Yearly Archives: 2017

Weekly Roundup: April 28–May 4, 2017


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This roundup contains a collection of the posts published on the Forum during the week of April 28–May 4, 2017.








The Emerging Need for Cybersecurity Diligence in M&A









Contested Visions: The Value of Systems Theory for Corporate Law

Tamara Belinfanti is a Professor of Law at New York Law School and Lynn A. Stout is The Distinguished Professor of Corporate and Business Law at Cornell Law School. This post is based on their recent article, forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review.

Our article addresses the fundamental question: What is a corporation? Some experts say the corporation is a grantee of the state and should serve a public purpose (concession theory). Others describe the corporation as a legal entity that can hold property and enter contracts in its own name (entity theory). Still others argue the corporation is a nexus of privately-negotiated contracts (nexus of contract theory). Or perhaps a corporation is an aggregation of natural persons (aggregate theory) or an aggregation of shareholder property (property theory) or specific assets (team production)?

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Kokesh v. SEC: Supreme Court to Discuss Application of Statute of Limitations to SEC Disgorgement

Paul C. Curnin is partner and co-chair of the litigation department at Simpson Thacher and Bartlett LLP. This post is based on a Simpson Thacher publication.

“Chief Justice Marshall said it was utterly repugnant to the genius of our laws to have a penalty remedy without limit … the concern, it sees seems to me, is multiplied when it’s not only no limitation, but it’s something that the government kind of devised on its own.”
—Chief Justice Roberts

The Supreme Court heard oral arguments on April 18, 2017 in Kokesh v. SEC, No. 16-529, a case requiring the Court to decide a question with major implications for the remedies the SEC may seek in court: whether civil disgorgement is a “fine, penalty, or forfeiture” governed by a five-year statute of limitations under 28 U.S.C § 2462 or is remedial in nature and therefore not subject to any statute of limitations.

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Independent Directors: New Class of 2016

This post is based on a publication from the EY Center for Board Matters.

Today’s boards are navigating disruptive changes, a dynamic geopolitical and regulatory environment, shifting consumer and workforce demographics, and shareholder activist activity amid a push by leading investors for a more long-term strategic focus. These demands highlight the critical role boards play in helping companies manage risk and seize strategic opportunities.

To see how boards are keeping current and strategically aligning board composition to company needs, we reviewed the qualifications and characteristics of independent directors who were elected to Fortune 100 boards for the first time in 2016 (Fortune 100 Class of 2016). We also looked at some of the same data for the Russell 3000, and we highlight those findings at the end of this post.

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Independent Directors and Controlling Shareholders

Lucian Bebchuk is the James Barr Ames Professor of Law, Economics, and Finance, and Director of the Program on Corporate Governance, at Harvard Law School. Assaf Hamdani is the Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz Professor of Corporate Law at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. This post is based on their Article, Independent Directors and Controlling Shareholders, forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review. The Article is part of the research undertaken by the Controlling Shareholders Project of the Program on Corporate Governance.

Independent directors are an important feature of modern corporate law and courts and lawmakers around the world increasingly rely on these directors to protect investors from controlling shareholder opportunism. In our Article, Independent Directors and Controlling Shareholders, forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, we examine this reliance. We show that the existing director-election regime significantly undermines the ability of independent directors to effectively perform their oversight role.

Both the election and retention of independent directors normally depend on the controlling shareholders. As a result, these directors have incentives to go along with controllers’ wishes, or, at least, inadequate incentives to protect public investors.

To induce independent directors to perform their oversight role, we argue, some independent directors should be accountable to public investors. This can be achieved by empowering investors to determine or at least substantially influence the election or retention of these directors. These “enhanced-independence” directors should play a key role in vetting “conflicted decisions,” where the interests of the controller and public investors substantially diverge, but not have a special role with respect to other corporate issues. Enhancing the independence of some directors would substantially improve the protection of public investors without undermining the ability of the controller to set the firm’s strategy.

We explain how the Delaware courts, as well as other lawmakers in the United States and around the world, can introduce or encourage enhanced-independence arrangements. Our analysis offers a framework of director election rules that allows policymakers to produce the precise balance of power between controlling shareholders and public investors that they find appropriate. We also analyze the proper role of enhanced-independence directors as well as respond to objections to their use. Overall, we show that relying on enhanced-independence directors, rather than independent directors whose election fully depend on the controller, can provide a better foundation for investor protection in controlled companies.

We do not argue that independent directors should play a key role in protecting public investors at controlled companies. Some may believe that market forces can discourage controller opportunism. Others may find other measures—such as public enforcement or approval by minority shareholders—to be necessary or effective in enhancing investor protection. We take as a given that corporate law has long substantially relied on independent directors in controlled companies to protect public investors in cases of controller conflicts. Given this pervasive reliance on independent directors, our contribution is twofold. First, we show that, by itself, approval by independent directors who serve at the pleasure of the controller cannot serve as an effective device for vetting conflicted decisions. Second, we analyze how to turn independent directors into more effective guardians of the interests of public investors in conflicted decisions.

Below we outline in more detail the analysis of the Article:

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Uncertainty on the Application of Unocal to Corwin Transactions: Paramount Gold & Silver

Gail Weinstein is special counsel and Steven Epstein is a partner at Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP. This post is based on a Fried Frank publication by Ms. Weinstein, Mr. Epstein, Warren S. de Wied, Scott B. LuftglassPhilip Richter, and Robert C. Schwenkel. This post is part of the Delaware law series; links to other posts in the series are available here.

In Paramount Gold and Silver Stockholders Litigation (April 13, 2017), the shareholder-plaintiffs claimed that the directors of Paramount Gold and Silver Corporation had breached their fiduciary duties by agreeing to an unreasonable “deal protection device” in connection with the merger pursuant to which Paramount was being acquired by Coeur Mining, Inc. Specifically, the plaintiffs contended that a royalty payment to be paid by Coeur was effectively a “second termination fee” that, when combined with the termination fee included in the merger agreement, was an unreasonably high fee that could deter a potential topping bid. The plaintiffs also argued that the Paramount directors had breached their fiduciary duties by “rushing” the sale process and not negotiating for a pre-signing auction of the company or a post-signing go-shop, and had acted in bad faith in agreeing to the unreasonable deal protection provisions and in providing stockholders with inadequate disclosure.

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President Trump’s Dangerous CHOICE

Gregg Gelzinis is a Special Assistant for the Economic Policy team at the Center for American Progress. This post is based on a Center for American Progress publication by Mr. Gelzinis, Ethan GurwitzSarah Edelman, and Joe Valenti. Additional posts addressing legal and financial implications of the Trump administration are available here.

During his campaign, Donald Trump promised a near-dismantling of the Dodd-Frank Act, the core piece of financial reform legislation enacted following the 2007-2008 financial crisis. [1] He doubled down on that promise once in office, vowing to both “do a big number” on and give “a very major haircut” to Dodd-Frank. [2] In early February, he took the first step in fulfilling this dangerous promise by signing an executive order directing U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Steve Mnuchin to conduct a review of Dodd-Frank. [3] Per the executive order, Secretary Mnuchin will present the findings in early June. [4] While the country waits for President Trump’s plan, it is useful to analyze one prominent way Trump and Congress might choose to gut financial reform—through the Financial CHOICE Act, or FCA. [5]

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Proxy Voting Conflicts—Asset Manager Conflicts of Interest in the Energy and Utility Industries

Edward Kamonjoh is Executive Director of The 50/50 Climate Project. This post is based on a 50/50 Climate Project publication by Mr. Kamonjoh.

While shareholder resolutions calling on companies to proactively address the risks to investors from climate change received unprecedented levels of support last year, despite their mainstream acceptance by investors, asset managers including JP Morgan, Fidelity, Vanguard, BlackRock, and BNY Mellon frequently voted in favor of management and failed to support the resolutions.

In a new report (available here), the 50/50 Climate Project, a non-profit shareholder resource and action center, finds that the managers who tended to vote in favor of management received more in fees and stewarded more assets than all other managers combined, and that their voting practices were even more management friendly at companies with which they had business relationships. The asset managers examined manage assets worth billions of dollars for the retirement plans sponsored by the portfolio companies at which they voted. The managers also receive millions of dollars in fees for managing such plans.

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Blockholder Voting

Joel Shapiro is Associate Professor of Finance at University of Oxford Saïd Business School; and Heski Bar-Isaac is Professor of Integrative Thinking and Business Economics at University of Toronto Rotman School of Management. This post is based on their recent paper. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Law and Economics of Blockholder Disclosure by Lucian Bebchuk and Robert J. Jackson Jr. (discussed on the Forum here); and Pre-Disclosure Accumulations by Activist Investors: Evidence and Policy by Lucian Bebchuk, Alon Brav, Robert J. Jackson Jr., and Wei Jiang.

Blockholders play an important role in the governance of firms, and the SEC has taken great interest in their voting behavior. In this paper, we adapt a standard model of voting by introducing a voter who has multiple votes. This allows us to explore the role of blockholders, how their presence might affect the behaviour of other shareholders, and possible consequences of the SEC’s rules on voting.

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The Emerging Need for Cybersecurity Diligence in M&A

Shilpi Gupta and Stuart D. Levi are partners, and William Ridgway is a counsel at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. This post is based on a Skadden publication by Mr. Gupta, Mr. Levi, and Mr. Ridgway.

Cybercrime has emerged as one of the foremost threats a company faces. As a result of a few keystrokes, a company may find its customers’ data sold on the dark web, its intellectual property in the hands of a competitor or its operations paralyzed by ransomware. It should come as little surprise, then, that cybersecurity has become a key risk factor in mergers and acquisitions.

A 2016 survey by West Monroe Partners and Mergermarket found that 77 percent of top-level corporate executives and private equity partners reported that the importance of cybersecurity at M&A targets had increased significantly in recent years. Given this trend, executives and directors contemplating acquisitions should consider the following cyber-related issues when conducting due diligence.

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