Last week’s ruling on the
Dell Inc.
appraisal proceeding shows how
Delaware corporate law can favor institutional shareholders over
individuals. The court found that Dell Inc.’s buyers – founder
Michael Dell and Silver Lake
Partners — had underpaid by almost 30% back in the 2013 buyout. Now
Dell will have to pay the small group of shareholders who preserved
their appraisal rights what the court concluded was the real fair
value plus interest from the closing of the transaction — which likely
adds up to about another 20% of the purchase price.
But
only a handful of shareholders will benefit
and over 70% of the money will go to a single hedge fund.
Appraisal is not a process
designed for the small investor. To participate in such a proceeding,
shareholders need to wait until the end to get their money, accept the
risk of collecting less than the deal price and navigate the
procedural complexities. The Dell case put a spotlight on the
complexity when
T. Rowe Price Group, one of the
largest U.S. mutual fund companies, blew the simplest part
of perfecting its appraisal rights by accidentally voting to accept
the deal even though it had publicly announced it was voting “no.”
That mistake
ended up costing it $194 million.
Unlike appraisal actions,
claims alleging directors breached their fiduciary duties generally
benefit all shareholders. The irony in Dell is that the deal got what
was essentially a clean bill of health in an earlier lawsuit seeking
to stop the deal and claiming breach of duty. In that case, Leo E.
Strine Jr., then chancellor of Delaware’s special corporate court who
later became chief justice of the state Supreme Court,
complimented Dell’s directors: “I do not see any plausible,
conceivable basis in which to conclude that it is a
colorable possibility that you could deem the choices made by this
board to be unreasonable with all the different safeguards.”
Fiduciary duty claims in
deals like the Dell buyout tend to be resolved through an examination
of the process the directors followed, but that’s not the case in
appraisal proceedings. “The court does not judge the directors‘
motives or the reasonableness of their actions, but rather the outcome
they achieved. The price is all that matters because the court‘s
inquiry focuses exclusively on the value of the company. How and why
the directors achieved fair value or fell short is not part of the
case,” Vice Chancellor J. Travis Laster wrote in last week’s ruling in
the Dell appraisal case
Individual investors (and
even an experienced corporate lawyer) could be forgiven for wondering
how directors could miss the mark by almost 30% of the purchase price
and be viewed as having complied with their fiduciary duties. But that
was the case here. Mr. Laster seemed to agree with the Mr. Strine’s
assessment in 2013, concluding that there could not be “any basis for
liability” in a fiduciary duty case against Dell directors. Something
seems wrong here. After all, isn’t the focus on good process based on
expecting it to lead to a fair price? The Dell decision seems to
disprove that.
Before this case, Delaware
judges issued a string of decisions that accepted the deal price as
the best indication of fair value in appraisal cases. The Dell case
says a different approach should be taken in some cases, particularly
management buyouts.
The end result is that
retail shareholders are generally left high and dry unless there’s an
obvious procedural error, while hedge funds and other sophisticated
investors can afford to navigate the complex appraisal process. And
the small shareholder arguably gets hit twice: Some have suggested
that buyers in such deals deals may
pay less to cover a potential recovery
in an appraisal.
It all seems backwards. If
the Delaware courts are going to conduct an independent financial
analysis of the fairness of the price, the results should benefit all
shareholders.
Send
questions, comments or story ideas to Dealpolitik@gmail.com