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New IPOs, Hostile Takeovers, Poison Pills, Contingent Value Rights
December 30, 2008
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Planning for 2009: Major Trends in M&A 2008 The legal market’s M&A crystal ball for 2009 is unusually hazy.
However, looking at certain trends and lessons from 2008 certainly
helps. With such a momentous year just now behind us, it’s impossible
to summarize it all – so we at Westlaw Business have picked out certain
highlights and trends, some of them undetected and possibly more
interesting. Bad economies drive consolidation, and with government
funding and active encouragement so actively behind it, one thing is
for sure: M&A will be a major source of legal activity in 2009. Read more
Looking Forward to 2009: Major Trends in Capital Markets 2008 What
sort of Capital Markets will we see in 2009? Hopefully more
active ones than 2008. A nod in that direction may be the
surprisingly active markets we’ve seen during the last 2 months
of the year. Though markets are not at their boom time levels,
there has been real activity, “real” being a relative term,
consisting of both debt and equity offerings, and even a few
IPOs. Factors driving this include market conditions, regulatory
factors and a seemingly omnipresent government. If this continues
into 2009, we should be in for an interesting year. Read more
Mind the Gap: Risks Bridged by Contingent Value Rights M&A is being hit from all sides by these uncertain times. In this type of downturn, buyers look for firesale
prices, while cash-hungry sellers want the greater payout (and
affirmation) that a higher price conveys. Like the hesitant heir
forced to pawn his grandmother’s jewels, this puts the seller in
an awkward position. It also creates difficult-to-bridge gaps with the
buyer, who has little motivation to offer a higher price. This
can lead to a prolonged freeze in the markets, until one side or the
other blinks, thereby slowing asset purchases and M&A in general. To
the rescue rides the prosaic yet road-tested device, the Contingent
Value Right (CVR). Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In the Know Lawyer As
2008 comes to a close, market activity continued at a level not usual
for a holiday week. New M&A filings had a particularly global take
and the SEC issued important guidelines and orders. For more specifics
on the information affecting the business law environment, see the
Related Resources. Read more
Driving to the Rescue: GMAC Gets Fed Oversight and Funding In
the last week GMAC has become a bank holding company, recipient of
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) funds and new equity from its
holders.
Read more
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Activist Shareholders, Sophisticed Investor Risk, Bankruptcy, Debt Offerings
December 23, 2008
Accredited Investors, Attention: Madoff Shows Your Weakness Is the market about to go deeper into its freeze, courtesy of not one,
but two scandals? With supposedly sophisticated investors twice-burned
by recent events, they seem to be short on legal protection, as well as
confidence (and possibly cash, too). While certain legal statuses
presume them “sophisticated,” events may have exposed how little these
“emperors” are clothed and how the legal status itself may be
inadequate. Both regulators and investors will react – leading one
toward the risk of over-regulation and the other toward the opposite
risk of complete avoidance of investments. These may seem extreme, but
so are the times. What remains to be seen is whether exposed investors
grow merely shy or downright phobic. Read more
Beware Activist Shareholders: Taking Over Companies Current conditions encourage activist shareholders to get a lot more
active. This is true for those who are suitors, hostile and otherwise,
emboldened by our equity-weakening markets. It’s also true for those
who are already shareholders, encouraged to become suddenly more vocal
by our management-battering recession. These shareholders are doing so
through several separate initiatives, with dry-sounding names like
“special shareholder meetings” and “cumulative voting standards.” In
fact they are anything but dry, geared to prying company control away
from management. Read more
Internet at Risk: Preparing for President Obama The Obama campaign promised to focus on many issues that matter to your
deals and/or disclosures. We at Westlaw Business see it as our job to
focus on these along with you. Previously, we’ve covered issues such
as auto industry regulation and credit market regulation (see Related
Resources). This is the final article in the Preparing for Obama
series. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In the Know Lawyer The penultimate week of 2008 saw a few
interesting events. Notable bankruptcy proceedings, the change of
heart of a CPP participant, and the termination of a deal involving
Warren Buffett. For more specifics on the deals affecting the business
law environment please, see Related Resources. Read more
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Madoff Risk; Soured PE Deals; M&A Drops; Tax Reincorporations; Activist Shareholders
December 18, 2008
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Madoff Made-Off: Waiting for the U.S. Company Shoe to Drop?
With the Madoff Securities $50 billion Ponzi scheme touching so many
investors, we at Westlaw Business remain shocked. Not for the reason
everyone else is, though – our shock derives from the seeming
insulation of U.S. financial institutions and operating businesses from
all this. Not a single U.S. bank or public company has (yet) disclosed
any exposure to Madoff directly or to affiliated funds. Did prudence
suddenly grip this group, the same group with self-destructive
penchants for complex securitizations and credit default swaps? Read more
Lots of Fiduciary Risk: Overleveraged Private Equity Deals Sour
“Private equity-led LBO” might seem
the catchphrase of a bygone era, spoken in the cold, whispered tones
used only by historians and obituary writers. However, their
issues are actually hot … some might even stay steaming.
Private equity funds and their portfolio companies are in a tight
squeeze, pinned between the triple pincers of conflict-ridden
governance duties, overleveraged capital structures and cash-depleting
recessionary conditions. In sum, they are in for a bumpy and
litigation-driven ride. Read more
M&A to Drop?: Antitrust Policy and Pres. Obama Westlaw
Business’s Presidential Preparation series moves onto another
high profile issue on the incoming administration’s agenda
– antitrust. This is issue six of a recurring series intended to
keep you up to date and informed on the new legal environment and
related disclosure needs likely to unfold under President-Elect Obama.
Make sure to view our earlier editions on: climate change, the auto
crisis, health care, labor relations and credit market regulation. Read more
Vacating a Tax Haven: Bermuda Triangle, No More
Are Caribbean-based American companies at long last vacating their tax
haven base? Some are, but not to bring their profits back Stateside.
Instead, they seem intent on moving them even further abroad, all the
way to that paradigm of havens, Switzerland. In a series of moves,
several company boards have recently approved re-incorporations from
Bermuda or the Cayman Islands to Switzerland. These seem to be driven
not only by year-end pressures, but the loftier issues of presidential
politics. How this plays in Peoria (or other places about to be
populated by those from Illinois) remains to be seen. Read more
Trendspotting: Activist Shareholders and Other Timely Disclosures
Activist Shareholders: Love Thy Enemy…or Hold Your Enemy Close
Corporate Governance: Tighter Shareholder Proposal Rules
Unwinding Private Equity: Paying Shareholders at BCE
Dour Times: Belt Tightening at U.S. Icons
Executive Compensation: Talented Leaders for Tough Times
Read more
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IPOs and Offerings; Loan Covenants; Blank Check Preferred; Muni Bonds
December 16, 2008
Loan Terms Today: Covenants, Defaults, and the Tribune's Lessons
If loan spigots at banks were opened wide today,
would borrowers be ready.... or are they already drowning? With all
eyes on the revival of the
banking markets, the shape in which corporate borrowers find themselves
seems to escape everyone's gaze. However, borrowers today, the
now-bankrupt Tribune Co. not least among them, provide a cautionary
tale, and lenders avert eyes at their own risk. This is ever-more
important as, even in this environment, companies are still managing to
arrange new loans; though savvy lenders are certainly exacting higher
prices, both financial and contractual. Read more
Blank Check Preferred: A Risky Trap, Laid by TARP?
Put yourself in the shoes of Treasury: concerns
of imminent collapse swirl around the global financial system, a war
chest of $700 billion, and a mandate to salvage the system by handing
the cash over to banks with immense urgency. How to do all of
this in less time than it typically takes to get a bank loan
approved? Siemens-style handovers of cash briefcases are out of
the question, as is Soviet-style forced-medicine-taking. To your
rescue comes the imperfect workhorse of the corporate lawyer, blank
check preferred stock. However, it too has its own issues in tow making
CPPs full impact still unclear. Read more
IPOs and Other Offerings: A Northern Tale Hockey Night in Canada
may seem an all-too tempting distraction from the financial tempest
outside, but the spectacle off the ice is more interesting than you
might think. For some time, Canadian capital markets have
sent signals of the slowing state of the Canadian financial
industry. The Bank of Canada’s recent declaration
of a Canadian recession provides a bracing reminder of this. However, the
markets also show surprising levels of activity; while the markets are
slower, they are far from stopped. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In the Know Lawyer
With only two weeks left to go in the year, you
might have expected to see a decline in significant events, but
apparently the law takes no holidays. Nonetheless, we wish we had
some better news to give you, but it was a tough week. It came replete
with defunct M&A, fraud and bankruptcy. For more specifics on the deals
affecting the business law environment please, see Related Resources. Read more
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Counterparty Risk, Hedge Fund Regulation, Automotive M&A, Debt Forbearance, Global Regulation
December 11, 2008
Counterparty Risk: Lost in the Fog of Bankruptcy
By the time companies end up in bankruptcy, any pretense of orderliness
has dissipated and the school cafeteria free-for-all begins.
Counterparty bankruptcy has always been a theoretical business risk,
but today's realities have brought the free-for-all to life. Dressed
up in its best legal robes, the process appears orderly, with courts
trying to impose what structure they can. However, companies are now
openly worried about counterparty bankruptcy, for good reason - and the
Lehman bankruptcy provides some telling lessons. Read more
Lawyers Start Your Engines: M&A in the Auto Industry
The Big 3 auto companies are in for a wild ride... and riding "shotgun"
will come the assortment of companies that surrounds them. Among these
are their dealerships, parts suppliers and finance companies.
Look for them to enter a process that smacks of restructuring or even
bankruptcy, complete with asset sales, terminations and debt
restructurings. Guided by experiences of crises
past, lawyers should be able to help and guide amidst the car-nage
(apologies, we couldn't resist). Each of the auto-parts, dealers and
finance companies will react differently... but react they must.
Read more
Trendspotting: Debt Forbearance, Total Return Swaps and other Timely Disclosures Forbearance, a sign of the Times: Simmons buys some Rest
Corporate Governance: Shareholder Proposal at Becton Dickinson & Co.
Total Return Swaps: Legg Mason shifts Risk
TARP Executive Compensation: Greene County Bancorp
Reviving Securitization?: Subprime auto notes from AFS Sensub Read more
Global Finance, Meet your Regulators: Hedge Funds, Short Sales, and Markets The International Financial Crisis of 2008 will remain the matter of
debate for years. However, the international regulatory community is
not sitting still and is now looking to get ahead of the crisis by
renewing the regulatory environment. In recognition of the
international nature of these transactions and the global scope of the
players, global regulators are now banding together. This led to a
recent conference of these regulators under the aegis of the
International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), the
worldwide financial market regulatory consortium. Read more
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Law Firm Opportunities; Debt Restructuring; Repricing Options; Credit Ratings
December 9, 2008
Offerings Create Law Firm Opportunity: Capital Markets Surge Securities markets were busier in November than
they have been for some time. In fact,
while securities markets are reputed to be on life support, they appear to have
made a pretty robust recovery. With all of this activity, there must be busy
lawyers somewhere. We at Westlaw Business set out to take a look at who’s doing
the work and what’s driving the once dormant capital markets back to life. Read more
Debt Restructuring: Litigation Risk and Loan Modification
Does an old-fashioned contractual promise still
count when the U.S economy rests on undoing it? While the law would
normally hold contractual rights to be sacrosanct, when it comes to
rescuing us all from financial mayhem, settled law becomes suddenly
unsettled. The problem? Unsustainable mortgage loan terms
need restructuring, but those attempting to undo these mortgages
don't appear to own them. These attempts to alter someone
else's contract rights call into question some rather fundamental
questions of property law, potentially affecting a broad range of debt
contracts, not only mortgage related. Read more
Backdating 2: Rethinking your Options
With equity prices depressed, how do companies ensure employee
motivation yet avoid the backdating scandals of years past?
Equity is a key component, but a ginger touch is needed - both with
shareholders and with employees who have regarded stakes in
their employers as a reservoir of value. Raising employee incentives
during down times is the goal, ideally achieved in ways that don’t raise
the lawsuit motivations of their shareholders (or the SEC). What
remains to be seen over the course of proxy season; can companies keep
everyone happy. Read more
Credit Markets Regulation: Preparing for President Obama
It's not like the financial industry needs a new president to signal the need for regulatory changes - the need
couldn’t be more glaring. Many areas are likely to be
touched, including regulation of the overall financial system, the
banking system, capital adequacy, credit ratings and credit default
swaps – to name but a few. Some of the regulation has begun
already in both the housing and financial markets. Companies
appear to be getting ready for all of this new regulation and have
begun to warn their investors of the potential
impacts in their disclosures. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer
Tumultuous market conditions have continued to
roil markets since our last deals briefing. The following represents
the most piquant and pressing of the deals and events emerging from the
previous week. Further insight to each deal is provided by the links to
recent disclosures and filings in Related Resources. Read more
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Surging Equity Offerings; Currency Risks; Private Equity Buying Banks; Exec Comp
December 4, 2008
Surging Securities Markets: No More Singing the Blues? Are
the securities markets singing the blues or singing a different tune?
Once you let the facts as to November offering activity speak (or sing)
for themselves, things sound quite different. This would be
noteworthy at any time, but considered in light of the simultaneous
panic over Citigroup's near-demise, and the high note seems even higher.
Read more
Private Equity Fingers in TARP's Pie: GMAC the Bank
Are the Fed and Treasury ready to hand over piles
of taxpayers' hard earned cash to private equity funds? While
they're at it, are they also prepared to dole money out to
industrial companies? GM Acceptance Corp (GMAC, GM's once-mighty
financing arm) will provide quite the test of both points, as it
recently announced an application for Bank Holding Company (BHC) status
and a related move for Treasury's CPP funding. Read more
Executive Compensation: Screws are Tightening
With the Teamsters riding at the government's side, do high
levels of executive compensation at financial companies stand a chance?
In what may be the beginning of the Revenge of the Little Guy (thinking
of "Big Labor" as representatives of the little guy), executive
compensation is under shareholder scrutiny as never before. In
particular, the Teamsters have taken the issue of executive compensation at Treasury-funded banks even further than has the
Treasury itself, insisting on greater comp controls at one of their
portfolio banks. In light of policy indications from the
incoming administration and traditional "say on
pay" proposals making their way toward proxy season, we at
Westlaw Business expect to see even more change to executive compensation at companies of all stripes. Read more
Trendspotting: Currency Risk, Social Responsiblity and other Timely Disclosures Currency
Exposure Disclosures: Swinging Dollar is the Latest Risk
Corporate Social Responsibility: Taking a Bite Out of Apple
New Executive Hires: Riding to the Rescue
New SEC Rule: Mutual Funds, Speaking in Plain English
Shareholder Proposal: Is Patriotism a Corporate Duty
Read more
Duty to Disclose: Airing your Subprime Litigation
There's nothing like a bloodbath (financial, that is) to encourage its
victims to lay blame. Massive recriminations seem set to result from
losses due to current market conditions. In the virtuous circle of
recrimination and disclosure, those being blamed (if the blame is steep
enough) must disclose this. Litigation disclosures seem set to follow. Read more
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Offering Risks; Terrorism Disclosures; Poison Pills; Financial Regulation; Labor Relations
December 2, 2008
Offering Risks: Paying for Material Mis-Statements
Do securities offerings impose great costs from risks of material
mis-statement or is this fear just mis-stated? These risks
are all too real, as indicated by recent filings that point to the
difficult dance conducted by offerors (and their underwriters) in the
course of any securities offering. On the one hand, the purveyors
of securities feel they must offer warm, fuzzy, reassuring statements
to investors in the course of their offerings. However, these often run
headlong into securities laws specifically designed to protect
investors from mis-leading statements and as securities
plaintiffs sue around these issues, this dance is shown to be a
difficult one indeed. Read more
Trendspotting: Top Timely Disclosures This is a special Tuesday edition of Trendspotting because we missed
the
chance to update you due to the Thanksgiving holiday. To stay on top of
the latest trends, look for our regular Trendspotting column each
Thursday.
Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-The-Know Lawyer Though Thanksgiving fans may have expected a
quieter environment over the holiday-shortened week in the U.S., it was
anything but quiet. The markets continued their wild ride since our
last events briefing, and legal and regulatory issues drove
several major events over this time period. Below are some of the more relevant happenings
along with disclosures and filings in our Related Resources. Read more
Preparing for President Obama: Labor Relations
Westlaw
Business’s Presidential Preparation series moves onto another
high profile issue on the incoming administration’s agenda
– labor relations. This is issue four of a recurring series
intended to keep you up to date and informed on the new legal
environment and related disclosure needs likely to unfold under
President-Elect Obama. Make sure to view our earlier editions on:
climate change, the auto crisis, and health care. Read more
Regulation Financial Services: New Market Watchdogs What
will the U.S. financial world’s future regulator look like?
A lot like the SEC, but a brighter, shinier version of it, if the
vision of Chairman Cox is carried through. As SEC Chairman Cox
prepares to leave his post, he has weighed in more than once on this
fundamental question, calling for a reinvigorated financial services
regulator, based largely on the current SEC model. However,
he’s also called for at least 2 innovations: consolidation of the
regulators that touch the financial markets and increased legislation
to fill in the cracks in existing regulatory oversight. Read more
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Activist Shareholders, Dilutive Equity, Ticker Changes, Health Care
November 25, 2008
Activist Shareholders: Change About to Sweep Proxy Season
Shareholder relations look set to get tougher in
our reborn era of hostile M&A. Between the rock-filled
waters of the economic downturn, the shark-filled waters of
collapsed equity markets, and the emerging hostile M&A activity,
navigating
shareholder/board relations has become far more fraught.
Board-driven bylaw changes abound, particularly highlighted in a rush
of disclosures in recent days. Two things seem to be driving this
- recent case decisions and SEC rule changes. All told their
impact: tightening the screws on activist shareholders and making them
‘fess up to their motives. Read more
Dilutive Equity: Should Banks take Treasury Money? Did
the big banks make a big mistake by taking CPP funds? To
judge from the protestations of banks opting out of the program, you
would
think so. At the same time, firms continue to line up for the (almost)
free money from the US Treasury. Perhaps only time will tell who is
making the right decision. Read more
Keeping Equities Ticking: Big Changes to Tickers Underway
Are the equity markets about to get a bit more
confusing? It depends on your point of view. In the midst of the market
turmoil, change has been the buzzword and as we all know it
hasn’t always proven to be a good thing. Change to ticker symbols
is coming from an unexpected quarter. Earlier this month, the SEC
approved a National Market System Plan for Selection and Reservation of
Securities Symbols, which could prove to be a huge change in the way
ticker symbols are assigned. Are we on the verge of seeing infamous
tickers like Citi's C disappear? Probably not (assuming Citi survives),
but the newest SEC rule will establish what they believe will be a more
simplified process for reserving, selecting and allocating tickers.
Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer
Since our last events briefing significant headwinds from the credit
markets have reappeared throughout the economy. Markets worldwide
surged and plunged (mostly plunged it seemed) as bailouts were given to
some and denied to
others. The only sure thing: volatility and uncertainty have
returned with a vengeance. The following is a breakdown and analysis of
the week's most significant events. Read more
Preparing for President Obama: Health Care Primer Are health care issues about to rise to the top
of every company's list of risk factors? A survey by Westlaw Business of the
issues facing the new Obama administration might make you answer that with a
strong affirmative. Issues start with
those affecting companies in general (who's going to pay what and how). Perhaps
less obvious, they also include a range of issues facing those who supply or
specialize in the health-related areas. Read more
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Poison Pills, Private Equity Risk, Appeasing the Bankers
November 20, 2008
Sharks in the Water: Are Poison Pills Back in Vogue?
With stock prices so cheap, can companies withstand a feared rush of
hostile M&A? A gleam in the eye during the frothy, high-priced days
of yesteryear, hostile M&A is back, and so are the fears of it, in
even bigger ways. To counter this, companies are rushing to acquire
defensive-wear against these hostile attempts, including poison pills
and staggered boards, among others. Read more
PE Funds on the hook: Are Funds at Risk Due to Troubled Holdings?
Are PE funds legally on the hook for portfolio companies they once
coveted, bought and even guaranteed? This issue is coming before
bankruptcy and other courts more frequently in the current
environment. It's likely to get even more “air time”
before this round of recessionary activity is over. Many suspect
that we're only now seeing the tip of the iceberg on PE deals gone sour. Read more
Appeasing the Bankers: How Far Will Companies Go to Protect M&A Financing? How far will LBO targets go to appease the banks
funding their deals? Quite far, to judging from the churn
we’re seeing around several recent deals. Fear of bank withdrawal
from funding commitments has led to surprising steps by all parties
with inevitable conflicts with shareholder interests in the
process. While long term shareholder interest seems to require doing
whatever it takes to get these deals done, issues swirl around the
level of shareholder sacrifice in the interim. Read more
Trendspotting: Tough Times, Proxies, and Other Top Trends
Automakers at the Brink: Disclosures Reflect Magnitude of Problems
Sign of the Times: Pepsi Announces Restructuring Initiative
Sign of the Times: KLA-Tenecor Announces Job Eliminations
Anticipating Proxy Season: Companies Revise Rules for Shareholder Proposals
Avoiding a Leadership Void: Symantec Moves Quickly to Replace CEO Read more
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Mark-to-Market Litigation; Credit Default Swaps; Hostile M&A; Auto Crisis, Banking Deals
November 18, 2008
Counterparty Risk, No More: Regulating Credit Default Swaps
Is stifling regulation about to hit the Credit Default Swap (CDS) market? Stifling may be in the eye of the stifled, as any amount of structure and regulation might be considered overwhelming for a market that has gotten away with none for too long. Laser focus is now being applied to the systemic dangers presented by this market, due to the counterparty risk in its very fabric.
Read more
Legal Lens on the Auto Crisis: Preparing for Pres. Obama
Might GM be the next Lehman Brothers, with the massive legal and bankruptcy issues that implies? Auto industry executives are now facing a crisis that must make them almost envy the financial institutions (and there aren’t many companies that would say that). Interestingly, they are confronted with a structural crisis that’s as much regulatory as it is financial, mandating solutions on both these sides as well.
Read more
Litigating Mark-to-Market: $350 Million tiff, Sumitomo-Lehman
Does Mark to Market valuation hold up under litigation? Perhaps not, says the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York. In a bold move relating to a $350 million contract with Lehman Brothers, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (SMBC) got its hand slapped by the court when it attempted to seize the collateral of its now-bankrupt counterparty. The court affirmed that even in today’s era of unprecedented markets, the bankruptcy automatic stay remains in effect to protect the bankrupt’s estate.
Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer
Tumultuous market conditions and unprecedented events have continued to unfold since our last deals briefing. The following represents the most piquant and pressing of the deals emerging in the economy. Further insight to each deal is provided by the links to recent disclosures and filings in the Related Resources Bar.
Read more
Life and Debt: Manulife Unfreezes Credit in Canada
Are Canadian credit conditions in a thaw? Fast moving credit markets had impacted Canadian financial service firms, hampering them in parallel with their U.S. counterparts. However, Canadian public and private sector officials have not remained inactive. While much of the world’s attention is focused on Washington and Wall Street, there’s been significant movement in Ottawa and on Bay Street, as well.
Read more
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Saving the Banks, Shareholder Access, Credit Crisis, SEC Shrinks
November 13, 2008
Saving the Big Banks: Amex, Goldman and Bank Holdco Conversions
Is the stampeding herd running toward bank holding company status escaping danger, or simply running headlong into its next set of problems? Pardon our mixing of metaphors, but otherwise stated, is being a Bank Holding Company (BHC) the cure-all it’s positioned as? Bank holding company (BHC) status does promise greater access to funding, better capitalization and tighter regulation.
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Trendspotting: Shareholders, Governance and Other Top Trends
Shareholder Access Changes: Host Hotels leads a Host of Companies
DIPping into Finance: Circuit City Accesses Funds
Government Funding, Redux: GE Accesses New Government Guarantees
Corporate Governance Advanced: Boeing Director Ejects
Executive Compensation: Easton Bell Exercises its Rights to New Hires
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Credit Crisis, Round 2: Student Finance Debacle
Is the next wave of the Credit Crisis about to roll in, around student loan finance? We wouldn't state things that strongly, but this form of lending suffers from many of the ills of the mortgage industry. Among them: predatory practices, conflict-ridden relationships and dubious marketing techniques, all topped, until recently, with a healthy dollop of securitization as a primary financing route. A mini-mortgage mess in the waiting?
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Shrinking the SEC?: Departing Leaders, Disappearing Jurisdiction
Is the SEC as we know it about to disappear? There are two layers to this question. The SEC is about to go through the sort of leadership switch characteristic of a change of administration. The recently announced departure of John White (Director of Corporate Finance) and the inevitable departure of Chairman Chris Cox are emblematic. More fundamentally, though, is the SEC at the end of its glory days?
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TARP Law Firms, Climate Change, Mark to Market, IP
November 11, 2008
Lemonade out of Lemons: Law Firms helping TARP
With Treasury now intent on spending our way out of the financial crisis, law firms stand at the ready to help. Several prominent law firms have already signed on. Their goal: assisting the financial community out of its morass and into a better-funded future. Treasury’s program has an application deadline of Nov. 14th (for public banks) and an as-yet unannounced deadline for private banks.
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Litigation Risk: Impacts of Mark to Market
In an environment rife with concern over litigation, does mark-to-market accounting work? This question matters greatly to the “credit crisis,” as financial pictures based on mark-to-market standards drive much of the turmoil (as well as M&A and equity investments) currently underway. Further, complex mark-to-market accounting has oft-hidden impacts.
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Preparing for Pres.Obama: Your Climate Change Primer
The Obama campaign promised to focus on many issues that matter to your deals and/or disclosures. We at Westlaw Business see it as our job to focus on these along with you. Thus, we are launching a series of weekly Presidential Preparation briefings, each focused on current trends around an issue of concern. This week: Climate Change.
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Disclose your Eroding I.P.: Process Patents No More?
Is I.P. uncertainty ramping up, just as credit market uncertainty is abating? For the many companies with proprietary business methods, the answer may be “Yes”. If the patent community chatter is any indication, a recent decision regarding “Business Method” patents (aka Process Patents), seems set to impact a wide range of industries. This likely requires adjustments to core business strategy…and timely disclosure.
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Significant Events Briefing: Lawyers in the Know
Tumultuous market conditions and unprecedented events have continued to unfold since our last deals briefing. The following represents the most piquant and pressing of the deals emerging in the economy. Further insight to each deal is provided by the links to recent disclosures and filings in the Related Resources Bar.
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Funding Risk, Market Outs, Employee Retention, Health Regulation
November 6, 2008
Funding Risk: Making Bank Commitments Stick
How ironclad are bank funding commitment letters, and what may a bank do (or assert) to get out of them? These issues lay at the heart of a series of attempted “do-overs” by banks of deals they had committed to during the go-go days of early 2007. These, too, have been affected by the credit freeze, as banks in capital conservation mode look to end commitments still sitting in queue. Implications stretch far beyond private equity-led LBOs and mandate careful attention to closing conditions and contractual “outs” in whatever financings are arranged today.
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Out Clauses: M&A Going Defunct
Are contractual “out clauses” being used…or abused? The level of terminated M&A activity may provide some clue. There have been approximately 134 mergers withdrawn in October alone, some with merger agreements actually signed. In many cases, the deal never got that far and was terminated mid-negotiation (or mid-hostile process). The withdrawals seem due to terrible market conditions. However, with “market outs” and “credit outs” not to be found in every agreement, these conditions are not always the stated reason for the termination.
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Trendspotting: Post-Election, Top 5 Disclosures
With the recent election of President-Elect Barack Obama and a strengthened Democratic presence in Congress along with that, we at Westlaw Business expect to see certain trends manifest. In fact, these are not completely new. Several of them are an acceleration of trends already underway, as seen from recent disclosures.
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Layoffs and Retention: Downmarket Employment
How do you deal with tough employment issues during an economic downturn? Recent disclosures provide a clue. Some companies are positioning themselves for the downturn by insulating their operations, restructuring, and entering into mergers, each typically accompanied by agreements with employee retention plans and renegotiated employment agreements with key executives and officers.
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In case you missed it…
The November 4th edition of Westlaw Business Currents Extra covered important industry issues such as pricing risk, market standards, credit rating reform and customer bankruptcy. In case you missed any of these articles, simply click on the title below.
Pricing Risk in Contracts: Credit Default Swamps…More Central?
Market Standards for Recapitalizations?: U.S. Banks get Funded
Credit Rating Reform: Is Reliance Ending in North America?
Key Customer Bankruptcy: Vendors Pursue Lehman Brothers
Significant Deals Briefing: Lawyers In the Know
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Pricing Risk, Market Standards, Credit Rating Reform, Customer Bankruptcy
November 4, 2008
Pricing Risk in Contracts: Credit Default Swamps…More Central?
Are credit default swaps (CDS) about to move to center stage for corporations? This issue is not a theoretical one, as use of CDS and related pricing has spread to unforeseen corners, even in seemingly “vanilla” contracts. This emerging trend has seen CDSs used both for risk pricing (e.g., interest rates) and its better-known cousin, risk mitigation (aka hedging). Its use could even spread to other contracts as the markets thaw.
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Market Standards for Recapitalizations?: U.S. Banks get Funded
What terms and conditions should a $130 billion recapitalization (and counting) get? As the nation’s leading financial institutions take in unprecedented financing from the U.S. Treasury, this seems a narrow question, limited to the financial service sector…but it’s not. These agreements matter to the economy overall, both in terms of those things included in the agreements and those explicitly not included.
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Credit Rating Reform: Is Reliance Ending in North America?
Is reliance on credit ratings due to become one of the casualties of the financial market crisis? That is a stretch. However, it’s no longer unthinkable, given the central role played by Credit Ratings Agencies during recent frothy markets. These agencies had a central role, not well publicized, in the creation and marketing of many of the most controversial instruments and entities.
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Key Customer Bankruptcy: Vendors Pursue Lehman Brothers
What do you do when a big customer goes bankrupt? It’s a question much on the mind of businesses these days. While they themselves may not be at risk, many a company does worry as to whether they must face bankruptcy-related problems from their customers. Lehman Brothers may serve as the archetype of bankrupt customer, but they are far from the only company whose vendors have begun to worry.
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Significant Deals Briefing: Lawyers In the Know
Barclays/Sovereign Investments
CPP Participants
PNC Financial Services/ National City
Embarq Corp/ Centurytel, Inc.
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SPECIAL REPORT: Recapitalizations and Banks
November 3, 2008
Westlaw Business Currents Extra is publishing this Special Report to provide insight into the recent disclosure of the Securities Purchase Agreements entered into between the United States Treasury Department and nine of the largest financial institutions.
Market Standards for Recapitalizations?: U.S. Banks get Funded
What terms and conditions should a $130 billion recapitalization (and counting) get? As the nation’s leading financial institutions take in unprecedented financing from the U.S. Treasury, this seems a narrow question, limited to the financial service sector…but it’s not. These agreements matter to the economy overall, both in terms of those things included in the agreements and those explicitly not included.
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In case you missed it…
The October 30th edition of Westlaw Business Currents Extra covered such hot issues as hedge funds, shareholder lawsuits, big M&A and executive compensation, as well as the crisis scorecard and the top 5 timely disclosures. In case you missed any of these articles, simply click on the title below.
Up-ending Big M&A: Shareholder Risk to Wachovia and Merrill Deals
Fraudulent Misrepresentation: Hedge Funds Beware
Self-Dealing during the Crisis: On the Fly Changes Cause Regulator Scramble
Activist Shareholders: You Have Friends in North Dakota
Trendspotting: Top 5 Timely Disclosures
October Scorecard: Credit Crisis Updates
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Hedge Funds, Shareholder Lawsuits, Big M&A and Exec Comp
October 30, 2008
Up-ending Big M&A: Shareholder Risk to Wachovia and Merrill Deals
It’s often said that it isn’t wise to second-guess a decision that you’ve already made. Tell that to the shareholders of Wachovia and Merrill Lynch who may be questioning the wisdom of the planned mergers with Wells Fargo and Bank of America. Shareholder questions percolate around both transactions, with 2 common themes: (a) was the Board’s fiduciary duty fulfilled? and (b) are these deals good for shareholders in light of the government’s bailout financing plans, a subsequent event of not small consequence? Given that, in deals of this type, shareholders can always take a “belt and suspenders” approach to these questions – shareholder litigation and shareholder approval, aka sue and vote –both routes need to be considered.
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Fraudulent Misrepresentation: Hedge Funds Beware
Are hedge funds really unregulated or do they just think they are? The SEC certainly doesn’t think they’re above the law, especially when it comes to the fundraising (and investor retention) efforts that are the fundamental of all funds. The importance of this question has only grown.
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Self-Dealing during the Crisis: On the Fly Changes Cause Regulator Scramble
In the rush to unfreeze credit markets, are the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department creating the institutional and legal battles of the future? The federal regulatory agencies reacting to market turmoil, sometimes issue regulations counter to existing regulations at other agencies. Some companies, finding themselves caught at the intersection of these contradictory regulations, must seek exemptive relief. In other cases, the regulators must issue temporary regulations in rushed conditions.
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Activist Shareholders: You Have Friends in North Dakota
Is North Dakota the new Delaware? A particularly shareholder-friendly environment has bloomed amidst the plains of North Dakota. While Delaware takes a characteristically business-friendly approach, thus encouraging incorporations within its jurisdiction, North Dakota has gone to another extreme. The state is looking to woo shareholders (activist and otherwise) to set up or move their portfolio businesses to the shareholder-friendly environs of the Midwest.
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Trendspotting: Top 5 Timely Disclosures
Credit and Commodity Crises: Steel Polished or Rusted?
Executive Compensation Structure: Aligning Company Interests
Dour Times: Luxury Retailers Not Immune
Capital Purchase Program: Reviving the Banks
Commercial Paper Unfreeze: Alternative Energy gets a jolt
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October Scorecard: Credit Crisis Updates
• Tax experts speculate that PNC stands to gain billions in tax relief from their merger with National City due to a September tax benefit ruling by the IRS. (October 30)
• Financial data shows the US economy shrank at a rate of 0.3% during the third quarter. (October 30)
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Credit Default Risk; Events of Default; Commercial Paper
October 28, 2008
Credit Default Swaps and Risk: Cracking the CDS Market
Congressional hearings are now underway on Capital Hill and finger-pointing has become the sport of the week. In the midst of these games, one of the hotly debated questions is the financial market’s need for reform, particularly that of the credit default swap (CDS). This market is often described as “unregulated” and implied to be a wild west. However, was the CDS market, with its inherent counterparty risk, really as unknown and its impact as unpredictable as all the public denials might indicate?
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Financing Advice: Can the Fed Unfreeze Commercial Paper?
Unfreezing iced-over credit conditions has led the government to step into many corners of once-sacred private sector credit markets. As is well-known, while financial service businesses were the earliest to suffer from the credit freeze, they were soon joined by non-financial businesses as well. Perhaps less well-known is that, with those same financial companies the early beneficiaries of government largesse, other, non-financial companies couldn’t be far behind. Apparently not, as one of the newest areas of government involvement is the commercial paper (CP) market.
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Events of Default: Is the Bankruptcy Provision Gutted?
What are bankruptcy-related Event of Default provisions (and related remedies) worth? Not much these days, to judge from the non-protection of multiple counterparties to Lehman Brothers entities in the aftermath of the Lehman bankruptcy. Looking at the unfolding of these events, it becomes clear that a counterparty may have to do an awful lot to get the benefit of provisions that are meant to address bankruptcy-related events of default.
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Significant Deals Briefing: Required Reading for the In-the-Know…
Revised M&A Deal: Lehman Sale of Neuberger Berman
Revised Equity Deal: Morgan Stanley/Mitsubishi UFJ Group
Investment Deal: GE/Berkshire Hathaway
Investment Deal: Bunco Santander/Sovereign
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SEC-CFTC Merger?
SEC Chairman Christopher Cox recently disclosed his strong support for merging the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The CFTC is an independent agency that regulates US futures and options markets. Chairman Cox declared his support for regulatory consolidation at the October 23, 2008 hearing, “The Financial Crisis and the Role of Federal Regulators” held by the Congressional Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
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Counterparty Risk, Investor Batphone, Restricted Credit, Short Selling
October 23, 2008
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Counterparty Risk: Securities Lending Transactions
Like so many other lines of business, Securities Lending should no longer be seen as the innocent money-maker it was once seen as. Thanks to the Lehman bankruptcy and asset sale to Barclays for clarifying that. As of a recent filing with the Bankruptcy courts, a set of issues now ripples through the legal world focused on counterparty risk at the heart of securities lending.
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Ultimate Information Rights: The Investor’s Batphone
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway seems to have lined up the ultimate information right in his recent investments into each of GE and Goldman Sachs. In particular, obscured by the euphoria around the mere fact of his investments, is what we might call Berkshire’s “batphone provision”.
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Trendspotting: Top 5 Timely Disclosures
Federal investigators have recently become quite busy investigating potential malfeasance during the recent financial boomtimes…but you wouldn’t necessarily know it from company disclosures. While the investigations were widely-reported, few filers have disclosed federal investigations related to their recent and sudden collapses.
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October Scorecard: Credit Crisis Updates
Former Chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan, appearing before a US House Committee, announced that he was stunned by the collapse of the US credit markets, but he predicted that in the long run, we will have a far superior financial system. (October 23).
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MAC Clauses, Credit Terms, Disclosure Standards
October 21, 2008
Material Adverse Effect: How Material Adversity causes Material Changes in M&A
A set of plagues, almost Biblical in proportion, seems to have descended all at once: Market-level shocks, persistent fears of war and terrorism, industry slowdowns, frozen credit conditions, changing financial reporting standards… to name but a few.
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Duty to Disclose: How to talk about Risk without Spooking investors
Disclosure decisions are the purview of a Company’s Board of Directors, assisted by their executives. These decisions are often complex exercises of judgment, as directors walk a tightrope between alerting investors to risks, without spooking them right out of their shareholdings.
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Operating Companies and the Credit Crisis: Navigating the Cold, Dark Waters
The effects of the Credit Crisis on operating companies continue to manifest themselves in unexpected ways. Credit problems, once thought to afflict only banks and insurers, now leech into the “real economy.” Companies have implemented various coping strategies, including renegotiating terms on existing credit facilities and drawing down pre-existing revolvers.
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Disclosing the Perfect Storm in Commodities: Credit and Commodity Crises in Canada
Material Change has hit natural resource companies, at least if Canadian public company disclosures are any guide. A steady stream of Press Releases, recently filed under the SEDAR electronic filing system by Canadian mining and natural resources companies, portray trouble on two fronts: contracting credit markets and slumping commodities prices.
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Westlaw Business Currents Extra Reader Survey
In an effort to better ascertain what type of news is most valuable to you during the course of your business day, we have compiled a very brief survey focusing on Westlaw Business Currents Extra – The legal angle of the credit crisis. The survey is less than ten questions and should take no more than five minutes to complete. Participation in this survey will give you the unique opportunity to inform the future of this publication and its content.
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Acquisition Risks, Bank Recap's, and Crisis Scorecard
October 16, 2008
Legal Risk in Banking Consolidation: Is Wells Fargo a Hero?
Wells Fargo is double dipping…and in so doing is driving up its risk profile. While its takeover of Wachovia is getting all the attention, it actually concurrently released news of 2 bank acquisitions: Wachovia and a small regional Texas bank, Century Bankshares. Both merger agreements were filed on October 10th. The mind reels at how busy all these legal teams have been…The common filing date invites comparison.
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A Bird-in-Hand: Morgan Stanley takes Mitsubishi’s Money
Morgan Stanley clearly subscribes to the bird-in-hand school of thought. Its financing from MUFG has gotten markedly more expensive in the longer term…but at least it’s still there. This has been the source of great relief to a market that had begun to fear the worst. MS is moving forward with this more expensive MUFG financing, even though the U.S. government has announced plans to invest $10 billion in Morgan Stanley (as part of its broader banking sector recapitalization), apparently at less expensive terms.
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October Scorecard: Credit Crisis Updates
• EU and US leaders agree to meet over the weekend to begin planning for a global summit to grapple with the financial crisis. (October 16)
• Southeast Asian governments, with the support of $10 billion from the World Bank, agreed to help rescue struggling banks in the region. (October 15)
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Counterparty Risk, CDS Disclosures, Legal Opinions, Canadian M&A
October 14, 2008
Counter-Party Risk: Paying the Price for Bank Failure
Derivatives transactions are at the heart of the current credit crisis – when banks fail, their counterparties are often left holding the bag. To examine this issue more finely, we at Westlaw Business have begun monitoring litigation trends, initially those involving Lehman Brothers.
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The SEC’s Big New Disclosure Initiative: The Beat of a Different Drum?
Place yourself in the shoes of the SEC and Chairman Cox. If you had an opportunity to assemble a group of leading lights on re-inventing disclosure today, would your focus be how disclosure connects to: (a) systemic risk and the derivatives market, (b) the credit crisis and financial regulatory reform or… (c) extensions to the data-tagging regime known as XBRL?
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De-regulating Legal Opinions: Are NYSEs Rules Meant to be Broken?
In an era dominated by cries for added regulation, it’s interesting to see the venerable New York Stock Exchange swinging the regulation needle ever so slightly in the other direction. Its impact is clear: it’s proposing making things somewhat easier to issue securities on the NYSE.
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Canada, Not as Distressed as the US.: Financing Markets Still Open
With Canada and the U.S. so close geographically and linked economically, one would expect their credit and M&A markets to move in close correlation. Surprisingly, the evidence of that is mixed. In particular, there are still signs of life in the Canadian M&A market and even in the related market for acquisition financing.
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Government’s Equity Cut, Crisis Scorecard, RTC to TARP
October 9, 2008
The Devil’s Due: The Government’s Equity Cut in the Bailout
It may be coming to a theatre near you. A modern adaptation of Devil and Daniel Webster; a dynamic legal team assists a besieged financial executive who made a deal with the Government. In the opening scene, the executive moans, “who will take my troubled assets?” The Government appears and whispers “I will, but I’ll want a bit of equity.”
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Credit Crisis Scorecard: 7th Inning Stretch or Bottom of the First?
The unprecedented cooperation of the central banks and regulatory intervention in response to the financial crisis unfolding across global markets demonstrates just how intertwined and complex this has become. Westlaw Business will continue to provide this updated re-cap of the major market events that are unfolding.
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Bailout 101: From the RTC to TARP
The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA) moved through Congress in near record time. To celebrate, the legislative branch, similar to Ferris Bueller, is taking the rest of the year off, leaving the Treasury to make the bailout work. While we wait for the Treasury to fully establish the institutions and contracts needed to spend $700 billion, a historical review of the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) and its activities may provide some insight regarding what to expect.
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RTC as a Catalyst, Canadian Cool, Recent Offerings, Merrill Litigation
October 8, 2008
Beware Securitization: the RTC’s role in today’s troubles
The Treasury is now racing to establish the institutions, infrastructure and contractor relationships needed to effect the bailout under the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA). As it’s doing that, what bears reminder is the long-forgotten, or perhaps never widely known, role that the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) played in promoting the growth and function of the mortgage securitization market.
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Northern Exposure? Canadian Filers Mostly Mum on Lehman Issues
Canadian public companies seem remarkably unflappable (or at least, thus far, unflapped) despite the unprecedented turmoil playing out to their south. Judging from their public disclosures in securities filings, even the calamitous events surrounding the collapse of Lehman Brothers don’t seem to have raised great concerns or needs to disclose, other than where true exposure exists.
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Big Equity Offerings: Down but Not Out
Talk of calamity and complete shutdowns of capital markets is rampant. However, a close look at the last two weeks shows that the U.S. equity markets are actually witnessing a significant revival. In addition to once-unimaginable M&A transactions conducted at hyper-speed, we’re actually witnessing a series of very large equity offerings.
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Merrill Lynch Fiduciary Duty: Was the Thundering Herd too Quiet?
It was inevitable that there would be disgruntled shareholders around a shotgun wedding of the size and speed of the Merrill Lynch – Bank of America merger. No surprise, the September announcement that Merrill Lynch would be merging with Bank of America left some Merrill shareholders claiming that the firm’s shares were grossly undervalued.
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Lehman's Derivatives, Troubled Assets, Exec. Compensation, etc.
October 6, 2008
TGIF: The Late Friday Afternoon Filing Rush
The expression TGIF may have taken on new meaning in the midst of the Wall Street earthquake underway. No more is it simply an allusion to the respite of the upcoming weekend. Instead, it may reflect gratitude for the “cover” of a late Friday, when submission of a key filing has become a seemingly common occurrence.
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Lehman Bankruptcy and B of A: Give us our $500 Million Back…
Lehman Brothers was (and id) rife with complexity. It is sure to help set new law as the bankruptcy unfolds…and Bank of America may be doing its part to help. This is the first in an occasional series on the litigations resulting from the Credit Crisis.
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Will Sunshine Burn the Banks: How Much Sunshine is too Much?
Do mark-to-market accounting and U.S.-style democratic openness play nicely together? We are about to find out. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) passed by Congress in early October was passed in days of financial gloom, and seeks to overcome that with two elements in short supply previously: cash and sunshine.
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Bailout Plan has Limited Say on Pay
Moral outrage over the then-proposed bailout boiled over around issues of executive compensation. The notion of paying executives large sums while taxpayers were funding bailouts of these same risk-taking organizations was too much for some to stomach. So, with the passage of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA) came new limits on executive compensation for those organizations benefiting from the bailout.
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Asset Managers, Get Ready: New Treasury Rules for the Bailout
There will be two separate groups of asset managers, one for securities and the other for mortgage whole loans. The asset managers will be considered financial agents of the U.S. and not contractors. A public notice will be posted on the Treasury website soliciting prospective financial agents and set out the asset management services being sought.
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Currents Extra: The Legal Angle of the Credit Crisis
October 2, 2008
Deleveraging Main Street: New Market Standards for Covenants and Loan Prices
The reach of the Credit Crisis extends much farther than Wall Street. Even before the most recent, most serious turn of the Crisis, our Westlaw Business analysts saw clear signs of the tightening of the market. This stands to get even worse, hampering the conduct of business far outside the financial services sector.
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Is Fair Value Accounting Really Fair? FAS 157 and Mark-To-Market
Recently the subject of consternation and, in some circles, even vilification, Financial Accounting Standard 157 was created in sunnier days to shine a bright light on a somewhat murky corner of the financial markets. Murkiness, in particular, hung over certain classes of financial instruments for which up-to-date pricing data was not regularly available.
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And You Thought the Bailout Was Expensive… What It Took to Pass the Senate Bill
With many political conversations turned to moose in place of pork, it was easy to forget how things get done in Washington, even for something as fundamental as the financial market bailout. The bill the Senate passed was a sharp reminder of what “ways and means” are sometimes required.
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Currents Extra: The Legal Angle of the Credit Crisis
October 1, 2008
The Buck Stops (Here, Again): Congress (Still) Wants the Ultimate Say on Pay
Congress and the White House are still working on the details of a $700 billion plan know as the Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (“EESA”) which has been described as having dual goals of rescuing Wall Street and protecting Main Street. While the House of Representatives rejected a version of the bill earlier this week, the Senate plans to vote on their version of the bill this evening.
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Tracking the Financial Crisis: Today’s Scorecard
With all of the recent chaos surrounding solving the financial crisis, we at Westlaw Business figured it might be a good time for a brief re-cap of the events unfolding. If you’re as busy as we are, a short update might be appreciated. As of press time, here is a brief rundown of major market, regulatory, and legislative events:
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Breaking WaMu: What JP Morgan didn’t Take
Given the unprecedented events taking place in the market this week, we’ve decided to take a quick step back to review details from a relative blip that some may have missed: Washington Mutual’s (WaMu’s) bankruptcy filing. The nation’s largest thrift filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection September 26 in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
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In With the New: PORTAL Database to Revolutionize Resale Market
The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC filed a proposed rule change with the SEC September 16 to establish an electronic PORTAL Reference Database. The NASD created the PORTAL market in 1990 (concurrently with the SEC adoption of Rule 144a) as a new trading platform “for the purpose of quoting, trading and reporting trades in securities deemed eligible for resale by Qualified Institutional Buyers under Rule 144a.”
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Currents Extra: The Legal Angle of the Credit Crisis
September 29, 2008
Show Me the Money: TARP, RTC & How Their Mechanics Drive Profits
As is well known by the time of publication, lawmakers are attempting to put through a bailout plan, intended to save the U.S. financial markets. Titled the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA), its creation has led to a series of cautious cheers emanating from Washington. These are not undeserved, given the depth of uncertainty and gloom otherwise pervading.
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Seized or Squeezed? Is TARP an Option for Auto, Student and Credit Card Finance?
While the proposed bailout plan is now stalled, its focus was primarily on the exposure of the financial services world to mortgage related securities and related losses, lurking just beneath that surface is another set of credit-related woes affecting the asset-backed securities industry.
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Disclosure Déjà vu: RTC Offered Golden Ticket to Some, Panic to Others
The government's now-delayed bailout law, EESA, has at its core a program for the acquisition and disposition of troubled assets, termed TARP, for the Troubled Assets Relief Program. TARP is modeled in the minds of many after the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC). The government created the RTC in 1989 as a vehicle to bailout the U.S. financial system after incurring massive financial failures related to the Savings & Loan crisis. The RTC was later disbanded in 1995.
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The Day After: SEC Readies for Post-Crisis Markets
Evidencing optimism that the U.S. financial system will emerge from its current funk, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has continued to move forward with two new rulemaking projects. As all eyes are fastened to the bailout initiative wending its ways through Washington, these initiatives may have escaped the radar screens of practitioners.
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Disclosure Trends: Do You Have WaMu Exposure?
Certain companies are attempting to protect themselves from being dragged deeper into the credit crisis, particularly the events surrounding Washington Mutual (WaMu). To remind our crisis-weary readership, the last several days have witnessed WaMu’s forced seizure, asset sale and bankruptcy filing, marking the largest bank failure of a United States in history.
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Big Picture Scorecard: Tracing the Latest Market Madness
With all of the recent chaos surrounding solving the financial crisis, we at Westlaw Business figured it might be a good time for a brief re-cap of the events unfolding. If you’re as busy as we are, a short update might be appreciated.
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Will Private Equity Save the Banking Industry? WaMu’s FDIC Seizure
WaMu’s seizure and resale marks yet another wrinkle in a head-spinning week’s worth of events. It gives pause for many reasons, not least of which are the lessons to be learned about Private Equity funds’ roles in bank recapitalizations.
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Currents Extra: The Legal Angle of the Credit Crisis
September 25, 2008
Breaking Levies: Bank Holding Companies, the Fed Courting Private Equity Infusion
The Federal Reserve relaxed ownership requirements for Federal Bank Holding Companies this week allowing private equity firms and hedge funds to dramatically increase their investment and participation levels in BHCs without subjecting themselves to regulation under the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956.
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Credit Crunch Lawsuits Trickle In: Class Actions to Clog Court Dockets?
While Congress and the White House hammer out the details supporting Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson’s proposed $700 billion Wall Street bail out, third parties have already begun escalating their grievances to the Judicial Branch.
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The Reserve Fund: Breaking the Buck
On the heels of quick responses by both the Treasury Department and Securities and Exchange Commission in attempts to cure market failures to calm investor panic, net asset values of several money market funds with substantial holdings in failing financial firms like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. plummeted to zero.
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Currents Extra: Continuing Update on the Credit Crisis
September 24, 2008
Monumental Shareholder Vote Could Unwind Merrill’s Deal
Could a shareholder vote quash Merrill Lynch & Co.’s deal to be acquired by Bank of America? A close reading of Merrill’s merger agreement suggests that shareholders indeed could block the transaction pursuant to the agreement’s “force-the-vote” clause.
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Lehman Bankruptcy: Dancing on the Head of a Pin
Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy and asset sales show the firm to be the beneficiary of some very clever legal advice. The particulars of the bankruptcy filing and asset liquidation show just how much. This is the second installment of a series on Lehman and its strategies.
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No Blank Check: Congress Wants the Ultimate Say on Pay
Congress is calling for a compromise with the White House on the proposed Wall Street bailout plan. In exchange for the $700 Billion from taxpayers, leaders from both the House and Senate are demanding tighter restrictions on executive compensation for those firms involved in the bailout.
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Morgan Stanley: Capital Ideas
In an effort to avoid the perils of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, and Merrill Lynch & Co., Morgan Stanley made 2 moves this week to strengthen its capital position. First, it opted to swap easier access to cheap capital for increased government oversight. Second, it announced a planned investment by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc. Both are discussed below.
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Lehman Liquidation, Barclays Protection: The Good, the Bankrupt and the Toxic
Lehman Brothers’ failure to attract an appropriate suitor left the investment bank with only one real option: file for bankruptcy and liquidate remaining valuable assets. This is one of a 2-part series on Lehman and its strategies.
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Currents Extra: the Legal Angle of the Credit Crisis
September 22, 2008
Currents Exclusive: Lehman Brothers Capital Structure
Investment bank Lehman Brothers filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection set the pace for one of the most turbulent weeks in Wall Street’s history. Lehman’s bankruptcy filings disclosed that it held $639 billion in assets and $613 in outstanding debt, making Lehman’s filing the largest bankruptcy in US history (by assets held).
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Through the Looking Glass…Steagall: Banking Regulation of Securities Firms
The Glass Steagall Act, enacted in the aftermath of the Crash of 1929, was designed to avoid commercial banks engaging in overly risky financial markets. One could be forgiven for a sense of déjà vu, pre Glass Steagall– given the events of the last few days.
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Do you have Lehman Exposure?: Disclosure Trends
In the aftermath of Lehman Brothers Chapter 11 filing, companies have been eager to protect their own businesses by disclosing the extent to which they have a relationship with the failing investment bank.
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Swirling Currents: Financial Crisis Creates Swift Regulatory Reaction
The recent events on Wall Street have caused the SEC, Treasury and Federal Reserve to act in concert to address the turmoil and attempt to calm the markets. They have also worked with the Financial Services Authority of the United Kingdom because of the global reach of these events.
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Old News/New News: Lehman’s Bankruptcy Filings…Redux
The big news this week around Lehman’s filings was, of course, its filing for bankruptcy. Little noticed among these filings was the twist in Lehman’s approach to filing with the SEC about its bankruptcy. Monday brought Lehman’s announcement that Lehman Brother Holdings Inc. had filed for bankruptcy.
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Tight Times & Bank Failures: Use Westlaw Business to Master New Restructuring Strategies
September 16, 2008
A hectic summer for regulators culminated in the Federal Reserve’s decision to relax lending rules this week rather than rescuing additional financial institutions, as it did with mortgage financing giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. While some issuers, like Merrill Lynch & Co., have found solace in finding last minute white knight buyers like Bank of America, others like Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. have not taken advantage of similar opportunities and are now seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, hoping to sell off some of their operations.
During these market shifts, whether you are a practitioner bracing for reform or proactively seeking restructuring opportunities for your clients, Westlaw Business’ new Restructuring Center will streamline your growing workflow needs. The Restructuring Center offers targeted content and functionality to help you spot issues, perform due diligence, find precedent agreements, and draft the documents you need to build a solid restructuring deal. For more information on how the Restructuring Center can advance your practice, click here.
Listed below are search strings to help you with your next restructuring deal. In addition, there are several SEC Currents feature articles analyzing pressing legal issues amidst recent financial setbacks.
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Restructuring Precedent Language - Tax Matters - Divestitures
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Restructuring Transactions - Asset Sales
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Restructuring Transactions - Business Division Sale
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Restructuring Transactions - Substantially All Assets
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Triggering Event - Default on Obligations
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Tracking Stock - Disclosure & Considerations
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Restructuring Activity - Carve-Outs
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Price to Earnings (P/E) - Disclosure Considerations
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Total Return to Shareholders (TRS) - Disclosure & Considerations
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UCC Financing Statement - Disclosure & Considerations
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Restructuring Precedent Language - Compromise or Settlement Agreements
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Special Purpose Acquisition Corp (SPAC) - Disclosure & Considerations
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Substantial Doubt of a Going Concern
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Bankruptcy Announcements
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Restructuring Transactions - Letter of Intent
Financial Institutions Battling Addictions, Regulators Strike
Risky positions in the subprime mortgage industry, controversial marketing strategies of auction-rate securities, and the resulting credit crisis continue to strike blows to U.S. financial institutions -- promising bleak hopes of quick correction. Big banks are taking hits even a year into the ongoing credit crunch, and many industry experts are calling for mass consolidation to weather the storm.
Read more >
Quick Change: Inside the Mortgage Financing Bailout
The United States government has opted to rescue the nation's largest government-sponsored mortgage finance companies in an effort to temporarily cure the growing credit crunch, and boost investor confidence in an increasingly downtrodden market. The cost: $25 billion to taxpayers. During the deliberation, one of the largest government sponsored entities filed and received special clearance from the Securities and Exchange Commission to sell new shares to the public in hopes of raising much needed capital perhaps the beginnings of a growing trend amidst tough financial times.
Read more >
Behind The Credit Crunch: 'Repo' Loans Sabotage U.S. Financial System
Creative deal-making will come highly rewarded in coming years, as unprecedented gridlock in the debt markets has forced many hedge funds and private equity groups to restructure their organizations -- mainly by firing hordes of traders in response to massive losses and banks' reluctance to lend money. The recent fire-sale of Bear Stearns Co. to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. for the bargain price of $10 per share compounds exactly what the market feared: irreparable financial institutional failure. While the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is attempting to cure this, what once seemed like smart money is now suffering potentially irrecoverable devastation.
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Boost Your Executive Compensation Disclosures Today with Westlaw Business!
September 9, 2008
The SEC continues to ask issuers for additional disclosures with relation to their Compensation Discussion and Analysis (CD&A) sections on their Forms 10-K and proxy statements. Results of recent Westlaw Business research efforts underscores both the weight and the importance that issuers now face in the rectifying, and in some cases re-filing, their executive compensation disclosure filings.
More than 350 public companies received letters from the SEC Division of Corporation Finance just over a year ago seeking additional information in their CD&A disclosures based on this season's initial proxy statement filings. The inquiry came just over a year after the Commission issued new executive compensation and related party rules (SEC Release No. 338732). An extensive review of these letters indicates several areas of reporting that the SEC is targeting in their reviews -- specifically executive compensation and corporate governance. Issuers now must prepare for yet another proxy season under a relatively new compliance lens with the second installment of the Commission's daunting executive compensation standards. The findings of the SEC Currents Staff's most recent study suggest that it may be a long road ahead before public filers will meet the Commission's stringent reporting requirements.
Listed below are two in-depth SEC Currents feature articles regarding the rising trends in CD&A disclosures. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of related searches to ease your research efforts.
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CD&A Discussion - '33 Act Registration Statement
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Performance Measures - CD&A Discussions & Considerations
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CD&A - Compensation Committee Report - Proxy Statement
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CD&A Reporting - Form 10-K
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"Say On Pay" Discussion
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Proxy Disclosure Related to CD&A and Sample Summary Compensation Tables
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Compensation Discussion & Analysis - Narrative Discussions and Considerations
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CD&A Discussion - Issuers with Single Executive Officer
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CD&A Reporting Errors Addressed By Issuer
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Sample Summary Compensation Tables – Proxy Statements
Stock Option Backdating Remains a Top Priority at SEC
More than two years after launching investigations, the Securities and Exchange Commission continues to conduct thorough reviews of public companies and associated individuals
for their participation in fraudulent backdating schemes with sustained vigor. To date, the SEC Staff has secured many lucrative settlement arrangements from various issuers and persons
caught in the backdating crossfire. Many investigations remain in the midst of ongoing litigation. While the pace of proceedings has been noticeably slow, the Commission continues to flex
its regulatory muscle, encouraging SEC filers to pursue full compliance with the SEC's revamped compliance agenda.
Read more >
Politicizing Executive Compensation: Say-On-Pay Initiative Gains Recognition
Recent corporate governance initiatives closely tied to the Securities and Exchange Commission's campaign to tighten controls on excessive executive pay continue to rise in shareholder
popularity and disclosure documents. Despite rising shareholder activism, results remain mixed as many proposals -- even if passed -- are simply advisory, and not binding in any manner.
The issue has also become a heated point of political debate as top Presidential candidates continue to solidify their positions. Recognition, irrespective of its source, marks positive
momentum for corporate governance advocates when compared to recent years.
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Got Green? Use Westlaw Business to Shape Your Environmental Disclosures
September 3, 2008
A striking trend in securities filings signals a remarkable compromise between big business and big green. Issuers in the energy industry are enhancing their environmental disclosures and reporting significant efforts to comply with emerging environmental regulations in light of advancing debate and rule making regarding climate change and gas emissions. These increased efforts to address pressing environmental issues reflect a substantial departure form the previous norm of stonewalling the cries of activists. Improved green disclosures signify activists' strident ability to interfere and block continuing development efforts. As issuers come to realize the mounting power of these organizations, environmental disclosures appear to be expanding in kind.
SEC Currents' Staff has analyzed a range of environmental disclosures and uncovered new language reflecting a marked increase in issuers' environmental compliance efforts. These disclosures suggest a significant struggle between environmental awareness and business development, considered against the backdrop of the embroiling debate over global warming, its causes, and potential solutions. The political and regulatory climate appears to be calling particular attention to businesses heavily involved in energy manufacturing and production. According to SEC Currents, "As issuers come to realize the mounting power of these organizations, environmental awareness disclosures appear to be expanding -- even though the Securities and Exchange Commission remains mum on what must be required."
Listed below is an in-depth SEC Currents examination regarding the rising trends in environmental disclosures. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of related search statements to ease your research efforts.
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Environmental Liabilities or Risk Factors (Form 10-K)
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Environmental Related Loss Contingencies
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Environmental Related Remediation Disclosure
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Entry Into Material Agreement Involving Purchase of Wind Turbines
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Registration Statements (S-1) by Issuer in the Alternative Energy Industry
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Renewable Energy Credits (REC) Discussed by Issuer
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Carbon Footprint & Investor Concerns
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Offshore Drilling - Issuer Disclosure In Regulatory Filings
Going Green: Environmental Disclosures on the Rise
Rising oil prices are not the only thing to affect the current consumer and corporate decision making. A recent analysis of securities filings indicates a growing trend in corporate culture and reveals new compromises between big business and big green: issuers are enhancing their environmental disclosure statements to show their unfettered resolve to comply with emerging global climate change rules and regulations. While most issuers have been reluctant to acknowledge these developing issues, almost all have made some concessions to the notion that going green is not going away.
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Uncovering a New Fraud: Regulators Attack Auction Rate Securities Sales Practices
August 26, 2008
As financial institutions continue to cave to regulators for participating in allegedly fraudulent sales tactics used to secure investors in auction-rate securities, practitioners should prepare clients to accommodate the latest in disclosure trends. While not admitting any wrongdoing, both Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley have agreed to pay government regulators hefty fines for misleading investors to purchase auction-rate securities. State regulators also have charged UBS AG and Merrill Lynch & Co. with fraud for implementing misleading sales strategies to peddle auction-rate securities.
Earlier this month, the general counsel of UBS's investment banking division resigned from his post as federal and state auction-rate securities investigations continue to widen. Citigroup too reached an agreement with regulators to buy back at least $5 billion worth of auction-rate securities and pay a $100 million fine. Merrill Lynch agreed to pay $125 million to state regulators and upwards of $7 billion to the Securities and Exchange Commission to buy back the auction-rate securities the firm once peddled as safe investments.
Below we have provided several useful search strings assembled by our Business Law Research team to accelerate your research.
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Auction Rate Securities (ARS) - Recovery Periods
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Capital Markets - Dutch Auction Disclosure
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Dutch Auction - Discussion in Form S-1
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Auction Rate Discussion - S-1 Terms of Transaction
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Capital Markets - Auction Rate Risk Factor Discussion
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Auction Rate Securities (ARS) - Form 10-Q MD&A Discussion
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Auction Rate Securities (ARS) - Form 10-K Risk Factor Discussion
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Auction Rate Securities (ARS) - Market for Registrant's Common Equity
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Auction Rate Securities (ARS) - Proxy Discussion
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Auction Rate Preferred Securities (ARS)
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Credit Crunched? Use Westlaw Business as Your Trend Tracker
August 19, 2008
As the credit crunch continues to strain corporate transactions and government regulators prepare to overhaul regulation of the financial industry, smart practitioners should do their best to stay atop of rising trends in business law and securities disclosure to ensure best positioning for navigating markets for future dealmaking.
Let Westlaw Business help you and your clients stay up to date with today's transactional trends and securities disclosures. Listed below are two in-depth SEC Currents feature articles addressing aspects of the credit crunch and its effect on business. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of search statements related to mortgage financing and the auction-rate securities market. Simply click on any link of interest to launch your search.
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Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis Exposure - Risk Factor Disclosure S-1
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Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis - Impact On M&A Transaction
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Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis - Risk Factor Discussion - Form 10-K
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Credit Crunch - Debt Restructuring - Reps & Warranties of Borrower
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Triggering Events Creating Financial Obligation - Form 8-K Item 2.04
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Impact of the Credit Crunch - Exchange Act Filings Disclosure
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Challenges Securing Lines of Credit
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Lease Representations & Warranties in Compromise and Settlement Agreements
Quick Change: Inside the Mortgage Financing Bailout
The United States government has opted to rescue the nation's largest government-sponsored mortgage finance companies in an effort to temporarily cure the growing credit crunch, and boost investor confidence in an increasingly downtrodden market. The cost: $25 billion to taxpayers. During the deliberation, one of the largest government sponsored entities filed and received special clearance from the Securities and Exchange Commission to sell new shares to the public in hopes of raising much needed capital perhaps the beginnings of a growing trend amidst tough financial times.
Read more >
Behind The Credit Crunch: 'Repo' Loans Sabotage U.S. Financial System
Creative deal-making will come highly rewarded in coming years, as unprecedented gridlock in the debt markets has forced many hedge funds and private equity groups to restructure their organizations -- mainly by firing hordes of traders in response to massive losses and banks' reluctance to lend money. The recent fire-sale of Bear Stearns Co. to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. for the bargain price of $10 per share compounds exactly what the market feared: irreparable financial institutional failure. While the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is attempting to cure this, what once seemed like smart money is now suffering potentially irrecoverable devastation.
Read more >
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Westlaw Business Alert: Frenetic Pace of Hostile Takeover Bids Creates New Challenges, Opportunities
August 12, 2008
Unsolicited bids to takeover public companies are reaching a new level of precedence. A recent SEC Currents' research study reveals that almost 20-percent of all global mergers and acquisition activity has been in the form of unsolicited bids in 2008. This is remarkable - the highest rate of takeover bids in nearly a decade. According to SEC Currents: "[A] new mutation in hostile takeovers appears to be morphing from initial unsolicited bids. Many of the hostile bids appear to be transforming into friendly negotiations as directors increasingly revert to their roles as company shareholders - seeking to do what is best from a financial perspective, given today's market."
Listed below is an in-depth examination from SEC Currents on the recent hostile takeover attempts. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of search statements related to hostile takeovers and unsolicited bids. Simply click on any link of interest to launch your search.
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Acquiring Company Is A White Knight
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Hostile Stock Exchange Offers
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Hostile Two Step Stock Merger Tender Offers
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Full Bid Hostile Tender Offers
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Partial Bid Hostile Tender Offers
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Hostile Two Step Cash Merger Tender Offers
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Issuer's Response to Tender Offer - Rejection of Offer
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Hostile Tender Offer - Call to Reject Offer In Proxy Statement
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Reverse Break-Up Fee - Amount of Fee Disclosed
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Reverse Break-Up Fee - Discussion in Proxy Filing
Hostile Takeovers Spin Different Tunes
Devastating economic blows dealt from the aftermath of the subprime mortgage mess have spawned an inevitable uptick in hostile takeover bids across multiple industries. The rising popularity of unsolicited bids appears to be heating up in recent months as corporate raiders are beginning to open their cash-rich coffers seeing opportunity in an increasingly down market. Even so, differing results from unsolicited bids and varying implementation of hostile takeover preventative tactics appear to be producing interesting clashes between historical down-market corporate vultures and modern corporate governance policy pundits.
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Westlaw Business Offers Timely, Powerful New Enhancements
July 22, 2008
As economic trends continue to shift, business law professionals are being asked more and more to develop sound business strategies and make difficult assessments for clients in light of today's challenging economic climate. To aid in providing this counsel, Westlaw Business is introducing a new Restructuring Center.
Exclusive to Westlaw Business, the new Restructuring Center is the first of its kind to give you the necessary in-practice agreements and expert guidance required to craft the most advantageous solution for your clients.
The Restructuring Center on Westlaw Business provides:
- Restructuring Navigator - a tool to guide you chronologically through the events and issues involved in restructuring and workouts
- Model agreements with key language often found in restructuring, workouts and bankruptcies
- Clause and defined term searching within model agreements
- Legal Due Diligence Reports that include access to vital material agreements
- Checklists and guides supporting workouts, securities, UCC, tax implications, employee termination
- Guidance materials on out-of-court considerations
- Analytical materials from seasoned practitioners
In addition, Westlaw Business also continues to enhance its industry-leading M&A Center. The M&A Center now includes:
- Williams Act section searching
- Standardized searching for the most common M&A agreement titles
- Clause and defined term searching within agreements
- More than 240,000 global public and private deals
- More than 265,000 material agreements
- Advanced search capabilities to focus your research down to the clause level by industry, company or law firm
For more information on how you can take advantage of the latest Westlaw Business enhancements, please contact your sales and account management team or call 800.669.1154.
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While Overloaded Commission Staff Continues to Impress, Future Policy & Rulemaking Remains Unclear
June 18, 2008
Despite losing three Commissioners in the last year, the SEC already has managed to accomplish many of its goals for 2008. In a time of depleted resources, the short-staffed Commission continues to march onwards to meeting its own aggressive agenda towards stabilizing damage done from issues stemming from the recent collapse of the subprime mortgage industry and resulting credit crunch. While global clamor for international regulatory and rulemaking cooperation remains a priority for the SEC Staff, the regulator must reassess its policies and standards for its role in overseeing the markets. As politicians call for game-changing financial industry regulation reform, the Commission clearly has its work cut out for them.
According to SEC Currents: "With the U.S. Presidential election around the corner, however, many top Commission Staff members are likely to abandon ship for private practice. This will prompt a changing of the guard with many facets of SEC rulemaking and overall Commission business strategy."
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SEC Release - Modernize Oil & Gas Reporting
•
SEC Litigation Release - Broadcom - Backdating
•
SEC Statement - Rules For Credit Rating Agencies
•
Climate Risk Disclosure - Public Petition
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SEC Release - Reforms To Credit Rating Process
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Sub-Prime - SEC News & Public Statements
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SEC Regulatory Releases - "Say On Pay"
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Adoption of New Policy - Back-Dating
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APB 25 - Inadvertent Backdating of Options
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Back-Dating - "Clawback" of Profits
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Comfort Statement - Back-Dating
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10-Q - Risk Factors - Sub-Prime Mortgage Industry
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M&A Transactions - Sub-Prime Mortgage Exposure
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Sub-Prime Mortgage - Risk - Prospectus
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Sub-Prime Mortgage - SEC Staff Reviews
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UBS AG - Write Down Disclosure
Mid-Year Review: SEC Exudes Confidence Despite Incredible Challenges
At its midpoint, 2008 has been an ambitious year for the Securities and Exchange Commission. In a time of depleted resources, the short-staffed Commission continues to march onwards to meeting its own aggressive agenda towards stabilizing damage done from issues stemming from the recent collapse of the subprime mortgage industry and resulting credit crunch. While global clamor for international regulatory and rulemaking cooperation remains a priority for the SEC Staff, the regulator must reassess its policies and standards for its role in overseeing the markets. As politicians call for game-changing financial industry regulation reform, the Commission clearly has its work cut out for them.
Read more >
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Business Law Research: Intelligent Information When You Need It
June 16, 2008
We know you face incredible demands on your time - every single day. That's why our research consultants are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to assist you.
Our expert researchers understand the value of complete, comprehensive business and industry intelligence to the work you do. With a simple phone call, you'll access a team of experts who can deliver timely, presentation-ready information on anything from a single company's debt to analysis of an entire industry's employment and compensation disclosures. Click here to see a sample of what we can do for you.
The Business Law Research team also offers custom research services. Our professionals can assist with any scale research project, creating and managing alerts tailored to your specific needs or delving into historical filings.
Our research professionals are a valuable extension to any legal or financial staff. And we are only a call or click away.
Call 800.669.1154 or visit Business Law Research at gsionline.com
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Corporate Profitability Neutralizing Shareholder Activism?
June 04, 2008
While public company shareholders have been more successful in securing votes on trendy corporate governance measures, such as splitting the Chairman and CEO posts and say-on-pay, recent failures to pass these proposals suggest that shareholders will not be motivated to reform corporate governance practices if the company has a history of strong profits. Seemingly, the trend suggests that corporate boardrooms should feel at ease come proxy season if their company is wildly profitable. Results of future shareholder votes should shed light as to whether this, in fact, is a growing trend combating shareholder activism.
According to SEC Currents, "Despite recent publicity of excessive executive compensation and the say-on-pay initiative, it seems that shareholders are still swayed more by profitability than ethical responsibility." In this light, practitioners should prepare their issuer clients to best handle shareholder proposals to better mitigate potential crisis.
Listed below are two in-depth examinations from SEC Currents regarding these pivotal shareholder proposals. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of related search statements addressing shareholder proposals and the nomination of directors in the proxy solicitation process.
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SEC Regulatory Releases - "Say On Pay"
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"Say On Pay" - Shareholder Proposal
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Shareholder Proposal - Separation of Roles
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Washington Mutual Chairman - Loss of Title
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8-K - Separation of Chairman & CEO Roles
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Exxon Mobil Corp - Separation of Chairman/CEO Role
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Verizon - Proxy - Separation of Roles
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Wachovia Corp - Separation of Roles
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Director/Officer Continuing Education - Post S-OX
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Nomination Procedures - Proxy
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Corporate Governance Principles - Disclosure Of
•
Corporate Governance Guidelines
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Shareholder Proposal - Proxy
•
Shareholder Proposal - Clawback Policy
•
Opposition Statement To Shareholder Proposal
•
Issuer Sends Notice of Defects
Politicizing Executive Compensation: Say-On-Pay Initiative Gains Recognition
Recent corporate governance initiatives closely tied to the Securities and Exchange Commission's campaign to tighten controls on excessive executive pay continue to rise in shareholder popularity and disclosure documents. Despite rising shareholder activism, results remain mixed as many proposals -- even if passed -- are simply advisory, and not binding in any manner. The issue has also become a heated point of political debate as top Presidential candidates continue to solidify their positions. Recognition, irrespective of its source, marks positive momentum for corporate governance advocates when compared to recent years.
Read more
Separation of Power? Profitability Trumping Governance Reform
Corporate governance pundits have long encouraged companies to divide powers between their Chief Executive Officer and Chairman -- roles typically shared by one individual in most U.S. companies. Given the recent noise generated by Exxon Mobil Corp. shareholder activists to strip the company Chairman role from the office of the Chief Executive Officer, the SEC Currents' Staff conducted a study to assess similar efforts at public companies.
Read more
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Finding Capital For Your Clients: Let Westlaw Business Help Your Alternative Financing Due Diligence
May 14, 2008
As access to cheap capital continues a virtual death spiral, issuers scurry to secure the investments necessary to commence and close transactions that once
were foregone conclusions. While today's "credit crunch" continues to spread across most industries and impact consumer choice, practitioners should become well versed in financing alternatives for their
clients so to encourage business activity in a deflated market. Using capital raising vehicles like Special Purpose Acquisition Companies (SPACs), attracting investments from Sovereign Wealth Funds,
and taking advantage of new private equity trading platforms are but a few of the latest strategic financing methods that appear to be flourishing -- getting issuers the capital they need to succeed with their business objectives.
According to SEC Currents, "The quest to find creative financing options amidst the market's current credit crunch has escalated once bullied vehicles for catalyzing investment, as blank check companies, foreign government
sponsored hedge funds, and tweaked versions of private equity consortiums appear to have risen from their own ashes in titanic proportions." In this light, practitioners should use Westlaw Business in preparing their
issuer-clients to consider embracing unorthodox capital raising approaches to best leverage current market conditions.
Listed below are three in-depth examinations from SEC Currents regarding alternative financing strategies. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of related search statements addressing these strategies.
•
Blank Check / Blind Pool Company
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Dunkin Brands - Private Equity M&A Transaction
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M&A - Private Equity Buyer / Leveraged Buy Out
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KKR Private Equity Investors - Offering Memorandum
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Private Placement - Hedge Fund
•
Regulation S Offerings - 144A/Private Placement
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Private Placement By Government Entity
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S Corporation Distribution 144A/Private Placement
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Catastrophe Bonds - Private Placement/144A
•
Auction Based IPO
Alternative Financing: SPACs Get Respect
The quest to find creative financing options amidst the market's current credit crunch has escalated a once bullied vehicle for catalyzing investment, as blank check companies
appear to have risen from their own ashes in titanic proportions. Special Purpose Acquisition Companies, or SPACs, continue to gain credit as a legitimate financing method in the
face of an increasingly expensive debt market. Recent moves by the United States' primary national exchanges to list SPACs underscores the importance, and popularity, of this alternative investment strategy.
Read more
Big Banks Juiced By Sovereign Wealth Funds, Regulators Concerned
Huge investments by state-run investment pools called Sovereign Wealth Funds (SWFs) in the first quarter of 2008 suggest that major U.S. lending institutions truly have been rocked by
the credit crunch -- more so than could have been predicted. Foreign investment in financial institutional giants like Citigroup Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co., UBS AG, and Morgan Stanley
indicate that the influx of foreign capital may be one of the keys to saving the federal system from utter devastation. The aftermath, however, remains a concern for many market
participants, policy-makers, and regulators.
Read more
Inside Apollo: IPO Rides Brave New Capital-Raising Strategy
On April 8, 2008, private equity behemoth Apollo Global Management, LLC filed a registration statement to sell its shares on the public market. While it has been reported that Apollo
investors plan to sell upwards of $475 million worth of stock in the initial public offering on the New York Stock Exchange, the IPO has less to do with raising capital as it does with
meeting outstanding compliance commitments. A recent SEC Currents' study reveals that amidst the excitement of a private equity firm conducting an IPO, Apollo's hand had been played last
summer in part of a broader strategy to raise capital and rally interests of institutional investors.
Read more
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Securities-Canada Center Now on Westlaw Business
April 16, 2008
Westlaw Business now has a single convenient destination for your Canada securities work. The Securities-Canada Center on Westlaw Business offers SEDAR and related compliance research and document retrieval in a platform optimized for securities practice.
The Securities-Canada Center provides a place where filings, law, and guidance all come together, with just what you need to draft documents and key agreements, identify precedent language, and monitor peers, clients and competitors.
To learn more about the new Securities-Canada Center, visit westlawbusiness.com or contact your Westlaw Business team at 800.669.1154.
GSI, a division of West, is
located at 1100 Thirteenth St. NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20005, and has been in the business of
providing information services to legal and financial professionals since 1988.
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Use Westlaw Business to Mitigate Activist Shareholder Proposals
March 18, 2008
Recent SEC rulemaking has made shareholder access the rallying cry of activist investors this proxy season. After weighing the issue
of shareholder access to director nomination for much of last year following a controversial ruling by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in American Federation of State, County,
and Municipal Employees v. American International Group, Inc., the SEC chose to jettison a formal proxy access rule, instead choosing to clarify their existing stance on the exclusion
of shareholders proposals relating to director election. The decision to once again postpone a shareholder nomination rule has evoked a strong reaction from activist investors,
led by AFSCME, who seek to once again push the issue to the Court of Appeals.
According to SEC Currents, "As the escalating battle between corporate boards and shareholder activist groups over the corporate ballot, corporate counsel should remain watchful of how the controversial
proxy access issue plays out this proxy season, in corporate proxy filings, at the SEC, and perhaps even in the courts." In this light, practitioners should prepare their issuer clients to best handle
shareholder proposals to better mitigate potential crisis.
Listed below are two in-depth examinations from SEC Currents regarding shareholder proposals. In addition, GSI has compiled a list of related search statements addressing shareholder proposals and the
nomination of directors in the proxy solicitation process.
•
SEC Proposed Rule - Shareholder Proxy Access
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SEC Proposed Rule - Shareholder Access
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Exclusion Of Proposal - Rule 14a-8(i)(3)
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S&P 500 Proxy - Proposal to amend By-laws
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SSR - Correspondences Related to Rule 14a8
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Staff Legal Bulletin No. 14c Shareholder Proposals
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AFSCME v. AIG - Comment on 2nd Circuit Ruling
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No-Act - Shareholder Eligibility Requirements
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E-Proxy Consent Language
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Electronic Access to Proxy Material
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SSR - Proxy Proposals
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Opposition Statement To Shareholder Proposal
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Revision of Proposal
•
SEC Press Releases - Codify Election Procedures
Early Proxy Season Sees Onslaught of Proxy Access Resolutions
The American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) has once again taken the lead in driving shareholder access initiatives this proxy season.
AFSCME's early shareholder submissions have already equaled the sum of all shareholder access proposals submitted in the 2007 proxy season. The increased prominence
of proposals advocating shareholder access to director nomination indicates that this issue will be at the forefront of corporate governance this proxy season. This
SEC Currents feature highlights proxy access proposals and the contrasting efforts of Boards of Directors to omit the proposals from the corporate proxy. Read more
Shareholder Proposals Pursue Alternate Route to Board Elections
This proxy season the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) is spiriting a multi-pronged attack on the status quo for shareholder
director nominations. AFSCME is submitting a new volley of shareholder proposals aimed squarely at recouping the costs of nominating directors outside of the corporate proxy process,
in addition to submissions of traditional proxy access proposals. This newest end run on shareholder access provides another example of activists increased resolve to impart a
significant change in the corporate election process. This SEC Currents analysis explores the dynamics of AFSCME's reimbursement proposal for its impact on issuer's election
processes and greater corporate governance policies. Read more
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Westlaw Business to add Powerful New LIVEDGAR Feature
March 14, 2008
Beginning on Monday, March 17, the LIVEDGAR center on Westlaw Business will offer a powerful new feature that enables you to pull the most recent company filings directly from the landing page.
The new Latest Company Filing search box lets you use a company's ticker symbol to pull its most recent 10-K, 10-Q or Proxy with a single click of your mouse. This exciting new feature in Westlaw Business lets you perform a very common task extremely efficiently.
For more information on how you can take advantage of this latest enhancement to Westlaw Business, simply click here to login. If you have other questions about your Westlaw Business subscription, please contact your sales and account management team or call 800.669.1154.
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Are Your Executive Compensation Disclosures Bullet-Proof? SEC CD&A Review Nearing Completion
March 04, 2008
As the first round of the Securities and Exchange Commission's review of issuer proxy statements nears a close, practitioners should prepare to address a number of executive compensation disclosure issues to conform to the SEC Staff's latest issuer correspondences. A recent SEC Currents study suggests that the impact of the Commission's review will shape both the form and function of future Compensation Discussion and Analysis sections in proxy statements and annual filings. Keeping this in mind, the SEC Currents Staff advises practitioners carefully to consider the Commission's comments when assisting their clients in designing future compensation plans. Issuers would be wise to attempt overcoming these compliance challenges today to avoid falling prey to potential regulatory review next year.
Below GSI has compiled a list of search statements addressing executive compensation. To launch your search, simply click on any link of interest.
COMPENSATION - COMPENSATION DISCUSSION & ANALYSIS
• CD&A - 10-K Item 11 Executive Compensation
• CD&A - 8-K Item 5.02 - Changes to Plans
• SCD&A - No-Action Letter Discussion
• CD&A - Proxy - Elements of Compensation Discussion
• CD&A - Proxy - Change-In-Control Payments
• CD&A - Proxy - Performance Measures
• CD&A - Proxy - Grants of Plan-Based Awards
• CD&A - Proxy - Tax Reimbursement
COMPENSATION - CLAWBACK
•
Compensation Comm Report - Clawback Discussion
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Employment Contracts - Clawback Clause
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Golden Parachute Clawback Discussion
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Hewlett Packard - Shareholder Proposal - Clawback
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Microsoft Corp - Clawback Policy
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SEC Pronouncements - Clawback Policies
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Shareholder Proposal - Clawback Policy
•
Employment Contracts - Clawback Clause
Commission Staff Spots Lacking Disclosures as Exec. Comp. Review Nears a Close
Ranking representatives from the Securities and Exchange Commission have informed SEC Currents that the Division of Corporation Finance officially has closed 30-percent (over 100 companies)
of their executive compensation disclosure reviews submitted in issuers' proxy statements. Upwards of 70-percent of the original 350 companies receiving letters now have received a second round
of comments from the SEC. Sources tell SEC Currents that the Commission's primary objectives with the second round are to achieve clarity on issues addressing performance targets and competitive harm.
Read more
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Gsionline.com gets a New Look
February 22, 2008
Westlaw Business now has a single convenient destination for your Canada securities work. The Securities-Canada Center on Westlaw Business offers SEDAR and related compliance research and document retrieval in a platform optimized for securities practice.
The Securities-Canada Center provides a place where filings, law, and guidance all come together, with just what you need to draft documents and key agreements, identify precedent language, and monitor peers, clients and competitors.
To learn more about the new Securities-Canada Center, visit westlawbusiness.com or contact your Westlaw Business team at 800.669.1154.
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located at 1100 Thirteenth St. NW, Suite 200, Washington, DC 20005, and has been in the business of
providing information services to legal and financial professionals since 1988.
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Westlaw Business Offers Powerful New Enhancements
February 15, 2008
New strategic developments to Westlaw Business give you a competitive advantage when examining relevant research and legal guidance on mergers and acquisitions, offerings, securities and related business law topics.
The new Private Equity Center on Westlaw Business brings together buyout and capital markets coverage, laws and regulations from West, and renowned Aspatore guidance materials to give you a superior single source of private equity information. The Private Equity Center will help you mitigate risk by providing you with the solutions you need to operate in the alternative investment markets.
In addition, '33 Act and Blue Sky coverage have been added to the Securities Center making it the most robust resource for filings, law, and guidance in the industry. The Securities Center on Westlaw Business provides a place where practice-specific tools all come together, with just what you need for research, drafting, and review.
The M&A Center has also been enhanced and now includes relevant caselaw as well as M&A related laws and regulations, including the Williams Act and Hart-Scott-Rodino. The M&A Center on Westlaw Business is most comprehensive source of global deal coverage designed with the tools you need to give you an edge.
For more information on how you can take advantage of the latest Westlaw Business enhancements, please contact your sales and account management team or call 800.669.1154.
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