Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: RPT-UPDATE 5-Dell founder hikes buyout offer, demands voting-rules change

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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RPT-UPDATE 5-Dell founder hikes buyout offer, demands voting-rules change
Jul 25th 2013, 00:32

Wed Jul 24, 2013 8:32pm EDT

  (Repeats with no change to headline and story)      * Michael Dell raises offer by $0.10/share      * Bid increase conditional on voting rule change      * Special committee seeks at least $14/share to consider  vote change      * Dell postpones shareholder meeting to Aug. 2      * Shares close up 0.3 percent        By Poornima Gupta, Soyoung Kim and Greg Roumeliotis      July 24 (Reuters) - Dell Inc founder Michael Dell  raised his $24.4 billion bid by less than 1 percent just hours  before it was to be put to a vote, tacking on a controversial  demand to change voting rules to make it easier for him to buy  and take the No. 3 personal computer maker private.      A special board committee on Wednesday was reviewing the  CEO's sweetened offer of $13.75 per share and requirement that a  majority of votes cast be enough to seal the deal, an easier  threshold for him to meet.      But the committee wants at least $14 per share to even  consider that change in voting terms, a person familiar with the  matter said. And Silver Lake, which is backing Michael Dell's  now roughly $24.6 billion bid, will not support an increase to  $14 per share, said a second person familiar with the matter.       The vote on the buyout was postponed for a second time, to  next Friday, to give investors yet another week to consider. The  first vote had been slated for July 18.      Michael Dell's unusual demand sparked outrage among major  investors and is likely to incite aggressive legal challenges,  law experts say. His offer now requires a majority of all  shareholders' votes, a difficult bar to meet because about a  quarter of shares have not been voted either way, which then  count as votes against him.      Activist investor Carl Icahn, who has amassed an 8.7 percent  stake in Dell and is leading a charge with Southeastern Asset  Management against the buyout with an offer of his own, tweeted  on Wednesday that "all would be swell at Dell if Michael and the  board bid farewell."       The latest change is a "transparent attempt to force their  freeze-out transaction across the finish line despite the vote  of its stockholders," Icahn said in a subsequent statement.      The sweetened offer, which Michael Dell and Silver Lake  called their best and final proposal, comes after the group  refused for months to consider a raised bid despite growing  opposition from Icahn and other shareholders.      "The decision is now yours. I am at peace either way and I  will honor your decision," the CEO said in a personal, open plea  sent to shareholders later on Wednesday.      But Richard Pzena, founder and co-chief investment officer  of Pzena Investment Management, which owned 0.73 percent of  Dell's outstanding shares at the end of March, called the  proposed change in the shareholder voting rules "outrageous."      "Certainly the 10 cents wouldn't sway anybody so they have  to change the rules, and if the special committee goes along  with this, it would be a travesty," Pzena said.        A THORNY ISSUE          Experts say the CEO's attempt to change the voting rules is  legal, but almost certain to get challenged in court, where  there's been little precedent.        While trying to change voting provisions with a raised bid  is uncommon, similar tactics have been employed by other  companies in the past when investor support was lacking.      OSI Restaurant Partners Inc., owner of the Outback  Steakhouse chain, was bought by Bain Capital Partners and a few  members of the OSI management in 2007 after the group bumped up  their offer price and changed the voting requirements. That  case, which is not directly comparable because it involved  excluding the founder's and management's shares from the vote,  was challenged in Florida and Delaware courts and dismissed.      But Brian Quinn, a professor at Boston College Law School  who runs the M&A Law Prof Blog, said that Michael Dell and  Silver Lake may face a higher burden of proof in court.     "When the lawsuits, of which there are many, proceed, the  board won't get the protection of business judgment, but will  have to prove fairness," he said.      Fairness puts the burden on the board to prove the price and  process were fair. Business judgment is much more management  friendly and puts the burden on plaintiffs to prove there were  conflicts of interest or lack of good faith.      "That's a big wrinkle," he said.      Dell shares rose 0.3 percent to close at $12.92 on  Wednesday.      "According to our latest tally, approximately 27 percent of  the unaffiliated shares have not yet been voted. The presumption  that these shares should be treated as if they had voted against  the transaction is patently unfair," Michael Dell and Silver  Lake said.      The votes that have come in so far are split evenly between  yes and no, according to people familiar with the matter. That  means those who abstain from voting can determine the outcome.      The buyout group believes it can get the votes to pass the  deal if Dell will count just the shares that have been voted.  The provision of counting non-votes as a "no" was accepted  reluctantly by the bidders as it sets a very high threshold to  meet, according to one of the sources.      Another investor said the new offer is not really a bump.      "This is not about how to win the deal, this is about how  Michael Dell exits the process," said the Dell investor, who  requested anonymity. "They're really putting the screws on the  special committee, but I don't see how the special committee can  accept the conditions."     (Additional reporting by Jessica Toonkel, Supantha Mukherjee,  Nadia Damouni and Tom Hals; Editing by Rodney Joyce, Sofina  Mirza-Reid, Leslie Gevirtz and Jan Paschal)  
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