Special situation

Special situation in finance is an event turning business to go not as usual and materially impacting a company's value. The notion covers restructuring of a company and corporate transactions such as spin-offs, share repurchases, security issuance/repurchase, asset sales, or other catalyst-oriented situations. A conflict of shareholders is also considered a special situation.

To take advantage of special situations, a hedge fund manager must identify an upcoming event that will increase or decrease the value of the company's equity and equity-related instruments.[1]

Investors

Generally, the special situations investing is considered to be a subclass of alternative investments. Special situations are very risky and challenging as businesses go not as usual. They require specialized expertise; determining the best price can be difficult. In addition, profits are far from assured, because prices might increase as more money chases deals.[2] Therefore, such situations are monitored and sought after by hedge funds, for they provide interesting investments opportunities. Private equity funds and other institutional investors also do special situation investments as part of their strategies.

Definition

There is also a definition of special situation by Benjamin Graham:

First, just what is meant by a "special situation"? Convention has not jelled sufficiently to permit a clear-cut and final definition. In the broader sense, a special situation is one in which a particular development is counted upon to yield a satisfactory profit in the security even though the general market does not advance. In the narrow sense, you do not have a real “special situation” unless the particular development is already under way.[3]

Classes of special situations

In his well-known book Security Analysis, Benjamin Graham divides special situations into six classes:[4]

  • Class A: Standard arbitrages, based on a reorganization, recapitalization or merger plan
  • Class B: Cash payout, in recapitalization or mergers
  • Class C: Cash payments on sale or liquidation
  • Class D: Litigated matters
  • Class E: Public utility breakups
  • Class F: Miscellaneous special situations

See also

References

  1. "HFR I Strategy Definitions". Hedge Fund Research Inc. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  2. Alternative Investment Funds Filling Void for ‘Special Situations’
  3. Benjamin Graham on Special Situations
  4. Benjamin Graham, "Special Situation Investing", in Security Analysis, 1951 edition, pp 729-734.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.