Bailout Takeover

  

How many Porsches do you see on the road every day? How many Volkswagens do you see? Porsche is a high-end brand that was seeing a slipping share of automotive sales. Continued slippage would have ended the car brand entirely. Yes, Porsche was, in fact, going bankrupt. VW is/was pretty steady Eddie, but didn't have a high-end sports car. They wanted one...like, who doesn't want a Porsche?

In 2012, VW bought 50.1% of Porsche. Progress report: By 2017, Porsche set a sales record for the sale of Porsche models worldwide. With 237,788 Porsche cars sold worldwide, including a record number of 911 models, Porsche seems healthy. Now VW...that diesel faux pas didn't help.

The VW/Porsche merger represents a bailout takeover. A more profitable or stable company obtains control of a financially troubled company to turn around its situation. In a bailout takeover, stronger entity takes over the weak company, in total by purchasing all existing shares...or in part by purchasing a controlling portion of shares, 50+%.

Related or Semi-related Video

Finance: What is Disinvestment?3 Views

00:00

finance a la shmoop what is disinvestment? all right you got a couple

00:07

of choices disinvestment dat-investment and but disinvestment refers to the [Man walks through door]

00:12

process of a well a kind of whiny financial boycott like you think it

00:17

comes out of Yale or something it's a common thing among university students [Boy studying in library]

00:21

who are high on intellectual horsepower and low on self-awareness or how the

00:26

world actually works like the little rich kid who complains to Daddy about

00:30

the underpaid workers in his shirt factory as the kid drives away that [Boy driving sports car]

00:35

shiny new convertible BMW with the you know souped-up stereo set yeah that's

00:40

kind of what it's like well students often protest universities investing in

00:44

things like tobacco and oil and types of technology companies and that's really

00:49

kind of funny and sad because you know students late teenagers really have tons

00:54

of professional investment experience and life experiences and they've seen

00:59

lots of market cycles and they really know what they're doing when it comes to

01:04

the long cycles of the stock market and or they're advised by professors who [Woman working on laptop]

01:10

really have risked their own capital to build a big oh wait there none of that

01:14

so yeah that's the funny part and the sad part is that well for better or

01:18

worse over time those industries that they want to boycott for their school's

01:23

endowment which then pays for scholarships for underprivileged kids

01:27

have traditionally been really good industries to invest in like they've had

01:31

good investment returns yeah like technology come on give me a break just

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goes up right so when the students push the university to sell its point zero

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zero zero one percent ownership of their stake in whatever company well then the

01:46

university loses those good investment gains and that endowment money that was [Money vanishes from vault]

01:50

supposed to be earmarked for scholarships for the underprivileged not

01:55

the children of rich daddies in you know BMWs while that money just isn't there

02:00

just goes away so who did all that disinvestment hurt well students five

02:04

ten twenty years later who actually needed the scholarship money and didn't

02:09

get it but at least the boycott really affected how Chevron drilled for oil there

02:13

right [Chevron drills hole into sea bed]

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