Developments in State Takeover Regulation


Book Description

By the 1960's, use of the cash tender offer had become the predominant method for acquisition and control of publicly held companies, a method then virtually free of government regulation. However, in the absence of regulation, abuses emerged, underscoring the need for federal and state protection of investors in corporations targeted by an acquiring company's management. Governmental regulation of this type of takeover transaction originated at the state level with Virginia's enactment of the first state takeover statute in 1968, with thirty-six other states following suit. Several months after passage of the Virginia statute, Congress adopted the Williams Act, which amended the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to provide for regulation of cash tender offers. The extraterritorial reach of most state takeover statutes, together with the substantive differences between the state and federal scheme, led to the invalidation of numerous state takeover statutes under the commerce and supremacy clauses of the Constitution. This controversy between state and federal power was addressed, but not completely resolved by the now-familiar case Edgar v. MITE Corp. This decision and its aftermath are the primary focus of this article. The subsequent judicial efforts to interpret and apply the MITE precedent to takeover statutes of other states generally have been disastrous for the state regulatory schemes challenged. Ohio, Maryland, and Wisconsin developed new approaches in their efforts to revitalize their respective regulatory schemes through a perceived “window” left open by the MITE decision. After a discussion of this development, the article concludes with a summary of certain controversial proposals set forth in the final report of the SEC Advisory Committee on Tender Offers, issued approximately one year after MITE was decided. These recommendations presented important questions not only as to the future role of the states in the field of tender offer regulation, but also as to the vulnerability of state corporate law generally. Although opposition to those recommendations was extensive, the issues that they raise should be of particular concern to practitioners in virtually every area of corporate law.










State Takeover Laws


Book Description




Takeovers


Book Description

Demystify the takeover process with the straightforward guidance found in Aspen Publishersand’ Takeovers: A Strategic Guide to Mergers and Acquisitions, the definitive desk reference to managing the legal, regulatory, and economic aspects of todayand’s increasingly complex corporate combinations, including cross-border acquisitions. Using the expert insights in this guide to the takeover process, you will swiftly master the nomenclature, tempo of deal-making and techniques for closing in all types of business combinations.Takeovers: A Strategic Guide to Mergers and Acquisitions gives you a practical understanding of the critical procedures, issues, and laws both bidder and target corporations must consider, including: How tender offers are regulated Proxy contests The Hart-Scott-Rodino Act Strategic litigation Federal regulation of a targetand’s responses to a takeover Poison pills State takeover legislation Deal protections Directorsand’ duties Going private This updated Third Edition of Takeovers: A Strategic Guide to Mergers and Acquisitions expands the entire book with coverage of such topics as: Recent trends in mergers and acquisitions The impact of Rule 14d-10 on tender offers and proposed SEC amendments clarifying the rule Developments in insider trading law Proposed amendments to the proxy rules allowing delivery of proxy materials via the Internet Stockholder proposals relating to poison pills and majority voting Changes in the Hart- Scott-Rodino rules Political considerations in cross-border Mandamp;A and increased attention to the role of CFIUS How the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and the USA Patriot Act have affected Mandamp;A Developments in the standards of judicial review applicable to director actions Developments relating to deal protection Changes in federal tax rules affecting business combinations




A New Approach to Takeover Law and Regulatory Competition


Book Description

The development of U.S. state takeover law in the past three decades has produced considerable and quite possibly excessive protection for incumbent managers from hostile takeovers. Although the shortcomings of state takeover law have been widely recognized, there has been little support for federal intervention because of the concern that such intervention might produce even worse takeover arrangements. This paper puts forward a novel form of federal intervention in the regulation of takeovers that would address these shortcomings without raising such a concern. Rather than mandating particular substantive takeover arrangements, this form of federal intervention would focus on increasing shareholder choice. Choice-enhancing' federal intervention would consist of two elements: (i) an optional body of substantive federal takeover law which shareholders would be able to opt into (or out of) and (ii) a mandatory process rule that would provide shareholders the right to initiate and adopt, regardless of managers' wishes, proposals for opting into (or out of) the federal takeover law. We argue that such a federal role in takeover law cannot harm and would likely improve the regulation of takeovers. Moreover, by showing how federal law can be used to improve regulatory competition in the provision of takeover law rather than preempt it, our analysis lays the groundwork for a more general reconsideration of regulatory competition in the corporate law area




Takeover Laws and Financial Development


Book Description

The issue of "an appropriate" legal framework, especially in the case of the takeover market, has been poorly studied in the case of emerging markets, yet it is of immediate relevance and practical policymaker interest. The study makes a first attempt to analyze takeover regulations in a comparative context across 50 countries. It proposes a methodology to create a detailed index on the most salient features of capital market laws, and illustrates the approach on the case of takeover legislation. The methodology allows better understanding of the impact of laws on markets and development, allows a detailed quantification of a given regulation, in this case takeover market rules, and helps determine relevant policy implications. Specifically, the framework permits the exploration of the effects of individual regulations, their substitutability and interplay, as well as the overall extent of friendliness of the laws to investors, or particular groups thereof (such as minority shareholders), and the links of specialized regulation with the overall legal system. Finally, the study explores the effect of the investor-friendliness of takeover laws on stock market development.




Tender Offers


Book Description

The issues confronting the Securities and Exchange Commission, the courts, Congress, and securities and corporate lawyers regarding tender offers are examined in this timely collection of commentaries. New data is introduced on how to regulate tender offers and proxy contests for control of publicly held companies. In addition, the constitutional dimensions of state anti-takeover statutes, target managements's conduct in fending off hostile bidders, the SEC's advisory committee report of recommendations on tender offers and SEC tender offer rules are reviewed. Insider trading in the tender offer context and proposals for tender offer reform are also explored. Readers will learn what states are doing to regulate takeovers and what inside counsels should suggest when their firms become targets. They will also discover how target management's conduct is viewed and where further regulation will be most likely to occur.




State Takeover Laws


Book Description




Comparative Takeover Regulation


Book Description

Comparative Takeover Regulation compares the laws relating to takeovers in leading Asian economies and relates them to broader global developments. It is ideal for educational institutions that teach corporate law, corporate governance, and mergers and acquisitions, as well as for law firms, corporate counsel and other practitioners.