Money Stuff
Death and
Stock Picks
8 May 5, 2015 8:04 AM EDT
By
Matt Levine
***
Who can remember how to vote?
Are activists an important check on shareholder complacency? Left to
their own devices, would big institutional shareholders be
insufficiently protective of their own interests? Well I don't know
but
here is a story about how T. Rowe Price consistently opposed the
2013 leveraged buyout of Dell, of which it was a big shareholder, but
somehow voted for the
deal. Like, as far as I can tell, by
accident. Like the guy in charge of telling everyone what
a bad deal it was never talked to the guy in charge of hitting the
vote button. "We are aware of a discrepancy in the communication of
our voting instruction on the Dell buyout," says T. Rowe. What?
This is immediately relevant because T. Rowe is a plaintiff in an
appraisal lawsuit, and the
appraisal statute requires that you "neither voted in favor of the
merger or consolidation nor consented thereto in writing." So T. Rowe
would seem to be out of luck in its appraisal demand, though it has a
pretty amusing reading of the statute to mean the opposite of what it
says, which happens to be
supported by case law. But the broader issue is:
How do you vote the wrong way
on a merger? What does this story say about the need for
activist investors? About T. Rowe's concerns about high-frequency
trading? About the efficiency of our public equity markets?
***
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