Forum reference:
Buyer defense strategies based on perceived
distinctions between LBO and MBO situations, without distinction between pricing
and value
|
For the original publication
of the article below as legal advertising, see
For other professional views, news reports
and court records of the
decision,
see the "Appraisal
of Fair Value"
section of the Dell project's reference page.
|
Source:
The Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial
Regulation, July 1, 2016 posting |
Dell: Appraisal Award
and Merger Price
Posted by Gail Weinstein, Fried, Frank,
Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP, on Friday, July 1, 2016
In Appraisal of
Dell Inc. (May 31, 2016), the Delaware Court of Chancery awarded
an appraisal amount ($17.62) that was 30% higher than the price that
was paid in the $25 billion merger ($13.75) in which Michael Dell (the
founder, CEO, and 16% stockholder of Dell) and private equity firm
Silver Lake Partners took Dell private. In the merger, Mr. Dell,
having rolled over his equity and invested $750 million of cash,
obtained 75% ownership of the company. The court utilized a discounted
cash flow (DCF) analysis to appraise Dell’s “fair value” for appraisal
purposes (i.e., the going concern value of Dell at the time of
the merger, excluding the value of any expected synergies), having
concluded that, in this case, the merger price was not a reliable
indicator of fair value.
Background
In the pre-signing phase, Mr. Dell discussed a potential going
private transaction with Silver Lake and another financial buyer, and the
special committee contacted one financial buyer, but Silver Lake was the only
bidder. In the post-signing go-shop phase, numerous financial buyers were
contacted. No strategic buyers were solicited, as the committee believed that
they would not be interested (primarily because of Dell’s very large size and
complexity). Carl Icahn made a topping bid, which caused Michael Dell/Silver
Lake to raise their price by 2%—but the ultimate merger price was still slightly
below Icahn’s bid. While the merger price represented a substantial premium over
the unaffected Dell stock trading price, the company’s proxy statement reflected
that Mr. Dell and the company’s financial advisers viewed the company’s value as
being significantly higher. Nearly half of the stockholders dissented from the
merger and sought appraisal rights (although, in a separate litigation, the
court ruled that, for most of the dissenting shares, appraisal rights had not
been perfected properly and thus had been forfeited).
Definitions:
For clarity, we define here our usage of the following terms in this post:
-
LBO
(“leveraged buy-out”)—A transaction with a financial buyer that includes no
management buyout component or a non-significant management buyout component.
-
MBO
(“management buy-out”)—A transaction with a financial buyer that includes a
significant management buyout component.
Whether the court will regard a transaction with a management
buyout component as an LBO or an MBO will depend on the facts and circumstances,
particularly the extent to which the target company and/or the transaction is
viewed as dominated by the target company managers who are participating in it.
Key Points
-
In our view, the decision is consistent with the court’s recent
approach in appraisal cases—and underscores that the court will base appraised
“fair value” on the merger price only when the court believes that the
merger price is the best indicator of fair value.
Some broad language in the decision has given rise to concern among some
commentators that the decision reflects a new direction by the court with
respect to use of the merger price to determine “fair value” in appraisal
cases involving financial buyers. In our view, the decision is consistent
with the court’s appraisal jurisprudence. Historically, the court has relied
primarily on the discounted cash flow (DCF) methodology to determine appraised
“fair value.” In a few recent cases, the court has relied instead on the
merger price when the court has determined that it was the best indicator of
fair value. All of these cases involved a pre-signing public auction sale
process; in most of them, the court, in addition, regarded the inputs
available for a DCF analysis to be unreliable; and none of them
involved an MBO.
-
The court regarded the Dell sale process as well-crafted for
fiduciary duty purposes—but, for appraisal purposes, as insufficient to
outweigh the factors that undermined the reliability of the merger price as an
indicator of “fair value.”
The court found that the Dell sale process, as a process matter,
“easily” passed muster for fiduciary duty purposes—but that, because the
process “lacked meaningful competition,” it was not sufficient for the court
to determine that the price derived through it reflected “fair value” for
appraisal purposes. The decision serves as a reminder that the extent to which
the court will view a sale process as having been sufficiently competitive to
establish that the merger price is the best indicator of appraised fair value
will depend on the facts and circumstances—and that the court will take into
account its view of the underlying reality of the sale process based on
real-world factors.
-
The decision highlights the appraisal risk in MBOs.
The opinion reflects that the courts generally are skeptical that the merger
price in an MBO is a reliable indicator of “fair value” for appraisal
purposes. Due to a number of features present in Dell (not all of which
are always present in MBOs), that skepticism was heightened.
-
Contrary to recent commentary on the decision, in our view the
court’s discussion of the “LBO pricing model” does NOT mean that the court
will not rely on the merger price to determine fair value in any merger with a
financial buyer.
In our view, the court’s discussion indicates that a buyer’s use of an “LBO
pricing model” will be one factor taken into account in evaluating
whether the merger price is the best indicator of appraised fair value—and we
expect that it would be unlikely to ever be a significant factor where a truly
competitive market check has taken place. We note that most of the recent
cases in which the court did view the merger price as the most reliable
evidence of fair value involved LBOs.
Discussion
When determining what weight, if
any, to give to the merger price in making fair value determinations in
appraisal cases, the Court of Chancery has evaluated the cases on a continuum
based on the type of transaction and the nature of the sale process.
At one end of the continuum are transactions by controllers that involve no
competitive process, and, at the other end, are arm’s length transactions with
strategic buyers that involve a pre-signing public auction. LBOs and MBOs would
fall somewhere in between, depending on the facts and circumstances, including
the extent to which there was meaningful competition in the sale process. MBOs
would tend to fall toward the controller end of the spectrum, requiring more
competition than an LBO to move along the continuum in the other direction. As
there is no bright line test to determine whether the management buyout
component of a financial buyer transaction is or is not significant enough for
the transaction to be considered an MBO as opposed to an LBO, and as there is no
bright line test to determine whether a sale process involved “meaningful”
competition, the appraisal risk depends on a nuanced analysis of the facts and
circumstances of the specific transaction.
Factors inherent in MBOs tend to
militate against the merger price being deemed a reliable indicator of fair
value for appraisal purposes.
As noted by the court in Dell, these factors include that the managers
participating in these transactions generally:
-
Have an information advantage over potential competing bidders, which will
tend to reduce competition and to enable the buyers to choose an opportunistic
time to buy the company; and
-
Have interests in the transaction that at least to some extent (and in some
cases significantly) diverge from the interests of the stockholders
generally—for example, in addition to their being sellers of shares in the
transaction, the participating managers also typically will have employment
positions at the post-merger company and/or may be “net buyers” of shares in
the transaction, potentially giving rise to motivations that conflict with the
objective of obtaining the best price for the shares).
We note that these factors are not inherent in (although
they may also appear in) LBOs or strategic transactions.
In the Dell MBO, there
were also a number of important factors (not all of which are always present in
MBOs) that appeared to have further undermined the reliability of the
merger price as the best indicator of appraised fair value.
These additional factors included that:
-
Michael Dell was uniquely important to the company.
Given Michael Dell’s large existing equity interest, large equity interest
being acquired in the transaction, role as CEO, status as founder, and role as
the creator of the business plan for transformation of the company, he was
even more important to the transaction than management typically is in MBOs.
-
Michael Dell’s interests were, in important respects, adverse
to the other stockholders’ interests.
Due to the very high equity interest that he was obtaining in the transaction,
Michael Dell was a “net buyer” of shares—which caused his interests not only
to be not aligned with the other stockholders, but to be adverse to
their interests—in that his interests were in the merger price being as low as
possible.
-
The only pre-signing discussions involved Michael Dell’s
contacting two financial buyers to discuss his desired transaction.
These discussions, presumably, involved Mr. Dell’s determining whether the two
buyers would be interested in doing a transaction that met his objective of
his obtaining a 75% interest in the company. (The special committee contacted
one other financial buyer in the pre-signing period, but that buyer was not
interested in discussing a transaction.)
-
The universe of potential buyers was
particularly limited.
Given Dell’s large size and
complexity, there was a very limited universe of potential buyers—meaning
that, even with the best sale process, it would be difficult to achieve
meaningful competition.
-
There was very limited variability among the potential buyers.
Among the interested financial buyers, each of them evaluated the company
based on executing the company’s existing business plan (which had been
created by Michael Dell), without bringing to the table buyer-specific plans
to create value (which would have led to different pricing among the bidders
and some pressure to bid higher).
-
It appeared to be a
particularly opportune time to buy the company, given
the very large valuation gap between the stock trading price and management’s
view of the company’s value.
The very large valuation gap
underscored that, at the time, there was an unusually high degree of
uncertainty relating to the company, which would tend to discourage potential
competition. The court viewed the large gap as “anchoring” any bid prices to
the very low stock price and as indicating (even more than would be typical in
other MBOs) that it was an extremely opportunistic time for an MBO.
-
The special committee rejected a topping bid.
The court did not view the fact that Carl Icahn, during the post-signing
go-shop period, made a slightly higher bid as evidence of competition in the
process. To the contrary, the court viewed it as further evidence that the
Michael Dell/Silver Lake merger price was low.
-
The only potentially interested strategic buyer was not
solicited during the pre-signing period.
Dell and its financial advisers identified HP as the only strategic buyer
large enough to potentially have an interest in the company—but they did not
contact HP in the pre-signing phase of the sale process. (HP was contacted
during the go-shop and signed a confidentiality agreement but did not then
proceed further.)
-
The special committee:
-
did not consider a transaction other than a financial buyer
whole-company acquisition, even though the business plan that Michael Dell
had developed and that all of the financial buyers intended to follow
without modification could have been executed in a public or private company
context;
-
did not explore stand-alone alternative transactions to close
the valuation gap (such as a recapitalization, restructuring or asset
sales);
-
did not consider (or even calculate) going concern value of
the company; and
-
relied exclusively on the premium over the stock trading
price when recommending the transaction (notwithstanding the very large
valuation gap).
The court’s view was that the
sale process—albeit well-crafted and satisfying the directors’ fiduciary
duties—was insufficient, for appraisal purposes, to outweigh the factors that
undermined the reliability of the merger price as an indicator of appraised fair
value. The
court explained that the sale process is viewed through different lenses for
fiduciary duty cases and appraisal cases. In fiduciary duty cases, the inquiry
is into the directors’ decision-making process and protections against conflicts
of interest. In appraisal cases, the inquiry is into the result of that
process—that is, irrespective of the directors’ motivations and process, did the
merger price reflect “fair value”? The court found that Dell’s sale process, as
a process matter, “easily” passed muster for fiduciary duty purposes—but that it
was not sufficient, as a substantive matter regarding appraised fair value, to
determine that the price derived through the process reflected fair value,
particularly in the context of an MBO.
In the Dell process, Michael Dell purported to be willing to
cooperate and participate with any buyer selected by the special committee; the
go-shop was “relatively open and flexible,” according to the court; and a
slightly higher competing bid emerged during the go-shop. The court concluded,
however, that, despite the positive optics of the process, numerous real-world
factors limited the universe of potential buyers, resulting in a process that
“lacked meaningful competition.” The court’s view was also influenced by the
infirmities of the sale process (for appraisal purposes) noted above. We note
that it is not entirely clear in the court’s discussion of the sale process
which points are intended to apply to all transactions, which to LBOs, and which
only to MBOs. In our view, the factual context of the Dell MBO was an
important overlay on the full discussion, and the absence of some combination of
the negative Dell-specific factors noted above could well result in a
different analysis.
Whether a go-shop will be
regarded by the court as having provided for meaningful competition in a sale
process will depend of the facts and circumstances.
In Dell, the court found that the go-shop terms were relatively “open and
flexible,” and two competing bids were made during the go-shop (although one was
quickly withdrawn). The court emphasized that, nonetheless, real-world factors
inhibit competition in the post-signing phase of an MBO (including the fact that
financial buyers may be reluctant to compete with one another because of their
ongoing relationships). While the court was not entirely clear about the extent
to which its skepticism about go-shops was intended to apply only to MBOs or to
apply also to LBOs, it is clear that go-shops will be evaluated by the court on
a continuum, depending on the facts and circumstances of the specific situation.
Relevant factors would be the type of transaction, the number and type of
possible competing bidders, the extent of any pre-signing competition, the terms
of the go-shop, and the results of the go-shop (i.e., whether any
competing bids in fact emerged). In Dell, the court stated that a go-shop
has limited utility in promoting competition in the context of an MBO, and that
the most persuasive evidence of meaningful competition in an MBO will be
the competition that is present in the pre-signing period. The court
reasoned that only a large gap between the deal price and fair value
would possibly incentivize a competing bidder to emerge during a go-shop to take
advantage of that gap, but that a less than large gap would not provide
sufficient incentive, given the practical disincentives to post-closing bidding,
particularly in an MBO. (It should be noted that, in any event, a go-shop may be
important in fiduciary duty litigation challenging the “price” or “process” in a
company sale.)
Even when the court deems a sale
process to have been insufficient to support use of the merger price to
determine fair value, the merger price may affect the court’s determination
under a DCF analysis.
The court has substantial discretion in determining fair value in a DCF
analysis. To the extent that a sale process was reliable (albeit not reliable
enough to support using the merger price to determine fair value), the merger
price may “anchor” a DCF valuation, may influence the DCF inputs selected, and
may influence the court’s choice of the fair value point within the range. In
Dell, the court rejected the plaintiff’s DCF valuation result, which was
about double the merger price, stating that, if the gap between the merger price
and fair value had been that large, a competing bid would have emerged to take
advantage of the gap. Further, the court could have selected the high or low end
of the range of DCF values that it determined, but selected the
midpoint—presumably, at least in part, based on its view that the sale process
(which it characterized as “praiseworthy in many ways”) gave the merger price at
least some level of reliability.
The court viewed the “LBO
pricing model” as a negative factor when considering whether there was evidence
that the merger price reflected fair value.
Commentators have expressed concern that the court’s discussion of the “LBO
pricing model” indicates that, in all LBOs (as well as MBOs), the court will not
rely on the merger price to determine fair value. The court reasoned in Dell
that an LBO pricing model solves for what a buyer is willing to pay (determined
by the requirements that financial buyers have for a certain rate of return and
for sufficient leverage capacity to support financing of the transaction). By
contrast, the court explained, a DCF model solves for what the going concern
value of the target company is (which is the relevant issue for determining
“fair value”). In our view, the court’s discussion indicates that a buyer’s
using an LBO pricing model will be just one factor in determining whether the
merger price is a reliable indicator of fair value—and that it is not likely to
be a significant factor in cases in which there is otherwise persuasive evidence
that the merger price is a reliable indicator of fair value. There is no reason
to expect that in LBOs there could not be persuasive evidence that the merger
price is reliable, notwithstanding use of the LBO pricing model.Indeed, in
the recent cases in which the court has relied primarily or exclusively on the
merger price, most of them were LBOs (although, as noted above, none were
MBOs, and all involved meaningful competition in the sale process).
Even when the court considers use of an LBO pricing model as a
negative factor, the issue is likely to be of far less importance than it was in
Dell. First, as discussed, in Dell, there was no countervailing
evidence of the merger price being reliable, in the court’s view. Moreover, the
gap between the LBO model-derived price and the going concern value was
unusually large. It is important to note that, although the court characterized
financial buyers as essentially monolithic in their pricing given that they all
target the same IRR, their pricing determinations nonetheless can vary
substantially. Variation occurs based on differences in the degree of leverage a
firm is willing to use (with more leverage creating more risk), the exit
multiples it projects, and, most importantly, what improvements it can make to
the business to improve the cash flow (by growing revenue, reducing expenses,
recapitalizations, and so on). In Dell, there was almost no variation
because all of the financial buyers that considered a potential transaction
intended simply to execute the company’s existing plan and not to add value.
Further, the very large gap in Dell between the stock market price and
management’s view of going concern value (which provided the opportunity for a
deal at a price so far below the DCF-based price) is rare—and, as the court
noted, it “anchored” the deal price to a low number. In most cases, so long as
there is any actual or perceived competition, a buyer whose LBO model-driven
price is far below going concern value simply would not submit a bid, as it
would be unlikely to be successful.
The court continues to face an
impossible task in appraisal cases.
Almost half of the 115-page Dell opinion is devoted to discussion of
economic and financial theories and studies, reflecting the court’s ongoing
efforts to grapple with developing an appropriate macroeconomic and corporate
finance framework for appraisal cases. It is apparent that even the most senior
and independent investment bankers could not make the determinations required to
satisfy the existing mandate of the Delaware appraisal statute. Indeed, the very
notion of having to define a precise “fair value” number is unworkable when the
available tools for valuing companies merely establish a range of values. In our
view, Dell underscores the advisability of legislative change and/or
further Delaware Supreme Court guidance in the appraisal area.
Practice Points for Financial
Buyers
-
Appraisal risk uncertainties that pose planning challenges for
a potential buyer.
A buyer will face uncertainty as to the likelihood that an appraisal case will
be brought, and, if it is brought, whether the court will view the transaction
as an MBO as opposed to an LBO.
-
A buyer and its counsel should conduct a risk assessment with
respect to these uncertainties, based on the facts and circumstances of the
specific situation. Once the probabilities are determined, the buyer can
factor the risk into its modeling for the transaction—and increase the
general contingency reserve for the transaction to the extent deemed
appropriate;
-
make decisions relating to the balance between minimizing
deal risk and merger price on the one hand and appraisal risk on the other
hand (in other words, the most effective way to mitigate appraisal risk is
for there to be “meaningful competition” in the sale process, but
pre-signing competition can reduce deal certainty and increase deal cost);
and
-
consider what steps, if any, should be taken to mitigate the
appraisal risk if it is deemed to be significant—such as seeking an
appraisal condition to the merger (which is likely to be resisted by the
target company); or structuring the transaction to avoid appraisal rights
(for example, a recapitalization with a tender offer).
Again, in our view, the appraisal risk post-Dell is not
higher than it was pre-Dell. To the extent that increases in the general
contingency reserve, appraisal conditions, and so forth were not considered
necessary before, they should not be considered necessary now. Dell
simply serves as a reminder that there has been and continues to be an appraisal
risk. As we have discussed in previous Fried Frank Briefings, while there is an
inherent element of uncertainty relating to appraisal, in most cases the degree
of risk is not wholly unpredictable—although assessing the risk does require a
careful, nuanced analysis by the buyer and its counsel.
We note also that, as a practical matter, appraisal cases are
determined in retrospect and that the court may well be influenced by (as
occurred with Dell) a substantial increase in the value of the post-merger
company during the period of the appraisal proceeding.
-
Go-shops.
In negotiating a go-shop, a buyer should take into account the court’s view,
stated in Dell, that MBO go-shops rarely lead to topping bids. In
addition, it should be noted that the court was especially disapproving of
unlimited or numerous matching rights.
-
“Synergies.”
As we have advised in prior Fried Frank Briefings, a buyer should analyze and
contemporaneously document the extent to which its deal price reflects value
that the buyer and the transaction itself will potentially create—through
cost-savings associated with taking the company private, as well as
recapitalizations, acquisitions, divestitures, restructuring, and so on. In
the event that an appraisal case is brought, and that the court does
rely on the merger price to determine fair value, a buyer should be prepared
to establish that these expected synergies were included in the merger price
and, under the appraisal statute, should be excluded from the determination of
fair value. The court continues to grapple with the legal and practical
complexities of how to exclude synergies from the merger price when the merger
price is used to determine fair value. However, in recent cases (including
Dell), the court has acknowledged that synergies must be excluded; and, in
Dell, the court stated that even financial buyer go-private
transactions have the implicit buyer-generated synergy of “reducing agency
costs” by taking the company private. (We note that the court’s brief
discussion on this point would seem to indicate that the merger price would,
by definition, virtually always be higher than “fair value”
because, even in financial buyer transactions, there are synergies that must
be excluded.)
Harvard Law School Forum
on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation
All copyright and trademarks in content on this site are owned by
their respective owners. Other content © 2016 The President and
Fellows of Harvard College. |
|
|
|