Jonathan Doorley is Partner at Brunswick Group LLP. This post is based on his Brunswick memorandum.
The collision of financial, political and social issues in deal-making and proxy contests has never been more apparent in the United States than it was in 2023 and thus far in 2024. While shareholder value creation remains the sine qua non of transactions and proxy contests, investors of all kinds have long been imposing their own specific agendas on issuers. In addition to the widening scope of activism, there are new players for senior management teams and boards to contend with – most notably organized labor.
Recent activism cases in the US reveal how labor unions have inserted themselves more aggressively into transactions and shareholder disagreements. Unions are not a monolith – they each have their own distinct agendas and cultures, reflected in the ways they interact with the capital markets. Below, we review three recent examples of this trend – two that have recently reached a resolution and one that is ongoing – and we offer some lessons to help executives prepare for this kind of engagement with their workers.