Showing posts with label material adverse change. Show all posts
Showing posts with label material adverse change. Show all posts

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Either outcome could have had severe consequences for BofA that Lewis had to consider in deciding whether to go through with the acquisition.

TO BE NOTED: From The Deal:

"MAC clause was not an option for Lewis
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lewis,ken125x100.jpgKen Lewis can't escape the kudzu-like clutches of Bank of America Corp.'s (NYSE:BAC) acquisition of Merrill Lynch & Co. as the House of Representatives Oversight Committee probed him Thursday on whether Ben Bernanke and Henry Paulson forced him to go through with the deal against his better judgment.

Lewis had two ways out of the deal, at least in theory. He could have claimed that Merrill had suffered a "material adverse change" that would have let BofA walk. But the parties' merger agreement provided that any disputes over the contract would be litigated under Delaware law, and in April 2008 the Delaware Court of Chancery showed it had no appetite for involving itself in such a politically charged situation. Bears Stears Cos. shareholders challenged the sale to J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. on the grounds that the deal-protection measures in the companies' revised merger agreement were illegal under Delaware law.

Vice Chancellor Donald Parsons Jr. wanted no part of the case. In a broadly written opinion, he all but said that he would not involve himself in a matter that the Treasury secretary claimed involved the stability of the U.S. financial system. By deferring to Washington, Parsons was probably trying to forestall an assault on Delaware's corporate law franchise by showing Congress that he and his fellow judges acknowledged the practical limits of state corporate law. A Delaware judge would likely have reached the same result had BofA declared an material adverse event and tried to walk from the deal.

Lewis' lawyers at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz advised J.P. Morgan on the Bear deal and the related case, and they must have told him that given the circumstances under which BofA agreed to buy Merill, no Delaware judge would stand in the way of the deal absent extraordinary misconduct at the target.

Lewis and his board had another escape hatch: They could have recommended that their shareholders vote down the deal if they believed their fiduciary duties required them to do so. Of course, such a recommendation risked alienating Bernanke and Paulson, both of whom discouraged Lewis from trying to walk or get BofA shareholders to reject it. Either outcome could have had severe consequences for BofA that Lewis had to consider in deciding whether to go through with the acquisition.

In reality, the only practical way for Lewis to get out of buying Merrill wasn't in the merger agreement; Bernanke and Paulson would had to have approved. Without that, Lewis was stuck. - David Marcus

See related story about Lewis testimony from Dealscape
See related story about Fed e-mails from Dealscape

David Marcus is the editor of Corporate Control Alert."

Thursday, April 23, 2009

top banking regulators feared a systemic risk if the deal was not completed, and even threatened to remove management if it balked

TO BE NOTED: From the NY Times:

"
U.S. Role Questioned on Merrill

Newly revealed testimony about federal involvement in the Bank of America acquisition of Merrill Lynch is raising questions about whether bank regulators may have overstepped during a period of extreme stress in the financial system.

Kenneth D. Lewis, the chairman of Bank of America, told investigators that he was pressured by the government to complete the acquisition of Merrill Lynch at the end of last year and to withhold material information about government assistance from shareholders, according to a letter released Thursday by Attorney General Andrew Cuomo of New York.

According to Mr. Lewis’s testimony, top banking regulators feared a systemic risk if the deal was not completed, and even threatened to remove management if it balked.

In his letter to Congressional leaders and federal securities regulators questioning the role of the government in the deal, Mr. Cuomo said he was concerned about the lack of transparency into the program to shore up the nation’s banking system. While protecting taxpayers’ interests, “it is equally important that investor interests are protected and respected,” he wrote.

He also raised the possibility that Bank of America broke federal securities regulations by not disclosing Merrill’s staggering fourth-quarter losses to shareholders.

Federal laws require public companies to disclose any “material” event that could affect the company’s value. Whether Mr. Lewis should have disclosed the deterioration at Merrill is the subject of shareholder lawsuits. Though Mr. Cuomo said in his letter that testimony from federal officials largely supported Mr. Lewis’s testimony, a full account of the events is not clear. Mr. Cuomo did not release other testimony.

Representatives for Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Henry M. Paulson Jr., who was secretary of the Treasury at the time, denied that they ever advised Mr. Lewis on disclosure issues. A representative for Mr. Paulson said he did not dispute any of the attorney general’s characterizations of his conversations with Mr. Lewis. Mr. Bernanke has invoked the bank examination privilege and declined to testify about the Fed’s role.

According to Mr. Lewis’s testimony, Mr. Paulson and Mr. Bernanke strongly advised the banker to complete the purchase of Merrill even after he learned in mid-December that losses at the brokerage firm were $7 billion more than expected.

Mr. Lewis also testified that Mr. Paulson told him “we do not want public disclosure” about possible government financing for Bank of America to help it complete the Merrill deal. Asked by the attorney general’s office whether he discussed disclosing Merrill’s greater losses to shareholders, Mr. Lewis said the issue never came up.

After learning that Merrill’s financial condition “had seriously deteriorated at an alarming rate,” Mr. Lewis said he sought to back out of the deal. On Dec. 17, he told Mr. Paulson and Mr. Bernanke that he was planning to invoke a clause in the merger agreement that allowed him to walk away from the transaction.

Based on the information he has collected, Mr. Cuomo said Mr. Paulson then told Mr. Lewis that walking away from the takeover of Merrill would create a systemic risk to the financial system and that he had no legal basis for terminating the deal. The two federal officials threatened that they “could or would” seek to remove Mr. Lewis and the company’s board if he refused to complete the merger.

“Lewis admits that Secretary Paulson’s threat changed his mind about invoking the MAC clause and terminating the deal,” Mr. Cuomo said in the letter, noting so-called material adverse change.

Mr. Cuomo’s letter further confirms that his investigation includes whether securities laws were violated and whether government programs to shore up the banks have been transparent.

In a statement, a Bank of America spokesman said, “We believe we acted legally and appropriately with regard to the Merrill Lynch transaction.”

Bank of America agreed to buy Merrill Lynch in a hastily arranged deal in September, as financial markets were seizing up and Lehman Brothers, another big Wall Street firm, was slumping into bankruptcy protection.

“Despite the fact that Bank of America had determined that Merrill Lynch’s financial condition was so grave it justified termination,” Mr. Cuomo wrote, “Bank of America did not publicly disclose Merrill Lynch’s devastating losses.”

Legal experts noted that the testimony would most likely benefit shareholder suits against Bank of America.

“ ‘The government made me do it’ is not really a valid legal defense,” said Randall W. Bonder, a lawyer at the firm Ropes & Gray.

But Mr. Lewis may benefit in the court of public opinion by claiming the government pressured him to do the deal to save the financial system. Mr. Lewis admitted in the testimony that he believed going through with the takeover would hurt shareholders in the short term, but had to be done to “stem a financial disaster in the financial markets.” He defined short term as “two to three years.”

Another issue raised in the testimony is whether Bank of America’s shareholders were being asked to take a loss to save the rest of the financial system.

“We shouldn’t lose sight of the fact that this was an extraordinary time, and every action these men were making had extraordinary ramifications that went well beyond the health and well-being of Bank of America shareholders,” Mr. Bonder said."