continue such negotiations and planning for any length of time. Rather than let the information slowly leak, the company has an obligation to conduct an orderly disclosure once it is clear that confidentiality may be at risk or that prior statements the company has made are no longer accurate. In cases in which there is speculation that a takeover is being planned, significant market movements in stock prices of the companies involved – particularly the target – may occur. Such market movements may give rise to an inquiry from the exchange on which the company trades. Although exchanges have come under criticism for being somewhat lax about enforcing these types of rules, an insufficient response from the companies involved may give rise to disciplinary actions against the companies.
The choice of doing an asset deal as opposed to a whole entity deal usually has to do with how much of the target is being sold. If the deal is for only part of the target's business, then usually an asset deal works best.
One of the advantages for the acquirer of an asset deal is that the buyer does not have to accept all of the target's liabilities. This is the subject of negotiation between the parties. The seller will want the buyer to accept more liabilities and the buyer wants fewer liabilities. The benefit of limiting liability exposure is one reason a buyer may prefer an asset deal. Another benefit of an asset acquisition is that the buyer can pick and choose which assets it wants and not have to pay for assets that it is not interested in. All the assets acquired and liabilities incurred are listed in the asset purchase agreement.
Still other benefits of an asset deal are potential tax benefits. The buyer may be able to realize asset basis step-up. This can come from the buyer raising the value of the acquired assets to fair market value as opposed to the values they may have been carried at on the seller's balance sheet. Through such an increase in value the buyer can enjoy more depreciation in the future, which, in turn, may lower their taxable income and taxes paid.
Sellers may prefer a whole entity deal. In an asset deal the seller may be left with assets it does not want. This is particularly true when the seller is selling most of its assets. Here they are left with liabilities that they would prefer getting rid of. In addition, the seller may possibly get hit with negative tax consequences due to potential taxes on the sale of the assets and then taxes on a distribution to the owners of the entity. Exceptions could be entities that are 80 % owned subsidiaries, pass-through entities, or businesses that are LLPs or LLCs. Tax issues are very important in M&As. This is why much legal work is done in M&As not only by transactional lawyers but also by tax lawyers. Attorneys who are M&A tax specialists can be very important in doing deals, and this is a subspecialty of the law separate from transactional M&A law.
There are still more drawbacks to asset deals, in that the seller may have to secure third-party consents to the sale of the assets. This may be necessary if there are clauses in the financing agreements the target used to acquire the assets. It also could be the case if the seller has many contracts with nonassignment or nontransfer clauses associated with them. In order to do an asset deal the target needs to get approval from the relevant parties. The more of them there are, the more complicated the deal becomes. When these complications are significant, an asset deal becomes less practical, and if a deal is to be done it may have to be an entity transaction.
There are two ways to do an entity deal – a stock transaction or a merger. When the target has a limited number of shareholders, it may be practical to do a stock deal as securing approval of the sale by the target's shareholders may not be that difficult. The fewer the number of shareholders, the more practical this may be. However, when dealing with a large public company with a large and widely distributed shareholder base, a merger is often the way to go.
In a stock entity deal, deals which are more common involving closely held companies, the buyer does not have to buy the assets and send the consideration to the target corporation as it would have done in an asset deal. Instead, the consideration is sent directly to the target's shareholders who sell all their shares to the buyer. One of the advantages of a stock deal is that there are no conveyance issues, such as what there might have been with an asset deal, where there may have been the aforementioned contractual restrictions on transfer of assets. With a stock deal, the assets stay with the entity and remain at the target, as opposed to the acquirer's level.
One other benefit that a stock deal has over a merger is that there are no appraisal rights with a stock deal. In a merger, shareholders who do not approve of the deal may want to go to court to pursue their appraisal rights and seek the difference between the value they received for their shares in the merger and what they believe is the true value of the shares. In recent years the volume of appraisal litigation in Delaware has risen. This is, in part, due to the position the Delaware court has taken regarding the wide latitude it has in determining what a “fair value” is.9
One of the disadvantages of an entity deal is that the buyer may have to assume certain liabilities it may not want to have. One way a buyer can do a stock deal and not have to incur the potential adverse exposure to certain target liabilities it does not want is to have the seller indemnify it against this exposure. Here the buyer accepts the unwanted liabilities but gets the benefit of the seller's indemnification against this exposure. However, if the buyer has concerns about the long-term financial ability of the target to truly back up this indemnification, then it may pass on the stock deal.
Another disadvantage of a stock-entity deal is that all the target shareholders have to approve the deal. If some of them oppose the deal, it cannot be completed. When this is the case, then the companies have to pursue a merger. When the target is a large public corporation with many shareholders, this is the way to go.
Mergers, which are more common for publicly held companies, are partly a function of the relevant state laws, which can vary from state-to-state. Fortunately, as we will discuss in Chapter 3, more U.S. public corporations are incorporated in Delaware than any other state, so we can discuss legal issues with Delaware law in mind. However, there are many similarities between Delaware corporation laws and those of other states.
In merger laws certain terminology is commonly encountered. Constituent corporations are the two companies doing the deal. In a merger one company survives, called the survivor, and the other ceases to exist.
In a merger the surviving corporation succeeds to all of the liabilities of the nonsurviving company. If this is a concern to the buyer, then a simple merger structure is not the way to go. If there are assets that are unwanted by the buyer, then these can be spun out or sold off before the merger is completed.
In a merger the voting approval of the shareholders is needed. In Delaware the approval of a majority of the shareholders is required. This percentage can vary across states, and there can be cases where a corporation has enacted supermajority provisions in its bylaws. Unlike stock deals, shareholders who do not approve the deal can go to court to pursue their appraisal rights.
The basic form of a merger is a forward merger, which is sometimes also called a statutory merger. Here the target merges directly in the purchaser corporation, and then the target disappears while the purchaser survives. The target shares are exchanged for cash or a combination of cash and securities. The purchaser assumes the target's liabilities, which is a drawback of this structure. However, given the assumption of these liabilities, there are usually no conveyance issues. Another drawback is that Delaware law treats forward mergers as though they were asset sales, so if the target has many contracts with third-party consents or nonassignment clauses, this may not be an advantageous route for the parties. Given the position of Delaware law on forward mergers, these deals look a lot like assets deals that are followed by a liquidation of the target, because the assets of the target move from the target to the buyer and the target disappears, while the deal consideration ends up with the target's shareholders.
A big negative of a basic forward merger is that the voting approval of the shareholders of both companies is needed. This can add an element of uncertainty to the deal. Another drawback