Forum
distribution:
Leading corporate defense expert's new playbook for services to
battle activists
|
For
the recently stated principles of corporate purpose that the authors of
the article below now offer to defend, see
Note: Previous Forum attention to the authors' evolving playbooks
for their firm's activist defense services is presented in the "Professional
Views" section of the reference page
for observations of professional responses to an activist contest for
control of
Darden Restaurants, Inc., a project of the Forum's 2012-2015 public
program addressing
Fair Investor Access. |
Source:
The Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance, January 20, 2020 posting |
Dealing with Activist Hedge Funds and
Other Activist Investors
Posted by Martin Lipton, Wachtell, Lipton,
Rosen & Katz, on Thursday, January 20, 2020
Editor’s Note:
Martin Lipton is a
founding partner of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, specializing
in mergers and acquisitions and matters affecting corporate policy
and strategy. This post is based on a Wachtell Lipton memorandum
by Mr. Lipton,
Steven A. Rosenblum,
Karessa L. Cain, and
Sabastian V. Niles. Related research from the Program on
Corporate Governance includes
The Long-Term Effects of Hedge Fund Activism
by Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, and Wei Jiang (discussed on the
Forum
here);
Dancing with Activists by Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, Wei Jiang,
and Thomas Keusch (discussed on the Forum
here); and
Who
Bleeds When the Wolves Bite? A Flesh-and-Blood Perspective on
Hedge Fund Activism and Our Strange Corporate Governance System
by Leo E. Strine, Jr. (discussed on the Forum
here). |
Introduction
Activists set a new
record in 2019. According to the Bloomberg 2019 Global Activism Market Review,
there were 518 companies targeted by activists deploying stakes aggregating $76
billion. There were a record 99 activist interventions in M&A transactions.
There were 118 proxy fights. Elliott Management, followed by Icahn Associates,
were the top activists by stake value. Elliott and Starboard Value were the most
active by number of targets, with 17 and 13, respectively. Among the 2019
targets were AT&T, CVS Health and Bristol-Myers Squibb. As we have previously
noted, regardless of industry, size or performance, no company should consider
itself immune from hedge fund activism. No company is too large, too popular,
too new or too successful. Even companies that are respected industry leaders
and have outperformed the market and their peers have come under fire.
Although a number of
asset managers and institutional investors are beginning to question whether
hedge fund activism should be supported or resisted, and will act independently
of activists, the relationships between activists and asset managers and
investors in recent years have encouraged frequent and aggressive activist
attacks. A number of hedge funds have also sought to export American-style
activism abroad, with companies throughout the world now facing classic activist
attacks. In addition, the line between hedge fund activism and private equity
continues to blur, with some activist funds becoming bidders themselves for all
or part of a company, and a handful of private equity funds exploring
activist-style investments in, and engagement with, public companies.
The Bloomberg 2019
review contains statistical information on activists and the bankers, lawyers,
public and investor relations advisors and proxy solicitors who are involved in
advising activists and companies.
The Attack Devices Used by
Activists
-
Aggressively criticizing a company’s governance,
management, business and strategy and presenting the activist’s own
recommendations and business plan.
-
Proposing a precatory proxy resolution for
specific actions prescribed by the activist or the creation of a special
committee of independent directors to undertake a strategic review for the
purpose of “maximizing shareholder value.”
-
Recruiting candidates with industry experience
(including retired CEOs of major companies or even former executives of the
target) to serve on dissident slates, and conducting (or threatening to
conduct) a proxy fight to get board representation at an annual or special
meeting or through action by written consent. Solicitation for a short slate
is very often supported by ISS and, if supported, is often, though not always,
successful, in whole or in part.
-
Orchestrating a “withhold the vote” campaign.
-
Seeking to force a sale by leaking or initiating
rumors of an unsolicited approach, publicly calling for a sale, acting as an
(unauthorized) intermediary with strategic acquirers and private equity funds,
taking positions in both the target and the acquirer, making their own
“stalking-horse” bid or partnering with a hostile acquirer to build
substantial stock positions in the target to facilitate a takeover.
-
Rallying institutional investors and sell-side
research analysts to support the activist’s arguments.
-
Using stock loans, options, derivatives and other
devices to accumulate positions secretly or increase voting power beyond the
activist’s economic equity investment.
-
Using sophisticated public relations, social media
and traditional media campaigns to advance the activist’s arguments.
-
Investing in significant diligence and third-party
consulting services to analyze the target’s
-
Seeking to create divisions within the boardroom
or between the board and management.
-
Reaching a company’s retail shareholders with
weekly mailings, telephonic outreach, local newspaper advertisements and
user-friendly infographics.
-
Hiring private investigators to create dossiers on
directors, management and key employees and otherwise conducting aggressive
“diligence.”
-
Litigation, including demands for books and
records.
Current SEC rules do
not prevent an activist from secretly accumulating a more than 5% position
before being required to make public disclosure and do not prevent activists and
institutional investors from privately communicating and cooperating.
Prevention of, or
response to, an activist attack is an art, not a science. There is no substitute
for preparation. The issues, tactics, team and approaches to an activist
challenge will vary depending on the company, the industry, the activist and the
substantive business and governance issues in play. To forestall an attack, a
company should regularly review its business portfolio and strategy and its
governance and executive compensation issues. In addition to a program of
advance engagement with investors, it is essential to be able to mount a defense
quickly and to be agile in responding to changing tactics. A well-managed
corporation executing clearly articulated strategies can still prevail against
an activist, even when the major proxy advisory firms support the activist.
Given the risks and
potential harm of a full-blown battle, in certain situations the best response
to an activist approach may be to seek to negotiate with the activist and reach
a settlement on acceptable terms, if such a settlement is feasible, even if the
company believes it could win a proxy fight. However, when a negotiated
resolution is not achievable on acceptable terms, whether because the activist’s
proposals are inimical to the company’s business goals and strategy or because
the activist is unwilling to be reasonable in its negotiation, the ability to
wage an effective campaign will depend on advance preparation, proactive action,
good judgment and effective relationships and engagement with shareholders. This
outline provides a checklist of matters to be considered in putting a company in
the best possible position to prevent, respond to or resolve a hedge fund
activist attack.
Advance Preparation
Create Team to Deal
with Hedge Fund Activism:
-
A small group of key officers plus legal counsel,
investment banker, proxy soliciting firm, and public relations firm.
-
Continuing contact and periodic meetings of the
team are important.
-
A periodic fire drill with the team is the best
way to maintain a state of preparedness; the team should be familiar with the
hedge funds and other investors that have made activist approaches generally
and be particularly focused on those that have approached other companies in
the same industry and the tactics each fund has used; the team should also use
that familiarity to be alert to any contacts or interest shown by known
activists.
-
Periodic updates to the company’s board of
directors.
Shareholder Relations:
-
The investor relations officer is critical in
assessing exposure to an activist attack and in a proxy solicitation. The
credibility that the investor relations officer has with the institutional
shareholders has been determinative in a number of proxy solicitations. Candid
assessment of shareholder sentiment should be appropriately communicated to
senior management, with periodic briefings provided to the board.
-
Review capital return policy (dividends and
buybacks), broader capital allocation framework, analyst and investor
presentations and other financial public relations matters (including
disclosed metrics and guidance).
-
Monitor peer group, sell-side analysts, proxy
advisors, active asset managers, and internet commentary and media reports for
opinions or facts that will attract the attention of activists.
-
Articulate and consistently maintain the company’s
basic strategic message while updating the strategy as circumstances warrant.
-
Objectively assess input from shareholders and
whether the company is receiving candid feedback. The company should make sure
that major investors feel comfortable expressing their views to the company
and believe that the company honestly wants to hear any concerns or thoughts
they have.
-
Proactively address reasons for any shortfall
versus peer benchmarks. Anticipate key questions and challenges from analysts
and activists, and be prepared with answers. Monitor peer activity and the
changes peers are making to their businesses, as well as key industry
-
Build credibility with shareholders and analysts
before activists surface.
-
Monitor changes in hedge fund and institutional
shareholder holdings on a regular basis; understand the shareholder base,
including, to the extent practical, relationships among holders. Pay close
attention to activist funds that commonly act together or with an
institutional
-
Maintain regular contact with major institutional
investors, including both portfolio managers and proxy voting/governance
departments; CEO, CFO and independent director participation is very
important. Consider engagement with proxy advisory firms.
-
Major institutional investors, including
BlackRock, Capital Group, Fidelity, State Street, TIAA, T. Rowe Price,
Vanguard and Wellington, have established significant proxy departments that
make decisions independent of ISS. It is important for a company to know the
voting policies and guidelines of its major investors, who the key
decision-makers and point-persons are and how best to reach them. It may be
possible to defeat an activist attack supported by ISS by gaining the support
of major institutional shareholders.
-
Consider whether enhancements to company
disclosures or changes to governance practices are appropriate in light of
evolving shareholder expectations, including with respect to ESG.
-
Monitor third-party governance and ESG ratings and
reports and seek to correct inaccuracies.
-
Maintain up-to-date plans for contacts with media,
regulatory agencies, political bodies, industry leaders and other
stakeholders, and refresh relationships.
-
Monitor investor conference call participants,
one-on-one requests and transcript downloads.
Prepare the Board of Directors to Deal with the
Activist Situation:
-
Maintaining a unified board consensus on key
strategic issues is essential to success in the face of an activist attack; in
large measure, an attack by an activist hedge fund is an attempt to drive a
wedge between the board and management by raising doubts about strategy and
management performance and to create divisions on the board, which may include
advocating that a special committee be formed.
-
Keep the board informed of options and
alternatives analyzed by management, and review with the board basic strategy,
capital allocation and the portfolio of businesses in light of possible
arguments for spinoffs, share buybacks, increased leverage, special dividends,
a sale of the company or other structural or business changes.
-
Schedule periodic presentations by the legal
counsel and the investment banker to familiarize directors with the current
activist environment and the company’s preparation.
-
Directors should guard against subversion of the
responsibilities of the full board by the activists or related parties, and
should refer all approaches to the CEO.
-
Boardroom debates over business strategy,
direction and other matters should be open and vigorous but stay confidential
and be kept within the boardroom.
-
Recognize that psychological and perception
factors may be more important than legal and financial factors in avoiding
being singled out as a target,
-
Scrutiny of board composition is increasing, and
boards should self-assess regularly. In a contested proxy solicitation,
institutional investors may particularly question the “independence” of
directors who are older than 75 or who have lengthy tenures, especially where
the board has not recently appointed new directors, in addition to more
broadly assessing director expertise and attributes. Directors may also be
criticized for “overboarding” or attendance issues. Meaningful director
evaluation is now a key objective of institutional investors, and a
corporation is well advised to undertake it and talk to investors about it.
Regular board renewal and refreshment, and having longer-term board
development and succession plans, can be important evidence of meaningful
evaluation.
-
A company should not wait until it is involved in
a contested proxy solicitation to offer its key institutional shareholders the
opportunity to meet with its independent directors. Many major institutional
investors have recommended that companies offer scheduled meetings with some
(or, in unusual circumstances, even all) of a company’s independent directors.
A disciplined, thoughtful program for periodic meetings and other engagement
initiatives is advisable. See
Shareholder Engagement: Succeeding in the New Paradigm for Corporate
Governance.
Monitor Trading, Volume and Other Indicia of
Activity:
-
Employ stock watch service and monitor Schedule
13F filings.
-
Monitor Schedule 13D and Schedule 13G and
Hart-Scott-Rodino Act filings.
-
Monitor parallel trading and group activity (the
activist “wolf pack”).
-
Monitor activity in options, derivatives,
corporate debt and other non-equity securities.
-
Monitor attendance at analyst conferences,
requests for one-on-one sessions and other contacts from known activists.
The Activist White Paper:
The activist may approach a company with an
extensive, and in many cases high-quality, analysis of the company’s business
and strategy that supports the activist’s recommendations (demands) for:
-
Return of capital to shareholders through share
repurchase or special dividend.
-
Change in capital structure (leverage).
-
Sale or spin-off of a division.
-
Change in business strategy, including ESG.
-
Change in cost structures.
-
Improvement of management performance or
replacement of management (e.g., replace CEO).
-
Change in executive compensation.
-
Merger or sale of the company, change merger
consideration, abandon merger or sale.
-
Change in governance: add new directors designated
by the activist, separate the positions of CEO and Chair, declassify the
board, remove poison pill and other takeover defenses, and permit shareholders
to call a special meeting (or lower thresholds for same) and act by written
consent.
Responding to an Activist Approach
Response to Non-Public Communication:
-
Assemble team quickly and determine initial
strategy. Response is an art, not a science.
-
No duty to respond, but failure to respond may
have negative consequences, and in most cases response is desirable.
-
No duty to discuss or negotiate, but usually
advisable to meet with the activist and discuss the activist’s criticisms and
proposals (company participants in any such meeting should prepare carefully
with the company’s activist response team and there should be at least two
company participants in any such meeting); no outright rejection absent study;
try to learn as much as possible by listening; keep in mind that it may be
desirable at some point to negotiate with the activist and that developing a
framework for private communication may avoid escalation.
-
Generally no immediate duty to disclose; determine
when disclosure may be required, or
-
Response to any particular approach must be
specially structured; team should confer to decide proper response. Consider
whether the activist’s claims or demands have merit and/or are consistent with
the company’s own pending or proposed initiatives.
-
Keep board advised; in some cases, it may be
advisable to arrange for the activist to present its white paper to the board
or a committee or subset of the directors.
-
Be prepared for public disclosure by the activist
and have immediate public response contingencies ready in the event of any
disclosure.
-
Be prepared for the activist to try to contact
directors, shareholders, sell-side analysts, business partners, employees and
key corporate constituencies. Make sure directors understand that any contacts
should be referred to the CEO or other designated officer.
-
Assess whether there are sensible business actions
that can be taken or accelerated to preempt or undercut the activist attack
and the extent to which the activist may attempt to publicly claim credit for
such actions.
-
Consider whether negotiations with the activist
and settlement should be pursued and, if so, at what point in time.
Response to Public Communication:
-
Initially, no response other than “the board will
consider and welcomes input from its shareholders.”
-
Assemble team; inform directors.
-
Call special board meeting to meet with team and
consider the communication.
-
Determine board’s response and whether to meet
with the activist. Even in public situations, consider pursuing disciplined
engagement with the activist. Failure to meet may also be viewed negatively by
institutional investors. Recognize that the activist may mischaracterize what
occurs in meetings. There should be at least two company representatives at
any meeting or call with the activist.
-
If the activist includes a demand—e.g.,
replace the Chair or CEO—that the board finds unacceptable or non-negotiable,
it may be advisable to make the board’s position on that item clear earlier
rather than later, even if there is willingness to consider and negotiate
other aspects of the activist’s platform.
-
Avoid mixed messages and preserve the credibility
of the board and management.
-
Continuously gauge whether the best outcome is to
agree upon board change and/or strategic, business or other action in order to
avoid (or resolve) a proxy fight.
-
Be prepared and willing to defend vigorously if a
reasonable settlement is not possible.
-
Recognize that a proxy fight will entail a
meaningful time commitment from both management and directors, and work in
advance to coordinate availability for key meetings with shareholders and
proxy advisory firms.
-
Engage with other shareholders, not only the
activist, to take investor temperature, solicit feedback and assess whether
actions may (should) be taken by the company to secure support (if an activist
identifies a legitimate issue, the company may propose its own plan for
resolving any shortcomings that is distinct from the activist’s solutions).
-
Appreciate that the public dialogue is often
asymmetrical; activists may make personal attacks and use aggressive language,
but the company should not respond in kind.
-
Remain focused on the business; activist
approaches can be very distracting, but strong business performance, though
not an absolute defense, is one of the best defenses. Similarly, unexpected
poor performance can undermine a company’s defense. When and if business
challenges arise, act in a manner that preserves and builds credibility with
shareholders.
-
Maintain the confidence and morale of employees,
partners and other constituencies.
-
A significant number of major institutional
investors are increasingly skeptical of activists and activist platforms even
as they closely scrutinize targeted companies as well. Investors can be
persuaded not to follow the recommendations of ISS in support of a dissident’s
proxy solicitation. When presented with a well-articulated and compelling plan
for the long-term success of a company, investors are able to cut through the
cacophony of short-sighted gains promised by activists touting short-term
strategies. As a result, when a company’s management and directors work
together to present a compelling long-term strategy for value creation,
investors will listen.
Harvard Law School Forum
on Corporate Governance
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