Deal Compass – November 2016 Edition
Howard Chatzinoff,
Eoghan Keenan
and
Maryam Naghavi
on
November 23, 2016
Understanding and Managing Appraisal Risk in M&A Transactions
The decision by Vice Chancellor Laster of the Delaware Court of
Chancery in In re: Appraisal of Dell Inc.[1]
has received considerable coverage and discussion in legal
publications. More importantly, the decision has resulted in
significant concern and uncertainty amongst dealmakers and their legal
counsel when negotiating transactions involving the merger of a
Delaware corporation where appraisal rights are available to the
stockholders of the acquired corporation. While much has been made of
the rationale for the Dell decision and many have sought to
distinguish it on the facts, the scope of Chancellor Laster’s remarks
in the decision should be given careful consideration when evaluating
the risk of an appraisal action in Delaware merger transactions, most
notably those transactions involving management-led buy outs, private
equity-backed going private transactions and targets that have made
significant capital investments shortly prior to the sale of the
company. However, whether through the negotiation of an appraisal
rights condition in the merger agreement or taking advantage of recent
amendments to Section 262 of the Delaware General Corporation Law (“DGCL”),
dealmakers and their legal counsel can take certain steps to mitigate
the risk of an unfavorable outcome in an appraisal action.
The Dell decision is notable for a number of reasons, but in
particular because the court clearly distinguished the question of
fulfillment of fiduciary duties from the question of “fair value”.
Prior to this decision, transaction parties would take some comfort in
the establishment of a well-managed process designed to ensure that
the directors of the target fully exercised their fiduciary duties.
However, in the Dell decision, the court explained that while
actions such as establishing an independent committee, running a
competitive process, excluding interested directors from the
decision-making process and subjecting the transaction to the vote of
the majority of unaffiliated stockholders help establish that the
decision-making process employed by the board and the information it
based its decision on was reasonable, and that the board acted
reasonably in light of the circumstances, they do not necessarily
indicate that the deal price proposed in the board-approved
transaction reflected the “fair value” of the company. Stating that
the burden of proof in an appraisal proceeding differs from a
fiduciary liability proceeding, the court explained that “[i]n a
statutory appraisal proceeding, both sides have the burden of proving
their respective valuation positions by a preponderance of evidence”,
and that “no presumption, favorable or unfavorable, attaches to either
side’s valuation”. The court further explained that “fair value” is
not the equivalent of “fair market value” but rather represents the
true or intrinsic value of the stock of a corporation. The court
clarified that the valuation date to determine “fair value” of a
dissenting stockholder’s stock is the closing date and that “if the
value of the corporation changes between the signing of the merger and
the closing, the fair value determination must be measured by the
‘operative reality’ of the corporation at the effective time of the
merger.” All this to say that, while the process adopted by the board
of directors (or special committee) of the target is important, it is
not determinative when evaluating the likelihood of an appraisal claim
being brought and succeeding.
Vice Chancellor Laster acknowledged the recent trend in Delaware
courts to presume that the deal price was a good indicator of “fair
value,” but emphasized that those cases were decided in connection
with transactions which “resulted from an arm’s-length process between
two independent parties” and that “no structural impediments existed
that might materially distort the ‘crucible of objective market
reality.’[2]”
The court argued that “[a]mong the other requirements for market
efficiency are liquidity and fungibility. Public stock market prices
are generally efficient because large numbers of identical shares of
stock in a given company trade on a highly liquid market with millions
of participants. The deal market, however, dealing as it does with
entire companies, rather than individual shares, often lacks both
qualities.” The court further argued that in a management buyout,
“[a]lthough the literature is far from unanimous in its analysis and
policy recommendations, the weight of authority suggests that a claim
that the bargained-for price in an MBO represents fair value should be
evaluated with greater thoroughness and care than, at the other end of
the spectrum, a transaction with a strategic buyer in which management
will not be retained.”
While acknowledging that the intrinsic value of a company does not
necessarily translate into a price that a buyer is willing to pay in
an arms’ length transaction, in addition to the concerns raised by a
management buyout, the court pinpointed three additional factors in
the Dell transaction to argue that the deal value did not reflect the
“fair value” of Dell:
-
Use of an LBO pricing model:
The court argued that a financial buyer evaluates a company based on
the IRR that it desires to achieve on its investment and, in the
case of the Dell transaction, the financial buyer needed to achieve
an IRR of 20% or more to satisfy its own investors. The court
concluded that the IRR method tends to undervalue the fair value of
the target company and, unlike discounted cash flow methodology,
does not reflect the equity value of the target company.
-
Compelling evidence of disconnect between the market and the reality
of operations:
While Dell experienced a continuous drop in the price of its shares
during the Dell transaction process, both the financial advisors and
management agreed that the market “did not get the company” and that
the market was focused on short-term results rather than the
long-term strategies of the company (e.g., the fact that Dell
had recently made nearly $14b in capital investments which had not
yet begun to generate the anticipated results). The court argued
that a “transaction which eliminates stockholders may take advantage
of a trough in a company’s performance or excessive investor
pessimism about the company’s prospects (a so-called anti-bubble).
Indeed, the optimal time to take a company private is after it has
made significant long-term investments, but before those investments
have started to pay off and market participants have begun to
incorporate those benefits in the price of the company’s stock.”
-
Limited pre-signing competition:
The court argued that go-shop provisions rarely produce meaningful
superior bids in an LBO context, so “the bulk of any price
competition occurs before the deal is signed.” The court explained
that competition does not have to be direct and overt and it
sometimes suffices to have prospects of post-signing competition to
help raise the price during the pre-signing period; however, the
court noted that in the case of a bidding process including several
financial investors, there might not be rampant incentives to top
offerings given the pre-existing relationships that such financial
investors may have. In such situations, the “price established
during the pre-signing phase is therefore critical, and it is the
presence or realistic threat of competition during this period that
drives up the price.”
From the factors summarized above, it appears that the Delaware courts
intend to place greater scrutiny on the “fair value” of transactions
involving management of the acquiring party, financial sponsors
generally (both as a result of anticipated IRR mandates and assumed
relationships amongst financial sponsors), transactions relying upon a
post-signing go shop period to satisfy the market check and
transactions where the target company’s stock price is depressed.
Whether one or more of these factors will become more likely to result
an unfavorable appraisal rights outcome remains to be seen as the case
law develops, but transaction parties should give careful
consideration to the circumstances of the transaction in evaluating
the risk of an appraisal claim being brought and resulting in an
unfavorable outcome and determining what actions should be taken by
the parties to mitigate that risk.
From the buyer’s perspective, the inclusion of an appraisal right
closing condition in the merger agreement in favor of the buyer is
frequently raised as a desirable means to mitigate the risk of
appraisal rights being exercised. The condition provides that holders
of no more than a certain percentage of a company’s shares (e.g.,
5%) have sought an appraisal of the fair value of their target company
shares. The inclusion of this condition provides comfort to the buyer
both by potentially deterring stockholders from seeking to exercise
their appraisal rights (there is no appraisal action if the
transaction does not close) and by giving the buyer the ability to
walk away from the transaction if the holders of too many shares
exercise their appraisal rights. However, the appraisal condition is
not without its faults. Buyers will need to carefully consider the
shareholder base of the target company before seeking an appraisal
condition as it could result in providing minority shareholders
hold-up value over the transaction. Such deal uncertainty is exactly
why target company boards are generally loath to agree to appraisal
conditions and will usually strongly resist the inclusion of an
appraisal condition. Following the Dell decision, many
anticipated that buyers would be more successful in negotiating the
inclusion of an appraisal condition in public merger transactions
where appraisal rights are available. However, in the five months
that have passed since the Dell decision, we have not seen a
meaningful increase in the number of merger agreements including an
appraisal condition. Of the 64 transactions with a deal value of
greater than $500m announced between June 1, 2016 and November 17,
2016, only two agreements include an appraisal rights closing
condition. In the seven months prior to the Dell decision,
only three of the 74 transactions with a deal value greater than $500m
included an appraisal condition. According to the 2014 ABA Deal
Points Study, of all the public company transactions with a deal value
of greater than $100m which were announced in 2013, only 3% included
an appraisal condition in all cash deals and only 26% included an
appraisal condition in part cash, part stock deals.
Even prior to the Dell decision, the number of appraisal
proceedings has steadily increased over the last few years as
investors have pursued appraisal claims as an investment strategy,
with the risk of loss mitigated by the statutory interest accruing on
the value of the shares for which appraisal is sought. Under Section
262(h) of the DGCL, unless the Court of Chancery determines otherwise
for good cause, interest on an appraisal award accrues from the
effective date of the merger through the date of payment of the
appraisal award at a rate of 5% over the Federal Reserve discount
rate, compounded quarterly. Recognizing the concerns raised by its
corporate constituency regarding the increasing use of appraisal
actions as an investment strategy and the significant cost incurred by
the interest imposed during the life of an appraisal proceeding (often
lasting three or more years), the Delaware legislature recently
amended Section 262 of the DGCL to impose a minimum shareholding
requirement for petitioners bringing an appraisal claim and empowered
buyers to significantly decrease the potential interest payments that
such petitioners may receive during a pending appraisal claim. The
amendment, which became effective on August 1, 2016, provides that the
courts must dismiss any appraisal proceeding where the total number of
shares entitled to appraisal does not exceed 1% of the company’s
outstanding shares eligible for appraisal or the value of the merger
consideration for such shares in the transaction does not exceed $1
million. This exception should have the effect of cutting off minor
appraisal claims that are more of a nuisance than a threat to deal
certainty or the economics of most public company transactions.
More importantly, Section 262 of the DGCL has also been amended to
allow the surviving company in the merger to make a voluntary cash
payment of the merger consideration to the holders seeking appraisal,
without any negative inference by the Court of Chancery, which could
significantly reduce if not eliminate the amount of interest that
accrues during the appraisal process. Following such a payment, the
stockholder seeking appraisal would only be entitled to interest on
the excess, if any, of the fair value of the shares as determined by
the Court of Chancery over the amount paid by the surviving company
(plus any interest that may have accrued between the date of the
merger and the date of the merger consideration payment to such
stockholder).
The ability of the surviving company in the merger to pay the merger
consideration on the shares for which appraisal is sought immediately
following the closing of the merger has the potential to significantly
deter questionable appraisal claims. By eliminating the guaranteed
rate of return provided by statutory interest, stockholders bringing
an appraisal claim will now need to carefully consider the financial
impact of pursuing an appraisal proceeding, including legal costs
incurred in pursuing the claim, the market risk of investing the
merger consideration to other investors during the pendency of the
appraisal claim and, of course, the outcome of the Delaware courts’
finding that the fair value is less than the merger consideration.
While the Dell decision may have the effect of making buyers
less certain about the outcome of appraisal proceedings, if buyers
begin to adopt the practice of promptly paying the merger
consideration to shareholders seeking appraisal, the recent amendments
to Section 262 of the DGCL should reduce the occurrence of such
proceedings.
[1]
In
re: Appraisal of Dell, Inc.
(Del. Ch. May 31, 2016)
[2]
Highfields Capital, Inc. v. AXA Fin., Inc., 939 A.2d 34, 42
(Del. Ch. 2007)
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