One of the ways a company can try to unlock its own hidden value is by creating a separate company out of a corporate subsidiary. The parent company can either sell stock in the new company to the public, or spin it off—hand the stock out to its own investors.
Often, the parent company starts by selling a portion of the new company to the public, to establish a market and a following among investors. That way, by the time of the spin-off, stock in the new company may be liquid enough to be sold relatively easily, or retained with some confidence as a worthwhile investment.
In our experience, and in most academic studies of the subject, this helps the parent and its corporate spinoff. Both generally do better than comparable companies for at least several years after the spinoff takes place.
When a company carries out a spinoff, it sets up one of its subsidiaries or divisions as a separate company, then hands out shares in the new company to its own shareholders. It may hand out the shares as a special dividend, or give its shareholders an opportunity to swap shares of the parent company for the shares of the newly established spinoff.
Study after study has shown that after an initial adjustment period of a few months, stock spinoffs tend to outperform groups of comparable stocks for several years. (For that matter, the parent companies also tend to outperform comparable firms for several years after a spinoff.) The above-average performance of spinoffs makes sense for a couple of reasons.
First, company managers naturally prefer to acquire or expand their assets, not get rid of them. Getting rid of assets reduces a company’s total potential profit. The management of a parent company will only hand out a subsidiary to its own investors if it’s nearly certain that the subsidiary, and the parent, will be better off after the spinoff than before.
Second, spinoffs involve a lot of work and legal fees. Companies only have an incentive to do spinoffs under two sets of favourable conditions: When they feel it isn’t a good time to sell (which often means it’s a good time to buy); or, when they feel the assets they plan to spin off will be worth substantially more in the future, possibly within a few years.
Quite often, a big company will spin off a small subsidiary because it feels the subsidiary is a tiny gem, but that it’s too small to make an impact on the much larger financial statements and market capitalization of the parent.
At TSI Network we’ve had great success with a number of spun off stocks over the years. That’s especially true of the many spinoffs we have recommended that have gone up after they began trading, and have later attracted a takeover bid at a substantial premium over the market price.
Needless to say, things don’t always work out this well. Spinoffs and their parents do sometimes run into unforeseeable woes. But on the whole, in investing, spinoffs are the closest thing you can find to a sure thing.
NAVIOS MARITIME PARTNERS L.P. $29 is a hold but only for aggressive investors. This Monaco-based limited partnership (New York symbol NMM; Manufacturing & Industry sector; Units outstanding: 30.8 million; Market cap: $893.2 million; Dividend yield: 0.7%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.navios-mlp.com) operates a fleet of 177 dry bulk, container… Read More
The share prices of these two technology firms are down sharply. The slide has prompted activist investors to demand each company slash costs or put itself up for sale. Even without major moves, we feel one of the two–Twilio–has strong prospects for a rebound and… Read More
On December 1, 2023, Worthington Industries spun off its steel processing operations as Worthington Steel. Shareholders received one share of the new firm for each share they held. The former parent then changed its name to Worthington Enterprises.
The split should let both firms better focus… Read More
HEWLETT-PACKARD ENTERPRISE CO. $15 is a hold. The company (New York symbol HPE; Manufacturing sector; Shares outstanding: 1.3 billion; Market cap: $19.5 billion; Dividend yield: 3.4%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.hpe.com) took its current form on November 1, 2015, when the old Hewlett-Packard Co. split into two firms—HP Inc… Read More
Pipeline giant TC Energy is your #1 Spinoff Buy for 2024. The former TransCanada Pipelines will soon spin off its oil pipeline business and its remaining operations will consist of gas pipelines and electrical power assets.
The stock has gained 11% since the spinoff announcement in… Read More
MAPLEBEAR INC. $25 is a hold. The company, (Nasdaq symbol CART; Manufacturing sector; Shares outstanding: 280.2 million; Market cap: $7.0 billion; No dividend paid; Takeover Target Rating: Lowest; www.instacart.com), does business as Instacart, operating an online grocery delivery and pick-up service in the U.S. and Canada. It has… Read More
TOURMALINE OIL CORP. $60 is a hold. The company (Toronto symbol TOU; Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 340.8 million; Market cap: $20.4 billion; Dividend yield: 1.9%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.tourmalineoil.com) is a Canadian oil and natural gas exploration, development and production company. Its properties are concentrated in central Alberta… Read More
In October 2019, foodmaker Post sold shares of its BellRing Brands business to the public through an IPO. BellRing makes protein bars, shakes and nutritional supplements. On March 10, 2022, Post distributed its remaining 80.1% stake in that business to its shareholders. They received 1.267788… Read More
MDU RESOURCES GROUP INC. $20 is a hold. The company (New York symbol MDU; Utilities sector; Shares outstanding: 203.6 million; Market cap: $4.1 billion; Dividend yield: 2.6%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.mdu.com) generates and distributes electrical power to residential and commercial customers in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and… Read More
On August 3, 2021, the old L Brands holding company (old New York symbol LB) split into two separate firms: Victoria’s Secret and Bath & Body Works. Investors received one new share of Victoria’s Secret for every three shares of L Brands they held. L.. Read More
WENDY’S CO. $20 is a hold. The company (Nasdaq symbol WEN; Consumer sector; Shares outstanding: 214.3 million; Market cap: $4.3 billion; Dividend yield: 5.0%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.wendys.com) is a leading quick-service restaurant chain with more than 7,000 locations worldwide. Founder Dave Thomas named the burger chain after… Read More
Activist investor Elliott Investment Management is now targeting two firms it feels could boost shareholder value with asset sales or spinoffs. We agree with its proposals, and see both stocks as attractive buys.
CROWN CASTLE INTERNATIONAL CORP. $117 is a buy. The company (New York symbol CCI; Manufacturing… Read More
In November 2014, Agilent spun off its electronic testing equipment business as Keysight Technologies. Agilent shareholders received one Keysight share for every two shares they held.
While both stocks have dropped lately, they remain terrific examples of why spinoffs are the closest thing you can find… Read More
BLACKBERRY LTD. $5.75 is a hold. The software maker (Toronto symbol BB; Manufacturing sector; Shares outstanding: 584.4 million; Market cap: $3.4 billion; No dividend paid; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.blackberry.com) cancelled its plan to sell about 20% of the shares in its Internet of Things business, which includes its… Read More
In the past few years, many well-established conglomerates, such as General Electric and Danaher, have spun off some of their smaller businesses to help eliminate a “holding company discount.”
Honeywell did the same in October 2018, spinning off its building products business (called Resideo). Shareholders received… Read More
RICHTECH ROBOTICS INC. has filed paperwork with U.S. regulators for an initial public offering (IPO) of common shares. The shares will trade on Nasdaq under the symbol RR.
Based in Las Vegas, Nevada, Richtech makes robotic equipment for restaurants, hotels, casinos and factories. For example, its Matradee… Read More
VF CORP. $18 is still a buy, but only for aggressive investors. The company (New York symbol VFC; Consumer sector; Shares outstanding: 388.7 million; Market cap: $7.0 billion; Dividend yield: 2.0%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.vfc.com) is one of the world’s largest apparel suppliers and a leader in the… Read More
Under pressure from activist investor Elliott Management, Western Digital will now break itself into two separate firms—one will make traditional computer hard drives, and the other will focus on flash memory products. (Manufacturers of mobile phones, digital cameras and other devices use flash chips to… Read More
CORTEVA INC. $47 is a buy. The company (New York symbol CTVA; Manufacturing sector; Shares outstanding: 704.7 million; Market cap: $33.1 billion; Dividend yield: 1.4%; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.corteva.com) makes seeds and crop-protection chemicals. On June 1, 2019, DowDuPont investors received one Corteva share for every three shares… Read More
In 2019, the old DowDupont broke itself into three new firms—DuPont, Dow and Corteva (see box). Since then, Corteva is up over 70%, but Dow is down 1% and DuPont has dropped 14%. Even so, we still like the long-term prospects for all three. We… Read More