The Delaware Supreme Court issued a
ruling on December 14, 2017 that endorsed its interpretation of the "Efficient
Market Hypothesis" as a foundation for relying upon market pricing
to define a company’s “fair value” in appraisal proceedings. The
Forum accordingly reported that it would resume
support of marketplace processes instead of judicial appraisal
for its participants' realization of intrinsic value in
opportunistically priced but carefully negotiated buyouts. See:
Court decision illustrating risks of "appraisal arbitrage"
in strategic business combinations
The legal review below addresses interests of
Forum participants in (a) court decisions relying upon market pricing of a
merger in the absence of reliable evidence of intrinsic value, and (b)
risks associated with appraisal of strategic acquisitions in which the
exclusion of value attributable to synergies of a business combination may
reduce an appraisal amount to less than the offered merger price. For the
referenced decision, see
This forum provides insights and
analysis of recent developments in appraisal rights
litigation, educating professional investors about an
underutilized but highly effective mechanism to increase
their returns in M&A deals.
With Unreliable Management Projections and No
Market-Based Models, Delaware Chancery Pegs Fair Value to Merger Price
Delaware’s latest appraisal
decision in LongPath Capital v. Ramtron
International Corp. adopted the merger price as its
appraisal valuation, but stands apart from the other recent appraisal
decisions that likewise fell back on transaction consideration. Here,
the court’s lengthy opinion repeatedly lamented the lack of any
remotely reliable means of valuation other than the merger price, and
the court was careful to satisfy itself that the sales process leading
up to the deal was “proper,” “thorough” and “effective,” though these
terms remain without precise definition. Ramtron ostensibly
joins Chancery’s recent decisions — including
Ancestry.comand
AutoInfo — in adopting the negotiated deal price as
conclusive proof of value. But unlike those two cases, the court in
Ramtron found that fair value ($3.07/share) was actually
below the deal price ($3.10/share) when accounting for synergies
between Ramtron, the semiconductor manufacturer being acquired, and
Cypress Semiconductor, the hostile acquirer.
Part of the unique nature of this
action was that in a deal valued at $110 million, the merger price
represented a 71% premium to the pre-deal stock price. Moreover, the
petitioner, who acquired its shares after the merger announcement
(more about the arbitrage play later), bought only a small stake worth
about $1.5 million. But the bulk of the court’s analysis focused on
whether or not the management projections presented in the
petitioner’s DCF analysis were reliable, as Delaware courts apply the
commonsense rule that a DCF predicated on suspect projections is
worthless in an appraisal. The petitioner’s projections were fatally
flawed in many respects, though three of the nine flaws identified by
the court stand out the most. First, the projections were prepared by
new management, using a new methodology (the product-by-product
buildup method) and covering a longer time period than earlier
forecasts. Furthermore, the projections had not been prepared in the
ordinary course of business. Second, Ramtron distorted its revenue
figures by engaging in so-called channel stuffing, the practice of
pushing excess inventory into distribution channels so that more
revenue can be recognized sooner (indeed, the court repeatedly cited
an e-mail in which a salesman said that the company will “for sure
stuff channel”). Third, Ramtron management provided alternative
projections to Ramtron’s bank, which they described as “more accurate”
than those cited by the petitioner. Given these deficiencies, the
court had no trouble casting aside management’s pre-merger projections
and the petitioner’s DCF which relied on them.
Indeed, the court took both experts to
task for what appeared to be litigation-driven valuations. The court
criticized the respondent’s “eyebrow-raising DCF” which,
notwithstanding its reliance on projections that the expert presumed
were overly optimistic, somehow still returned a “fair” value two
cents below the merger price.
In any event, the court also had little
trouble rejecting the petitioner’s suggested “comparable transactions”
methodology, a market-based analysis which ascertains going-concern
value by identifying precedent transactions involving similar
companies and deriving metrics from those deals (and which we will be
examining in greater detail in our next “Valuation Basics” post). The
petitioner’s expert was hamstrung by a lack of deals involving
companies similar to Ramtron, and could only point to two, which were
themselves drastically different from each other and which resulted in
disparate multiples. Given this “dearth of data points,” the court
found that it could not give any weight to a precedent transactions
approach. The court was also influenced by the fact that the
petitioner’s expert himself only attributed 20% of his valuation to
the comparable transactions analysis.
That left merger price, which the court
acknowledged “does not necessarily represent the fair value of a
company” as that term is used in Delaware law. To demonstrate this
truism, the court cited to the short-form merger, in which the
controlling stockholder sets the merger price unilaterally, forcing
minority stockholders out and leaving them to choose between taking
the deal and exercising appraisal rights. According to the court,
pegging fair value to the merger price in such a circumstance would
render the appraisal remedy a nullity for the minority stockholder —
all roads lead to a merger price that has not been independently
vetted. In a situation like Ramtron, however, where the
company was actively shopped for months and the acquirer raised its
bid multiple times, merger price could be deferred to as conclusive
(and critically, independent) proof of fair value.
The court was not troubled by the fact
that Cypress’s acquisition process was initiated by a hostile offer,
or the fact that no other company made a bid for Ramtron. According to
Vice Chancellor Parsons, there was no evidence that the hostile offer
prevented other companies from bidding on Ramtron — there were six
signed NDAs in total — and impediments to a higher bid for Ramtron
were a result of the company’s operative reality, not any purported
shortcomings in the deal process itself. Having found a fair merger
process, the court concluded that the merger price was the best, if
not the only, evidence of fair value. Simply put, “if Ramtron could
have commanded a higher value, it would have.” Indeed, the court
expressed its skepticism over the petitioner’s expert’s valuation of
$4.96, as compared to its unaffected stock price of $1.81, suggesting
that “the market left an amount on the table exceeding Ramtron’s
unaffected market capitalization.” The court could not accept that
such a significant market failure occurred here.
Coming back to the arbitrage issue, the
Vice Chancellor makes a point of noting that LongPath only began
acquiring Ramtron shares a month after the merger was announced. We’ve
discussed the practice of appraisal arbitrage extensively, noting the
arguments for (here)
and against (here).
The Court of Chancery has been reluctant to limit the practice thus
far (here),
and Vice Chancellor Parsons continues that pattern here, consistent
with the Corporation Counsel of the Delaware Bar’s own refusal to
recommend to the legislature that it limit or eliminate the arbitrage
practice altogether, as we’ve previously posted
here and
here.
The program supporting Appraisal Rights
Investments was conducted by the Shareholder Forum
for invited participants according to stated conditions,
including standard Forum policies that
each participant is expected
to make independent use of information obtained through the
Forum and that participant identities
and views will not be reported without explicit permission..
The information
provided to Forum participants is intended for
their private reference, and permission has not
been granted for the republishing of any
copyrighted material. The material presented on
this web site is the responsibility of
Gary Lutin, as chairman of the Shareholder
Forum.
Shareholder
Forum™
is a trademark owned by The Shareholder Forum,
Inc., for the programs conducted since 1999 to
support investor access to decision-making
information. It should be noted that we have no
responsibility for the services that Broadridge
Financial Solutions, Inc., introduced for review
in the Forum's
2010 "E-Meetings" program and has since been
offering with the “Shareholder Forum” name, and
we have asked Broadridge to use a different name
that does not suggest our support or
endorsement.