Investors Must Better Utilize Delaware’s
Appraisal Process
|
Michael Lange |
|
Brian Shea
|
Law360, New York (July
13, 2016, 12:21 PM ET) --
On May 31,
2016, the Delaware Chancery Court issued its opinion in the
Dell appraisal case, valuing the
company’s common stock at 28 percent more than the $13.75 paid to
shareholders on Oct. 29, 2013.[1] In other words, Michael Dell and his
management team underpaid investors by about $6 billion in the deal.
Despite the magnitude of Dell’s underpayment, the company is only paying
$37 million more to dissenters as a result of the court decision.[2] Why?
Most investors, having failed to timely exercise their appraisal rights
before the vote on the deal, are now ineligible for payments and have
consequently left $5.96 billion on the table.[3] The Dell case is not an
anomaly. As discussed in detail below, appraisal actions frequently award
comparable premiums, and investor participation is similarly small.[4]
Institutional investors have become savvy about filing proof-of-claim
forms in securities class action settlements, but they continue to let
billions slip through their fingers by underutilizing Delaware’s appraisal
process. This raises concerns about whether investors are fully satisfying
their fiduciary duties in this area.[5]
This article provides an overview of Delaware appraisal law and recent
trends that have created opportunities for institutional investors with
significant holdings to more fully and efficiently utilize this remedy
without filing suit or prosecuting appraisal petitions themselves. We
offer insights for fiduciaries into the mechanics of this quasi-passive
recovery opportunity, and then make suggestions on identifying, monitoring
and evaluating appraisal situations so they don’t miss out on future
premiums.
Appraisal Rights
Appraisal rights exist in mergers and consolidations involving some degree
of cash (rather than stock) consideration. Not less than 20 days before
the vote on a given deal, investors must be notified if appraisal rights
are available.[6]
Under Section 262 of the Delaware General Corporation Law, if you believe
the value of your shares exceeds the amount being offered, you can
exercise your right to have their worth determined and awarded by a judge
from the Chancery Court. These suits differ from securities class actions
and other shareholder matters in that they don’t involve claims of
wrongdoing — they concern your right as a shareholder to an objective
valuation of your investment. There is no class or lead plaintiff, and
unlike securities cases, both sides in an appraisal action bear an equal
burden to show fair value by a preponderance of evidence, a determination
ultimately made by the court. This levels the playing field.
Appraisal petitions are representative actions brought on behalf of all
investors perfecting appraisal, meaning only one dissenting shareholder
needs to file a petition and prosecute the appraisal case on behalf of
others. The petition must be filed in the Chancery Court within 120 days
after the effective date of the transaction. Within 20 days of filing, the
corporation must file an accompanying list of stockholders who have
demanded appraisal and not previously settled.[7] If the petitioner
obtains a negotiated or judicially determined valuation, that result is
available to all others who have perfected their rights.
Appraisal litigation focuses on share value and involves “battles of the
experts.” Discovery is focused on valuation issues, matters related to how
the deal was negotiated and/or shopped, and on occasion, the standing of
investors seeking appraisal.
With a number of large funds specializing in appraisal arbitrage — buying
large amounts of shares after transaction announcements to seek premiums
through appraisal — institutional investors who made prior investments and
own significant numbers of shares as of the record dates can take
advantage of these arbitrage efforts without having to file and prosecute
the appraisal petitions themselves. As the Chancery Court recently noted
in Plasmanet, nonappearing investors who exercised appraisal and
negotiated settlements could have filed petitions but were not required to
do so: “[T]here need be only one appraisal petition — filed by the
surviving corporation or by a former stockholder — to commence an
appraisal proceeding and thereby entitle all former stockholders with
perfected appraisal rights to receive what the Court determines to be the
‘fair value’ of the corporation’s stock.”[8]
As that court further noted, appraisal matters resemble class actions in
that “all members of the class enjoy the fruits of the class
representative’s labor.”[9] But there is a critical difference: investors
seeking appraisal must affirmatively opt in by perfecting their rights
before the deal vote. This was the problem in Dell — most shareholders
failed to opt in before that vote, forfeiting their eligibility to later
benefit from the court’s valuation.
Appraisal Opportunities
From January 2015 to date, there have been more than 160 deals eligible
for appraisal. Only a fraction of appraisal-eligible deals — about 15
percent — result in filed appraisal petitions. The filing of a petition
initiates the process for seeking objective determinations of share value
by the court.[10] On average, appraisal cases take about two years to
resolve. Actual times vary widely depending on each company’s willingness
to settle and, if litigated, the extent of any improprieties that arose in
the course of shopping the company. Dell was one of the few matters
pursued to judgment; many settle before or within a reasonable time after
the petition is filed. Last year, in the
Albertsons case, for example, a group
of investors settled for a 26 percent premium ($127 million in total)
within six months of the deal closing.[11] Others continued the
litigation.
Academic literature indicates that appraisal awards typically equal or
exceed tenders.[12] While past matters may be poor predictors of future
outcomes given the unique facts of each case, below are 15 suits (besides
Dell) between 2010 and 2015 that resulted in court-awarded valuations.[13]
Where available, the additional returns from statutory interest (discussed
below) are noted.
-
In re
Dole Food Co. (Aug. 2015) 20
percent premium
-
In re
Safeway Inc. (July 2015), 26
percent premium
-
Owen v. Canon (June 2015), 60 percent premium plus 17.6 percent more
from interest
-
Laider v. Hesco (May 2014), 75.5 percent premium plus 21.5 percent more
from interest
-
In re
Orchard Enterprises (Sept. 2013),
127.8 percent premium plus 36.1 percent more from interest
-
Merion v.
3M Cogent (July 20, 2013), 8.5
percent premium plus 14.3 percent more from interest
-
Towerview v.
Cox Radio (June 2013), 19.8 percent
premium plus 26.9 percent more from interest
-
IQ v. Am. Commercial Lines (Mar. 2013), 15.6 percent premium plus 13.7
percent more from interest
-
Global v. Golden Telecom (Apr. 2010), 19.5 percent premium plus 14.7
percent more from interest
-
In re Sunbelt Beverage (Feb. 2010), 148.8 percent premium plus 213.8
percent more from interest
Four other matters resulted in zero premiums but returned 10.5 percent to
13.7 percent with the added interest. Only one case resulted in a negative
premium, which was largely offset by statutory interest.
Given the volume of appraisal-eligible matters each year and the potential
for significant negotiated or court-awarded premiums, there’s ample reason
for fiduciaries to monitor, evaluate and participate in appropriate cases.
Perfecting Your Appraisal Rights
To perfect appraisal, before the vote, you or your proxy firm must deliver
to the corporation a written demand for appraisal of your shares.[14] You
must also instruct your proxy firm to abstain or vote against the
deal.[15] This demand is different from filing an appraisal petition,
which must be done by at least one dissenter who has exercised appraisal
and within 120 days after the effective date of the transaction.[16]
To benefit you must also continue to hold your shares through the
resolution of the suit. Under Section 262(h), you are entitled to
“interest from the effective date of the merger through the date of
payment of the judgment [which] shall be compounded quarterly and shall
accrue at 5% over the
Federal Reserve discount rate.”
Interest applies even if the court awards a zero premium (i.e., determines
fair value equals the tender). However, the impact of interest on total
recoveries will likely change very soon.[17]
Exercising appraisal rights creates the option but not the obligation to
pursue them later. Under Delaware law, within 60 days after the effective
date of the merger, you can revoke your election and instead accept the
tender, provided appraisal proceedings haven’t started. (With company
consent, you can revoke after this 60-day period.) This limited withdrawal
right gives you a window of time to monitor the appraisal situation before
making a final decision.
If your preference is to piggyback on the efforts of arbitragers or others
rather than filing your own petition, there are several additional factors
to consider:
(1) Who Will File the Initial Petition? If a petition is not
filed within 60 days after the effective date, you will need to either do
it yourself or cancel your appraisal election and accept the tender to
avoid receiving nothing.
(2) Will You Need to Hire Counsel? If another investor files
the petition, you may or may not be able to work through their lawyers. If
you work with another law firm, you or someone else from the group may
need to file a petition.
(3) What Happens If the Matter Settles? If you don’t like
the settlement terms proposed, you’ll need another petitioner to prosecute
the case on behalf of the remaining dissenters. You’ll also need to be
sure the remaining group has enough at stake to motivate counsel.[18]
Capable counsel can help you effectively navigate this process and obtain
appraisal benefits without yourself filing a petition and prosecuting the
litigation. Most Delaware attorneys will undertake appraisal cases on a
fully contingent basis, advancing all costs. If the case is successful,
the court will decide the extent to which others benefiting from the
appraisal litigation will share responsibility for the overall fees and
costs associated with achieving the outcome.
Suggested Best Practices
With the above in mind, we suggest the following best practices for
institutional investors:
(1) Identify Relevant Appraisal-Eligible Transactions:
Implement a system to identify all appraisal-eligible transactions
affecting your portfolio, particularly those in which you have significant
holdings as of the record dates. Establish a minimum investment amount for
further consideration of appraisal activity, bearing in mind the new
thresholds being enacted (see footnote 17).
(2) Monitor Matters Likely Headed for Appraisal: Your
portfolio managers will likely have strong views on which tender offers
are inadequate. Pay particular attention to negative premium deals in
which tenders are less than pre-announcement share prices. Appraisal
petitions are more frequent in interested-director transactions and/or
management-led buyouts where market checks and minority protections are
less clear.
(3) Be Prepared to Exercise Your Rights: Understand and have
systems in place ready to instruct your proxy firm on voting and to notify
the company about appraisal. Be sure communications are well-documented
and given as far in advance of the vote date as possible. Also, identify
and rectify any standing issues beforehand, and be sure to keep your
shares.
(4) Monitor the Chancery Court Docket: Decide whether your
firm is willing to file an appraisal petition or would prefer to let other
dissenters lead the charge. Between your exercise of appraisal and the 60
days after transaction consummation, monitor the Chancery Court docket to
see if appraisal petitions are filed, and if so, by whom. Obtain the list
of investors exercising appraisal (footnote 17). Identify law firms
representing investors and if it makes sense, work through them or obtain
your own counsel. Decide in advance what your fund will do if an appraisal
petition is not filed. If you join a group, ensure someone else will serve
as the petitioner if that’s your preference, and establish a mechanism for
staying informed about the proceedings.
(5) Monitor the Appraisal Litigation: If another investor
negotiates a proposed resolution, you or your counsel will likely receive
an offer to settle on the same terms. Remember that if you don’t accept,
you or someone else will need to continue the effort with enough at stake
to motivate counsel. If the case results in a valuation decision, be sure
you have a system in place to know about it and obtain your recovery.
—By Michael Lange and Brian Shea, Financial Recovery Technologies LLC
Michael Lange is counsel of securities litigation and Brian Shea is
associate counsel at Financial Recovery Technologies in Medford,
Massachussetts.
The opinions expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily
reflect the views of the firm, its clients, or Portfolio Media Inc., or
any of its or their respective affiliates. This article is for general
information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as
legal advice.
[1] In re Appraisal of Dell Inc., C.A. No. 9322-VCL at 1 (Del. Ch., May
31, 2016).
[2] Matt Levine,
T. Rowe Price Voted for the Dell
Buyout By Accident, Bloomberg (May 13, 2016).
[3] “Few of the Dell investors are eligible for compensation due to the
intricacies of the law in Delaware, where the suit was filed.” Sarah
Krause, T. Rowe Price Pays Up for Botched Vote, Wall St. J (June 6, 2016),
note 1.
[4] Appraisal rights have gained increased attention in recent weeks
following T. Rowe Price’s decision to voluntarily pay $194 million to its
mutual fund investors after it failed to properly exercise its appraisal
rights in Dell due to an administrative error. T. Rowe’s payment is more
than five times what Dell must pay following the court’s valuation
decision.
[5] See James D. Cox and Randall S. Thomas, Letting Billions Slip Through
Your Fingers: Empirical Evidence and Legal Implications of the Failure of
Financial Institutions to Participate in Securities Class Action
Settlements, 58 Stan. L. Rev. 411 (2005) (citing In re Caremark Int’l
Deriv. Litig., 698 A.2d 959 (Del. Ch. 1996)).
[6] Del. Code tit. 8, § 262(d).
[7] § 262(e)-(f).
[8] Mannix v. Plasmanet Inc., C.A. No. 10502-CB at 5 (Del. Ch. July 21,
2015) (Bouchard, C.).
[9] Id. at 6.
[10] Appraisal cases are distinct from the more prevalent and much
maligned “disclosure suits” brought in an estimated 90 percent of proposed
transactions. These often settle quickly for modest extra disclosures and
fee awards to plaintiffs counsel.
[11] See Liza Hoffman, Safeway to Pay Hedge Funds $44 a Share to Settle
Buyout Suits, Wall St. J, (June 2, 2015).
[12] See, e.g., Kobi Kastiel, Co-Editor, Why Delaware Appraisal Awards
Exceed the Merger Price, Harvard L.
Sch. Forum on Corporate Governance and Fin. Regulation (Sept. 23, 2014).
[13] Source
Fried Frank, A Study of Recent
Delaware Appraisal Decisions: Part 1, Law360 (July 28, 2015).
[14] Del. Code tit. 8 § 262(d).
[15] § 262(a).
[16] § 262(e).
[17] On June 8, 2016, the Delaware Senate passed HB 371, which seeks to
eliminate smaller appraisal suits, namely those where less than 1 percent
of eligible shares elect appraisal and/or the merger consideration for
dissenters is $1 million or less. Also, to avoid paying as much statutory
interest, defendants will be able to make cash payments to investors
exercising appraisal in amounts they choose any time before settlement,
limiting statutory interest to the remaining amount. These changes will be
effective for transactions entered into on or after Aug. 1, 2016.
[18] After a plaintiff files her appraisal petition, the company will file
with the court a list of all investors that exercised appraisal. You’ll
appear on this list, but your inclusion in the disclosure document does
not make you a plaintiff or require you to take an active role in
prosecuting the petition.
© 2016, Portfolio Media, Inc. |