliance)
% of responses,
1
n = 164
McKinsey on Finance
CFO 100 days survey
Exhibit 3 of 3
77
relationships with the leaders of business units
and functions.
Among the CFOs we interviewed, some use
these tools, as well as facts and insights derived
from the CFO’s unique access to information
about the business, to challenge other executives.
A number of interviewees take a different
approach, however, exploiting what they call the
“rhythm of the business” by using the corporate-
planning calendar to shape the performance
dialogue through discussions, their own agendas,
and metrics. Still other CFOs, we have
observed, exert infuence through their personal
credibility at performance reviews.
While no consensus emerged from our discus-
sions, the more experienced CFOs stressed
the importance of learning about a company’s
current performance dialogues early on,
understanding where its performance must be
improved, and developing a long-term
strategy to infuence efforts to do so. Such a
strategy might use the CFO’s ability to
engage with other senior executives, as well as
changed systems and processes that could spur
performance and create accountability.
First steps
Given the magnitude of what CFOs may
be required to do, it is no surprise that the frst
100 to 200 days can be taxing. Yet those who
have passed through this transition suggest
several useful tactics. Some would be applicable
to any major corporate leadership role but
are nevertheless highly relevant for new CFOs—
in particular, those who come from
functional roles.
Get a mentor
Although a majority of the CFOs we interviewed
said that their early days on the job were
satisfactory, the transition wasn’t without specifc
challenges. A common complaint we hear about
is the lack of mentors—an issue that also came up
in our recent survey results, which showed that
32 percent of the responding CFOs didn’t have one.
Forty-six percent of the respondents said that
the CEO had mentored them, but the relationship
appeared to be quite different from the traditional
mentorship model, because many CFOs felt
uncomfortable telling the boss everything about
the challenges they faced. As one CFO put
it during an interview, “being a CFO is probably
one of the loneliest jobs out there.” Many of
The CFO
78 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
the CFOs we spoke with mentioned the value
of having one or two mentors outside the company
to serve as a sounding board. We also know
CFOs who have joined high-value roundtables
and other such forums to build networks
and share ideas.
Listen first . . . then act
Given the declining average tenure in offce
of corporate leaders, and the high turnover among
CFOs in particular, fnance executives
often feel pressure to make their mark sooner
rather than later. This pressure creates
a potentially unhealthy bias toward acting with
incomplete—or, worse, inaccurate—information.
While we believe strongly that CFOs should
be aggressive and action oriented, they must use
their energy and enthusiasm effectively. As
one CFO refected in hindsight, “I would have
spent even more time listening and less
time doing. People do anticipate change from
a new CFO, but they also respect you more
if you take the time to listen and learn and get
it right when you act.”
Make a few themes your priority—consistently
Supplement your day-to-day activities
with no more than three to four major change
initiatives, and focus on them consistently.
To make change happen, you will have to repeat
your message over and over—internally, to the
fnance staff, and externally, to other stakeholders.
Communicate your changes by stressing broad
themes that, over time, could encompass newly
identifed issues and actions. One element
of your agenda, for example, might be the broad
theme of improving the effciency of fnan-
cial operations rather than just the narrow one
of offshoring.
Invest time up front to gain credibility
Gaining credibility early on is a common
challenge—particularly, according to our survey,
for a CFO hired from outside a company. In
some cases, it’s suffcient to invest enough time
to know the numbers cold, as well as the
company’s products, markets, and plans. In other
cases, gaining credibility may force you to
adjust your mind-set fundamentally.
The CFOs we interviewed told us that it’s hard
to win support and respect from other corporate
offcers without making a conscious effort to
think like a CFO. Clearly, one with the mentality
of a lead controller, focused on compliance
and control, isn’t likely to make the kind of risky
but thoughtful decisions needed to help
a company grow. Challenging a business plan and
a strategy isn’t always about reducing invest-
ments and squeezing incremental margins. The
CFO has an opportunity to apply a fnance
lens to management’s approach and to ensure that
Finance executives often feel pressure to make
their mark sooner rather than later. This
pressure creates a potentially unhealthy bias
toward acting with incomplete—or, worse,
inaccurate—information.
79
1
Financial Officers’ Turnover, 2007 Study, Russell
Reynolds Associates.
2
We surveyed 164 current or former CFOs across
industries, geographies, revenue categories, and ownership
structures. For more of our conclusions, see “The
CFO’s first hundred days: A McKinsey Global Survey,”
mckinseyquarterly.com, December 2007.
a company thoroughly examines all possible
ways of accelerating and maximizing the capture
of value.
As an increasing number of executives become
new CFOs, their ability to gain an understanding
of where value is created and to develop
a strategy for infuencing both executives and
ongoing performance management will
shape their future legacies. While day-to-day
operations can quickly absorb the time of
any new CFO, continued focus on these issues and
the underlying quality of the fnance operation
defnes world class CFOs.
The CFO
80 McKinsey on Finance Anthology 2011
Viral Acharya is a professor of fnance at New York
University’s Leonard N. Stern School of Business.
Patrick Beitel ([email protected]) is
a partner in McKinsey’s Frankfurt offce.
Nidhi Chadda is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Bertil Chappuis ([email protected])
is a partner in the Silicon Valley offce.
Richard Dobbs ([email protected])
is a director of the McKinsey Global Institute and
a partner in the Seoul offce.
Bryan Fisher ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Houston offce.
Massimo Giordano (Massimo_Giordano@
McKinsey.com) is a partner in the Milan offce.
Marc Goedhart ([email protected]) is
a senior expert in the Amsterdam offce.
Peter Haden ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Amsterdam offce.
Neil Harper is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Peggy Hsieh is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Bill Huyett ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Boston offce.
Bin Jiang ([email protected]) is
a consultant in the New York offce.
Conor Kehoe ([email protected]) is
a partner in the London offce.
Aimee Kim ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Seoul offce.
Tim Koller ([email protected]) is a partner
in the New York offce.
Ankush Kumar ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Houston offce.
Eric Lamarre ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Montréal offce.
Nick Lawler is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Rob McNish ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Washington, DC, offce.
Jean-Hugues Monier (Jean-Hugues_Monier@
McKinsey.com) is a partner in the New York offce.
Robert Palter ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Toronto offce.
Martin Pergler ([email protected]) is
a consultant in the Singapore offce.
Herbert Pohl ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Dubai offce.
S. R. Rajan is an alumnus of the New York offce.
Werner Rehm ([email protected]) is
a senior expert in the New York offce.
Michael Reyner is an alumnus of the London offce.
Paul Roche ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Silicon Valley offce.
Michael Shelton is an alumnus of the
Chicago offce.
Jonathan Shih is an alumnus of the New
York offce.
Robert Uhlaner ([email protected]) is
a partner in the San Francisco offce.
Felix Wenger ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Zurich offce.
David Wessels is an alumnus of the New
York offce.
Andy West ([email protected]) is
a partner in the Boston offce.
Florian Wolff is an alumnus of the Munich offce.
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