bust-up takeover
Noun: A bust-up takeover is a specific type of corporate acquisition. It refers to a leveraged buyout (LBO) where the acquiring company finances the purchase primarily through borrowed money. After the takeover is complete, the acquirer sells off (or "busts up") the target company's assets. The primary purpose of selling these assets is to generate cash to repay the large loan that was used to finance the acquisition in the first place.
This term is used in finance, corporate strategy, and business journalism to describe an aggressive acquisition tactic focused on asset liquidation rather than long-term operation of the acquired company. - The strategy and outcome are central to the term's meaning. - It often carries a negative connotation, implying the target company is being dismantled.
- The private equity firm executed a bust-up takeover, quickly selling the company's real estate and patents to cover the acquisition debt.
- Shareholders feared the proposed deal was a bust-up takeover that would lead to immediate plant closures and layoffs.
- Analysts criticized the bust-up takeover model for prioritizing short-term debt repayment over the company's long-term viability.
- Corporate Raiding: A bust-up takeover is a classic tool of 1980s-style corporate raiders, who would target undervalued companies, acquire them with debt, and liquidate their assets for profit.
- Financial Engineering: The process is seen as a form of financial engineering where value is extracted not through business growth, but through the strategic disassembly and sale of component parts.
- Controversy: This method is frequently controversial, as it can lead to significant job losses, the dissolution of historic companies, and is often opposed by employees, management, and communities.
- Leveraged Buyout (LBO): The broader category of acquisition that a bust-up takeover falls under. Not all LBOs are bust-up takeovers; some aim to improve and operate the company.
- Asset Stripping: A closely related and often synonymous term describing the act of selling off a company's assets. A bust-up takeover is a method to achieve asset stripping.
- Hostile Takeover: A bust-up takeover can be executed as a hostile takeover if it is opposed by the target company's management.
- Asset-Strip Takeover
- Liquidation Buyout
- Breakup LBO
- Strategic Acquisition (focused on long-term integration and growth)
- Friendly Takeover (agreed upon by both companies' managements)
- Merger of Equals (combining two companies into a new entity)
- a leveraged buyout in which the target company's assets are sold to repay the loan that financed the takeover