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Q: Finance for researcher elmarto-ga ( Answered 5 out of 5 stars,   1 Comment )
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Subject: Finance for researcher elmarto-ga
Category: Business and Money > Finance
Asked by: jimmy5-ga
List Price: $100.00
Posted: 04 Nov 2003 16:01 PST
Expires: 04 Dec 2003 16:01 PST
Question ID: 272658
If elmarto-ga is not available question is open to anyone.
This is the long case study questions.


TELETECH CORPORATION, 1996

Raiders Dials Teletech
Wake-up Call Needed Says Investor

New York (AP)---The reclusive billionaire Victor Yossarian  has 
acquired  a   10  percent  stake   in Teletech Corporation and has
demanded two seats on the firm’s board of directors. The purchase was
revealed yesterday in  a  filing  with the Securities and Exchange
Commission,  and  separately  in  a letter to Teletech’s CEO,  Maxwell
Harper.   “The firm is misusing its  resources and  not earning an
adequate return,”  the letter said,   “The  company should abandon its
misguided  entry  into comput-ers, and  sell  the  Product and 
Systems   Segment.  Management  must   focus  on  creating  value  for
 shareholders.”   Teletech  issued  a brief statement emphasizing the 
virtues  of  a  link  between com-puter technology and
telecommunications.

TELETECH CORPORATION, 1996


Margaret Weston, Teletech’s chief financial officer, learned of
Yossarian’s letter late one eveing in early  January 1996.   Quickly 
she organized  a  team  of  lawyers  and   finance staff  to  assess 
the  threat.   Maxwell Haper, the  firm’s  CEO, scheduled a
teleconference meeting of  the  firm’s board of directors the next
afternoon.   Harper  and  Weston agreed that before the  meeting they
needed to fash-ion  a   response   to  Yossarian’s   assertions about
the firms’s returns.
	   Ironically,  returns  had  been  the  sub-ject  of  debate  within
 the  firm’s  circle  of senior managers in recent  months.  A 
num-ber of issues had been  raised  about the hur-dle rate  used by 
the  company in evaluating performance,  and   in    setting   the  
annual capital budget.   Since the  company was ex-pected to  invest 
nearly $2 billion  in capital
                     Wall Street Daily News, January 9, 1996          
                                                              
projects in 1996, gaining closure and consensus on these issues had
become an important priority for Margaret Weston.  Now, Yossarian’s
letter lent urgency to the discussion.  In the short sun, she needed
to respond to Yossarian.  In the long run, she needed to assess the
competing viewpoints, and recommend new policies as necessary.  What
should be the hurdle rated for Teletech’s two business segments?  Was
the Products and Systems segment really paying its way?



The Company

Teletech Corporation, headquartered in Dallas, Texas, defined itself
as a “provider of integrated information movement and management,” 
The firm had two main business segments:  Telecommunications Services
and Products and Systems, which manufactured computing and
telecommunications equipment.  In 1995, Telecommunications Services
had earned a return on capital(ROC) of 9.8 percent; Products and
Systems had earned 12.0 percent.  The firm’s current book value of net
assets was $16 billion, consisting of $11.4 billion allocated to
Telecommunications Services, and $4.6 billion allocated to Products
and Systems.  An internal analysis suggested that Telecommunications
Services accounted for 75 percent of the market value of Teletech,
while Products and Systems accounted for 25 percent.  The current
capital expenditures proposed by Telecommunications Services offered
prospective internal rates of return averaging of 9.8 percent; the IRR
for prospective Products and Systems projects averaged 12.0 percent. 
Overall, it appeared that the firm’s prospective return on capital
would be 10.35 percent.  Top management applied a hurdle rate of 10.41
percent to all capital projects, and in evaluating the performance of
business units.


      Over the past 12 months, the firm’s shares had not kept pace
with the overall stock market indices, or with industry indexes for
telephone, equipment, or computer stocks.  See Figure 1.

Securities analysts had remarked on the firm’s lackluster earnings
growth, pointing especially to increasing competition in
telecommunications, as well as disappointing performance in the
Products and Systems segment.  A prominent commentator on television
opined that “there was no precedent for hostile takeover of a
telephone company, but in the case of Teletech, there is every reason
to try.”

Teletech’s Telecommunications Services Segment

The Telecommunications Services segment provided long-distance, local
and cellular telephone service to more than 7 million customer lines
throughout the Southwest and Midwest.  Revenues in this segment grew
at an average rate of 3 percent over the 1989-95 period.  In 1995,
segment revenues, net operating profit after tax (NOPAT), and net
assets were $11 billion, $1.18 billion, and $11.4 billion,
respectively.  Since the court-ordered breakup of the Bell System
telephone monopoly in 1983, Teletech had coped with gradual
deregulation of its industry through aggressive expansion into new
services and geographic regions.  Most recently, the firm had been a
leading bidder for cellular telephone operations, and for licenses to
offer personal communication services (PCS).  In addition, the firm
had purchased a number of telephone operating companies in
privatization auctions in Latin America.  Finally, the firm had
invested aggressively in new technology---primarily digital switches
and optical-fiber cables—in an effort to enhance its service quality. 
All of these strategic moves had been costly:  the capital budget in
this segment had varied between $1.5 and $2 billion in each of the
previous 10 years.
       Unfortunately, profit margins in the telecommunication segment
had been under pressure for several years.  Government regulators had
been slow to provide rate relief to Teletech for its capital
investments.  Other leading telecommunications providers had expanded
into Teletech’s geographic markets and invested in new technology and
quality enhancing assets.  Teletech’s management noted that large
cable TV companies might enter the telecommunications market and
continue the pressure on margins.
        
       On the other hand, Teletech was dominant service provider in
its geographic markets and product segments.  Customer surveys
revealed that the company was the leader in product quality and
customer satisfaction.  Teletech’s management was confident that the
company could command premium prices, however the industry might
evolve.


Teletech’s Products and Systems Segment


Before 1990, telecommunications had been the company’s core business,
supplemented by an equipment-manufacturing division that produced
telecommunication components.  In 1990, the company acquired a leading
computer workstation manufacturer with the goal of applying
state-of-the-art computing technology to the design of
telecommunications equipment.  The explosive growth in the
microcomputer market and the increased use of telephone lines to
connect home- and office-based computers with mainframes convinced
Teletech management of the potential value of marrying
telecommunications equipment and computing technology.  Using
Teletech’s capital base, borrowing ability, and distribution network
to catapult growth, the Products and Systems segment increased its
sales by nearly 40 percent in 1995.  This segment’s 1995 NOPAT and net
assets were $480 million and $4.6 billion, respectively.
        Products and Systems was acknowledged to be a technology
leader in the industry.  While this accounted for its rapid growth and
pricing power, maintenance of the leadership position required sizable
investments in R&D and fixed assets.  The rate of technological change
was increasing, as witnessed by sudden major write-offs by Teletech on
products that until recently management had thought were still
competitive.  Major computer manufacturers were entering into the
telecommunication-equipment industry.  Foreign manufacturers were
proving to be competitors in bidding on major supply contract.



FOCUS ON VALUE AT TELETECH

Teletech’s mission statement said in part,

        We will create value by pursing business activities that earn
premium rates of return.

         Translating that statement into practice had been a challenge
for Margaret Weston.  First, it had been necessary to help managers of
the segments and business units understand what “create value” meant
for them.  Because the segments and smaller business units did not
issue securities into the capital market, the only objective measures
of value were the securities prices of the whole corporation—but the
activities of any particular manager might not be significant enough
to drive Teletech’s securities prices.  Therefore, the company had
adopted a measure of value creation for use at the segment and
business unit level that would provide a proxy for the way investors
would view each unit’s performance.  This measure, called “economic
profit,” multiplied the excess rate of return of the business unit
time the capital it used:
			Economic Profit  =  (ROC  ---  Hurdle rate)  x  Capital employed

Where:

                                                                      
                                 NOPAT
				       ROC  =  Return on capital  =  -----------
                                                                      
                                  Capital

				NOPAT  =  Net operating profit after taxes

Each year, the segment and business unit executives were measured on
the basis of economic profit.  This measure was an important
consideration in strategic decisions about capital allocation, manager
promotion, and the awarding of incentive compensation.
        A second way in which the value creation perspective
influenced managers was in the assessment of capital-investment
proposals.  For each investment, projected cash flows were discounted
to the present using the firm’s hurdle  rate to give a measure of the 
net   present   value      (or NPV) of each project.  A positive
(negative) NPV indicated the amount by which the value of the firm
would increase (decrease) if the project were undertaken.  The
following equation shows who the hurdle rate was used in the familiar
NPV equation:

                                               n                Free
cash flowt
	Net present value  =  ĺ  [   -----------------  ]  -   Initial
investment
                                             t = 1                 ( 1
+ hurdle rate)1

HURDLE RATES


How the rate should be used within the company in evaluating projects
was another point of debate.  Given the different natures of the two
businesses and the risks each one faced, differences of opinion arose
at the segment level over the appropriateness of measuring all
projects against the corporate hurdle rate of 10.41 percent.  The
chief advocate of multiple rates was Rick Phillips, executive vice
president of Telecommunications Services, who presented his views as
follows:

Each phase of our business is different, must compete differently, and
must draw on capital differently.  Until recently, telecommunications
was a regulated industry, and the return on our total capital highly
certain, given the stable nature of the industry.  Because of the
recognized safety of the investment, many telecommunications companies
can raise large quantities of capital from the debt markets.  In
operations comparable to Telecommunications Services, 75 percent of
the necessary capital is raised in the debt markets at interest rates
reflecting solid AA quality, on average—this is better than the
corporate bond rating of AA-/A+.  Moreover, I have to believe that the
cost of equity of Telecommunications Services is lower than for
Products and Systems.  I contrast this with the Products and Systems
segment where, although sales growth and profitability are strong,
risks are high.  Independent equipment manufacturers are financed by
higher yield BBB-rated debt and more equity with higher expected total
returns.
	     In my book, the hurdle rate for Products and Systems should
reflect these higher costs of funds.  Without the risk-adjusted system
of hurdle rates, Telecommunications Services will gradually starve for
capital, while Products and Systems will be force-fed—that’s because
our returns are less than the corporate hurdle rate, and theirs are
greater.  Telecommunications Services lowers the risk of the whole
corporation, and should not be penalized.
         Here’s a rough graph of what I think is going on. 
Telecommunications Services, which can earn 9.8 percent on capital, is
actually profitable on a risk-adjusted basis, even though it is not
profitable compared compared to the corporate hurdle rate.  The
triangle shape on the drawing shows about where Telecommunications
Services is located.  My hunch is that the reverse is true for
Products and Systems, which promises to earn 12.0 percent on capital,
P + S is located on the graph near the little circle.

       In deciding how much to loan us, lenders will consider the
compositions of risks.  If money flows into safer investment, over
time the cost of their loans to us will decrease.
       Our stockholders are just as much concerned with risk.  If they
perceive our business as being more risky than other companies, they
will not pay as high a price for our earning.  Perhaps this is why our
price/earnings ratio is below the industry average most of the time. 
It is not a question of whether we adjust for risk—we already do
informally.  The only question in my mind is whether we make these
adjustments systematically or not.
        While multiple hurdle rates may not reflect capital-structure
changes on a say-to-day basis, over time they will reflect prospects
more realistically.  At the moment, as I understand it, our real
problem is an inadequate and very costly supple of equity funds.  If
we are really rationing equity capital, then we should be striving for
the best returns on equity for the risk.  Multiple hurdle rates
achieve this objective.

                  Implicit in Phillip’s argument, as Weston understood
it, was the notion that if each segment in the company had a different
hurdle rate, the costs of the various forms of capital world remain
the same.  However, the mix of capital used would change in the
calculation.  Low-risk operations would use leverage more extensively,
while the high-risk divisions would have little or no debt funds. 
This lower-risk segment would have a lower hurdle rate.


Opposition to Risk-Adjusted Hurdle Rates


Phillips’s views were supported by several others within Teletech;
opposition was just as strong, however, particularly within the
Products and Systems segment.  Helen Buono, executive vice president
for the segment, expressed her opinion as follows:

All money is green.  Investors can’t know as much about our operations
as we do.  To them the firm is an opaque box:  they hire us to take
care of what is inside the box, and judge us by the dividends coming
out of the box.  We can’t say that one part of the box has a different
hurdle rate than another part of the box, if our investors don’t think
that way.  Like I say, all money is green:  all investments at
Teletech should be judged against one hurdle rate.
        Multiple hurdle rates are illogical.  Suppose that the furled
rate for Telecommunications Services was much lower than the
corporatewide hurdle rate.  If we undertook investments that met the
segment hurdle rate, we would be destroying shareholder value because
we weren’t meeting the corporate hurdle rate.
        Our job as managers should be to put our money where the
returns are best.  A single hurdle rate may deprive an underprofitable
division of investments in order to channel more funds into a more
profitable division, but isn’t that the aim of the process?  Our
challenge today is simple:  we must earn the highest absolute rates of
return we can get.
         In reality, we don’t finance each division separately.  The
corporation raises capital based on its overall prospects and record. 
The diversification of the company probably helps keep our capital
costs down and enables us to borrow more in total than the sum of the
capabilities of the divisions separately.  As a result, developing
separate hurdle rates is both unrealistic and misleading.  All our
stock holders want is for us to invest our funds wisely in order to
increase the value of their stock.  This happens when we pick the most
promising projects, irrespective of their source.




MARGARET WESTON’S CONCERNS


As she listened to these arguments, presented over the course of
several months, Weston became increasingly concerned with several
related considerations.  First, the corporate strategy directed the
company toward integrating the two divisions.  One effect of using
multiple hurdle rates would be to make justifying high-technology
research and application proposals more difficult, as the required
rate of return would be increased.  Perhaps, she thought, multiple
hurdle rates were the right idea, but the notion that they should be
based on capital costs rather than strategic considerations might be
wrong.  On the other hand, perhaps multiple rates based on capital
costs should be used, but in allocating funds, some qualitative
adjustments should be made for unquantifiable strategic
considerations.  In Weston’s mind, theory was certainly not clear on
how to achieve strategic objectives when allocating capital.
Second, using a single measure of the cost of money (the hurdle rate
or discount factor) made the net present value results consistent, at
least in economic terms.  If Teletech adopted multiple rates for
discounting cash flows, Weston was afraid the NPV and economic profit
calculations would lose their meaning and comparability across
business segments.  To her, a performance criterion had to be
consistent and understandable, or it would not be useful.
In addition, Weston was concerned with the problem of attributing
capital structures to divisions.  In Telecommunications Services, a
major new switching station might be financed by mortgage bonds.  But
in Products and Systems, it was not possible for the division to
borrow directly; indeed, any financing was feasible only because the
corporation guaranteed the debt.  Such projects were considered highly
risky—perhaps, at best, warranting only a minimal debt structure. 
Also, Weston considered the debt-capacity decision difficult enough to
make for the corporation as a whole, let alone for each division.
Judgments could only be very crude.
In further discussions with those in the organization about the use of
multiple hurdle rates, Weston ran across two predominant trains of
thought.  One argument held that the investment decision should never
be mixed with the financing decision.  A firm should decide what its
investments should be and then how to fiancé them most efficiently. 
Adding leverage to a present-value calculation would distort the
results.  Use of multiple hurdle rates was simply a way of mixing
financing with investment analysis.  This argument also held that a
single rate left the risk decision clear-cut:  management could simply
adjust its standard (NPV or economic profit) as risks increased.
The contrasting line of reasoning noted that the weighted-average cost
of capital tended to represent an average market reaction to a mixture
of risks.  Lower-than-average-risk projects should probably be
accepted even though they did not meet weighted-average criterion. 
Higher-than-normal-risk projects should provide a return premium. 
While the multiple-hurdle-rate system was a crude way of achieving
this end, it at least was a step in the right direction.  Moreover,
some argued that Teletech’s objective should be to maximize return on
equity funds, and because equity funds were and would remain a
comparatively scarce resource, a multiple-rate system would tend to
maximize returns to stockholders better than a single-rate system.
To help resolve these questions, Weston asked her assistant, Bernard
Ingles, to summarize academic thinking about multiple hurdle rates. 
His memorandum is given in Exhibit2.  She also requested that he draw
samples of comparable firms for Telecommunications Services and
Products and Systems that might be used in deriving segment WACCs. 
The summary of data is given in Exhibit 3.  Information on
capital-market conditions in January 1996 is given in Exhibit 4.



CONCLUSION

Weston could not realistically hope that all the issues before her
would be resolved in time to influence Victor Yossarian’s attack on
management.  But the attack did dictate the need for an objective
assessment of the performance of Teletech’s two segments—the choice of
hurdle rates would be very important in this analysis.  However, she
did want in institute a pragmatic system of appropriate hurdle rates
(or one rate) that would facilitate judgments in the changing
circumstances Teletech faced.  What were the appropriate hurdle rates
for the two segments?  Was Products and Systems underperforming as
Yossarian suggested?  How should Teletech respond to the raider?





























EXHIBIT 2
Theoretical Overview of Multiple Hurdle Rates
 
To:          Margaret Weston
From:      Bernard Ingles
Subject:   Theory of Segment Cost of Capital
Date:       January 1996

	You requested an overview of theories about multiple hurdle rates. 
Without getting into minutiae, the theories boil down to the following
points:

1.	The central idea is that required returns should be drive by risk. 
This is the dominant view in the field of investment management, and
is based on a mountain of theory and empirical research stretching
over several decades.  The extension of this idea from investment
management  to corporate decision making is straightforward, at least
in theory.
2.	An underlying assumption is that the firm is transparent (i.e.,
that investors can see through the corporate veil and evaluate the
activities going on inside).  No one believes firms are completely
transparent, or that investors are perfectly informed.  But financial
accounting standards have evolved toward making the firm more
transparent.  And the investment community has grown tougher and
sharper in its analysis:  Teletech now has 36 analysts publishing
reports and forecasts on the firm.  The reality is that for big
publicly held firms, transparency is not a bad assumption.
3.	Another underlying assumption is that the value of the whole
enterprise is simply the sum of its parts—this is the concept of Value
Additivity.  We can define “parts” as either the business segments (on
the left-hand side of the balance sheet) or the layers of the capital
structure (on the right-hand side of the balance sheet).  Market
values (MVs) have to balance.

      		MVTeletech  =   (MVTelecommunications   +  
MVProducts+Systems)   =  ( MVDebts   +    MVEquity)
If these equalities did not hold, then a raider could come along and
exploit the inequality by                 buying or selling the whole
or the parts.  This is “arbitrage.”  By buying or selling, the actions
of  the raider would drive the MVs back into balance.

4.	Investment theory tells us that the only risk that matters is
nondiversifiable risk, which is measured by “beta.”  Beta indicates
the risk that an asset will add to a portfolio.  Because the investor
is assumed to be diversified, she is assumed to seek a return for only
that risk that she cannot shed, the nondiversifiable risk.  Now, the
important point here is that the beta of a portfolio is equal to a
weighted average of the betas of the portfolio components.  Extending
this to the corporate environment, the “asset beta” for the firm will
equal a weighted average of the components of the firm—again, the
components of the firm can be defined in terms of either the
right-hand side or the left-hand side of the balance sheet.

		bTeletech Assets      =    (Wtel.Serv. bTel.Serv.   +    WP+S bP+S) 
 =   (Wdebt   +   Wequitybequity)

where:			    w   =   Percentage weights based on market value.
		bTel.Serv.bP+S   =   Asset betas for business segments.
		            bdebt   =   b for the firm’s debt securities.
                          bequity =   b of firm’s common stock (given
by Bloomberg, etc.)

This is a very handy way to model the risk of the firm, for it means
that we can use the Capital Asset Pricing Model to estimate the cost
of capital for a segment (i.e., using segment asset betas).

5.	Given all the previous points, it follows that the weighted average
of the various costs of capital (k) for the firm (WACC), which is the
theoretically correct hurdle rate, is simply a weighted average of
segment WACCs:

WACC teletech   =  (Wtel.serv. WACCtel.serv.)   +  (Wp+s WACC p+s)

Where:     

  Wtel.serv. Wp+s   =    market value weights
               WACCtel.serv.    =   (Wdebt,tel.serv Kdebt, tel.serv.)
+ (Wequity,tel.serv.Kequity,tel.serv.)
                WACCp+s          =   (Wdebt,p+sKdebt,p+s)   +  
(Wequity,p+sKequity,p+s)


6.	The notion in point 5 may not hold exactly in practice.  First,
most of the components in the WACC formula are estimated with some
error, Second, because to taxes, information asymmetries, or other
market imperfections, assets may not be priced strictly in line with
the model—for a company like Teletech, it is reasonable to assume that
any mispricings are just temporary.  Third, the simple two-segment
characterization ignores a hidden third segment:  the corporate
treasury department that hedges and aims to finance the whole
corporation optimally—this acts as a “shock absorber” for the
financial policies of the segments.  Modeling the WACC of the
corporate treasury department is quite difficult.  Most companies
assume that the impact of corporate treasury isn’t very large, and
simply assume it away.  As a first cut, we could do this too, though
it is an issue we should revisit.

Conclusions

ˇ	In theory, the corporate WACC for Teletech is appropriate only for
evaluating an asset having the same risk as the whole company.  It is
not appropriate for assets having different risks than the whole
company.
ˇ	Segment WACCs are computed similarly to corporate WACCs
ˇ	In concept, the corporate WACC is a weighted average of the segment
WACCs.  In practice, the weighted average concept may not hold, due to
imperfections in the market and/or estimation errors.
ˇ	If we start computing segment WACCs, we must use the cost of debt,
cost of equity, and weights appropriate to that segment.  We need a
lot of information to do this correctly, or else we really need to
stretch to make assumptions.



EXHIBIT 1						
Summary of WACC Calculation for Teletech Corporation, and Segment
Worksheet
			Corporate		Telecommunications Services	
MV asset weights			100%		75%	
Bond rating			AA-/A+		AA	
Pre-tax cost of debt			7.03%		7.00%	
Tax rate			40%		40%	
After-tax cost of debt			4.22%		4.20%	
						
Equity beta			1.04			
Rf			6.04%			
Rm-Rf			5.50%			
Cost equity			11.77%			
						
Weight of debt			18.00%			
Weight of equity			82.00%			
WACC			10.41%			



EXHIBIT 4						
Debt Capital Market Conditions, January 1996						
Corporate Bond Yields, by Rating					U.S. Treasury Securities	
Industrials:						
AAA		6.50%			Short-term bills	5.20%
AA 		7.00			Intermediate-term notes	5.43
A		7.64			Long-term bonds	6.04
						
BBB		7.78%				
BB 		8.93				
B		10.49				
						
		
Utilities		
AA		6.53%
A 		7.94
BBB		8.06


Thanks,
Jimmy5

Request for Question Clarification by elmarto-ga on 05 Nov 2003 05:25 PST
Hi jimmy5!
I very much appreciate that you directed this question at me. However,
I'm sorry to say that at the moment I don't have enough time to answer
your question, so I think that it would be best to let it open for
other Researchers (there are many others with experience in this
field).

I hope I'll be able to answer your future questions at Google Answers.

Best wishes!
elmarto

Request for Question Clarification by omnivorous-ga on 05 Nov 2003 09:54 PST
Jimmy5 --

Several questions for you here:
1.  the essential 3 questions seem to be those in the Conclusion re:
hurdle rates; whether or not Products & Systems was underperforming;
and how the company should respond?

2.  What are the definitions of Rf and Rm-Rf (in the exhibits)?

3.  Finally, the company can respond in a number of ways, depending on
factors outside the scope of this case -- such as how concentrated the
Teletech shares are in managements' or other investors hands.  There's
a lot we don't know in this case, including how bad the write-offs
have been in the newer Products & Services business.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Request for Question Clarification by omnivorous-ga on 05 Nov 2003 15:45 PST
BTW -- my assumptions are:
Rf = risk-free rate (U.S. treasury bills)
Rm - Rf = corporate bond premium being paid by Teletech.

What's confusing is the lower assumed bond rates at 7%.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Clarification of Question by jimmy5-ga on 06 Nov 2003 07:30 PST
Your assumptions are correct for Rf, and Rm - Rf.  Answer the case the
best you can, just be able to support your answer.
Answer  
Subject: Re: Finance for researcher elmarto-ga
Answered By: omnivorous-ga on 06 Nov 2003 14:07 PST
Rated:5 out of 5 stars
 
Jimmy5 --

This is a classic cost-of-capital and capital allocation case.  There
are lots of questions that can be asked but the core issues are:
?	does debt change the potential value of the firm?  This is the
implicit argument that the Rick Phillips, Exec VP of
Telecommunications Services, makes in his brief when he says "if money
flows into safer investment, over time the cost of their loans to us
will decrease."
?	is there a different cost-of-capital for the 2 business units of
Teletech?  There are no comparable equity betas for the two business
units, but we do have operating profits and debt information to help
make a judgment.

Prof. Bruce Lehmann's lecture notes from his introduction to corporate
finance lay out some of the principals of the Nobel-Prize winning work
of Franco Modigliani and Merton Miller.  The most-relevant comments
start on page 5, noting what some of the implications are:
1.	Managers should always maximize net present value (NPV)
2.	There are problems when firms near bankruptcy or their inability to
produce positive cash flow
3.	There are inevitable battles over capital structure between cash
cows and growing business units.
4.   Measurement of project risk continues to be a problem.

UCSD IR/PS
Prof. Bruce Lehmann
"Modigliani and Miller and the Irrelevance of Debt Policy" (Jan. 9, 2001)
http://www2-irps.ucsd.edu/faculty/blehmann/study_materials/corporate_finance-1-notes.pdf

Merton Miller, in his attempt to explain the irrelevance of borrowing
in the capital structure, uses the example, "Say you have a pizza, and
it is divided into four slices. If you cut it into eight slices, you
still have the same amount of pizza. We proved that! Rigorously!"
Arnold Kling -- AP Economics
"Corporate Finance: Leverage and the Modigliani-Miller Theorem" (undated)
http://arnoldkling.com/econ/saving/corpfin.html

So the first conclusion is that NPV -- using a risk-adjusted
cost-of-capital -- should be the sole determinant of decisions to
invest or not invest.  And, of course, projects with the highest
potential return should get priority -- though funding should be
sought for any investment with a positive NPV.

The question is: do the two business units have different costs-of-capital?


THE MARKETS FOR TS AND P&S
---------------------------------------------

The ideal situation is to find several competing companies and judge
the beta or capital market risk for them.   Considered to be the best
way to judge company-related risk, this is still an imperfect process.
 Even taking two closely-competitive semiconductor companies such as
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices (NYSE: AMD), you'll
find many things are the same (percent of R&D spending; gross margins
on major product lines; percent of sales & marketing spending). -- and
you'll find many things different (share of microprocessor markets;
markets for new product development; customers; capital structure).

Bernard Ingles' memo to CFO Margaret Weston in the Teletech case makes
mention of this in his last point but really makes no mention of what
companies would provide likely comparisons -- or if the companies are
publicly-traded.

In terms of equity, we know only that the company has a low aggregate
beta of 1.04.  However, we do have a good idea of what debt risks are
-- and the portion of capitalization that's allocated to
Telecommunications Services (TS) and Products & Services (P&S):
Debt: 18%
Equity: 82%

TS Capital: 75% ($1.18 billion)
P&S Capital: 25% ($4.1 billion)

TS cost of debt: 7.00%
Corporate cost of debt: 7.03%

Knowing the weighted averages, we know too that:
P&S cost of debt: 7.12% (as it's 25% of the portfolio).

Returns being required by the bond holders allow us to calculate a
beta on the debt:
QuickMBA
"Analysis for Financial Management," Robert Higgens
"Corporate Finance -- Cost of Capital"
http://www.quickmba.com/finance/cf/

rD = rF + Bd * (rM-rF)

where, 
rD: return required by market
rF: the risk-free or T-bill rate
Bd: beta for the debt
rM-rF: Teletech's bond premium

So, the bond beta, Bd, for Telecom Services (TS) is:
7.0 = 6.04 + Bd * (5.5)
Bd = .17

And the bond beta, Bd, for Products & Services (P&S) is:
7.12 = 6.04 + Bd*(5.5)
Bd = .20

Neither beta is particularly risky, indicating the believe that debt
coverage is very adequate for both units -- though a little riskier in
the case of P&S.  No assumptions about variance or risk in stock
prices can be made from the debt beta.

What's important to note here is that debt coverage with 18% is
considered by the market to be highly adequate -- leaving room for
additional debt on the balance sheet.


WACC
-----

Lacking the appropriate tools to separate beta or risk variance for
equity, we'll assume that the company's overall cost-of-capital can be
used to determine a weighted-average cost-of-capital (WACC) for each
of the business units.

It's important to note that WACC  mixes the impact of debt and equity
-- and provides larger equity returns in percentages, at the expense
of increasing risk by diverting cash flow to the bondholders.  Thus,
the use of debt to increase operating returns is often termed
"leverage" because of it's ability to increase profitability.

WACC = rE (E/VL) + rD(1-t)(D/VL)

where,
rE: return on equity
E/VL: proportion of equity in total firm value
rD: bond returns (which are slightly different for the two divisions)
t: tax rate (expressed as a decimal; 40% = 0.40)
D/VL: proportion of debt in total firm value

We can figure two WACC's for each division, inasmuch as the
assumptions are that each share the 18/82 debt-to-equity ration:
WACC TS = 11.77*(0.82) + 7.00*(0.6)*(0.18) = 10.41
WACC P&S = 11.77*(0.82) + 7.12*(0.6)*(0.18) = 10.42

Thus, absent any comparable betas for firms in the Telecommunications
Services or Product & Services areas, the Weighted-Average
Cost-of-Capital for the two operations is so close as to be
indistinguishable.  Thus, Rick Phillips should be concerned more
trying to establish a market risk for his division and the sister
division.  From an operating standpoint, knowing that each division is
a bundle of projects -- some of which could have quite high risks --
it is actually in both he and Helen Buono's interest to understand the
risks of their investments.  Some may be comparatively low (buying a
factory or producing equipment for lease) and could be handled
differently; some may be comparatively high (new product development)
and also could be managed differently (development options; joint
ventures, etc.)


HOW'S TELETECH DOING?
----------------------

Teletech's investment model, using a 10.41% hurdle rate and evaluating
projects by NPV is a good one.  It could be perfected by establishing
a better idea of project risks within the types of programs examined
for investment each year, as mentioned earlier.

With earnings of $1.18 billion, Telecommunications Services is
returning 10.35% on assets and 12% on an equity valuation of $9.83
billion.  With earnings of $480 million, Products & Services is doing
slightly better with a 10.43% return on assets and a 14.66% return on
equity.  Both divisions are returning investments close to the
expected returns, though hardly outstanding.  Most consultants would
try to see how to boost returns through better selectivity on
proejcts.

Any positive NPV projects should be funded, according to the academic
arguments on adding to shareholder value, as the capital-asset pricing
model already has risk built-in.  However, Telecommunications
Services' projects in 9.8 percent range won't make the cut under the
current capital structure.


WHY IS TELETECH UNDER ATTACK?
------------------------------

Victor Yossarian has chosen an investment in Teletech because he's
aware that the company's conservative debt-to-equity ratio is making
it a prime target for restructuring.  Presumably Yossarian learned
something from Milken, Boesky, Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts, et al during
the 1980's LBO era.

As Rick Phillips has argued, competitors are able to raise up to 75%
of their capital using debt -- lowering their weighted-average cost of
money or WACC.  If Teletech were structured this way, the 7% money
would like produce a WACC that meet his 9.8% threshold:

WACC for TS: Assuming 75% Debt
WACC TS = 11.77*(0.25) + 7.00*(0.6)*(0.75) = 2.94 + 3.15 = 6.09%

This assumes that neither the risk premium for the stock nor the risk
premium for the debt will rise substantially, assumptions that CFO
Margaret Weston would be wise to check in detail.

It is also possible that the company's competitive landscape has
changed.  The case leaves room for the interpretation of the Products
& Services division facing much more intense competition in the
future.  Inasmuch as investors are judging future returns, it may be
that the perception of Teletech is that this unit will not be able to
perform competitively in the future.


WHAT ARE TELETECH'S OPTIONS?
-----------------------------

The options for a company such as Teletech are varied and would
probably depend on factors outside this case.  If company control were
solidly in the hands of a family or trust, the company might choose to
do nothing and let Yossarian sit on his $1.3 billion investment. 
Company managers should know the synergies of having the two units
together and have a much more detailed understanding of their markets
and opportunities than an outsider.

For an arbitrageur to be forced to sit on an investment this large
would be painful, costly -- and embarrassing -- even with interest
rates in the 6% to 7% range.

However, Weston could use the Yossarian opportunity to lower the WACC
by purchasing Yossarian's shares.  A purchase price of $1.6 billion
would provide the investor with a return of at least 23% (assuming a
$1.3 billion investment) and retire shares in the company.  The new
capital structure, assuming that debt was used to purchase the shares,
would be 28% debt and 72% equity.

This would result in a new WACC for TS = TS = 11.77*(0.72) +
7.00*(0.6)*(0.28) = 8.47% + 1.18% = 9.65%

Undoubtedly the firm could consider other options, including:
?	aggressive use of sales of telecommunications equipment to leasing
companies to lower the capital costs
?	separation of the company into two companies, adjusting
capitalization to meet the percentages generally used by competitors


Google search strategy:
You can find the common questions about this finance case using:
Yossarian + Teletech

The basic theory in the case is covered by the following searches. 
Using the Nobel  Prize winners' names helps restrict the search to
more relevant articles:
"Modigliani-Miller" + "capital allocation"
"cost of capital" + "Modigliani-Miller"

It's also helpful to use the Google Glossary, which is still under
development, for the common search terms, such as "cost of capital":
Google Glossary
http://labs.google.com/glossary

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Request for Answer Clarification by jimmy5-ga on 06 Nov 2003 15:22 PST
I see no need for claification at this time.  I do have 3 other cases
if you are interested.  They also pay $100 each, and they are shorter
than Teletech.
Let me know!

Thanks,
Jimmy5

Clarification of Answer by omnivorous-ga on 06 Nov 2003 16:43 PST
Jimmy5 --

Researchers have slightly different skills in differing areas of
finance, so I'd encourage you to post the others, even if I can't
help.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA
jimmy5-ga rated this answer:5 out of 5 stars
Excellent, Thank You

Comments  
Subject: Re: Finance for researcher elmarto-ga
From: elmarto-ga on 05 Nov 2003 05:26 PST
 
This question is open for any Researcher who'd like to answer it, as
I'm not able to do it at the moment.

Regards,
elmarto

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