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Sale-Leasebacks, Carbon Emissions, Healthcare Risks, Financial M&A, Protectionism
March 26, 2009
Selling the Family Jewels: NY Times, AIG, and Sale-Leasebacks Selling the family jewel real estate holding is
something that companies are confronting in these cash-starved times
– and sale-leaseback transactions are a vehicle of choice.
Giants like the New York Times Co., HSBC, and AIG, tottering under the
combined weight of ... Read more
Financial M&A, Beware: RBS's Shakespearean Tragedy
M&A drama is on the rise, with battles
underway over the troubled acquisition of ABN AMRO by Royal Bank of
Scotland (RBS). Reaching near-Shakespearean levels, this plot is filled
with stories of hostility, arrogance and greed, along with colorful
characters like “Fred the Shred” (so dubbed by Fleet
Street). Its legal themes include...
Read more
Healthcare Risks: Turning Green from Illness...or Lucre Healthcare
costs and reforms are making some companies turn green – at times
from queasiness, but at other times from lucre. Healthcare ferment just
restarted its bubbling with the passage of a new law under the cloak of
the recently-passed Obama stimulus package. This compounds an
already-busy interaction among regulators, shareholders and business... Read more
10-K Hot Topic: Protectionism
Protection of American markets for labor, goods
and services is increasingly an issue for global companies, as the U.S.
government seeks to support American business interests. Recently
entering the spotlight, the final version of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA) contained a “buy American”
provision mandating that all of the iron, steel and manufactured
products used in ARRA-funded building and public works projects be
produced in the United States. Beyond ARRA, protective
regulations come in many flavors and sizes, including...
Read more
Trendspotting: Carbon Emissions, Hostile Transactions, and other Top Trends
Making Green Off of the Green Movement
Finger Pointing at Bank of America
Another Takeover Defense – Standstill Agreements
Issuing Debt to Reduce Debt
Ultimate Shareholder Activism – Derivative Actions Read more
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Toxic Asset Plan, Activist Pensions, Big M&A, Say On Pay, Change of Control, AIG Bonuses, Public Debt Offerings
March 24, 2009
Toxic Assets, Antidote: $500 Bn Opportunity
Toxic assets are about to be given a $500 billion
antidote, though one that may cause painful side effects. Once it
goes live following its comment period, the government’s new
toxic asset program seems set to be a boon for investors…and
riding shotgun with them are the taxpayers as co-investors and lawyers
and other professionals as trusted advisors...Read more
Change of Control Clauses: Cat and Mouse...and Courts
Creditors are trying to exert ever more control
using Change of Control clauses – to very mixed success. A
cat-and-mouse is at play: While creditors attempt different definitions
and place them in broader sets of documents, courts are not always
amenable to this breadth. Clever structuring is used...Read more
Pension Fund Investors: Not Passive, But Aggressive
Pension funds, as investors, have long trended
toward passivity – but aggressiveness is increasingly their
hallmark. In a recent raft of proxy proposals and litigations, pensions
have emerged from the background. No longer the quiet shareholder,
they… Read more
AIG We're NOT: Bonus Disclosures by Others According
to a statement by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, several AIG
employees agreed to return approximately $50 million in bonus
payments. This announcement seems to have quieted the AIG bonus
furor for the time being. Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate appears to be
taking a slower approach… Read more
Big M&A: BAA on Runway, but Credit Headwinds? M&A
in the U.K. just got a major boost, with the mandate to sell major
British airports issued by U.K. competition authorities. Sure to
influence this transaction are global credit markets, which continue to
leave a strong imprint on the shape of M&A in the U.K. and beyond.
Look no further than... Read more
Proxy Topic Box: Say on Pay
The “say-on-pay” vote – a
nonbinding shareholder advisory vote on executive compensation –
is a hot topic again this proxy season as investors are becoming
increasingly concerned with holding executives responsible for their
performance. The passage of the Troubled Asset Relief Program
(TARP) and the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)
have made say on pay proposals even more interesting...
Read more
Significant Events: From Bankruptcy to Public Debt Offerings
Bankruptcy had another big week with yet more
casinos, chemical producers, and commodities manufactures falling into
insolvency. There was, however, also an uptick in exchange offers
and an impressive surge in M&A activity. M&A was helped along in no small part by... Read more
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Proxy Battles, Executive Perks, Hedge Funds, Unresolved SEC Comments, TALF, Gold Deals
March 19, 2009
Proxy Battles: The Ultimate Anti-Takeover Weapon
Forget poison pills and golden parachutes –
it’s starting to seem that the best form of anti-takeover
protection may be the change of control provisions that tend to
accompany (over-)leverage. Look no further than several proxy
battles, currently underway, to recognize their importance. The
hostile acquirors in each may have figured out…
Read more
Cutting the Perks: Execs Lose Jets, JetCo's Lose Execs
Now that annual disclosure season has arrived, shareholders
and the general public are chomping at the bit to know exactly what perks
executives are receiving. Amid the corporate downturn, many executives
can only long for the glory days when personal assistants and luxurious
limousines were the norm. Even though some executives still enjoy…
Read more
Hedge Funds and Regulation: Try Not to Topple The
regulatory and economic grounds are shifting on hedge funds.
Those that are not toppling on their own are being toppled by
regulators or are beginning to plan for adjustments. With the
Brave New Regulatory World as yet unclear, what is clear is that both
regulators and investors have less stomach for... Read more
10-K Topic Box: Unresolved SEC Staff Comments
As companies are busy filing their annual reports, they are charged
with the additional requirement of disclosing unresolved SEC staff
comments. Staff comments (including those of the unresolved variety)
often relate a company’s financial condition, accounting issues and
proxy statements, among other issues. Under SEC rules... Read more
Trendspotting: TALF Securitization, Gold Deals and Other Trends
TALF Gains Momentum: Automakers Quick to Join the Bandwagon
Seeking Security in Gold
Additional CDS Central Counterparty: The SEC’s Push Toward Transparency
Creative Financing: Forbearance Leading the Way
Bylaw Amendments: Growth Leads to Additional Board Members Read more
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AIG Legal Risk, Joint Ventures, DIP Loans, Short Sellers, Anonymous Shareholder Votes, Golden Parachutes, M&A
March 17, 2009
The Notorious A.I.G.: Preserve the Law, While Clawing the Money
With AIG’s blush-inducing announcements
this weekend, hackles are raised and chokehold government steps
threaten. After the company simultaneously disclosed both
egregious compensation packages and staggering sums in collateral
payments, counterparty risk and the need for due diligence have new
meaning. Reported as separate issues, compensation and collateral
payments are anything but. They are joined together not only by
the stimulus of public ire, but also by a more fundamental legal
interplay, which raises issues from fraudulent conveyance to fiduciary
duty to failure to regulate. As if AIG alone wasn't big enough,
the issues at play are even bigger -- sweeping in a broad range of both
companies and their legal underpinnings.
Read more
Bankruptcy Risk: DIP Lenders Squash Others As if bankruptcy wasn’t tough enough, it now seems that the days when
management teams and senior lenders could sit down and civilly hammer
out reorganizations are over. Companies’ existing credit structures and
the general lack of credit are driving the terms of
debtor-in-possession (DIP) financings. DIPs are allowing some lenders
to move up in capital structure at the expense of others. Bankruptcies
involving companies taken over in leveraged buyouts by private equity
(PE) funds during the boom, like Lyondell and Aleris, are proving to be
particularly acrimonious. Meanwhile, the appearance of distressed
investors, like those at Chesapeake, can greatly complicate the already
complicated bankruptcy process. Overall, today’s DIPs and the claimant
leapfrog games they spawn are transforming the bankruptcy process into
a more adversarial and litigious forum and altering the distressed
investment landscape.
Read more
10-K Must Have: Joint Venture Disclosures
Are we starting to see a mutual admiration
society or is it a passing fad? Recent market volatility has led
companies to form joint ventures, which allows them to mitigate
exposure to some risks, yet avoid any change in ownership that would
occur with a merger or acquisition. These strategies are not
without risk, however, as joint ventures can be costly to implement or
end up knocking a company flat on its face should the partnership
fail. The presence of cultural differences, opposing objectives,
and a sense of “too many cooks” can all end up disjointing
an otherwise healthy relationship. Read more
Short Sellers Beware: Disclose, Uptick or Both
Is
the price-depressing impact of short selling rearing its ugly head
again? With all of the regulatory buzz now surrounding this area, you
might believe so. Equity markets are still depressed, some believe by
aggressive short sellers, so it is no surprise that circuit breakers
and short position disclosures are breathing new regulatory life. Each
is under active consideration by the Financial Services Authority (FSA)
and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Regulators have a tough
balancing act, however. They are recovering from their rushed short
selling bans in the darkest days of 2008, while trying to prevent
further share swoons, and balancing this concern with the health of
hedge funds and other key buy side investors. Read more
Shareholder Voting: Anonymous No More, SEC and NYSE
Voting rights burn brightly as any issue during all shareholder meeting
seasons, and this season they’re brighter than ever. With concerns
ranging from empty voting by funds to new NYSE rules proposed as to
broker voting, an uncertain season is about to commence. Along with
that uncertainty, though, it is certain that fundamental changes are
underway to shareholder voting, offering a promise of improved
corporate governance. Read more
Proxy Hot Topic: Golden Parachutes The
departure of a number of high profile executives last year brought the
issue of golden parachutes – lucrative benefits given to
departing employees – back into the spotlight as yet another
controversial form of executive compensation. Supporters of this
form of compensation argue that it helps protect employees from
arbitrary dismissal, discourages takeover attempts, and aids in
executive retention efforts. Golden parachute critics, however,
point out that these benefits are often guaranteed in executive
contracts without regard for the reason for the employee’s
departure, essentially create a reward for poor performance, compensate
already over-compensated executives, and don’t serve as
deterrence for unsolicited takeovers at all. Shareholders are
speaking out against these in proxy proposals this season, and even the
government took aim when it limited golden parachute compensation
through the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act (EESA). We at
Westlaw Business recognize that golden parachutes are a hot proxy topic
this year and have gathered some materials to assist you as you prepare
for this year’s proxy season. Read more
Significant Events: From Restructurings to Securities Offerings
Financial distress is leading to a deluge of
restructuring activity and bankruptcy filings. Big pharmaceutical
M&A is still in vogue. Energy and pharma M&A also made notable
showings. Meanwhile, the new regulatory environment is continuing to
unfold through a combination of settlements and actions from the SEC.
See our Related Resources for more on the restructuring events, M&A
transactions, offerings, and regulations defining today’s
business law environment. Read more
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TALF Risks, FSA Regulation, Big M&A, Capital Markets Revive, Commodities Volatility, Debt Issuance, E-Proxies
March 12, 2009
TALF, Beware: MBIA and Ghosts of Securitizations Past
The government is looking to jump-start the
securitization market through its Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan
Facility (TALF) and has some funds and other investors positively
gleeful at the promised benefits. Beware one and all -- the ghost of
securitizations-past still hangs over, and current litigations are
living proof. In particular, underlying asset originators and credit
enhancement firms must be careful about their roles. TALF
may not solve all of their ills. Furthermore, with the just-announced
lawsuit against MBIA's securitization-driven restructuring, it's clear
that the hot-seat role of credit enhancer has become even hotter. Read more
Financial Meltdown, Meet Global Regulation: Sans-Bernanke's Brave New World The
market should be "very frightened" of its newly re-charged regulators,
to judge from this week’s policy speeches by the heads of both
the U.K.’s Financial Services Authority (FSA) and the U.S.
Federal Reserve. Faced with a collection of bogeymen, ranging from
credit rating agencies (CRAs) to hedge funds, and facilitated by
devices like securitization and credit default swaps (CDS), both the
U.S. and U.K. are trying to recover from a near-meltdown propelled by a
startling collection of failures. Determined to put into place the
overall systemic regulations, top regulators are determined to prevent
a recurrence. To this end, this week, Hector Sans, CEO of the FSA,
and Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, have made
groundbreaking policy speeches that boil down to the following:
Simultaneous financial meltdown meets ironclad, harmonized financial
regulation. Read more
Big M&A: Outs are In, Merck and Genentech Flexibility
is the new black in M&A and everyone is looking to don it.
Ensuring maximum wiggle room, even after reaching “firm”
agreement to terms, companies of different stripes have reached major
M&A deals in recent days. Concluding that the M&A market is
firmed up may be premature, as “outs” of different sorts,
financing and fiduciary among others, are at the core of recently
announced agreements. With the lessons of the now-settled Dow-Rohm
acquisition/litigation/acquisition, companies are looking to structure
deals to account for the burdensome conditions of the current economy. Read more
Capital Markets Revive: Springtime (for Some), Post-10K
Something all too rare happened last week – and we’re not talking about
annual 10-K filings. Rather, long-sought but sadly rare in our time,
there were upticks in both offering registrations and M&A. Stranger
still – the U.S. government wasn’t behind (most of) it, nor was it
concentrated in the financial or pharmaceutical sectors. 10-K filing
season may signal the start of a spring-like thaw in more ways than
one. Read more
10-K Must Have: Commodities Volatility Over the past year, violently whipsawing prices
have made it clear that there is a lot of risk surrounding commodities.
Almost all companies rely on some sort of commodity input for their
value chains. The range of commodity uses is staggering –
everyone from automakers (needing metals), to packaging companies
(requiring chemicals), to delivery services (using oil products) relies
on them. As a result, this 10-K season, filers need to
meticulously disclose the risks they face arising from the prices of
commodities. To this end, we at Westlaw Business have compiled a list
of resources to assist you as you prepare your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
Trendspotting: Debt Issuance, E-Proxies and Other Top Trends
The SEC’s Rush to Regulate – Credit Rating Agencies and CDS Central Counterparties
Amended Bylaws – Electronic Shareholder Notices
Healthcare Consolidation – A Boon to Executives
Unfreezing Debt Markets: Natural Resource Companies
Silicon Valley is Under Water
Read more
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Merck Merger, TALF, Going Concerns, UK Rights Offerings, Golden Coffins, Debt Exchange, Restructuring
March 10, 2009
Law Firms, Opportunity: TALF is a Many Splendored Thing Too
Has the government handed over a pot of gold in
its quest to revive the financing markets? The Term Asset-Backed
Lending Facility (TALF) program may be just that for the financial
institutions and funds that play in the market, and for the law firms
and accounting firms that advise them. Last week, the Fed
detailed its TALF program, intended to facilitate the issuance of
asset-backed securities (ABS). The broad goal of the program is to jump
start at least one component of the flailing credit markets. If
the FDIC’s Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program is any
indication, government-guaranteed debt may prove a successful driver of
financing. Regardless of the ultimate success of this effort, the
program comes replete with reporting and disclosure requirements and
restrictions that will create new opportunities for a variety of
professionals. In the coming months, attorneys, accountants and
other professionals should pay particular attention to TALF as a source
of opportunity – and possible liability for the
less-than-diligent. Read more
Merck's M&A: TARP, Giant Pharma Thanks You
Big pharma just keeps getting bigger and bigger.
“Patent cliffs” (read: revenue-starved development
pipelines) and synergies (read: layoffs) continue to spur major
industry deals. The most recent is the $41.1 billion merger of Merck
and Schering-Plough, which was announced this week. Roche’s
pursuit of Genentech is also heating up with an increased offer and
reports of friendly negotiations. Not to be forgotten, there was also
the $68 billion tie-up of Pfizer-Wyeth in January. Still, the
shadow of the credit crisis looms large in all deals, especially the
mammoth ones we are talking about here, and financing continues to be a
major concern. Read more
10-K Concerns: Late Filings, Going Concern and Other Bad News
With
10-K season now raging, it’s not surprising to see that the
credit freeze has produced some 10-K gloom. What is actually surprising
is the number of companies that are taking extra time to get a handle
on their liquidity situation or work through their accounting before
filing. Worse still, some companies seem to be doing a little
early-spring balance sheet cleaning in hopes of avoiding a going
concern warning. By comparison, reduced earnings, downbeat growth
projections, and even industry-wide distress look positively rosy to
other filers who simply want to get this information out the door as
soon as possible. Read more
U.K. Rights Offerings: Bells and Whistles Needed Are
UK rights issues growing not only in frequency but complexity?
Observers may be forgiven for answering both affirmatively. There has
been a veritable plethora of recently announced rights issues, leading
investors and analysts alike to question just how much more the market
can bear. Even if the market can bear more offerings, more bells and
whistles are the order of the day, to judge from two recently announced
issues, those by Wolseley PLC and Premier Foods PLC. As other
cash-hungry companies consider how to turn to the capital markets for
financing, even the larger offerors must consider how much to dress
their offerings up to attract investor attention all while respecting
the pre-emptive rights enjoyed by their current shareholders. Read more
Debt Exchange Offers: Ford (and Others) Done with Debt? Debt
reduction is the order of the day, and companies are doing whatever it
takes to get these done. Motivated by forces ranging from
government demands relating to the Troubled Asset relief Program
(TARP) to undoing survival-threatening debt, companies from Ford to
Harrah’s are now chancing the debt markets in the hopes of
undoing heavy debt loads. To do so, they are adopting different
methods, ranging from debt conversions to debt exchange offers. At the
same time, these companies must also be careful to avoid legal traps
surrounding debt offers, not the least of which include inequitable
subordination claims by creditors moved down the capital structure pile
and breach of indenture claims. Read more
Proxy Hot Topic: Golden Coffins
Executive death benefits, known as “golden
coffins”, are gearing up to be one of the hottest proxy topics
this season. Several prominent companies have already received
proposals about them, and there may be more to come. Critical
investors see these death benefits as the ultimate form of compensation
not based on performance. Many companies, however, argue that
executive compensation in any form, even golden coffins, falls within
the purview of the board and that such compensation is vital to the
board’s ability to attract and retain qualified senior
executives. We at Westlaw Business have gathered some resources
to assist you as you prepare to address the issue of golden coffins
during this year’s proxy season. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: From Restructuring to Regulation
Financial distress is leading to a deluge of
restructuring activity and bankruptcy filings. Big pharmaceutical
M&A is in vogue. Energy and technology M&A also put in
extremely strong showings. The new regulatory environment is also
unfolding through a combination of settlements and new rules from the
SEC and FINRA. See our Related Resources for more on the restructuring
events, M&A transactions, offerings, and regulations defining
today’s business law environment. Read more
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Dark Pools, Blogs as Disclosure, Backdating, Great Depression, Off-Balance Sheet Transactions, Governance Cuts
March 5, 2009
Shine Light on Dark Pools: Avoid the Next Financial Mess
Does an unregulated and shadowy market, laden with systemic risk and
vulnerable to counterparty default, sound familiar? It may, drawing on
the waves of debacle that crashed down on the financial system in the
fall of 2008. While regulatory minds remain focused on secretive hedge
funds and under-regulated credit default swaps (CDS), they should be
thinking about another such area too: “dark pools.” When a financial
market involving all major institutions has as its principal selling
point its lack of transparency and regulation, legal and regulatory
antenna should start buzzing. Read more
Backdating is Back: The SEC is Watching Just when you thought it was safe, stock option
scandals are back in the spotlight. While actual occurrences of option
backdating are still few, charges and enforcement actions against
former and current executives have started to pop up again. Officers
from public companies have been recently charged by the SEC with
backdating options. Even though the biggest scandals broke
earlier, latent concerns about backdating remain throughout the market,
and companies and regulators are still buzzing about it. Read more
Incredibly Shrinking Boards: Can Governance Get Cut? Are
incredibly shrinking boards the latest casualties in our era of
dividend cuts, salary caps and workforce reduction? Though they
have positive expense ramifications, these cuts are not to be made
lightly. In an evolving trend, they are joined by still other
board cuts that companies are not driving. Some board members are
departing, seemingly intent on reducing their risks or simply the
exhaustion ensuing from our risk-filled era. Together, a range of
governance concerns results, with critical implications to companies in
this hazardous time. Read more
Related Topic: Board Size in the U.K. Companies
in the U.K., like their American counterparts, are considering
reductions in the size of their boards as a cost cutting measure.
Disclosures in the listings of the Financial Services Authority in the
United Kingdom, indicate that not only are firms engaging in this for
purely economic considerations but are also reducing the size of their
boards as a means of operating more nimbly. The Combined Code on
Corporate Governance sets out that boards should not be so large as to
be “unwieldy,” while firms aim to comply with these
corporate governance standards they must assess whether the
effectiveness of the board is compromised by its size. For a discussion
of the reductions in board sizes of U.S. companies please see,
Incredibly Shrinking Boards: Can Governance Get Cut?
Read more
Corporate Disclosure: To Blog or Not to Blog?
To blog or not to blog? That is the question
facing many corporate executives today. Blogs are just the tip of
the iceberg though. As we become an increasingly web-centric society,
investors appreciate – and in some cases expect –
convenient forms of web-based disclosure. Many companies have
responded to investor demands for information by endorsing corporate
blogs and creating investor relations sections of their websites, both
of which tread in the murky waters of informal disclosures. Even
the SEC seems to be jumping on board with some forms of web-based
disclosure by issuing rules and guidance intended to recognize new
media disclosures while keeping them in check. Now that the SEC
is merging formal disclosure with informal routes of the web,
what’s next? Read more
10-K Hot Topic: Off-Balance Sheet Transactions Off-balance sheet arrangements are one of the original culprits of the
credit crisis, but they are by no means purely a bank issue. Financial
services companies’ losses mushroomed as they were forced, possibly for
reputational reasons, to stand behind thinly capitalized off-balance
sheet entities. This 10-K season, financial services companies should
disclose their structured investment vehicle (SIV is Wall Street jargon
for an off-balance sheet arrangement) activities and the associated
risks much more thoroughly. All companies should also provide much more
thorough disclosure of any off-balance sheet arrangements and any
liabilities that could arise from these structures. We at Westlaw
Business have compiled a list of resources to assist you as you prepare
your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
Trendspotting: Great Depressions, Contingent Rights and other Top Trends
Back to the Great Depression
Deal Savers: Contingent Rights Agreement
Director Nominees: Time for a Change?
Rocky Roads for Retail
Forbearance: When Creditors get Creative
Read more
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Financial Fraud, RBS and UK Banks, Energy M&A, Stimulus Disclosures, Bankruptcies, Rights Offerings, Financing
March 3 , 2009
Have an issue you want to see covered? Send an e-mail to the Legal Currents Editorial Staff.
Axis of Financial Evil: Fraud's Many Flavors
A bewildering array of financial fraud of all
flavors has been revealed in recent months and an axis of financial
evil has emerged. With the ardor of a “Law and Order”
detective, we at Westlaw Business thought it helpful to sort the
different forms of financial mayhem. Our goal: to better
understand the (alleged) crimes, their perpetrators and likely
directions going forward for both regulation and enforcement.
This analysis is telling, as new regulatory and enforcement zeal, with
a budget to match, are being advocated by both President Obama and SEC
Chairwoman Schapiro.
Read more
UK Banks: Backstopping RBS--Third Time's a Charm? Between the revolving door of penury-claiming
banks and the head spinning sums being allocated, seemingly weekly, to
leading U.K. financial players, one could be forgiven the sense of
vertigo. Now in its third round of Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) rescue,
Her Majesty's (HM) Treasury and the Financial Services Authority (FSA)
are hopeful that this “third time is the charm.” Of course,
in this the U.K. is not alone. A regulatory and financial football
match is underway with equally generous healers of the U.S. government
and their latest ward, Citigroup. Playing from the same regulatory
playbooks, albeit in a different order, the two governments have set
themselves up to be both significant regulators and overwhelming
owners. The impact, thus far, has been to dilute shareholders, protect
creditors and salvage the financial system. What remains to be seen is
whether this suffices.
Read more
Energy M&A: Green Winds are Blowing
Energy markets: Start practicing your foreign languages. Consolidation
underway sees national boundaries as a mere inconvenience, dwarfed by
tough financing markets and over-regulation. However, regulatory winds
blow in multiple directions, seeking to advance policy goals as varied
as energy markets that are both green and un-bundled (more on both of
these points below). The M&A markets are taking the hint, with a
raft of green-focused energy M&A deals, most recently the north
European link up between Vattenhallen and Nuon. With the Obama
Administration using both its budget and the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA) to shape-shift the energy industry, the U.S. is
looking to play fast catch-up. Read more
Stimulus Dollar Disclosures: ARRA and TARP, a 10-K Must Have
With the late-breaking news of the stimulus package
passed on Feb. 17, filers may want to hold off pushing the “file
now” button. A $787 billion significant development has
just transpired that may bear thought…or even disclosure as
companies consider their final 10-K preparations. While the
President’s stimulus plan has now been signed into law as
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), the unknown
effects of the huge cash injection may still bring concern.
Companies are starting to adopt the lottery player’s mentality of
“if I win, I’d do this and that,” even though the
money has not yet been distributed. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: From Bankruptcies through Rights Offerings Financial distress continues to play out in markets around the globe.
Government intervention (or “semi-nationalization” -- take your pick)
continues to unfold in the market, particularly in halls of Washington
and Westminster. The week saw the U.S. and U.K. records for quarterly
loses adjusted to the upside and the largest rights offering ever.
However, not everything is doom and gloom. The week also saw a
noticeable uptick in M&A and a spattering of bankruptcy asset sales,
and showed that government intervention can create pretty good workflow for legal
professionals. For more on each of the events shaping today’s business
law environment, please follow the Related Resources. Read more
10-K Topic Box: Investment Market Times are Tough Financing and investment markets are working
through
one of the most jarring cycles since the 1930s. The readjustments
playing
out across financial markets are causing companies to rethink
their filing strategies. This year’s 10-Ks should focus on
the risks
and difficulties of securing debt financing from public and private
markets, equity markets, and the risks that the economic downturn
presents to investment
portfolios. We at Westlaw Business have compiled a list of resources
that may assist you as you prepare your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
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UBS Banking Crisis, Prepackaged Bankruptcy, Governance Standards, Declassification, Capital Structure
February 26, 2009
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UBS: Banking's Secret no More
A massive tax scandal, an IRS investigation and
pursuit by multiple government agencies is creating quite a maelstrom
for UBS and tarring its once pristine brand. Its money-fueled,
transnational world, filled with tax-dodging-wealthy-characters gives
the entire saga a James Bond air. At the same time, the episode
portends yet another set of banking and possible tax law changes. Read more
Activism and Declassification: Lowering the Drawbridge, a Proxy Must Have
Are boardrooms suddenly thrown open to new board
slates, removing current boards? With declassification on the tip of so
many tongues, you might think so. Motivated by under-performing
businesses, under-water stock prices and over-protected boards, demand
for board declassification has grown. Surprisingly, the boards
themselves seem quite willing to go along with the move, claiming to be
singing from the good governance songsheet. In truth, these moves
may be intended to ease the way for premium-paying acquirors or
operations-improving activist shareholders. Regardless, companies
entering this year’s proxy season should consider this dynamic
and their role in it. Read more
Prepack Bankruptcy: Avoid Chapter 11's Casino Prepackaged
bankruptcy can sound mighty attractive in our financing-constrained age
with few willingly venturing into the casino that is the bankruptcy
process. Faced in bankruptcy’s bluff-filled world
with much to lose and little cash to survive, a pre-packaged bankruptcy
sounds startlingly attractive. Legal issues shape the entire
process starting with the impact of the 2005 bankruptcy reforms and
continuing through predictable claims of duties breached and rights
trampled. While this may sound upsetting, it’s
better than the alternative. For reasons relating to capital structure,
operations and legalities, it is not open to all. The unlucky ones
proceed into the contentious bankruptcy processes. Read more
Rise in UK Bankruptcies: Related Topic Box As
in the United States, the economic crisis in the United Kingdom has
created severe distress for companies and forced some to make difficult
decisions. These decisions include the possibility of bankruptcy. In the
U.K., this can take various forms: (1) “administration,”
somewhat akin to Chapter 11 in the U.S., (2) winding up of the company
through liquidation, or (3) voluntary member liquidation, as in the
recent case of Danka Business Systems (which entered voluntary
liquidation following the sale of its primary operating business). The
members’ voluntary liquidation is done outside of the insolvency
process but may be sought out as companies are forced into asset sales.
The U.K. has also seen an increase in the number of pre-packaged
administrations. Likewise, prepackaged bankruptcies are appearing more
often in the U.S. Read more
Governance Risks: Board Committees and their Over-Full Plates It’s
a wonder that board members don’t resign their positions en
masse. Boards, and the committees that make them up, are facing
unprecedented challenges this year and governance has seldom been
tougher. From a legal perspective, these issues range from
additional TARP-driven certifications, to cross-board limitations, to
executive compensation and stability. Financial concerns include
the needs to sign off on the certainty of key numbers, despite our
uncertain times. Suffice it to say that their plates are more than
full. As if that list wasn’t scary enough, the threat of
litigation pervades all, as similarly-themed litigations have already
been brought. Read more
Trendspotting: Son of TARP, Capital Restructuring and other Top Trends
Stressed Capital Markets -- Fresh Medicine Coming Your Way
Governance Standards: Majority Voting Amendments
Restricted Stock Units: The Non-Option Option
Restructuring Capital Structures: Intercreditor Agreements
Hostile Back and Forth: Tag, You’re It
Shuffling Executives and Board Repositioning
Read more
Related Party Transactions: 10K Topic Box
As part of the fallout of the market crisis,
shareholders and regulators are scrutinizing corporate transactions
checking to see if blame can be placed for a company’s
woes. Consequently, related-party transactions, which some may
have once deemed to be normal business practice, are now inherently
suspect. Doing business with related parties takes various forms
ranging from M&A through ordinary business practices, like
insurance and office leases. It also leads companies to put in place
protocols for what is permissible and how that is disclosed. In the
interest of full disclosure, companies should seek out and disclose any
and all related-party transactions and their company policies about
such operations. To this end, we at Westlaw Business have
compiled a list of resources to assist you as you prepare your 2009
10-Ks. Read more
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Hostile M&A, IP Disclosure, Health Coverage Proposals, UK Bailout, E-Proxies
February 24, 2009
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Debt Exchange Offers: GM and Others Join the Rage Are debt exchanges really the path to salvation for companies with too
much leverage, on all (or many) of the wrong terms, to boot? Just as
leveraging (or over-leveraging) a company’s capital structure was all
the rage during the “golden” days of private equity-led leveraged
buyouts, de-leveraging through debt exchanges is in vogue today. The
newest members of the attempted-debt-exchange club are GM and Chrysler,
which recently submitted reorganization plans both call for massive out
of court debt reductions. However, they are not alone – they join an
eminent list, some more successful than others, including golden-era
golden children Harrah’s, GMAC and Realogy, to name a few. With debt
exchanges proving harder to complete, for reasons both financial and
legal, GM and Chrysler and all other over-levered companies should take
heed. Read more
U.K. Rights Offerings: Dancing Around the Covenants Cash-starved
U.K. companies are jumping on Rights Offerings as a bandwagon of
choice. These refinancings are shaped both by choice-constraining
debt covenants and the absence of stigma that Rights Offerings seem to
suffer from in the U.S. Jumping on this bandwagon and with an eye
to their prevalence as financing vehicle, the Financial Services
Authority (FSA) has taken steps to streamline rights offerings current
and future. With U.K. companies in industries from property to
mining suffering balance sheet imbalance, look for increasing rights
offerings and disclosures of them.
Read more
Senior Executives: Cuomo Clawing Compensation?
With New York Attorney General Cuomo digging into
the executive compensation practices of Merrill Lynch (pre-merger),
post-TARP Wall Street is now on notice that its compensation practices
are a matter of quite-public record. More specifically, Bank of America
and its peers are being told that investor disclosures of this sort are
a must have, and failure to do so may have serious consequences.
The worries go further, however: concerns extend to the chance for a
government-led clawback of compensation, in which someone may be asking
executives to give that money back. Strategies for investigation
management, compensation and disclosure should adjust accordingly. Read more
10-K Hot Topic: Restructuring Risks and Costs
Restructuring,
inside and outside of bankruptcy court, is sure to be a topic at the
forefront of this season’s 10-K disclosures. With the
increasing number of companies restructuring to increase operational
efficiency, investors are keen to know the associated
details. These points of interest will all need to be
meticulously disclosed. To this end, we at Westlaw
Business have compiled a list of resources to assist you as you prepare
your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
Proxy Hot Topic: Splitting Co-Titles
The issue of separating chairman and CEO roles may be a hot proxy topic
among activist shareholders again this year, as there is disagreement
between interested parties over whether good corporate governance and
shareholders’ interests are best served by splitting the two roles.
Many CEOs are hesitant to separate the roles and relinquish the extra
degree of control, but investors are increasingly supportive of
proposals to make boards more independent from the executive teams. In
anticipation of another possible round of these proposals, we at
Westlaw Business have gathered some resources to assist you as you
prepare for this year’s proxy season. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: From Bankruptcies to Corporate Fraud
Bankruptcies and strategic M&A transactions
are heating up. Other issues shaping today’s business law
environment include corporate fraud, new regulations, and continuing
softness in the IPO market. See our Related Resources for more on
the transactions, offerings, and regulations defining today’s
business law environment. Read more
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Hostile M&A, IP Disclosure, Health Coverage Proposals, UK Bailout, E-Proxies
February 19, 2009
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Stimulus Law Opportunity: Restructuring Debt, TARP, and the Economy With all the talk of the financial benefits of
the stimulus package, you’d almost forget it’s actually a
cash-stuffed law with legal elements aplenty. With the
implications to lawyers of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
of 2009 (ARRA) being too many to enumerate, we at Westlaw Business opt
to highlight a sampling of various incentives and impediments.
These range from debt restructuring, to tweaking TARP, to sheer
disclosure of wins-and-losses from the stimulus funds. The one
thread tying the law together is its intent to re-ignite the
economy. Whether it in fact does will be the work of the lawyers,
as much as the domain of the economists and historians who ultimately
assess them. Read more
Hell Hath no Fury: Beware Bankruptcy-Scorned Unions (and Execs)
Hell hath no fury like a scorned employee (or
executive…or union) – making the scorn-filled bankruptcy
process particularly tough. In reorganizing during bankruptcy, at
least three employment issues leap to the strategic fore: unions and
their collective bargaining arrangements (CBA), executive pay-to-stay,
and the prosaic (unless unless you’re the payee) continued
payments to the downsized. While these legal constructs sound
esoteric, they risk tanking the whole bankruptcy proceeding as
Interstate Bakeries (for one) learned to its chagrin and
near-death.
Read more
Silent Takeovers?: Short Slates, Long Positions, a Proxy Must Have
How
can shareholders replace under-performing boards without triggering
change of control provisions? Investors frustrated by poor management
may be tempted to run alternate director slates or stage all-out proxy
contests…but there is a downside. Change of
control provisions, typically triggered by the replacement of boards, can
negatively impact everything from public relations to credit lines to
leases. Consequently, short slates (i.e. a minority slate of directors)
are often seen as a safer alternative to a full or majority
slate. The battles between activist shareholders and stodgy
boards are heating up, with a barrage of short slates complementing the
onslaught of hostile tenders. Read more
10-K Hot Topic Box: Disclosing Counterparty Risk There was an uptick in bankruptcy filings last
year and counterparty risk has become more salient. This year’s
10-Ks will therefore need to focus not only on risks to the company
itself, but also on those posed to it by third-parties, such as the
potential insolvency of its suppliers or distributors. Many companies
will also need to carefully disclose risk concentrations that webs of
financial counterparties pose to their business. To this end, we at
Westlaw Business have compiled a list of resources to assist you as you
prepare your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
New Sheriff(s) in Town: Get your Filings Right
Slack filers beware: there’s a new sheriff
in town and tougher filing requirements are the order of the day.
Several entities are getting down to business, taking on enforcement
actions against companies for failing to meet filing
requirements. Cries for change have been heard at the SEC by the
new chairperson, Mary Schapiro, who promised tougher regulations and
stricter enforcement. Not to be outdone, enforcement comes from
the exchanges as well. These moves signal a warning of
“freeze -- not so fast!” to companies not submitting
periodic filings in a timely manner. With the filing sheriffs on
the prowl, if you don't file, you are going to face tighter enforcement. Read more
Trendspotting: Backdating, Subleases and Other Trends
Incredibly Shrinking Boards
Restricted Stock Awards – Stability Over Volatility
Keeping the Creditors Happy
Passing Debt On Through Subleases
Turn Back the Clock – It’s Backdating Time Again? Read more
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Hostile M&A, IP Disclosure, Health Coverage Proposals, UK Bailout, E-Proxies
February 17, 2009
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Hostile M&A: When an Ounce of Prevention is not Enough
How do you stop an overly amorous acquiror in an age of cheap stock
prices and heightened hostile activity? Even poison pills and staggered
boards are far from foolproof, begging other, more expensive, measures
to be adopted following the launch of a bid. Lawyers and strategists
ought to learn the cautionary lessons from several recently announced
acquisitions (or agitations), not least among them the ongoing dramas
surrounding Roche-Genentech, CF-Terra and NRG-Exelon. Sometimes both
an ounce and a pound of cure do not suffice and the end result is an
extensive fight, of either the proxy contest or tender offer variety. Read more
Trolls Under The Bridge: IP Disclosures, a 10-K Must Have
Intellectual
property (IP) has long been a major differentiating factor –
but is now being eroded both by legal change and business
pressures. Long viewing IP rights as legal protection of them
as agents of change, innovators are now facing change of a less-desired
variety, impacting everyone from finance to retail and technology.
Courts have diminished long-trusted business method patents,
competitors have threatened others, and economics have undermined most
of the rest. As a result, particularly careful attention must
be paid in this year of change to disclosure of these issues. Read more
Governance Strategists: Shareholder Access, Meet E-Proxies Investor relations and governance experts: Better corporate governance
and big cost savings are but a keystroke away, to believe e-proxy
fans. The SEC is one of the biggest proponents, with its desire to
improve shareholder communications and overall governance. To help, the
SEC has pushed the use of electronic proxy distribution. Its
provenance and ultimate adoption seems inevitable. In an era of an
ever-expanding Web universe, it’s been an anachronism to have
EDGAR-bearing websites as a sole point of access for the investor
community. However, while many – like household names Sara Lee,
Microsoft, and Citigroup – have adopted it, companies should give
careful consideration to their own needs and those of their
shareholders. Read more
UK Banking Shock: Marking HBOS to Market With
shades of Merrill’s traumatic pre-merger mark-to-market, the U.K.
is now experiencing the sequel. Like Hollywood recycling a better-made
movie from another country, Lloyds seems to have done the same, only
this time using the Bank of America/Merrill Lynch script. With an
eerily similar feel, Lloyds disclosed an unexpected loss at HBOS a
month after Bank of America revealed a $15 billion loss at the recently
acquired Merrill Lynch. Does Lloyds’ disclosure of a £10
billion loss and subsequent credit rating downgrade signal the need for
additional assistance from the U.K. government? Read more
Proxy Hot Topic: Comprehensive Health Coverage Proposals
Comprehensive health coverage is building up to
be a hot proxy topic this year. A major focus last year, health
coverage may be even more so this year because it is threatened by the
slower economy. The SEC’s support of similar 2008
initiatives also seems to have helped reinvigorate the movement, as a
large number of proposals are once again rolling in. We at
Westlaw Business have gathered some resources to assist you as you
prepare for this year’s proxy season. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: From Bankruptcy to Defunct IPOs
This week saw an unfortunate uptick in bankruptcy filings. However,
there is a silver lining to this cloud. The upside this week includes
a $280 million "stalking-horse" bid in a Section 363 asset sale. More
of these sales are sure to follow later in the year. Also, M&A
continues to hold up well in the technology and pharmaceutical
industries. See our Related Resources for more on the transactions,
offerings, and regulations defining today’s business law environment. Read more
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Hedge Fund IPOs, North Dakota, Tax Gross-Ups, Bankrupt Tenants, Market Caps
February 12, 2009
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Reincorporation: Home Sweet Home in North Dakota
To
Dorothy Corp., there’s no place like home – in
Bismark. North Dakota has it all: the Great Plains, snow, and the
Lawrence Welk museum. What more could an activist shareholder
ask for? Back in mid-2007, driven in part by mega-investor
Carl Icahn, North Dakota revised its corporate governance laws to
include provisions that favor shareholder rights. While
images of the old west and its renegade ways (or George Washington
crossing the Delaware) may entice some, billion dollar corporations are
being asked to set up shop in tornado alley. Like shareholder
proposals of past years, this movement is one worth keeping an eye on,
as it appears to be increasingly gaining momentum. Read more
Hedge Fund IPOs: Bait and Switch?
Hedge Funds do the darndest things –
especially when facing massive redemptions and threatened collapse.
With public markets a possible avenue to raise more capital and provide
for investor exit, that option might seem quite attractive to a fund
otherwise having a hard time staunching the bleeding. Yet going
public to meet redemption requests and provide investors with liquidity
might not be the best strategy, in light of the recent Bank of America v.
Steel Partners II Ltd. lawsuit. Steel Partners decided to take this
avenue and it is now the defendant in a complaint alleging breach of
contract, fraud, and hinting at potential securities law violations. So
it remains to be seen if going public is a wise way to deal with
redemption. Read more
Bankruptcy Risk: Landlords Stuck Between a Rock and a Hard Lease Landlords of bankrupt tenants are now learning
what many sports fans already knew – the best defense is a good
offense…at least when it comes to commercial leases. The
holiday shopping season has been over for more than a month now and as
we assess the damage of less than stellar sales figures, we are seeing
record numbers of well-known names heading into bankruptcy. This
not only impacts the company, its employees, customers, and
shareholders – groups we commonly hear about in the
bankruptcy fallout – but it also has an effect on landlords who
have found themselves in the situation of not being able to (at least
as reliably as before) collect the rent. Read more
Battered Equity Prices: Funds, Indices and the SEC to the Rescue?
Beyond
the suffering of investors, battered equity prices lead to trouble. Not
only are they egg on the CEO’s face, but the resultant low market
cap subjects public companies to significant costs ranging from more
expensive access to capital markets to de-listing from exchanges.
Companies should be aware of market cap and price-per-share triggers
and take steps to bolster share prices. However, traditional
moves, such as share buybacks, may be difficult to execute in current
markets, as some companies may be faced with covenants from credit
lines or debt issuances or possibly government financing (think of
TARP/FSP) restricting repurchases prior to repayment. Fortunately,
boards aren’t the only entities trying to pull companies out of
the equity price scramble. The exchanges have taken actions
recently aimed at addressing the equity price volatility. Even the SEC
has been forced to deal with the turmoil. Read more
10-K Hot Topic Box: Disclosing M&A Dependency Many
companies use mergers and acquisitions as a growth strategy. The
upcoming year will require disclosure of some of the challenges firms
have recently faced in carrying out this strategy in light of current
economic conditions. These challenges include the inability to fund
future acquisitions, servicing the debt of past acquisitions, and the
failure to close a pending merger. We at Westlaw Business have compiled
a list of resources that may assist you as you prepare your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
Trendspotting: Tax Gross-Ups, SPACs, and Other Top Disclosure Trends
Corporate Political Contributions: Who’s Getting What?
Tax Gross-Ups: High End Retail in Tough Times
Labor Unions & Bankruptcy Concessions
SPACs: Searching for the Right Combination
How Healthy is Fast Food? Read more
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Banking M&A, IPOs, TARP Do-Over, Credit Rating Reform, XBRL, Environmental Disclosures, Exec Perks
February 10, 2009
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TARP Do-Over: Private Sector's In, M&A's Out, Trillions Spent
In
a re-branding effort worthy of Madison Avenue, the Treasury Department
today relaunched TARP under the sober sobriquet of the Financial Stability
Plan (FSP). The FSP focuses, for now, on how to spend the
remaining $350 billion from the original TARP funds. Other than a
healthy dose of mind-bending renamings, the old/new plan has several
interesting elements: toxic asset cleanup, equity recapitalizations,
new asset purchases, and all with commensurate restrictions and
reporting. If the plan sounds familiar, it should – it
hearkens back to the original TARP. At the same time, it contains
several interesting new elements, not least among them the involvement
of private sector co-investors and restrictions on M&A before
repayment. While stock markets convulse in reaction, we at
Westlaw Business opt, below, to take a more studied approach to the new
plan’s contents. Read more
Credit Rating Agencies: Fox and Henhouse?
Credit rating agencies (CRAs) are back in the hot seat, with the temperature
jointly cranked by hot-off-the-press regulations and warming U.S. debt
markets. In truth, they never really left this position – a growing
list of litigations attest to alleged abuse by CRAs during the frothy days gone by. These litigations not only
threaten to impose upon the agencies a financial burden, but they also
lay out quite clearly the legal and business issues requiring redress
if the CRAs are to move forward as the arbiters of credit-worthiness in
the future. Read more
Strategic Disclosure Opportunity: Lawyers, Advise Execs on XBRL
Disclosures
to the SEC are about to undergo a major shakeup, and it's
high time for company lawyers and leaders to update their reporting
strategies. With the release of the SEC's final rules last week, the
age of XBRL is now officially upon us. Due to the seemingly mundane nature of this new requirement, senior executives, who
would never leave SEC reporting to junior accountants and tech folks,
may be tempted to do just that when it comes to XBRL. Beware
of that temptation. While viewed as "tagging arcana", XBRL
presages an era of equity price moves that favor those who consider the
marketing impact of these tags...and penalizes those who
don't. And, with aspirations of enveloping both
financial and qualitative disclosures, XBRL requires a well considered
disclosure strategy with tight focus from top company lawyers and
the executives they advise. Read more
Banking M&A: Financing Terms in the Driver's Seat
Tough financing markets have left no area of
M&A unscathed, least of all the financial service sector, where it
all began. Deal terms are being carefully structured. These
days, it's all about the money, which has proven itself in an
all-too-short supply. Even deals built around seemingly-available
TARP funds are less flush than you’d think – while
TARP’s been used to spur deals, it’s also caused an outcry
of “TARP money is for lending, not merging”. Look
under the hood of each recent deal, from complex joint ventures like
Citi/Morgan Stanley/Smith Barney to straightforward mergers like
Capital One/Chevy Chase to local acquisitions like Wesbanco/AmTrust,
and you’ll see that financing markets are in the driver’s
seat. With so little certain, one thing is nearly so: financing
markets seem set to drive consolidation (and its terms) in both the
financial sector and related spaces, like financial technology.
Read more
Pollution and Other Dirty Laundry: Environmentals are a 10K Must-Have The environment has been a political focus and
increasingly at the forefront of people’s thinking since the
1960s. But, unlike the hula-hoop, environmental issues are a fad
turned serious business – and are here to stay. Companies face ever-changing environmental disclosure challenges and
regulatory compliance demands which can leave investors in the woods
about just where companies stand on hot topics such as global warming,
hazardous waste, and pollution, to name a few. Read more
Proxy Hot Topic: Executive Perks Need Airing Amid the public and regulatory scrutiny of
corporate expenditures, executive perquisites (or in some cases, the
lack thereof) are a hot topic this year. Companies will be
disclosing everything from the payments of country club dues, to
executive jet use, to limousine service provisions, to an array of
other cleverly devised executive perks. We at Westlaw Business
have gathered some resources to assist you in disclosing your
perquisites as you prepare your filings (see our Related Resources
panel). Read more
Significant Events Briefing: From IPOs to Bankruptcies This week brought another round of significant
legal events that will shape the business law environment. The
IPO has returned, at least for the time being. Could it be here to
stay? While several major companies filed for bankruptcy, the baker
that makes all the lovable Hostess brand treats exited Chapter 11. Debt
markets may even be poised for a thaw, as several blue chip companies
managed to roll multi-billion dollar offerings this week. For
more on each of the events shaping today’s business law
environment, please see our Related Resource. Read more
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Poison Pills, CDS, Exec Comp, Forcing M&A, New Directors
February 5, 2009
Have an issue you want to see covered? Send an e-mail to the Legal Currents Editorial Staff.
Poison Pills: Careful What You Swallow... The financial storm has left many company stock
prices under, exposing them to hostile acquirors, lovingly referred to
as “sharks” swimming around them. To repel these
sharks, boards are turning to defensive mechanisms. Last week, we
covered staggered boards. This week, we are another method boards use
to ward off unwanted attention: with equity prices low enough to
entice unwanted suitors, boards are looking to arm themselves with
poison pills. Read more
Executive Compensation: Limited Pay, Unlimited Disclosure Executive compensation is almost too hot to
touch…yet companies have to figure out both whether to curb it
and how to disclose it. It has become such a hot issue that that
the Feds are stepping in (or maybe stepping on) to quash the practice.
Shareholders and lawmakers alike are scrutinizing all aspects of
companies’ executive pay packages, including base salary,
bonuses, deferred compensation, incentive pay, golden parachutes, and
even the perks that used to come with the job (judging from recent news
coverage, there had better not be private airplane usage anywhere in
sight). Read more
Forcing M&A: Courts, Can Dow Walk from Rohm?
Do acquirors obtain a “put option” on
mergers they have committed to? Dow Chemicals certainly thinks so, in
walking away from Rohm and Haas, but Rohm and Haas strenuously
disagrees and has sued Dow. Rohm & Haas might think its
case is airtight, but bitter experience has taught that it is anything
but. It is part of a string of cases playing out during our
“winter” of discontent, where golden-era acquirors attempt
to walk away from their commitments…and if they don’t,
their banks do. The courts have consistently ruled that “a
deal is a deal – as long as it’s
well-crafted”…but this turns out to be scant comfort, as
the story doesn’t end there. Acquirors have found yet other
ways to leave unwanted deals behind, and “specific
performance” sometimes ends up being anything but the original
deal being actually completed. Read more
10-K Hot Topic Box: Disclosing CDS and Securitized Bonds Companies have always included securities in
their portfolios, but with the tumultuous market conditions of recent
months, disclosure could be a more delicate task than usual. This year,
companies will be disclosing a litany of risky holdings, including
credit default swaps (CDS), securitized debt, loans originated for
securitization that are now languishing on the balance sheet, and
plain-old investment returns (the good and the bad). We at Westlaw
Business have compiled a list of resources that may assist you as you
prepare your 2009 10-Ks. Read more
Trendspotting: Activist Investors, New Directors and Other Top Disclosure Trends Hostile Activity: Pharma Board Battle
Employment Agreement: NCR’s Newest Board Member
Shareholder Proposal: Say On Pay
Unsure Footing Ahead for Shoemaker
PE On the Up? Read more
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Surviving Bankruptcy, TARP Under Scrutiny, Succession Planning, Anti-Takeover Protections
February 3, 2009
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Tech M&A: Allocating Risks in an Age of Risk With tech M&A continuing to unfold in the
technology industry, how are today’s heavy risks being allocated?
This is worth considering, as M&A in the tech sector continues at a
rate that is none too shabby (relative to today’s world).
The key is how these deals are getting done– while the values
tell part of the story, masked in the legal terms is the rest of the
story. Financing terms, risk-allocating Material Adverse Clauses
(MAC), specific performance clauses, and termination fees are among the
indicators that we at Westlaw Business have looked at to give you a
sense of how tech M&A is playing out in the current economic
climate. Read more
Law Firms, Opportunity: TARP is a Many Splendored Thing Have
the opportunities in the legal market promised by TARP ended? Not by a
longshot. TARP’s explicit components continue to
unfold, including initial securities investments and subsequent equity
offerings. Along with these, it seems set to drive further capital
markets, M&A and (of course) lending activity…and with
staggering amounts of taxpayer funds on the line, there is an
increasing need for greater disclosure. Read more
Executives Beware: Duty to Disclose Rising
Disclosure standards may just have increased, thanks to recent
incidents involving GM, Apple and Bank of America. All household
names, these companies are being taken to task for alleged failures to
disclose major issues. The upshot? The professional’s craft of
disclosure must rise in 2009 to the level of “high art” as
uncertainty-weary investors demand the fullest possible picture from
companies. This demand must be taken seriously, as recent events make
clear that failure to disclose exposes companies, their boards and
their certifying executives to real risk. Read more
Hot Topic Box: Researching Clawbacks
Clawbacks of bonuses and long-term incentive pay
are hot issues this year. Many companies are disclosing their executive
clawback provisions, driven by poor economic conditions and government
bailout requirements, among other things. We at Westlaw Business
gathered some resources to assist you in disclosing your clawbacks as
you prepare your filings (see our Related Resources panel). Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer The last week has seen a redoubling of M&A activity and a tailing
off of bankruptcy filings, which may be viewed as positive
developments. The pharmaceutical industry, no doubted spurred into
action by last week’s announcement of the massive merger between Pfizer
and Wyeth, was particularly active. There was also movement in
technology and commodities sectors. Could this uptick continue? Or will
it prove to be just an aberration? See our Related Resources for more
on the transactions, offerings, and regulations defining today’s
business law environment. Read more
Who's Got the Power: Must-Have Energy Disclosures Any
company relying on energy (i.e., every company) must consider how to
disclose its dependency. This is a wider group than you might
think, touching companies from airlines to yacht manufacturers.
Even the green world has an energy issue. If nothing else, energy
has two things in spades - usage and volatility – both of which
trigger disclosure requirements by a range of companies, from those
obviously affected to those far less so. As a result, companies must
pay careful attention to their disclosure strategies as they step into
the upcoming season of disclosures. Read more
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Surviving Bankruptcy, TARP Under Scrutiny, Succession Planning, Anti-Takeover Protections
January 29, 2009
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Bankruptcy Risk: Reorganizing in Tough Financing Markets Has the process of entering bankruptcy become
even more unhappy? Apparently so, as the special bankruptcy
financing on which it used to depend, has become extra-limited, thanks
to constricted credit markets. However, for companies already operating
in bankruptcy protection (at least some of them), bankruptcy remains a
rather helpful haven. With all of the noise around bankruptcies from
Lehman to Lyondell, this corner of the market seems forgotten.
Forgotten, perhaps, but not gone, and lessons should be learned from
this market as to how this group contends with current credit markets. Read more
Anti-takeover Protections: Raise the Gates, the Hostiles are Coming Can
hostile acquirors take advantage of depressed equity prices to buy
coveted companies on the cheap? Can activist shareholders shake up
disappointing boards with impunity? They may want to, but
today’s boards seem to be one step ahead and have recently
increased their adoption of protective measures. In
particular, boards are turning to several tools to protect themselves:
staggered boards, golden parachutes, supermajority voting provisions,
and of course poison pills. Milder forms of protective action are being
taken as well: tightened advance notice requirements for special
shareholder meetings among them. What they're putting in place and how
they're disclosing is of great interest as we move into a new year
filled with M&A promise. Read more
Succession Planning: Is Anyone in Charge?
Is succession planning merely good advice or is it good governance? The
recent debacle over disclosure of the health of Apple’s Steve Jobs
calls this issue to the fore. In fact, succession planning has long
been a burning issue for many shareholders, as the loss of a key
officer can be extremely disruptive to the operation and health of a
company. Some have even raised its stature from an issue of “mere”
disclosure to one of fiduciary duty – responsible boards must have
chosen successors and possibly even communicated it. The sensitivity of
the issue is most apparent where the CEO is the company (or at least is
seen that way). “CEO as brand” is often beneficial to the company
(think of Apple’s Jobs, Dell Computers’ Michael Dell and Berkshire
Hathaway’s Warren Buffet). While there is a great swirl of opinion and
news around this topic and the SEC has allowed companies latitude,
companies ought to be giving much thought to their own approach. Read more
Trendspotting: TARP Scrutiny, Whistleblowing and Other Top Trends
TARP Use of Proceeds: SEC sharpens its Scrutiny
Reducing Benefits: …But it Beats Layoffs
Currency Risks: Shipping Risk Overseas
Whistleblowing: The “Other” Sarbanes Oxley
Executive Leadership in Dour Times: Best Buy Employment Agreement Read more
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Pharma M&A, Financing Outs, Executives Beware, PE Funds, Pension Underfunding, Big Bankruptcy
January 27, 2009
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Pharma M&A: Financing Outs Are Back In Can you get a “financing out” where
all manners of financing seem to be…out? Look no further
than the recent multi-billion wave of pharmaceutical M&A, where
constricted financing markets define the structures and terms of deals
being done. Motivated by starved drug pipelines (read:
revenue-starved pipelines), Big Pharma companies are turning toward
M&A with a vengeance. They are finding willing ears amongst
smaller players faced with starved financing markets. Financing terms
shape how these deals are done. The fortunate acquirers are cash-rich
and funding deals from their own pockets, thus avoiding financing
questions altogether. The others lucky enough to play the role of
acquirer are subject to the slings and arrows of outrageous financial
markets – but still seem able to pull things off. A review
of deal structures provides pointers for other would-be acquirers. Read more
Executives, Beware: Can You Certify Your Filings this Year? Executives in 2009 are faced with a potential
nightmare scenario: the continuing need to certify filings as certain,
in the face of certainty-threatening volatility. With whipsawing
markets, plummeting asset prices, and depressing economic conditions,
mandated certification of company filings is particularly
troubling. Exacerbating such conditions, TARP saddles recipients
of government money with additional certification requirements.
Reassuring, perhaps, is the fact that this sort of uncertainty has
given pause to others before and has also elicited commentary from the
SEC. Executives considering what to do if certainty remains
unavailable this year may find the following analysis helpful in
deciding how to evaluate the signing risks they’re being asked to
consider. Read more
M&A Structuring: What Happens in NewCo, Stays in NewCo
Are M&A legal structures about to be pierced or collapsed? Not if
the Delaware courts have anything to do with it, as seen as their
ruling on the recent Blackstone/Alliance Data aborted acquisition. The
upshot: when working with any purchaser, certainly of the PE “smart
money” kind, caveat vendor – PE funds are known as smart money for good
reason. Prolific creators of multiple legal entities and complex
partnerships, PE funds are careful to segment one legal identity (and
set of obligations) from another, and certainly from the main funds and
the General Partner. The issue is broader than PE purchases, as
triangular mergers deploying NewCo’s are routinely used. As banks and
policy-makers look to M&A (including that of the PE variety) to
salvage the distraught financial system, careful lawyering is more
important than ever. Read more
Disclosure Risk: Underfunded Pensions, a 10-K Must-Have Harm
to employees and the government are two things companies never want to
disclose -- yet many are faced with the need to do just that, as they
work through underfunded pensions. Though many pension plans have been
long
labeled as under-funded, the issue has hit new extremes as
bankruptcy-threatening economic conditions combine with depressed
investment markets to expose companies and their employees to risk. As
with so many other issues of the day, the taxpayer is along for the
ride as the federal guarantor of pension liabilities, the Pension
Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) is ultimately on the hook in the
event of company bankruptcy. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer This week brought another round of significant
legal events on both Wall Street and Main Street. The week included
huge pharmaceutical mergers and even the President’s tailor going
bankrupt. The U.S. government has also continued to take an active role
throughout the capital market. For more on each of the events shaping
today’s business law environment, please follow the Related
Resources. Read more
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DIP Financing, Forbidden Rumors, CSR, Tightening TARP, Big M&A, Inauguration Initiatives, Credit Markets
January 21, 2009
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Bankruptcy Creditors, Beware: How to Get Money from a Stone Creditors are finding it much harder to recover
cash from bankrupt companies, especially those of the flag-carrying
variety. The bankruptcy world has markedly changed, motivated by new
U.S. bankruptcy laws, turnaround-stifling economic conditions, and the
credit crunch (which makes bankruptcy financing harder to come
by). All told, this has led many a flag-carrier into early
bankruptcy, with cash still on the books. They do so in the hopes
that amenable bankruptcy courts allow them to continue using it.
Though this may seem unconventional, it’s proven otherwise and,
given today’s frozen financing markets, it may seem better than
the alternative, as witnessed most recently by Circuit City. Read more
Tightening TARP: Banks, Fess Up TARP
is about to get a little tougher. To all appearances, funding
will still be available, but the conditions attached to it and the
reporting requirements that follow it are being tightened.
Perhaps no accident, this follows repeat funding requests by titans
including Bank of America, Citigroup and SunTrust Bank. Rumor has
it that Chrysler may be joining this list if its proposed deal with
Fiat progresses. These new restrictions and reporting
requirements are not new to all, as certain institutions have begun
voluntary steps in these same directions – some have even been
crowing about their newly invigorated lending or M&A
activity. As many others have been strangely silent, the new
Administration seems determined to step in and shake things up. Read more
FINRA Regulates Rumors: Loose Lips, Stop Sinking Ships! Can a recurrence of rumor-driven collapse (a la
Bear Stearns or, worse, Lehman) be prevented? With President
Obama stating in his inaugural address that “without a watchful
eye, the economy and the nation can spin out of control,” the
question is a serious one. For evidence that a rumor mill can
bring a company to its knees, one need look no further than the rubble
of failed financial institutions like Lehman Brothers still quaking
around us. FINRA apparently believes it can control the fallout
and, like a finger-wagging grade school teacher, is stepping in with a
proposed rule to tame rumor-prone public markets. However, the desire
to tame these rumors runs headlong into the twin human propensities
toward gossip and profit. Can FINRA win? Read more
Proxies: Disclose CSR, Obama Advocates It This year’s proxy season looks set to be
like no other. With depressed stock prices, rising hostile
activity, and threats of corporate illiquidity, fireworks were already
assured. However, the pyrotechnics may get even brighter, now
that President Obama has boosted another proxy-season issue to the top
of the nation’s agenda. The long-cherished corporate social
responsibility (CSR) agenda just saw the President give voice to
several of its goals, with his stated visions to “restore science
to its rightful place, to wield technology to meet our goals, and to
harness sun, winds soil to power ourselves.” Proxy season
may never be the same – expect to see even more shareholder
proposals, proxy items, and 10-K annual report disclosures relating to
a broad array of CSR topics this year. Read more
Tip-toeing Through the Minefield: Disclosing Credit Issues on Your 10K
Tip-toeing through minefields is an apt analogy to this year’s 10-K
disclosure of your company’s credit issues. Disclosing either too much
or too little has real costs. Yet credit issues are not tangential –
they are likely among your Top 5 issues for preparing your major
filings this year. This is true whether you’re disclosing difficulties
(your own or those of your suppliers, distributors, or customers) or
opportunities (if you happen to be one of the lucky few getting new
credit lines or actually profiting from credit-compromised
conditions). With this need, we at Westlaw Business have prepared an
overview several manners of credit disclosures to help. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know-Lawyer
Inauguration euphoria witnessed on Main Street
didn’t exactly translate to Wall Street. However, there is a
silver lining to even this week’s cloud: M&A transactions,
debt issues, and even an up-tick in bankruptcy work. The following are
the most important transactions and events shaping today’s
business law environment. For more on each, please see Related Resources. Read more
Regulatory Alert: Newly Tightened Financial Markets Financial regulation is about to enter a new era,
along the new Administration. In truth, a period of remarkable
regulatory activity has been upon us for months, as the tentacles of
the financial crisis continue to reach into every crevasse of the
economy. Joining that impulse in recent days, with shades of Marbury v.
Madison (or the more modern Holder/Marc Rich scandal) is the prolific
regulatory activity characteristic of many end of term
administrations. Further shades of Marbury: the Obama White
House has since put a hold on all pending regulation, subject to
review. All told, our legislators, regulators, and
self-regulatory organizations (SROs) are remarkably busy…and may
remain so for some time. The following highlights recent significant
regulatory activity: Read more
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Voting Swaps, Big REIT Offerings, Hedge Funds, Ponzi Tsunami, Activist Shareholders
January 15, 2009
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Voting Swaps: Hedge Funds' Three Card Monte Are all shareholders after the same thing? The
mantra of recent years has been “one share, one vote”, but
what about no shares, entirely too many votes, and no disclosure?
Boards have noticed, and taken exception to, just this sort of
subterfuge among hedge funds and other activist investors. Some
shareholders seem to have a penchant for disguising their motives and
positions by taking complex positions throughout a company’s
capital structure or through webs of newfangled derivatives that affect
the same end. Boards are arming themselves for the upcoming proxy
season with amended bylaws designed to quail their clandestine
shareholders and uncover their intentions. Moreover, the torrent of
these ‘fess up amendments that we at Westlaw Business had
previously called to your attention has turned into a veritable deluge.
(See Related Resources) Read more
Ponzi Schemes: SEC Topples Pyramids
Did Ponzi fever just break out, with a schemer
around every corner? Or did a scandal-chastened SEC wake up to the need
to appear to be doing something – anything – after the
failures of Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Madoff Securities, and
others put the SEC's weakness into sharp light. One has to wonder, why
federal regulators have allowed so many Ponzi schemes to happen. Is it
due to insufficient oversight or inadequate regulation? Or is the
investing public somehow partially to blame for not doing its homework?
An overview of Ponzi schemes and affinity fraud leave us at Westlaw
Business with the conclusion that no one’s hands are completely
clean in all of this mess. Read more
Big Offerings: REITs Breathe New Life Has
the whole world suddenly found the religion of real estate? It
sure seems that way from the raft of recent Real Estate Investment
Trust securities registrations, totaling over $20 billion. Subprime may
have taken residential real estate subterranean, and commercial real
estate may be sinking in the same direction…but real estate
offerings are moving in the opposite direction. How are these
deals, and their disclosures, getting done? Read more
Trendspotting: Activist Shareholders, Succession Planning, and Other Timely Disclosures Activist Shareholders: Demanding Compensation Consultant Details
Succession Plans: Back on the Agenda for 2009
Big Pharma Set to Move
Is a Shareholder’s Best Defense a Good Offense?
FINRA: Breaking the Rumor Mill Read more
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Big M&A, Credit Default Swaps, Governance and Satyam, Risk of War, Financing Risk
January 13, 2009
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Due to the upcoming Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, Legal Currents will only be publishing one edition next week. Look for our special inauguration edition on Wednesday, January 21.
Companies, Put Your SOX Back On: Corporate Governance, Post-Satyam Haven't we lived this all before? Like a Bollywood movie that joins
elements of every known form of theatre, the Satyam Computer Services
scandal seems to combine the worst (though most dramatic) elements of
Enron, Madoff and Worldcom together. Though Indian in origin, Satyam
files with the SEC as well as the Mumbai and NYSE Euronext’s Amsterdam,
making it subject to the familiar litany of laws. Having been there
before, though, we at Westlaw Business have one big question: Aren't
our laws and regulators meant to prevent all this? Read more
Gone Global? Country Risk!: 10-K Must Haves The
world’s headlines are now focused on the conflict in
Israel. Only recently has news of piracy off the coast of Somalia
and the war in Georgia died down. As a result, the disclosure-minded
have visions of country risk disclosures dancing in their heads.
While global markets sound like a good idea, they are not
cost-free. Companies seeking to expand markets globally run into
differing circumstances around the globe, many of them
risk-imposing. The list includes a suite of political horrors,
ranging from political instability to military hostilities to
confiscatory regulations to even mundane foreign exchange
limitations. What these risks all have in common is a
globalization-driven need for extensive disclosure.
Read more
Financing Risk: Treasury's Kid Gloves with Auto Bailout
In looking to rescue the auto companies, how tight a set of legal
screws did the government apply? Not nearly as tight as some feared.
Treasury could have taken at least three possible approaches:
shareholder-lite, as in TARP; rescue-finance, as in private sector
workouts; or DIP (Debtor-in-Possession) finance during bankruptcy.
Though the restriction on striking by the United Auto Workers has
attracted some attention, Treasury seems to have used a light touch. It
could yet get a lot tougher. Read more
Regulating Credit Default Swaps: Less Deference, More Deterrence
The Credit Default Swap (CDS) market is vast,
opaque and unregulated. However, it is far from invisible and
could easily have been monitored and, dare we say, interrupted. The
fact that regulators did not take any action gives one pause. Not
only is the CDS market worth a $55 trillion, but its made up of both
the swaps themselves and complex, thoroughly traded indices that have
been assembled around them as well. The one thing missing from this
market, to date, has been the regulators. Yet, there is no
shortage of regulators who sound like they should have been involved
– among them, the SEC (securities regulator), CFTC (derivatives
regulator), and state insurance regulators. They just
weren’t. Why? Arguably, the result of both craftsmanship
and lobbying on the parts of the CDS’s creators, there were other
factors, and failures at play as well. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer Bankruptcies and strategic M&A transactions
are heating up. Other issues shaping today’s business law
environment include corporate fraud, new regulations, and continuing
softness in the IPO market. For more on all these topics, please follow
the Related Resources bar to the documents defining the business law
market. Read more
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TARP Double Dipping, Commercial Real Estate, CDS Mess, Executive Compensation, Capital Markets Roundup
January 8, 2009
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TARP Double Dipping: How Suntrust and Citi Got More Money
TARP double dipping is upon us, as the government
indicates an ever-increasing willingness to dole out money to one and
all. We've now seen 2 weaker institutions receive double dollops of
government help - Citigroup and Suntrust. What's telling is not merely that
they both received two rounds of funds, but that they received them on different
terms. Among the differences are both their financial terms and
their accompanying restrictions on executive compensation. Both
are indications of what future double dippers may (or may not) get as
well as the broader intentions and inclinations of an open-walleted
Treasury Department. Read more
Managing the Great Fall: Commercial Real Estate Plunges to Earth Land may be the one thing they’re not making more of (other than in
land-filling Dubai) – but that limited supply doesn’t mean commercial
real estate is a good business to be in these days. With residential
real estate capturing so many headlines, commercial real estate has
remained largely in the background. That should not be taken as a sign
of its good fortune. With one look at the disclosures of those in the
business and the litany of problems plaguing them becomes immediately
clear – commercial real estate presents both legal and business risks
(and opportunities, for the savvy) to those involved with it, whether
as lender, landlord, tenant, or otherwise. Read more
Cleaning up the CDS Mess: Is SEC the New Regulator? How did we get to a $55 trillion dollar CDS
market with great risk, great opacity, no oversight and tottering
credit markets to show for it? It was neither easy nor
accidental. It is the combined handiwork of the clever financial
craftsmen who created the credit default swap (CDS), statutory gaps
created by legislation, and regulatory gaps taking their cue from the
prior two. Imagine our surprise, then, at witnessing the SECs
recent blessing of an exchange meant to save us all from the CDS mess
upon us. Read more
Proxy Must Haves: Massive Executive Compensation Changes Talk about touchy subjects for a corporation - and compensation terms,
particularly for executives, are right at the top of the list.
However, there’s nothing like the threat of a really harmful tax law
change to open people’s minds. The current threat has led to a slew of
recent compensation changes, both short and long term, all seemingly
without raising more than a peep or two from recession-chastened
executives. With these changes now beginning to emerge in company
filings, we at Westlaw Business think them a perfect window into the
sorts of changes we all expect to see during the upcoming proxy season. 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
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M&A Deals; Hedge Transactions; Frozen Credit; Corporate Responsibility; Mark to Market;
January 6, 2009
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Ten Disclosure Trends for 2009: Debt Terms, Shareholder Activism, Corporate Responsibility, etc. Companies are now being faced with unprecedented disclosure needs,
driven by immense amounts of change and economic stress. We at WLB
have put together a "short list" of 10 major disclosures you should
consider among your own 2009 disclosures. These are based on our
handpicking trends, and actual disclosures, from what we've seen in
companies' filings in 2008. Read more
10K Must Haves: Hedges Heats up If
sweet-sounding Tootsie Roll and iconic Callaway Golf are doing it, how
bad can it be? When you’re talking about hedging transactions,
the answer is far from simple. Disclosure of hedging transactions is
therefore critical – but as shareholder lawsuits and SEC
investigations show, it’s been found to be quite
inadequate. This question is one for our times, as economic
volatility tempts companies to offset their risks via hedging
transactions. Read more
Mark-to-Market: SEC Keeps Status Quo Is
the mother of all accounting standards about to go through big changes?
Not if the SEC has its way. Mark-to-market
standards, blamed for everything from the difficulties of private
equity to the collapse of Lehman Brothers, have gotten more attention
than normally behind-the-scenes accounting standards are used to
getting. Clamor for reversion to book value/acquisition cost has
rung loud, but gone unheeded. With its recently released study of
Mark-to-Market accounting, mandated by the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act (EESA), the SEC's recommendations amount to tweaking
the edges of current standards, to tone down its extremes but keep the
gist. Read more
Significant Events Briefing: For the In-the-Know Lawyer We at WLB want to catch you up on what happened
while you were hopefully taking a much-needed end of year breather
after our cataclysmic year. We focus you on events that happened in the
week before year end 08, right through today. Please see Related
Resources for additional information on the events shaping the business
law landscape Read more
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
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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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