Supporting Practical Choices for Dell, and for Shareholders
Safe appraisal rights without risking deal defeat
Choosing between auction value and fair market value
Defining support to optimize value of appraisal rights
Last week Dell was offered an alternative that it can implement if
needed to win support of its proposed buyout, and that allows
shareholders to safely choose appraised fair value over the
auction-based bid price. The related investor decisions for this week
are addressed below.
Safe appraisal rights without risking deal
defeat
Responding to investor concerns that negative votes required to secure
appraisal rights might contribute to a defeat of the proposed
transaction and result in a value-destroying control contest, I have
offered Dell or any of the buyout affiliates support of what was
termed a “yes-voting” appraisal rights option. This is essentially a
more practical alternative to increasing the bid price, that the buyer
can present if it decides something is needed to win more support for
the transaction. In simplified form, the buyer would give shareholders
a choice between the fixed bid price and a right to receive the same
“fair value” payment (or an allocated portion) that a court
establishes for dissident investors, but make it available to
investors who vote in favor of the proposed buyout. Shareholders would
therefore be able to secure the appraised fair value alternative
without having to vote against the transaction.
The “yes-voting” appraisal rights option is summarized, with
explanations of its use to accommodate different levels of investor
participation and an analysis of costs compared with bid increases, in
this letter to Mr. Dell with an attached copy of the earlier letter to
the company’s special committee:
With this option available to the buyout’s proponents, a shareholder
can safely assume that its demand for appraisal rights will not
actually threaten the transaction. Dell will know the exact number of
shares that are subject to written demands they’ve received for
appraisal rights. If the numbers they are counting justify the
increased cost, they will be able to initiate the “yes-voting”
appraisal rights alternative – or a traditional bid price increase –
either before the scheduled meeting or for an adjourned or postponed
date.
Choosing between auction value and fair market value
While media attention has been focused on debates about the
effectiveness of the bidding contest and speculation about whether the
bidders might offer a higher price, investors need to focus on the
decision that is theirs: the choice between whatever bid the auction
produces and an independent court appraisal of Dell’s fair value.
What is familiar to most people as the distinction between an
“auction” or “liquidation” value and a “fair market value” for
equipment or real estate is similarly recognized in the Delaware
provisions for appraisal rights relating to companies. The court is
required to make an appraisal of “fair value” based on a long-term
investor interest in the business enterprise as a “going concern,”
independently of current auction market bidding.
And Delaware law allows a company’s investors to choose between the
bid price and the long-term fair value.
Now that appraisal rights are a practical alternative, the real money
for investors is in an analysis of the difference between auction and
fair market values.
Defining support to optimize value of appraisal rights
During the next few days we will be seeking the views of investors who
are reserving appraisal rights, as well as those of you who have
expressed interest in acquiring or trading the rights, to develop
final definitions of the support arrangements to be provided by the
Dell Valuation Trust. Forum participants who can justify the attention
will be welcomed to review a confidential draft of the Trust’s
organization plan and offer suggestions for its refinement. Any brief
suggestions or observations will also be appreciated, of course, to
help us understand how your interests can be most effectively
supported.
We expect to have the Trust’s plan in final form by the end of this
week, so that it can start offering whatever support services you need
to realize the full value of eligible appraisal rights.
GL – July 8, 2013
Gary Lutin
Chairman, The Shareholder Forum
575 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10022
Tel: 212-605-0335
Email:
gl@shareholderforum.com
|