Bloomberg News
Icahn Chasing More Dell Cash Shows Rise of Appraisal
Arbitrage
By Miles Weiss | October 03, 2013
Investor
Carl Icahn has vowed to petition the Delaware Chancery Court for an
independent valuation of his 8.9 percent stake in Dell, the computer
maker that won shareholder approval last month for a $24.9 billion
buyout led by founder Michael Dell. Photographer: Scott Eells/Bloomberg |
Carl Icahn’s plan to
seek a higher price for his stake in
Dell Inc. (DELL:US)
put the spotlight on a section of Delaware law that is being used by a
growing group of money managers to squeeze more cash from corporate
buyouts.
Icahn, 77, has vowed to
petition the Delaware Chancery Court for an independent valuation of his
8.9 percent stake in Dell, the computer maker that won shareholder
approval last month for a $24.9 billion buyout led by founder Michael
Dell. Should he proceed, Dell would have to pay him whatever the court
decides his stake, valued at $2.2 billion under the buyout terms, is
worth. Icahn would get accrued interest of almost 6 percent on the award,
regardless of whether it is more or less than he would have received
through the original deal.
With returns from
traditional merger arbitrage waning, the battle at Dell is drawing
attention to appraisals as a way to systematically profit from buyouts.
Money managers such as Nicholas Maounis and Andrew Barroway, boosted by a
court ruling Icahn attained years ago, have developed a strategy known as
appraisal arbitrage in which they buy stock in takeover targets after a
deal is announced and then seek a higher valuation from the chancery
court.
“Dell has kind of awoken
a sleeping giant,” said Matthew Giffuni, the manager of Quadre Investments
LP, a New York-based firm using the Delaware court to contest the price
paid in July for NetSpend Holdings Inc. “Now there are new firms who are
crawling into the space.”
Under Delaware law,
stockholders of companies incorporated in the state are entitled to a
judicial determination of fair value in a takeover. More than half of U.S.
publicly traded companies are incorporated in Delaware, the smallest state
by area after Rhode Island.
Transkaryotic Therapies
For years, the petitions were mostly filed by
disgruntled investors as the only alternative to accepting bids they
deemed too low. A court ruling on an appraisal play made by Icahn in 2005
opened the door for money managers to pursue appraisals more
systematically, by analyzing stocks to find takeovers that appear to pay
less than intrinsic value, then buying shares to gain appraisal rights.
The strategy is a twist on traditional merger arbitrage, in which
investors buy shares in a takeover target whose stock trades at a discount
to the buyout offer because of uncertainty over whether the deal will be
completed.
Icahn, SAC Capital
Advisors LP and Millennium Management LLC had challenged the price in
Shire Pharmaceuticals Group Plc’s acquisition of biotechnology company
Transkaryotic Therapies Inc. The investors sought appraisal on 11 million
shares, most bought after the record date for determining eligibility to
vote on the deal.
‘Taking Advantage’
The court said the petitioners were entitled to fair
value on all shares, upending the notion that stock purchased after the
record date couldn’t be included in a claim. The case was eventually
settled for $37 a share, the same price paid in the merger, plus interest.
The ruling allowed
arbitragers to buy stock just before shareholders voted on a transaction,
minimizing the danger of a deal falling apart, and giving investors more
time to study financial performance as well as valuation methods and
fairness opinions in takeover documents, which often are published after
the record date is set.
“People are taking
advantage of the flexibility on Transkaryotic,” said Daniel Wolf, a
partner in the mergers practice of Chicago-based law firm Kirkland & Ellis
LLP. “You can just sit there and wait and watch and just decide if the
business environment is improved.”
Merion Investment
One example is Barroway’s Merion Investment
Management LP, which disclosed a 5.4 percent stake in Houston-based BMC
Software Inc. on July 22, two days before Bain Capital LLC and Golden Gate
Capital won approval for their $6.7 billion acquisition of the company.
Merion sought appraisal last month, forgoing the $46.25 a share that the
private-equity firms had agreed to pay.
Barroway, co-founder of
one of the nation’s largest securities class-action firms, is seeking to
raise $1 billion for a group of funds specializing in appraisal arbitrage.
His Merion will target management-led buyouts, the type of acquisitions in
which top executives, often including the founder, seek to take a company
private.
“The fund believes that
‘insider acquirers’ often have a greater incentive to offer and pay
minority shareholders substantially less than fair value,” Merion says in
a marketing document. It will target a return rate of 20 percent by
enforcing appraisal rights through the judicial process.
Maounis’s Petitions
Barroway, the managing partner at Radnor,
Pennsylvania-based Merion, declined to comment on the strategy.
Maounis, the hedge-fund
manager whose Amaranth Advisors LLC collapsed in 2006 after losing $6.6
billion on natural-gas trades, petitioned this year for appraisals of
shares that his new firm, Verition Group LLC, held in three takeovers,
according to the Delaware Register in Chancery.
Verition sought
appraisal after investment bank Duff & Phelps Corp. was bought April 23 by
Carlyle Group LP, Swiss bank Pictet & Cie and others. The firm also filed
petitions after the Dec. 31 purchase of Ancestry.com Inc. by Permira
Holdings Ltd. and the July 2 takeover of NetSpend by Total System Services
Inc.
Maounis, whose firm is
based in Greenwich, Connecticut, didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Of the 18 deals spurring
petitions in Delaware through September of this year, at least 12 drew
filings by one or more arbitragers. Merlin Partners and its affiliates
targeted eight transactions, according to the Chancery docket.
‘Paying Enough’
Merlin is run by Beachwood, Ohio-based Ancora
Advisors LLC, a money-management firm founded by Richard Barone. Barone,
an activist investor who started his first money-management firm in 1973,
said in an interview that Ancora has done the bulk of its appraisal
arbitrage for about a year, though it had some experience with the
strategy previously.
“We look at these deals
and try to judge how fair the deal is,” said Barone, a 71-year-old native
of Cleveland who is no longer involved in Ancora’s day-to-day operations.
“Where we believe the acquiring company is not paying enough, we will go
for appraisal rights.”
Appraisal judgments are
paid only to those who file the petition, and can be more or less than
what they would have gotten in the original deal. To qualify, an investor
needs to file an appraisal demand with the target before the shareholder
vote, then oppose the deal or refrain from casting a ballot. The investor
must petition the court within 120 days after the deal becomes final.
Settling Cases
Legal fees can reach millions of dollars, and it
typically takes one to three years for a judgment, though a petition filed
in 1983 over Ronald Perelman’s bid for Technicolor Inc. required 22 years
to resolve.
Most appraisal claims
are settled before the court rules. Quick accords eliminate the expense of
pressing a case, said attorney Jeremy Anderson at Fish & Richardson PC.
Awards accrue interest
at the rate the U.S. Federal Reserve charges banks to borrow from its
discount window, currently 0.75 percent, plus five percentage points,
retroactively to the deal’s completion.
Eight of the 45
appraisal actions that went through trial in the past 20 years resulted in
an appraisal of fair value that was less than the merger price, according
to Fish & Richardson. In a 2004 ruling on Sunbeam Corp.’s purchase of
Coleman Co. for $5.83 a share, the court said the fair value was $32.35.
‘Purest’ Value
“This is value investing in its purest and most
professionalized form,” said Gary Lutin, a former investment banker who
runs the Shareholder Forum, a New York-based group that created the Dell
Valuation Trust to foster the creation of securities backed by appraisal
rights. “Except you are depending on a very sophisticated judge rather
than Mr. Market.”
In a 2007 case the court
went the other way, ruling in response to a petition by Highfields Capital
Ltd. that Mony Group Inc. was worth $24.97 a share when acquired by AXA
Financial Inc., after $31 was paid in the takeover.
Dell’s founder and
Silver Lake Management LLC won the vote on their buyout of the Round Rock,
Texas-based company on Sept. 12, after months of opposition, including a
competing bid from New York-based Icahn Capital LP. The buyout group
ultimately agreed to pay $13.75 a share plus a 13 cent dividend.
Dell Estimates
Icahn built his stake to 156.5 million shares after
the transaction was announced in February as he fought for control, then
asked fellow investors in July to join him in preparing to seek appraisal
rights. Conceding defeat as the buyout gained momentum, on Sept. 9 he
reiterated his appraisal plan.
Most professional
investors view Dell’s intrinsic value in the $15 to $18 range, according
to Lutin.
If the court were to
take two years to rule and award Icahn $18 a share, the company would owe
him $3.17 billion in principal and interest, about $1 billion more than
he’d get via the buyout. Outcome aside, it would be one of the court’s
biggest petitions ever, said Lawrence Hamermesh, the Rudy R. Vale
Professor of Corporate and Business Law at the Widener Institute of
Delaware Corporate Law in Wilmington.
Dell is a bad bet for
appraisal arbitrage, according to Quadre’s Giffuni. With others preparing
to join Icahn in filing, Dell is unlikely to settle claims because of the
prohibitive cost, he said.
Holders “should be happy
with what they are getting,” said Giffuni, a former merger and
acquisitions attorney who formed Quadre in 2009.
Icahn declined to
comment on a possible claim. Like any petitioner, he’d have 60 days after
the deal is done to change his mind and accept the terms, said Charles
Nathan, the former co-head of the mergers practice at law firm Latham &
Watkins LLP.
“There is nothing to say
that Carl couldn’t turn around and settle for the deal price when no one
is paying attention,” said Nathan, a partner at RLM Finsbury, a
strategic-communications firm headquartered in New York and London.
To contact the reporter
on this story: Miles Weiss in Washington at mweiss@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor
responsible for this story: Christian Baumgaertel at
cbaumgaertel@bloomberg.net
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