Understanding the (Ir)Relevance of Shareholder Votes on M&A Deals

James D. Cox, Tomas Mondino, Randall S. Thomas
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引用次数: 7

Abstract

Has corporate law and its bundles of fiduciary obligations become irrelevant? Over the last thirty years, the American public corporation has undergone a profound metamorphosis, transforming itself from a business with dispersed ownership to one whose ownership is highly concentrated in the hands of sophisticated financial institutions. Corporate law has not been immutable to these changes so that current doctrine now accords to a shareholder vote two effects: first, the vote satisfies a statutory mandate that shareholders approve a deal, and second and significantly, the vote insulates the transaction and its actors from any claim of misconduct incident the approved transaction. This article takes issue with the courts and commentators who have so elevated the impact of shareholder approval to insulate misconduct. We develop why it is not reasonable to believe that the shareholders’ competencies extend to adjudging managerial misconduct, why that conclusion is inconsistent with other modern corporate law developments, and why such shareholder ratification is likely both coerced and poorly considered. We also point out that the position of courts and commentators who pronounce the death of corporate fiduciary law is deeply qualified by the deep conflicts of interest institutional investors face when voting as well as the very real threat that today’s ecology that supports shareholder activism is likely to change so that the voice of the discontented shareholder will be at least more muted in the future. Finally, we provide strong empirical support based on a sample of 852 merger deals from 2000 to 2015 that there is a very large thumb on the scale that pushes all deals toward approval, regardless of any allegations of wrongdoing. We observe substantial ownership changes at target corporations, sometimes as high as 40 to 50% of their stock, from long-term investors to hedge funds upon the announcement of a deal and before the consummation of the transaction with a shareholder vote. This change reflects the merger arbitrageurs’ actions. We further show that this change in ownership has a positive and statistically significant impact on the likelihood of merger deals garnering the required shareholder approval. We conclude that the Delaware courts need to rethink their obsession with the shareholder vote, renounce the current doctrinal trends that are taking them in the wrong direction, and return to their historic role of evaluating whether directors have satisfied their fiduciary duties in M&A transactions.
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理解并购交易中股东投票的相关性
公司法和它捆绑的信托义务变得无关紧要了吗?在过去的30年里,美国上市公司经历了深刻的蜕变,从一个所有权分散的企业转变为一个所有权高度集中在成熟的金融机构手中的企业。公司法对这些变化并非一成不变,因此,目前的原则现在赋予股东投票两种效果:首先,投票满足股东批准交易的法定要求;其次,重要的是,投票使交易及其行为者免受因批准交易而产生的任何不当行为索赔。这篇文章对法院和评论员提出了质疑,他们将股东批准的影响提升到如此之高,以隔离不当行为。我们阐述了为什么认为股东的能力延伸到判断管理不当行为是不合理的,为什么这一结论与其他现代公司法的发展不一致,以及为什么这样的股东批准可能是被强迫的,而且考虑欠妥。我们还指出,宣布公司信托法死亡的法院和评论员的立场,深受机构投资者在投票时面临的深刻利益冲突的影响,以及支持股东激进主义的当今生态可能发生变化的非常现实的威胁,因此不满的股东的声音至少在未来会更加沉默。最后,我们基于2000年至2015年852宗并购交易的样本提供了强有力的实证支持,即无论存在任何不当行为指控,规模上都有一个非常大的拇指推动所有交易获得批准。我们观察到,在交易宣布后和股东投票完成交易之前,目标公司的所有权发生了重大变化,有时高达40%至50%的股份,从长期投资者到对冲基金。这一变化反映了合并套利者的行为。我们进一步表明,所有权的这种变化对合并交易获得所需股东批准的可能性具有积极的、统计上显著的影响。我们得出的结论是,特拉华州法院需要重新思考他们对股东投票的痴迷,放弃目前将他们带向错误方向的理论趋势,并回归到他们的历史角色,即评估董事是否在并购交易中履行了他们的受托义务。
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