Lexpert Special Editions

Corporate Law June 2014

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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14 | REGULATION Lexpert Special Edition Finnerty, Pat C. Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (403) 260-9608 pcf@blakes.com Mr. Finnerty's emphasis is on domestic and cross-border M&A, corporate transactions, public off erings, private placements and special committees. He has extensive experience in the structuring and fi nancing of oil sands projects and acquisitions. Fraiberg, Jeremy D. Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP (416) 862-6505 jfraiberg@osler.com Mr. Fraiberg, Co-chair of the Mining Group, practises corporate and securities law with an emphasis on M&A and corporate fi nance. He acts for public and private companies, private-equity funds and investment banks on a range of transactions. Fung, William Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (416) 863-2356 william.fung@blakes.com Mr. Fung's practice focuses on corporate fi nance & public M&A deals, with expertise on R EITs & income funds. His recent R EIT experience includes the Choice Properties R EIT & American Hotel R EIT LP off erings & the H&R R EIT purchase of Primaris R EIT. Forestell, QC, Peter R. Cox & Palmer (506) 633-2715 pforestell@ coxandpalmer.com Mr. Forestell advises major Canadian, international and provincial businesses on corporate commercial, IP & technology, real estate, and securities and corporate fi nance matters. His clients also include utilities and fi nancial institutions. Fraser, Jean M. Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP (416) 862-6537 jfraser@osler.com Ms. Fraser advises boards and senior management of public and private companies, principally on complex governance, M&A and corporate fi nance matters. She has been lead counsel on many of Canada's most signifi cant transactions. Gamble, Ian J. orsteinssons LLP (604) 602-4290 gamble@thor.ca Mr. Gamble's tax practice focuses on corporate- related matters in the telecom, real estate, mining, and oil and gas industries. He taught at UBC's law faculty, and speaks and writes regularly. He is the author of Taxation of Canadian Mining. LEXPERT ® RANKED LAWYERS uncertainty. And the more regulatory uncertainty there is, the less deal certainty there is. "Sellers," Pressman continues, "want to know a deal is going to close. When regu- latory uncertainty is injected into the deal calculus, it presents a mitigating factor on deal volume." While other factors are at play in the decline of Canadian M&A activity in 2013, there's evidence the current Ca- nadian regulatory environment is hav- ing a dampening eff ect, especially when it comes to hostile take-overs. It all has business leaders rubbing their temples as they try to grapple with sometimes oner- ous, and sometimes vague, regulatory rules or mandates. Transactions in the mining and energy sectors – the two biggest drivers of M&A in this country – have declined in Canada over the past four years. Canadian deal volume overall in all sectors was the slowest since 2009, according to PwC. e Q4 2013 aggre- gate value of deals was 26 per cent lower than Q4 2012. e stopped or, at least so far stumped, deals attributed to regulatory hurdles in Can- ada last year alone includes, among others, Telus's $380 million bid for Mobilicity last May, shot down by the federal government over concerns about reduced competition; the CRTC's belated approval of the Bell Canada En- terprises' $3.2-billion acquisition of As- tral Media, but only a er forcing BCE to invest in new Canadian programming and sell off more than a dozen services; and the feds' rejection of Egypt's Accelero Capital Holdings's $520-million bid to buy MTS Allstream, a division of Mani- toba Telecom Services, over unspecifi ed national security concerns. In the context of Canadian M&A history, "that's quite a list," says Pressman. e two most critical regulatory ele- ments giving headaches to dealmakers are changes announced in December 2012 to State-Owned Enterprise (SOE) guidelines under the Investment Canada Act (ICA) and, before that, changes to Competition Bureau reviews under the Competition Act. "I would say that a key milestone event, which altered the balance of power be- tween transacting parties and the Com- petition Bureau, occurred in 2009," says Paul Collins, who heads Stikeman Elliott LLP's Competition and Foreign Invest- ment Group in Toronto. at year the Bureau introduced a toothier formal two-stage process for reviewing mergers and acquisitions that might erode competition in the country. Prior to the changes the Bureau had to obtain an injunction from the Compe- tition Tribunal – a special tribunal that deals with matters under the Competition Act – to forestall a possible anti-competi- tive deal. " at could be an arduous task for the Bureau," explains Collins, "espe- cially if they were met with quite aggres- sive parties." Now, since 2009, if the Bureau has concerns a proposed deal may jeopardize competition, it can issue a Supplemen- tary Information Request (SIR) request- ing more information about the transac- tion. at triggers a second 30-day wait- "SELLERS WANT TO KNOW A DEAL IS GOING TO CLOSE. WHEN REGULATORY UNCERTAINTY IS INJECTED INTO THE DEAL CALCULUS, IT PRESENTS A MITIGATING FACTOR ON DEAL VOLUME." – Emmanuel Pressman, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP

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