Earlier this year the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit added another take on “make-whole provisions” in bankruptcy law when it held that, absent language to the contrary, prepayment penalties may not be included in the claims of lenders who accelerate their borrowers’ notes.1 “Make-whole provisions”, and related “no-call provisions”, are important mechanisms…
Tag: Transactional Law
WhatsApp Shows What’s Possible for Venture Capital Investors
WhatsApp is a cross-platform messaging service that is available on Internet-enabled devices. The app allows users to send messages via the Internet to other users of the app. The big selling point is that it costs 99 cents per year, with no added charges no matter where in the world a user sends a message….
Unpaid Internships and Intellectual Property Rights
Are unpaid internships still worth the trouble? For an early stage startup, the offer of free work may seem invaluable. Although unpaid interns may aide a startups bank account, hosting one may leave you open to severe future legal consequences. According to The Department of Labor, the following six legal criteria must be met in…
Corporate Law in Asia Symposium This Week
We welcome you to join the Michigan Journal of Private Equity and Venture Capital and the Asia Law Society for the Corporate Law in Asia: Trends and Opportunities symposium. It is being held this Friday, February 21, 2014 in South Hall Room 1020 at the University of Michigan Law School. Registration begins at 8:30 AM, and the program…
Aeropostale’s PIPE Dream
Men and women of my generation, and likely their parents, will be very familiar with the clothing company Aeropostale, as it was a fashion staple in the 90s and early 2000’s. However, since its heyday the clothing company has been in steady decline. Things have gotten much, much worse for Aeropostale in the last few…
VC Firms and Non-Disclosure Agreements: A Changing Landscape
Traditionally venture capital (“VC”) firms looking to add potential portfolio companies have been unwilling to sign non-disclosure agreements (“NDAs”) during initial discussions with entrepreneurs about their technologies and execution strategies. This unwillingness from VC firms to sign NDAs stems from a number of reasons, “including a desire to avoid restricting their ability to seek out…
Private Equity Funds and the Use of Group Annuity Contracts to De-Risk the Pension Obligations of Portfolio Companies
Private equity firms acquiring portfolio companies with defined benefit pension schemes often overlook the financial risks associated with these funds.1 For private equity firms, the opportunity to realize additional value through efficient risk management of the pension fund by de-risking is an important consideration facilitated by the passage of the Pension Protection Act of 2006…
Private Equity and the Leveraged Buyout: Taking a Public Company Private
What is a Leveraged buyout?
A leveraged buyout (LBO) is a form of a business acquisition. However, it differs from an ordinary merger and acquisition (M&A) deal in many ways. First, the acquirer in an LBO is not a traditional corporation as in other acquisitions. Instead, the acquirer is a newly formed non-operating company, made up of the private equity firm and often the party who will manage the daily activities of the business.
Additionally, LBO’s are heavily debt financed, often with as little as 10 to 20% of the purchase price coming from equity investment.[1] In order to secure the large amount of debt necessary to complete the deal, the non-operating company is forced to borrow against the physical assets of the acquired business.[2]
Once the terms of the LBO are agreed to, current shareholders will be compensated with an agreed upon per share price and the ownership will be transferred to the non-operating company (the private equity firm and all other investors).
Why take a company private through an LBO?
Private equity firms are motivated to take the targeted company private in order to unlock potential synergy gains[3]. These synergy gains might come from financial restructuring, change in control, or increased coordination in decision-making.[4]
Firms often create synergy gains through financial restructuring. As discussed before, leveraged buyouts involve heavy debt financing. Debt has a tax benefit not available from equity investment, in that the interest owed on current outstanding debt decreases taxable income, resulting in higher cash flow available to all stakeholders.[5] In other words, debt creates a tax-shield equal to current interest expense multiplied by the effective tax rate.[6] Therefore, increasing the amount of debt within the financial structure of the firm can create value.
Additionally, Private equity firms often look to unlock synergy gains by eliminating the waste associated with inefficient management. By taking the company private, the firm no longer has to seek shareholder approval of management, but instead, can self select the new leadership team.[7] The idea is that the new management team will make better business decisions, increasing revenues and decreasing the associated costs.
Moreover, even if current management is efficiently running the company, there are coordination advantages from taking a company private. Public companies face a folly A/folly B problem. The company wants long-term success. In other words, it wants to make investments that result in the greatest net present value in the long run. However, companies have to respond to shareholders, who reward short-term performance, which results in increased stock price, over long term performance.
By taking the company private, management has flexibility in its decision-making and can focus on long-term performance without having to worry about shareholder repercussions. Also, public companies are often slow to act because there is a shareholder coordination problem. The company must provide information on major changes to all shareholders and must convince owners of a majority of the shares to vote collectively. By taking the company private, ownership is concentrated in a few individuals/entities who can act swiftly.
The potential downside of an LBO
While there are certainly numerous potential sources of synergy gains associated with an LBO, the form of acquisition is not without its risks. When levering a company to such a high debt to equity (D/E) ratio, the company must be able to produce enough cash flow to make its periodic interest payments on the outstanding debt. As a result, the risk of bankruptcy increases and the possibility of receiving the tax shield decreases. Additionally, banks will require higher returns to compensate for the risk associated with the debt. Therefore, private equity firms partaking in LBOs are continuously confronting the issue of how much leverage to implement in the deal.
Additionally, in an LBO, there is a constant conflict between shareholders and bondholders. Shareholders are incentivized to take risk, whereas bondholders prefer sound investments that will allow the company to pay back its debt. Therefore, when securing debt, private equity firms might lose some financial flexibility due to bank-imposed constraints on spending. If not managed properly this can counteract some of the benefits associated with making the move to a private company.
Lastly, by taking a company private, the investors lose access to a liquid market. As a result, it may take longer to recoup the investment. Research has indicated that the median LBO is still in private equity ownership around 9 years after the initial buyout transaction.[8]
Who is a good LBO target?
Given the potential risks associated with an LBO transaction, private equity firms must be careful when deciding whom to target. Private equity firms should look at targets from a three-value driver perspective: leverage, change in control and private-public.[9] The ideal target should be underlevered, inefficiently managed, and should be incurring large costs from staying public.[10] Additionally, companies with large assets and stable free cash-flows (cash cows) can support more debt, making them an attractive target. At the same time, private equity firms want to avoid using an LBO to purchase companies in highly cyclical industries and industries with rapid product obsolescence.[11] Companies in these industries are prone to periods of low to negative free cash-flows, which in turn increases the probability that they will be unable to meet their debts as they come due.
Summary
LBO’s are a form of private equity acquisition, in which the investors form a non-operating company and purchase a public company by implementing primarily debt financing. Taking a public company private can create gains in a multitude of ways, including increased tax shield free cash flows, elimination of inefficient management, and increased coordination of decision making. At the same time, there are many risks associated with an LBO. The risk of bankruptcy increases immensely, resulting in higher lending rates and loss of some financial flexibility. Consequently, private equity firms must be strategic about when to implement an LBO acquisition and realize that it is not always the proper tool.
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[1] Amiyatosh Purnanandam, Associate Professor of Finance, Valuation course at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan (February, 2013); Note on Leveraged Buyouts. Center For Private Equity and Entrepreneurship at 1, available at http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~igiddy/LBO_Note.pdf.
[2] Steven N. Kaplan & Per Stromberg, Leveraged Buyouts and Private Equity, Journal of Economic Perspectives, American Economic Association 23(1), 2009.
[3] Here, synergy gain is a proxy for a long term financial benefit
[4] See Note on Leveraged Buyouts at 2.
[5] Grant Houston, Tax Advantages of a Leveraged Buyout, Chron, http://smallbusiness.chron.com/tax-advantages-leveraged-buyout-24006.html
[6] See id.
[7] Amiyatosh Purnanandam, Associate Professor of Finance, Valuation course at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan (February, 2013).
[8] See Kaplan, supra note 2, at 130.
[9] Amiyatosh Purnanandam, Associate Professor of Finance, Valuation course at the Ross School of Business, University of Michigan (February, 2013).
[10] Id.
[11] Id..
Delaware Court Gives New Meaning to the Non-Disclosure Agreement
“But the road to true love seldom runs smooth, even for companies that make paving materials.” [1] This was just one of the memorable remarks from a recent Delaware Chancery Court decision, where Chancellor Leo Strine added a new twist to the way the court construes language in Non-Disclosure Agreements (“NDAs”). The opinion provides a plethora of information about NDAs and reminds law students – who may draft and negotiate these documents during their first years at a firm –that NDAs have significant strategic implications for clients and that standardized terms in these documents could be costly. Strine, in a lengthy opinion, strictly construed language in an NDA to have the effect of a standstill provision and issued an equitable remedy for the breach of the contract.[2]
This dispute began when Martin Marietta, a North Carolina aggregates corporation, entered into friendly discussions with Vulcan Materials (“Vulcan”), a large domestic aggregates corporation headquartered in Alabama.[3] Pursuant to the NDA facilitating these discussions, Martin Marietta could only use information acquired during the discussions for the purpose of considering a “business combination transaction” that was “between” the parties.[4] After discussions broke down, Martin Marietta used information it gained during the friendly talks in SEC public disclosure documents, investor calls, and press releases while it launched an unsolicited exchange offer proposing a deal of .5 shares of Martin Marietta for each Vulcan share.[5] Vulcan argued that the language in the NDA meant that any information gained from either side during the initial discussions was limited to use in “a friendly, contractual business combination between the two companies that was negotiated between the existing boards of the two companies, and that was not the product of a proxy contest or other unsolicited pressure strategy.”[6] Martin Marietta argued that the NDA allowed either side to use the information from the friendly negotiations for any type of business combination transaction between the two companies, and that Vulcan was attempting to read a standstill into the agreement even though it did not contain an explicit standstill.[7]
Strine looked to extrinsic evidence to resolve ambiguity in the contract language, focusing on Martin Marietta’s position as a potential target in the merger at the time of the NDA, and their sloppy attempts to gather and silo material gained during the friendly discussions in an effort to claim that information was not used in the hostile bid.[8] Martin Marietta’s changes to the initial NDA were “unidirectional: every one of the proposed…changes had the effect of making the NDA stronger in the sense of broadening the information subject to its restrictions and limiting the permissible uses and disclosures of the covered information.” According to Martin Marietta CEO Ward Nye’s own notes, at the time of the NDA he and his team were “interested in discussing…the prospect of a merger, but not an acquisition whether by [Vulcan] or otherwise.”[9] However, information gathered during discussions led Nye to believe there was an additional $100M each year in synergy potential above his initial estimates.[10] Nye claimed that the team evaluating the deal did not rely on any non-public information, but Strine held that once Nye had this information the deal was tainted. Any evaluation of a hostile bid at that point was an unauthentic attempt at using public information to rationalize synergy estimates derived initially from non-public information.[11]
Finally, the parties had included a clause in the NDA providing for injunctive relief in the event of breach by either side, and Strine held that “[t]he very fact that measuring the precise loss to Vulcan in terms of negotiating leverage, customer relations, and productivity loss from Martin Marietta’s misconduct is difficult to impossible is a reason why the parties’ voluntary agreement that any breach would give rise to injunctive relief should be respected and honored, not gutted by a judge, particularly of a state whose public policy is pro-contractarian.”[12] The injunction reflected the timing spelled out in the NDA restrictions and prevented Martin Marietta from making a hostile bid for four months.[13] While news reports have suggested that a renewed bid for Vulcan is on the table again because the injunction expired on September 15, 2012, the injunction has the practical effect of preventing a hostile bid for much longer.[14] The four month injunction prevented Martin Marietta from running its slate of directors at Vulcan’s June 1, 2012 annual meeting, and since only two Vulcan directors are up for election in 2013, the ruling eliminates Martin Marietta’s chances of taking control of Vulcan’s 10-member board until 2014.[15] Additionally, Vulcan’s position has now strengthened and analysts estimate that Martin Marietta would have to offer .7 shares for every share of Vulcan, a costly 40% increase above the previous bid.
Here are just a few takeaways from this decision:
You may not know your client is the target until it is too late
Vulcan entered into the initial NDA thinking it was the potential acquirer, and Martin Marietta ended up using information to turn Vulcan into the target. NDAs have the potential to enable or limit future strategic opportunities for clients, so they should not be viewed just as preliminary agreements that can be entered into without consequence.[16] The client’s position may shift based on information uncovered during friendly discussions and the thinking behind the language in the NDA should contemplate a range of potential outcomes.[17]
Establish a clean team to preserve a hostile takeover bid
Strine suggested that establishing a “clean team” may be a sufficient way to keep open the possibility of a hostile bid after friendly discussions are not fruitful.[18] Sequestering internal personnel, directors and advisors from exposure to confidential information could keep this option open, although in many cases this will not be available because senior executives need to be involved in both potential friendly negotiations as well as any potential hostile bid decisions.[19]
Do not count on a strict construction of the NDA – include a formal standstill to avoid a hostile bid
It is left for us to guess why Vulcan and Martin Marietta did not have a standstill agreement in their NDA. The most plausible reason is that neither party contemplated a hostile takeover bid. Something as simple as a friendship between executives may be a reason that parties do not include standstills in early conversations. But it’s better to be safe than sorry. Friendly relationships can easily sour during negotiations and clients concerned about a potential takeover bid would be wise to include a standstill provision. While a standstill provision may be a contentious issue, negotiating the types of information and the length of time applicable to any restrictive clauses may be a way to provide both sides what they need to fully engage in friendly discussions.[20] Additionally, the process of negotiating these items may uncover whether the other party wants to keep the hostile option on the table.
Do not forget about Injunctive relief
Delaware law allows parties to stipulate elements of a compulsory remedy.[21] While the injunctive relief in this case mirrored the initial timelines set in the NDA on restrictive use of information, there is no guarantee that the court will stick to timelines provided in the NDA when it comes to injunctive relief. Chancellor Strine noted that Vulcan’s request for relief was for the minimum period, and that a longer injunction may have been justified by the pervasiveness of the breaches.[22] It is plausible that the court in future cases could extend injunctive relief for up to a year beyond the NDA timing for the purpose of preventing a party from running directors at an annual meeting, which could then have longer-term implications for gaining board control depending on the timing of board elections.
Think early and often about framing the executive storyline
Strine staged the legal analysis with an extensive account of the facts and particular emphasis on Ward Nye, Martin Marietta’s CEO. Strine noted that “Nye was not at all anxious to find his chance to be a CEO lost in a large synergistic merger, which was a possibility depending on the relative negotiating and financial strength of Vulcan and Martin Marietta in merger talks.”[23] He also noted that “Nye’s own desire to be CEO and to have the headquarters in Raleigh was simply a selfless manifestation of his and Lloyd’s obviously superior management approach and the undisputed fact that an aggregates company should be closer to ACC basketball than SEC football.”[24] Further, Strine wrote “Nye did not want to be demoted, even during a transition period, and evinced a willingness to forego a 20% premium for Martin Marietta stockholders in the exchange ratio to ensure he was slotted as CEO right away.”[25] As if that were not enough, Strine added in a footnote that “[t]he Chinese concept of face is a good one for effective negotiators and public figures to keep in mind. Nye and Lloyd [Martin Marietta’s CFO] seemed to have had the same grasp of that concept as the self-engraved chosen one.”[26] While Strine’s legal analysis regarding ambiguity focused on the circumstances leading to the NDA, we can wonder to what extent the court’s image of Nye may have played a role behind the scenes.
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[1] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. v. Vulcan Materials Co., 2012 WL 5257252, at *15 (Del. Ch. May 4, 2012) aff’d, 45 A.3d 148 (Del. 2012) and aff’d, 254, 2012, 2012 WL 2783101 (Del. July 10, 2012), as corrected (July 12, 2012).
[2] Jonathan M. Grandon & Christina Bergeron, New Guidance on Confidentiality Agreements, 4 Fin. Fraud L. Rep. 607, 609 (2012). A traditional standstill provision expressly prohibits a party from pursuing any alternative acquisition of its securities or attempting to exert any control over its management or board of directors for a set time period.
Jahangier Sharifi, et al., The Accidental Standstill, Richards Kibbe & Orbe LLP (July 20, 2012), http://www.rkollp.com/assets/attachments/The%20Accidental%20Standstill.pdf.
[3] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at 1-2.
[4] Id, at 3.
[5] Id, at 3, 25.
[6] Id, at 3.
[7] Id, at 4.
[8] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at 36-37.
[9] Id, at 37.
[10] Id, at 14.
[11] Id, at 19.
[12] Id, at 58.
[13] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at 58.
[14] Tara Lachapelle & Thomas Black, Martin Marietta Seen Bumping Vulcan Bid: Real M&A, Businessweek (Sept. 18, 2012), http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-09-18/martin-marietta-seen-bumping-vulcan-bid-real-m-and-a.
[15] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at *58; Fraud Report 609.
[16] Marc Kushner & Medard T. Fischer, Corporate E-Review: Strategic Lessons Arising From Canadian and U.S. Judicial Consideration of Confidentiality Agreements, JDsupra.com (October 17, 2012), http://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/corporate-e-review-strategic-lessons-ar-71002/.
[17] Jonathan M. Grandon & Christina Bergeron, New Guidance on Confidentiality Agreements, 4 Fin. Fraud L. Rep. 607, 612 (2012).
[18] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at *17
[19] Marc Kushner & Medard T. Fischer, Corporate E-Review: Strategic Lessons Arising From Canadian and U.S. Judicial Consideration of Confidentiality Agreements, JDsupra.com (October 17, 2012), http://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/corporate-e-review-strategic-lessons-ar-71002/.
[20] Id.
[21] Jonathan M. Grandon & Christina Bergeron, New Guidance on Confidentiality Agreements, 4 Fin. Fraud L. Rep. 607, 611 (2012).
[22] Martin Marietta Materials, Inc., 2012 WL 5257252 at *59
[23] Id. at *5
[24] Id. at *17
[25] Id.
[26] Id. at *17 n.80
Law Students and MOOCs
In the face of contracted legal hiring, many have criticized law schools for failing to properly train students for modern legal careers. These perceived deficiencies in legal education were the subject of a notable 2011 New York Times article, which highlighted the difficulties many students—even those from the top institutions in the country—have had adapting to practice at corporate law firms.[1]
Some law schools have responded by reforming upper-class curriculum. NYU, for instance, recently revamped its third-year curriculum with a focus on offering students opportunities to pursue specialized concentrations, including programs dedicated to developing students’ business and financial literacy.[2]
But another quickly-emerging trend in legal education indicates that students interested in transactional careers don’t have to wait for curriculum reform if they want to cut their teeth before starting at a firm.
At http://www.lawmeets.com Drexe,l University Professor Karl Okamoto offers a solution considerably more proximate and infinitely less pricey. On October 23, Professer Okamoto debuted a two-week massive open online course (MOOC) entitled “The Basics of Acquisition Agreements.”[3] The course was open to the public, and offered free of charge.[4]
Okamato’s course included a mix of lectures, interactive learning exercises, and panel discussions, and was headed by professors from premier law schools throughout the country.[5] Students were given hypothetical client inquiries about drafting business acquisition agreements and instructed to upload video responses.[6] The responses were then evaluated by a group of experts from law firms and corporate legal departments around the world, who provided written feedback via online discussion boards and streaming video.[7]
LawMeets, which pitches itself as an online legal education program dedicated to training young lawyers via the apprenticeship system, is just one of many such open courses offered by institutions throughout the world to any student with a working internet connection.[8] At http://www.coursera.org inter,ested students can take classes covering a broad array of mathematical subjects.[9] http://www.edX.com a non,profit startup from Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, opened its first official classes this fall to an audience of 370,000 students.[10] As the costs of higher education soar, MOOCs are going viral.
Upcoming LawMeets programs bode particularly well for students interested in private equity and venture capital law. The website plans to offer a MOOC called “Advising the Startup.”[11] In addition, LawMeets sponsors a program called “Transactional LawMeet,” an annual “moot court” experience for students interested in honing transactional skills.[12] The next National Transactional LawMeet will occur in February 2013, and will be hosted regionally by schools throughout the country.[13] The program will include interactive educational competitions designed to give students a hands-on experience in developing and honing transactional lawyering skills.[14]
Critics of the MOOCs system point to various issues raised by the courses’ unusually large enrollment—often teachers cannot offer direct feedback to students, and there exists a propensity for students in such large classes to cheat.[15] In addition, while droves of students tend to register for MOOCs, a large percentage of enrolled students often do not complete the courses for which they register.[16]
Still, these trends should come as welcome news to law students, who, often impatient with the Socratic tradition of hiding the ball, now find the ball in their court when it comes to attaining the applicable skills necessary to hit the ground running in a transactional practice. For such students willing to make the commitment, MOOCs are an efficient, low-cost alternative to university courses.
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[1] See David Segal, What They Don’t Teach Law Students: Lawyering N.Y. TIMES, November 19, 2011, at A1. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/20/business/after-law-school-associates-learn-to-be-lawyers.html?pagewanted=all.
[2] THE NEW YORK UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL, NYU ANNOUCES AmBITIOUS NEW STUDY-ABROAD PROGRAM AS PART OF CURRICULAR ENHANCEMENTS (2012). Available at http://www.law.nyu.edu/news/NYU_LAW_ANNOUNCES_STUDY-ABROAD_PROGRAM_CURRICULAR_ENHANCEMENTS_THIRD_YEAR
[3] See LAWMEETS, http://www.lawmeets.com (last visited Nov. 10, 2012).
[4] Id.
[5] THE DREXEL UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL, LAW PROFESSOR CREATES FIRST MASSIVE OPEN ONLINE COURSE TO TEACH BUSINESS ACQUISITON SKILLS. Available at http://www.drexel.edu/now/news-media/releases/archive/2012/September/Law-MOOC/.
[6] Id.
[7] Id.
[8] LAWMEETS, http://www.lawmeets.com/about (last visited Nov. 10, 2012).
[9] See Laura Pappano, The Year of the MOOC, N.Y. TIMES, November 4, 2012, at ED26. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/04/education/edlife/massive-open-online-courses-are-multiplying-at-a-rapid-pace.html?pagewanted=2&_r=0.
[10] Id.
[11] See LAWMEETS, http://www.lawmeets.com (last visited Nov. 10, 2012). (Toward the bottom of the page they note an upcoming program with date TBA called “Advising the Startup”).
[12]LAWMEETS, http://transactionalmeet.lawmeets.com/ (last visited Nov. 10, 2012).
[13] Id.
[14] Id.
[15] See Laura Pappano, The Year of the MOOC, N.Y. TIMES, November 4, 2012, at ED26. Available at http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/04/education/edlife/massive-open-online-courses-are-multiplying-at-a-rapid-pace.html?pagewanted=2&_r=0 (“What’s Frustrating in a MOOC is the instructor is not as available because there are tens of thousands of others in the class,” Dr. Schroeder says…”We found groups of 20 people in a course submitting identical homework,” says David Patterson, a professor at the University of California Berkeley.)
[16]Id. (“The ones I have study groups with people, those are the ones I finish,” Ms. Spillman says.)