Table of Contents
- What Is an Unsolicited Bid?
- Key Takeaways
- How Unsolicited Bids Work
- Unsolicited Bid vs. Solicited Bid
- A Notable Example in Numbers
- Why Do Companies Make Unsolicited Bids?
- How To Avoid or Fight off an Unsolicited Bid
- Example of an Unsolicited Bid
- What Is the Difference Between Unsolicited and Solicited?
- What Is a Hostile Takeover?
- What Is the Difference Between a Merger and an Acquisition?
What Is an Unsolicited Bid?
Let me explain what an unsolicited bid really is. It's an offer from an individual, investor, or company to buy another company that isn't out there looking for a buyer. You might hear these called hostile bids if the target company pushes back and doesn't want to be taken over. These bids usually happen because the potential buyer spots real value in the target.
Key Takeaways
Here's what you need to know right away: An unsolicited bid targets a company not seeking a sale. These are often known as hostile takeovers. Companies go for them to grab market share, boost profits, or cut down competition. If a company wants to fight back, it can reject the offer or even set up an employee stock ownership plan to block the bid.
How Unsolicited Bids Work
An unsolicited bid starts when a potential acquirer gets interested in a target company and decides to make an offer on their own initiative, not because the target asked for it. If the target wasn't planning to sell, this can lead to more bids coming in as the news spreads, driving up the price and possibly sparking a bidding war or full takeover fight.
These bids can involve private companies, but they're often between publicly-traded ones. Back in the 1980s, they were especially common because bidders saw profits in undervalued or poorly managed companies.
Unsolicited Bid vs. Solicited Bid
You should understand the difference here. An unsolicited bid catches the target off guard since they're not looking to sell, while a solicited bid is when the target is actively hunting for a buyer and wants the deal. Solicited ones are usually friendly, with both sides' management on board.
A Notable Example in Numbers
Consider this: Vodafone ended up paying $180.95 billion for Germany's Mannesmann in 2000 after their initial unsolicited offer got rejected. It's one of the biggest acquisitions ever recorded.
Why Do Companies Make Unsolicited Bids?
Companies launch these bids for clear reasons. They might want to control more market share, profit from the target's growth potential, gain access to proprietary technology, block competitors from doing the same, or even buy and break up the target company.
How To Avoid or Fight off an Unsolicited Bid
If you're running a company that becomes a target, there are ways to defend yourself. Start by rejecting the offer flat out. If that doesn't stop them, consider the people poison pill—where management threatens to quit if the takeover happens, forcing the bidder to build a new team, which gets expensive.
Another option is the poison pill strategy, letting shareholders buy more stock at a discount to increase the shares the bidder needs, making it costlier. You could also set up an employee stock ownership plan, giving employees shares and voting power to align with management against the bid.
Example of an Unsolicited Bid
Take Company ABC, an African oil company, making an unsolicited offer to buy another, Company DEF. ABC sees value in removing a competitor, expanding market share, and getting DEF's advanced technology. They offer $1 billion in cash, but DEF says no, calling it too low.
ABC ups it to $1.4 billion, but then Company XYZ from Saudi Arabia jumps in with a $2 billion unsolicited bid. Analysts think it's overpriced, and ABC can't match it. XYZ has the cash and wants the tech, so DEF accepts, and the merger happens with XYZ.
What Is the Difference Between Unsolicited and Solicited?
To clarify for you: A solicited bid is when the target company is eager to sell and is out seeking buyers. An unsolicited one is the opposite—the target isn't looking and might not want to be acquired at all.
What Is a Hostile Takeover?
A hostile takeover is when a company or investor tries to buy another that doesn't want it. They often bypass management and go straight to shareholders or buy up enough shares to gain control.
What Is the Difference Between a Merger and an Acquisition?
Let me break this down: A merger combines two companies into a new entity, pooling resources and strengths. An acquisition is when one company buys another and absorbs it into its operations.
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