Monthly Archives: August 2025

2025 CEO Priorities

Benjamin Finzi, Vincent Firth, and Brett Weinberg are Managing Directors at Deloitte LLP. This post is based on their Deloitte memorandum.

Priorities for today’s CEOs

After working with hundreds of CEOs, we’ve identified two sets of priorities that typically guide a CEO’s day-to-day. The Core Priorities, foundations of the role, remain relatively consistent from year to year, while the Current Priorities change in response to the current climate. We calibrate these Priorities annually based on our research, as well as our own conversations with chief executives.

As we think about the key challenges and opportunities shaping the Current Priorities for 2025, we recognize that CEOs are navigating an unprecedented confluence of events, challenges, and opportunities. The landscape seems more dynamic than ever.

In our work with CEOs, we witness firsthand the unique position of many CEOs today, in some cases feeling whipsawed by the scope and speed of change while at the same time recognizing the immense opportunities. Whether it’s macroeconomic factors, competition, innovation, or geopolitics, we have observed a heightened sense of engagement among CEOs, driven by these multifaceted pressures. Our 2025 CEO Priorities offer insight about the multitude of tensions facing leaders, and perhaps also, perspectives on the role of the CEO in today’s complex and rapidly changing world.

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Board Priorities in a Geopolitical Landscape: Risk, Compliance, and Supply Chain Resilience

Edward Knight is the Executive Vice Chairman at Nasdaq, Will A. Clarke is a Partner at Newport LLC, and Jana del-Cerro is a Partner at DLA Piper. This post is based on insight contributions with the Nasdaq Center for Board Excellence by Mr. Knight, Mr. Clarke, Ms. del-Cerro, and Bets Lillo.

As the impact of global interdependencies becomes increasingly complex, boards and executive management are guiding and governing their companies in an unpredictable environment. That was the central theme of the recent May 2025 webinar, Geopolitical Issues Impacting Global Supply Chains and National Security, hosted by the Nasdaq Center for Board Excellence and the Program on Corporate Compliance and Enforcement at NYU School of Law.

The webinar brought together a panel of experts, including Ed Knight, Executive Vice Chairman at Nasdaq, Will A. Clarke, Partner at Newport LLC, Jana del-Cerro, Partner at DLA Piper, and Bets Lillo, Board Member at Entara and River Logic and Executive in Residence at Texas Christian University. They offered a clear-eyed view of how boards and executive management must adapt to effectively lead amid a world where national security, economic policy, and supply chain resilience are deeply intertwined. Five key takeaways from their discussion are outlined below, alongside practical implications for boardroom oversight and planning.

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The Price of Delaware Corporate Law Reform

Kenneth Khoo is an Assistant Professor at the National University of Singapore Faculty of Law, and Roberto Tallarita is an Assistant Professor of Law at Harvard Law School. This post is based on their recent paper.

Early this year, within a matter of weeks, Delaware legislators proposed and enacted Senate Bill 21 (SB 21), a significant overhaul of the state’s corporate law code. This reform introduced more permissive rules for transactions involving conflicted controlling shareholders and imposed new constraints on shareholder‑plaintiffs, with the stated intent of curbing fiduciary litigation. It was the most significant rewriting of Delaware corporate law in more than half a century.

The bill sparked an intense debate among scholars and practitioners. Critics argued that the reform would facilitate excessive extraction of private benefits by controlling shareholders and other insiders at the expense of public investors; they also warned of laxer policing of controller transactions and criticized the speed and one‑sidedness of the legislative process. Supporters, on the other hand, contended that the new rules were a much‑needed correction to lower regulatory costs and reduce what they viewed as excessive litigation, ultimately benefiting all shareholders.

Both sides believed that their preferred framework would be better for investors. However, while there are plausible theoretical arguments in support of competing effects of the reform, there is no obvious reason why its overall effect on shareholder value should be positive or negative. The central question—Is this reform good or bad for the investors it is meant to serve? —is ultimately an empirical one.

In a new paper, “The Price of Delaware Corporate Law Reform,” we tackle this question by conducting a series of event studies. Our goal is to measure the stock market’s real‑time reaction to SB 21, to see how investors, with their capital on the line, valued this dramatic legal shift.

The High-Stakes Shift Away from “Double-Cleansing”

At the heart of SB 21 lies a fundamental shift in how Delaware law polices conflicts of interest involving controlling shareholders — the proverbial “800‑pound gorillas” of the corporate world. For years, Delaware courts protected minority investors through a “double‑cleansing” safeguard: controller transactions could escape the courts’ strict entire fairness review only if they won approval by both (1) a fully empowered special committee of independent directors and (2) a majority of the minority shareholders.

SB 21 overturns this legal regime. Except for squeeze‑outs, a single‑cleansing safe harbor now suffices: controller transactions avoid entire‑fairness review if either of the two mechanisms above is employed. The statute also supplies a bright‑line definition of a “controlling shareholder,” expressly excluding anyone who holds less than one‑third (33.3 percent) of the voting power. Furthermore, SB 21 adopts an enhanced presumption of director independence, making it more difficult for plaintiffs to challenge that status, and narrows the scope of shareholders’ right to inspect corporate books and records, a crucial information-gathering tool for derivative litigation. Collectively, these provisions push Delaware corporate law decisively toward a more controller‑friendly framework. READ MORE »

Calculating Earnout Damages: Strategic Lessons for Designing Milestone Frameworks

James Jian Hu and Rishi Zutshi are Partners, and Jessica Graham is an Associate at Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP. This post is based on their Cleary memorandum.

This article follows up on our prior analysis of the Delaware Court of Chancery’s liability determination in the Alexion-Syntimmune case, available at: https://www.clearygottlieb.com/news-and-insights/publication-listing/delaware-court-of-chancery-finds-buyer-failed-to-use-commercially-reasonable-efforts-in-pharma-milestone-payment-case

In designing the earnout structure, parties should anticipate how expectation damages would be determined by the court using a discounted, probability-weighted mathematical method.

On June 11, 2025, the Delaware Court of Chancery established an important framework for how courts may approach the calculation of earnout damages in pharma milestone disputes in its most recent decision in Shareholder Representative Services LLC v. Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Inc.[1] In an earlier opinion (the “September Opinion”), the Court found that a buyer, Alexion, was liable for breach of contract for its failure to use commercially reasonable efforts to achieve milestones for which future earnout payments may have become due to the selling securityholders of Syntimmune, Inc.[2] The June 11 opinion adopted a probability-based mathematical framework to determine the amount of damages owed and t provides a number of important takeaways:

  1. Expected value damages are recoverable for breached earnout obligations.
  2. Internal buyer assessments can be used as primary evidence of milestone probabilities.
  3. Different discount rates apply based on risk characteristics of milestone types.
  4. Sequential dependencies can create compounding effects in damages calculations.

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New Report Alerts Companies to New Level of Risk from Political Spending

Bruce Freed is the President, and Jeanne Hanna is the Vice President for Research at the Center for Political Accountability. This post is based on their CPA report.

In today’s climate of heightened polarization, intensifying public scrutiny, and shifting political dynamics, companies that engage in political spending face significantly greater risks than in the past. To help companies navigate these growing risks, the Center for Political Accountability recently released Corporate Political Spending: What Are the Real Risks?, a report that lays out the escalating financial, legal, and reputational threats companies now face.

The reports examines both immediate risks and emerging risks. Companies that lack a strong framework to guide their political contributions risk triggering public backlash, boycotts, regulatory retaliation, corruption, and employee dissatisfaction.

The report  details high-profile cases — from Tesla’s stock volatility to Disney’s feud with Florida’s governor and the fallout from FirstEnergy’s billion-dollar bribery scandal — to show how poorly governed political spending can damage a company’s bottom line and credibility.

Key risks identified in the report include:

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New Texas Law Puts Proxy Advice Under the Microscope

Elizabeth Goldberg is a Partner, and Rachel Mann is an Associate at Morgan Lewis & Bockius LLP. This post is based on their Morgan Lewis memorandum.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott recently signed into law S.B. 2337, marking a significant development in the increasing scrutiny of proxy voting as a focus of regulators targeting environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, including by institutional investors such as public and private retirement plans.

The June 20 law imposes two new disclosure obligations on proxy advisory firms with respect to their services to shareholders of companies based in Texas and headquartered in the state.

In passing this bill, the Texas legislature described it as designed to increase transparency around the influence of nonfinancial factors—particularly ESG considerations—on proxy voting recommendations.

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US Deals 2025 Midyear Outlook

Ray Garcia is a Partner & Leader, and Paul DeNicola is a Principal at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. This post is based on their PwC memorandum.

30% Of companies have paused or are revisiting pending deals due to new tariffs

Source: PwC’s May 2025 Pulse Survey
51% Of operations leaders think that acquiring a company to access talent is very effective in developing a digital-ready workforce

Source: PwC’s 2025 Digital Trends in Operations Survey
31%Of portfolio companies have been held over five years

Source: PitchBook Data, Inc.
25 Traditional IPOs have hit the market in 2025 (as of May 31)

Source: Copyright © 2025, Dealogic Limited. All rights reserved.

Dealmakers entered 2025 with expectations for an M&A rally as inflation and interest rate forecasts were on the downslope and a new, presumably more business-friendly administration was about to take office.

Those expectations were met by uncertainty over the administration’s aggressive policies, particularly in regard to trade. Dealmaking growth stalled as companies struggled to predict how new tariff policies would impact business models — or if the policies would change before implementation. PwC’s May 2025 Pulse Survey found that 30% of respondents have paused or are revisiting deals due to tariff issues.

So far, deal volume (4,535) and value ($567 billion) are comparable to a year ago. We believe an upswing is still possible, but it’s unlikely without more policy clarity and stability.

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Weekly Roundup: July 25-31, 2025


More from:

This roundup contains a collection of the posts published on the Forum during the week of July 25-31, 2025

Beyond the Appointment: Communicate CEO Transitions for Long-Term Success


Insights from the SEC Roundtable on Executive Compensation Disclosure Requirements


Insider Trading & Disclosure Updates


Proxy Voting Advice No Longer a Solicitation Under the Exchange Act


Director Skills for Navigating a Complex Business Environment


Executives Sentenced Under CPSA for Not Reporting Product Hazards


The Law and Economics of An Act to Encourage Privateering Associations


ESG Mid-Year Update: Who Still Cares, and Why You Should


When Term Sheet Provisions Survive the Execution of Definitive Agreements


ESG Aversion: Uncovering the Hidden Tension Between Profitability and Preference



Chancery Court Bars Discovery to Support Demand Futility




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