Get equity-like returns with bond-like risk [Read this article on our website.]( [Smart Money Monday]  Apr 4, 2022 How to Play Merger Arbitrage The investing world is chock-full of confusing terms. Like âmerger arbitrage.â It sounds complicated, but the setup is simple. Company A buys Company B in an all-cash deal. But the deal takes time to close. Attorneys get involved. Bankers get involved. Regulators get involved. The paperwork drags on and on. [[Video Exclusive] Years in the making. I'm releasing a list of 585 stocks that ran for more than 100% returns last year, and lifting the lid on the market's most overlooked trend.]( During that period, call it six months, shares of Company B should trade at or near the cash offer. After all, Company A has already told the market the price itâs willing to pay. Enter the merger arbitrageurs, or âarbs.â Letâs say Company Aâs cash offer was $50 per share. So, if shares of Company B are trading at $48 or $49, weâre looking at a $1â2 spread. That translates to a 2%â4% return in the six months it takes for the deal to close. On an annualized basis, that pencils out to a 4%â8% return. Nothing life-changing, but also, not bad for a low-risk trade. For perspective, the S&P 500 returns 8% per year, on average. A merger arbitrage play can hand you something close to that. But you arenât making any company-specific bets. Youâre just betting on the deal closing. - Of course, merger and acquisition deals donât always close⦠Things happen. Wars break out. Financing dries up. Sometimes shareholders vote down the transaction. If the deal falls apart, Company Bâs stock price could collapse. And that 4%â8% annualized return you expected could turn into a 20%+ loss in a flash. Just look at sporting goods retailer Sportsmanâs Warehouse (SPWH). In December 2020, the Great American Outdoors Group (parent company of Bass Pro Shops), announced it was buying Sportsmanâs Warehouse in an all-cash deal. The price was $18/share. Sportsmanâs Warehouse shot up to $17.92 on the news. At that point, the spread was extremely tight. And market participants may have expected a competing bid to roll in (it never did). Meanwhile, the deal dragged on. Eventually, the Federal Trade Commission labeled the merger âanticompetitiveâ and signaled that it wouldnât approve the deal. So, after 12 months of shuffling papers, Great American Outdoors backed out. When the deal collapsed, Sportsmanâs Warehouse sank from $17 to $13. Four months later, the stock is trading under $11. This is not uncommon. One in five merger and acquisition deals fall through, according to the New York Fed. - Microsoft (MSFT) could also be looking at a failed acquisition soon⦠In January, Microsoft announced plans to buy video game giant Activision (ATVI) for $95 per share in cash. As I write, Activision is trading around $80. Meaning thereâs a 16% spread between the acquisition price and the current price. That may look tempting to a novice investor. After all, Microsoft has a AAA credit rating, and itâs flush with cash. If anyone can close a deal, it should be Microsoft. However, a spread that wide means the market expects the deal to crumble. In this case, they expect the government to block the deal over antitrust concerns. And that is quite possible. Last week, a group of four US senators pushed the Federal Trade Commission to scrutinize the deal more closelyânot a good sign. Thatâs why Iâm staying out of this particular merger arb play. - That said, here are two of my preferred merger arbitrage plays⦠First, instead of trying to capture the spread, look at the pro-forma company to see if thereâs value. That was [my thesis behind recommending AT&T (T)]( in November. The company is set to spin off Warner Media, which will merge with Discovery Communications (DISCA). AT&T will own 71% of the new company. The deal should close in the next month or so. And I still like AT&T at current prices. The other play I like: Own a fund that specializes in merger arbitrage. My top choice is the Gabelli ABC Fund (GABCX), which has been around since 1993. The fund has outperformed its relative benchmark, the 3-month Treasury bill, by more than 3% since inception. The durations for its investments are extremely short, usually under a year. And the fundâs returns are effectively floatingâas interest rates rise, the spread demanded by arbitrageurs should rise as well. I donât often recommend a fund (or a huge company like AT&T). But in this case, weâre not looking for an investment that could wildly outperform the market. Weâre looking for alternatives for the bond portion of your portfolio. And the Gabelli ABC Fund is a compelling bond proxy. - Before I sign off, I want to personally invite you to SIC 2022. Iâm excited to join the rest of the Mauldin Economics team, along with investing powerhouses like Louis Gave, Grant Williams, and Lacy Hunt at the [Strategic Investment Conference, May 2 â 11](, and on our PLUS-day on May 13. I hope you will join us for a crash course on the top investing strategies and biggest profit-making opportunities for the year ahead. [Click here to preorder your SIC 2022 virtual pass at a steep discount.]( Thanks for reading, [Thompson Clark] âThompson Clark
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