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.
See how you can make the most of these special investment opportunities by reading our special free report Spinoff Stock Investigator: All You Need to Know about Reaping the Rewards of Spinoffs.
A key reason behind the success of spinoffs is that investors tend to prefer “pure-play” businesses that are easier to analyze and value.
A great example of this is trucking firm XPO, which has spun off two of its businesses in the past three years....
NCR VOYIX CORP. $13 is a hold. The company (New York symbol VYX; Manufacturing sector; Shares outstanding: 141.2 million; Market cap: $1.8 billion; No dividend paid; Takeover Target Rating: Medium; www.ncrvoyix.com) took its current form on October 16, 2023 when the old NCR Corp....
On November 1, 2015, the old Hewlett-Packard Co. split into two firms—HP Inc. and Hewlett-Packard Enterprise. For every share they held in the old HP, shareholders received one share in each of the new companies.
HP is now up over 120% since the split, while HP Enterprise has gained 40%....
MACY’S INC....
In April 2022, AT&T merged its WarnerMedia entertainment business with Discovery Inc. to form Warner Bros. Discovery (Nasdaq symbol WBD). AT&T investors received 0.241917 shares of WBD as a tax-free distribution for each share they owned. At that time, AT&T shareholders owned 71% of the new firm....
On April 3, 2020, aerospace and military equipment maker RTX Corp. (formerly called Raytheon Technologies, New York symbol RTX) spun off its Otis (elevators) and Carrier (heating and air conditioning equipment) businesses. For each UTX share they held, investors received 0.5 of a share in Otis and 1 share in Carrier.
This is a great example of how spinoffs can deliver big returns: since the spinoff, Carrier has shot up about 300% while Otis has gained 118%.
Both companies are now using acquisitions to expand their main businesses....
Indigo’s major shareholders, Gerald W....