The Case for Non-Binary, Contingent, Shareholder Action

Mira Ganor
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Abstract

Shareholder action is exercised mainly through a binary system: for example, the shareholders vote either to approve a proposal or to reject it. They either follow the recommendation of management and vote with management or vote against it. In case of contention between incumbents and insurgents, shareholders need to determine whom to trust. Disclosures and proxy advisory firms’ recommendations add to the information the shareholders might consider before casting their binary vote. However, retail investors as well as small investors are generally underequipped and restricted economically from reaching an informed and educated shareholder decision, and thus vote infrequently. Abuse of insider information further disadvantages retail investors. Yet, corporate decisions are based on the choice of the majority of the shareholder vote and retail investors are assumed to rely on disclosed information when making investment decisions. The new generation of Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs), currently representing about half of the U.S. going-public transactions, is one example that illustrates the weakness of the binary system and the consequent vulnerability of small and unsophisticated shareholders. Remarkably, investors in SPACs can vote yes on management proposed acquisition transactions and, nonetheless, simultaneously choose to redeem their shares. Unsophisticated retail investors may not realize that they, as well, will be better off if they redeem their shares even though the transaction received the approval of the majority of the shareholder vote. This Article puts forward a proposal to amend the law and allow shareholders to act in a way that is contingent upon a simultaneous non-contingent action by other shareholders. For example, a shareholder of a SPAC should be able to choose to redeem her shares iff at least a specified percentage of redemption rights are exercised unconditionally. Similarly, a shareholder who has preemptive rights should have the right to exercise her rights with a limit that caps her participation and maintains her percentage holdings in the company. Generally, shareholders should have the option to act contingently when they are exercising a shareholder right, such as preemptive rights, appraisal rights, and when they are given a choice to participate in transactions such as tender offers and stock-buybacks. Unlike mandatory disclosure rules imposed on insiders, the proposed non-binary, contingent, shareholder action treats all shareholders equally and increases the power of the shareholder's action without incurring high costs of collaboration and communication among the shareholders..
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非二元、偶然、股东行动的案例
股东的行动主要是通过一种二元制度来行使的:例如,股东投票赞成或反对一项提案。他们要么遵循管理层的建议,投票支持管理层,要么投票反对管理层。在现有企业和新兴企业之间发生竞争的情况下,股东需要决定该信任谁。披露信息和代理咨询公司的建议增加了股东在进行二元投票之前可能会考虑的信息。然而,散户投资者和小投资者一般都装备不足,在经济上受到限制,无法做出知情和受过教育的股东决策,因此很少投票。滥用内幕信息进一步使散户投资者处于不利地位。然而,公司的决策是基于大多数股东投票的选择,散户投资者在做出投资决策时假设依赖于披露的信息。新一代的特殊目的收购公司(spac)目前约占美国上市交易的一半,这是一个例子,说明了二元制度的弱点,以及随之而来的小而不成熟的股东的脆弱性。值得注意的是,SPACs的投资者可以对管理层提出的收购交易投赞成票,同时选择赎回自己的股份。不成熟的散户投资者可能没有意识到,即使交易获得了多数股东的投票批准,如果他们赎回自己的股票,他们也会得到更好的回报。本文提出修改法律的建议,允许股东以其他股东同时采取非或有行动的方式行事。例如,SPAC的股东应能够选择赎回其股份,前提是至少有一定比例的赎回权被无条件行使。同样,拥有优先购买权的股东也应该有行使权利的权利,但要限制其参与,并保持其在公司的持股比例。一般来说,股东在行使优先购买权、评估权等股东权利时,以及在参与要约收购、股票回购等交易时,都应该有应急选择权。与强加于内部人的强制性披露规则不同,拟议的非二元、或有、股东诉讼平等对待所有股东,并增加了股东行动的权力,而不会产生股东之间协作和沟通的高昂成本。
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