TechFlash
Major Dell stockholder ruled ineligible for share appraisal process
May 12, 2016, 10:55am CDT
A major stockholder in
Dell Inc.’s shareholder appraisal
process has been ruled ineligible by a Delaware chancery judge on
Wednesday.
T. Rowe Price
Associates Inc., an affiliate of
T. Rowe Price Group Inc. (Nasdaq:
TROW) that was once Dell’s third-largest shareholder, can’t be part of
the share appraisal process because it voted in favor of the October
2013 $24.9 billion shareholder buyout — even though it was done
unintentionally,
Law360 reported.
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T. Rowe
Price Associates Inc., a major stockholder in Dell Inc.’s
shareholder appraisal process, was ruled ineligible by a
Delaware chancery judge.
Sam Hodgson |
“When an investor
elects to use intermediaries, the investor assumes the risk that the
intermediaries will err or otherwise fail to act in accordance with
the investor’s wishes,” Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster wrote in the
court filing, according to the report. “Ironically, by making this
argument, the T. Rowe petitioners are effectively contending that [the
intermediaries] acted without actual authority (albeit with apparent
authority) because of the mistaken conveyance of voting instructions.”
Although an investor
group led by CEO
Michael Dell paid shareholders
$13.75 per share, attorneys for the more than 100 minority
shareholders
objecting to the price including
T. Rowe Price were asking for more than double — or $28.61 per share,
according to a Nov. 18, 2015 post-trial opening brief.
Gary Lutin — chairman of
Shareholder Forum, a New York company that moderates disputes between
shareholders and companies — said the ruling should have no effect on
the court determining fair value paid to the remaining Dell
shareholders.
"In fact, the amount
of money that Dell will save by not having to pay any valuation
premium or interest accruals on the 32 million T. Rowe Price shares
will be a great improvement for any shareholders who were worried
about Dell’s ability to pay them after buying
EMC," he said Thursday.
Round Rock-based Dell,
the No. 3 computer maker in the world, employs an estimated 13,000
workers in Central Texas. Now privately held, the company is
poised to complete this year a $67 billion
acquisition of Massachusetts-based EMC Corp. (NYSE: EMC) in
what would be the largest technology merger in history.
In late 2015, the
Austin Business Journal reported that
Dell agreed to pay the New York-based
Blackstone Group LP(NYSE: BX) $25 million in due-diligence
expenses as a prospective buyer for Dell in the run-up to the 2013
buyout.
Christopher Calnan
covers technology, finance and clean energy for the Austin Business
Journal.
© 2016
American City Business Journals. |
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