The New Delaware Takeover Statute


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Folk on the Delaware General Corporation Law


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As reporter for the revised Delaware Corporation Law, Ernest L. Folk played the decisive role in the actual drafting of the law. His great subsequent analysis now in its Fourth Edition is organized by code section, with incisive and extensively annotated commentary that includes: Strategies and options for specific business decisions and activities under the statute -- Detailed analysis of the practical applications and effects of each statutory provision and judicial decision -- All the major cases, many of them unreported and unavailable in any other source. You'll find easy-to-follow, ready-to-use guidance on such important matters as: Duties of officers and directors -- Director and officer liability -- The business judgment rule -- Standards of fairness in corporate transactions -- Administrative guidelines on filing Mergers and acquisitions -- The poison pill defense and other takeover tactics -- Contested takeovers, leveraged buyouts, and proxy contests -- Appraisal rights -- Alternative business entities and virtually everything else you'll need to know to solve problems arising under Delaware corporate law.




The Takeover Law of Delaware


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... analyzes Section 203 of Delaware's General Corporation Law, which was adopted to encourage fully priced tended offers and negotiated acquisitions and discourage highly leveraged takeovers of corporations.







Tryst with Delaware Corporate Takeover Law


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The Delaware Takeover law is a multitude of regimes that govern the conduct of Board of Directors in a business acquisition setting. During an acquisition there are numerous risks that need to be addressed including business risks, financial risks, commercial litigation, tax, intellectual property infringement, and antitrust issues. When a board is confronted with a proposed transaction, it has the obligation to determine whether the offer is in the best interests of the corporation and its shareholders. Absent certain limited set of circumstances when it needs to emphasize on short-term merits of the transaction, the board must focus at the long-term strategy of the combined company. This paper discusses the bidding war between Verizon and Qwest Communications over the acquisition of MCI, Inc. By invoking the legal mandate governing the Delware Corporate takeover law, the paper attempts to highlight such nuances of an acquisition setting.




Delaware's Takeover Law


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The Corporate Contract in Changing Times


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Over the past few decades, significant changes have occurred across capital markets. Shareholder activists have become more prominent, institutional investors have begun to wield more power, and intermediaries like investment advisory firms have greatly increased their influence. These changes to the economic environment in which corporations operate have outpaced changes in basic corporate law and left corporations uncertain of how to respond to the new dynamics and adhere to their fiduciary duties to stockholders. With The Corporate Contract in Changing Times, Steven Davidoff Solomon and Randall Stuart Thomas bring together leading corporate law scholars, judges, and lawyers from top corporate law firms to explore what needs to change and what has prevented reform thus far. Among the topics addressed are how the law could be adapted to the reality that activist hedge funds pose a more serious threat to corporations than the hostile takeovers and how statutory laws, such as the rules governing appraisal rights, could be reviewed in the wake of appraisal arbitrage. Together, the contributors surface promising paths forward for future corporate law and public policy.