Lexpert Magazine

March 2016

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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52 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | MARCH 2016 | CONTESTED M&A | WHAT IS CLEAR is that whether the mini- mum period turns out to be 90 or 120 or some other number of days, the proposed changes will effect a significant change in the landscape for hostile bids. "We won't be seeing as many tactical pills, both because shareholders will get used to the longer period and because it will be some deterrence to hostile bids in general," says William Gula of Hansell LLP in Toronto. e changes, if enacted, will represent a meaningful adjustment between the power of boards and the power of shareholders. "ey will also represent a fairly clear stan- dard that will result in regulators stepping out of the fray and removing themselves as arbiters as to when rights plans fall away," says Matthew Cumming of McCarthy Té- trault LLP in Toronto. Indeed, Neill May of Goodmans LLP in Toronto believes that the changes to the take-over regime will push M&A activity into proxy contests. "ere's a historical awkwardness in Canada that arises from securities regulators touching on issues, like fiduciary duties, that would better be dealt with by the courts," he says. "Under the new regime, the issues giving rise to this awkwardness will more likely be played out in proxy contests and, if necessary, resolved in court." For many, any measures that restrain regulators' involvement are a good thing. "I've never been a huge fan of securities commissions' getting in the way of how companies are run in the so-called interests of shareholders because the truth is that it's really hard for most shareholders to be as bid approaches and there are extraordinary circumstances." BUT UNDERMINING the effi- cacy of poison pills won't com- pletely dilute the historical tension between judges, who have been prone to give boards a liberal hand on the basis of the business judgment rule, and securities tribunals, which tend to be less deferential to directors of a company. "e proposed amend- ments do not address broader defensive tactics that are avail- able to targets, and securities commissions will still have to deal with these," Cumming points out. "I don't see securi- ties commissions abandon- ing their role, for example, in determining whether private placements to white knights are legitimate, nor do I see them pulling back on their tendency to invoke their public-interest jurisdiction to override directors' decisions." Otherwise, applications for exemptions from the 50 per cent minimum tender bid re- quired by the proposed amendments may flourish, filling the hearing void potentially le by a prescriptive bid period. "e 50 per cent requirement doesn't always make sense, and I believe the regulators want to have some discretion in those types of situ- ations," Tomchak says. en, of course, there's the uncertainty created by the fact that the various provin- cial securities regulators have been less than consistent in their approaches to defensive tactics and the parameters of their respec- tive public-interest jurisdictions. "e British Columbia Securities Com- mission, for example, is more likely to kill a pill faster than the Ontario Securities Commission, and the Alberta Securities Commission is even harder on pills than the BCSC," Tomchak says. Contrasting decisions by the Québec Bureau de décision et de révision (subse- quently upheld by the Québec Court of Appeal) in AbitibiBowater inc. c. Fibrek inc. and by the British Columbia Securities informed as the board is in determining a company's worth," says William Ainley in the Toronto office of Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP. Ainley, not surprisingly, is no fan of prescriptive bid periods at all. As a case in point, he cites Toronto-based WiLAN Inc.'s (ultimately unsuccessful) $480-mil- lion hostile bid for rival patent licensing company Mosaid Technologies Inc. in 2011. "In a situation like that, where bid- ders have to review thousands of patents to determine value, it makes no sense to im- pose a definitive period at all," Ainley says. Still, if a prescriptive regime is inevitable, Ainley does have a preference. "e 35 days we have now is too bidder-friendly, 45 days is too short because there are many cases in which value wouldn't surface, and 120 days is too long because there aren't many fi- nancing commitments that would hold for that period of time," he says. "Ninety days would probably be best, but even 120 days would be an improvement on the rights plan hearing game that exists now." Teresa Tomchak of Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy LLP in Vancouver also favours 90 days. "I think we're going to get 120 days, but I also believe that 90 days makes more sense," she says. e consensus seems to be that the lon- ger the minimum bid period, the rarer poison pill hearings will become. "I do think that it will be very hard to get an exemption from the 120-day period, if that's the period the CSA implements," Tomchak opines. "Pills, and the hearings that oen accompany them, are going to be appropriate only when the expiry of the "THE 50% requirement doesn't always make sense, and I believe the regulators want to have some discretion in those types of situations." TERESA TOMCHAK FARRIS VAUGHAN, WILLS & MURPHY LLP

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