Percentage of M&A deals challenged by shareholders of public target companies remained high
in 2014, but other indicators suggest a slowdown
A new report shows that the percentage of 2014 lawsuits filed by shareholders in M&A deals remained consistent with the previous four years, while other key indicators suggest a slowdown. The report, Shareholder Litigation Involving Acquisitions of Public Companies, released on Feb. 25 by Cornerstone Research, reveals that investors contested 93 percent of M&A transactions in 2014. Despite this typically high percentage, shareholders brought a smaller number of competing lawsuits per deal and in fewer jurisdictions, challenged fewer deals valued below $1 billion, and took slightly longer to file lawsuits.
In a significant shift from recent years, 60 percent of contested M&A deals had lawsuits filed against them in only one jurisdiction. Just 4 percent of these deals were challenged in more than two courts, the lowest number since 2007.
“This decline in the number of courts is likely the result of the widespread adoption of corporate bylaws that specify exclusive jurisdiction,” said Adel Turki, a senior vice president of Cornerstone Research and head of the firm’s finance practice. “For acquisitions involving Delaware-incorporated companies, the Delaware Chancery Court has gained ground as a preferred filing destination.”
Key Trends
- Plaintiff attorneys filed more than 600 lawsuits challenging M&A deals announced in 2014 and valued over $100 million.
- The percentage of deals challenged in litigation remained high at 96 percent for deals valued over $1 billion, but declined for deals valued under $1 billion, from 94 percent in 2013 to 89 percent in 2014.
- The average number of lawsuits per deal declined from 5.2 in 2013 to 4.5 in 2014, the lowest annual rate since 2009.
- The number of deals with more than 10 filings decreased, from 14 in 2013 to nine in 2014.
- The percentage of lawsuits resolved before M&A deals closed in 2014 slid to the lowest level since 2008. In 2014, only 59 percent of litigation was resolved before the deals were concluded, compared with 74 percent in 2013.
- Only one M&A case in the data went to trial in 2014; it resulted in a $76 million damages award.
- Lawsuits challenging M&A deals were filed more slowly in 2014. The first lawsuit was filed an average of 14 days after the deal announcement, compared with 11 days in both 2012 and 2013.
- Similar to prior years, almost 80 percent of settlements reached in 2014 provided only additional disclosures. Just six settlements involved payments to shareholders.