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Allied Corporation: A Conglomerate Case Study

The 30-Second Summary

Who Was Allied Corporation? A Journey Through Industrial America

Imagine a massive industrial department store. In one aisle, you have high-performance chemicals used in manufacturing. In another, you find parts for the brakes on your car. Wander over to another section, and you'll see complex avionics systems for Boeing 747s. And in the basement, there's a full-fledged oil and gas exploration unit. This, in a nutshell, was Allied Corporation. Born in 1920 as the Allied Chemical & Dye Corporation, it was a merger of five American chemical companies aiming to compete with the German chemical cartel. For decades, it was a solid, if unexciting, pillar of American industry. However, its modern story—and the one most relevant to investors—begins in the late 1970s and 1980s. Under the leadership of its aggressive CEO, Edward Hennessy Jr., Allied went on a corporate shopping spree. The company transformed from a chemical and oil company into a true conglomerate. The strategy was diversification. If the chemical business was in a slump, perhaps the booming aerospace division could pick up the slack. The major moves included:

Throughout this period, Hennessy was also a prolific seller of assets, earning a reputation as a restless corporate architect, constantly buying and selling entire divisions in an effort to reshape the company. This constant churn made AlliedSignal a fascinating but incredibly complex company to analyze. The story culminates in 1999, when AlliedSignal acquired the larger Honeywell and, in a “reverse takeover,” adopted the more famous Honeywell name.

“In business, I look for economic castles protected by unbreachable 'moats'.” - Warren Buffett
1)

Why It Matters to a Value Investor

The history of Allied Corporation is not just a business school lesson; it's a goldmine of practical wisdom for the value investor. It forces us to confront several core principles of value_investing.

Analyzing a Company Like Allied: A Value Investor's Toolkit

Studying history is useful, but applying its lessons is what creates wealth. If you were a value investor faced with a complex company like AlliedSignal in, say, 1990, how would you approach the analysis? You wouldn't just look at the consolidated P/E ratio; you'd need to get your hands dirty.

The Method: Sum-of-the-Parts (SOTP) Valuation

The most powerful tool for analyzing a conglomerate is the Sum-of-the-Parts (SOTP) analysis. The logic is simple: if a company is just a collection of different businesses, let's try to value each business individually as if it were a standalone company. Then, we add them up. The steps are as follows:

  1. Step 1: Identify the Segments. Read the company's annual report (the 10-K filing) to identify the distinct business segments. For AlliedSignal, this would be Aerospace, Automotive, and Engineered Materials. The report will provide revenue and operating income for each.
  2. Step 2: Find Comparable Companies. For each segment, find publicly traded companies that operate purely in that business. For the Aerospace segment, you'd look at companies like Rockwell Collins or Sundstrand. For the Automotive segment, you'd find comparable auto parts suppliers.
  3. Step 3: Apply a Valuation Multiple. Determine an appropriate valuation multiple for each segment based on its publicly-traded peers. This could be EV/EBITDA, EV/Sales, or P/E. 2)
  4. Step 4: Calculate the Value of Each Part. Multiply the segment's financial metric (e.g., its operating income) by the chosen peer multiple to get an estimated value for that segment.
  5. Step 5: Sum the Parts and Adjust. Add up the values of all the segments. Then, subtract the parent company's net debt (total debt minus cash) to arrive at an estimated equity value for the entire corporation.
  6. Step 6: Compare to Market Cap. Compare your SOTP valuation to the company's current market capitalization. If your valuation is significantly higher, you may have found an undervalued company with a solid margin_of_safety.

Interpreting the Result

The SOTP analysis does more than just give you a price target. It provides deep insight.

A Practical Example

Let's do a simplified, hypothetical SOTP analysis for “AlliedSignal” in the mid-1990s. 3) Company: AlliedSignal Inc. Market Cap: $20 Billion Net Debt: $5 Billion Step 1-4: Valuing the Segments

Segment Segment Revenue Segment Operating Income Comparable Multiple (EV/Op. Income) Estimated Segment Value
Aerospace Systems $6 Billion $900 Million 10x $9.0 Billion
Automotive Products $4 Billion $400 Million 7x $2.8 Billion
Engineered Materials $3 Billion $500 Million 8x $4.0 Billion
Total Value of Operations $15.8 Billion

Step 5: Sum the Parts and Adjust

Step 6: Compare to Market Cap

In this hypothetical example, our analysis suggests the company was significantly overvalued. A value investor would be extremely cautious, concluding that the market's enthusiasm for the company's growth story was not supported by the fundamental value of its underlying businesses. They would demand a much larger margin_of_safety before even considering an investment.

Advantages and Limitations

Studying a historical case like Allied Corporation provides invaluable lessons, but we must also recognize the context.

Strengths of This Case Study

Weaknesses & Common Pitfalls

1)
For a conglomerate like Allied, the key question for an investor was whether it was one giant castle with a single strong moat, or just a collection of disconnected fortresses, some strong and some weak, sitting on the same piece of land.
2)
EV/EBITDA, or Enterprise Value to Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization, is often preferred for this kind of analysis as it's independent of capital structure.
3)
These numbers are for illustrative purposes only.