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Many companies trade at a discount to their sum-of-the-parts (SOTP) value, but this can persist indefinitely. The key to unlocking value is a "hard catalyst," like a 100% spin-off, which forces the market to value separated assets independently. This is more effective than partial spin-offs or tracking stocks.

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Monish Pabrai's successful Fiat investment reveals a powerful strategy: find hidden assets within a company. The market valued Fiat Chrysler as a single struggling automaker, but Pabrai saw that its Ferrari subsidiary was a gem being overlooked. By valuing Ferrari separately, he realized the core auto business was trading for almost nothing.

A carve-out is not a simple asset transfer but the creation of a new, independent company. This process involves establishing entirely new IT, security, payroll, and benefits systems, which are often deeply entangled with the parent company's infrastructure and require significant time and resources to stand up.

Identifying a stock trading below its intrinsic value is only the first step. To avoid "value traps" (stocks that stay cheap forever), investors must also identify a specific catalyst that will unlock its value over a reasonable timeframe, typically 2-4 years.

Vox is considering selling digital and print assets to focus on its high-growth podcast network. This reflects a classic conglomerate problem: the market values the entire company based on its least promising division, obscuring the value of its high-growth assets.

Despite strong performance in Parks and streaming, Disney's stock is flat because the market values the entire conglomerate based on its weakest segment: declining linear networks. Spinning off these "bad bank" assets would unlock the true value of the high-growth divisions.

A powerful investment pattern is the "Good Co./Bad Co." combination. The market often nets out a profitable division and a losing one, undervaluing the whole. When the losing division is shut down or spun off, earnings can double overnight, forcing a dramatic stock re-rating.

Once a holding company with disparate assets, like Ziff Davis, sells one of its crown jewels, it often signals the start of a broader breakup or liquidation. This initial move sets a precedent, demonstrates a willingness to transact, and can attract M&A interest for the remaining pieces, creating an ongoing catalyst path.

Media companies are spinning off declining linear networks to unlock higher multiples for growth assets. However, this strategy ignores significant synergies in carriage negotiations and content sharing between linear and streaming platforms, likely destroying long-term value in the pursuit of short-term financial engineering.

The historical advantage of simply carving out a business that a corporation undervalued is gone. Increased competition and complexity mean that without a critical eye and deep expertise, carve-outs are now just as likely to fail as they are to succeed, with average returns declining over the last decade.

Instead of keeping its M&A strategy in-house, Composecure, under Dave Cote, spun out its capital allocation arm into a separate public company, Resolute Holdings. This allows the market to apply a high-growth 'asset manager' multiple to the M&A potential, separate from the core operating business.