Alert Memo. Second Circuit Provides Guidance on Section 13(d) Group Issues but Declines to Address Beneficial Ownership Issues in the Swap Context

Similar documents
Alert Memo. Dodd-Frank Corporate Governance Proposed Rules: Compensation Committee and Adviser Independence

Alert Memo. Background

Alert Memo PREPARING FOR "PROXY ACCESS" SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

Alert Memo. More Documents About the Target Would Be Required

Alert Memo. Directors Remuneration Reforms in the United Kingdom: UK Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Act 2013 Published

Executive Summary New Section 457A (Nonqualified Deferred Compensation)

Alert Memo. SEC Adopts Final Proxy Access Rules

Alert Memo. Further Changes to Russian Securities Law Aimed at Bringing Liquidity to the Local Market

Alert Memo. Italy Introduces a Financial Transaction Tax as of 2013

Alert Memo. 1. Introduction. 2. Consultation on profit forecasts, merger benefits statements and material changes in information. 2.

Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility Launches: Key Details

Alert Memo BRUSSELS AND HONG KONG FEBRUARY 18, China s State Council Issues Notice on National Security Review of Foreign Acquisitions

The Decision. 1. The Facts

Alert Memo. Italy s new rules on notes and commercial paper

Alert Memo NEW YORK, BRUSSELS, LONDON, AUGUST 28, 2012

Alert Memo. FDIC Proposes Rules on Nullifying Subsidiary and Affiliate Cross-Defaults Under OLA

Alert Memo NEW YORK & WASHINGTON, DC FEBRUARY 4, SEC Interpretive Release Establishes New Guidance on Disclosure of Climate Change Matters

CLEARY GOTFTLIEB NEW SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE PROPOSALS SIGNIFICANTLY CURTAIL DEFERRED COMPENSATION. New York January 17, 2007

Alert Memo. Prudential Regulators Propose Swap Margin and Capital Requirements

Alert Memo. Coordination but no Consolidation: Internal Draft Bill on Group Insolvencies in Germany

Alert Memo. Insolvency Reform to Boost Restructurings in Germany

Alert Memo. Financial Regulatory Reform - Hedge Fund and Private Equity Provisions

FCA AUTHORISED FIRMS REQUIRED TO DISCLOSE POSSIBLE COMPETITION INFRINGEMENTS

Alert Memo. PCAOB Proposes New Standard on Auditor Communications with Audit Committee

Alert Memo. Changed Supervision of Savings and Loan Holding Companies and Savings Associations

EXTENDED REPORTING REQUIREMENTS FOR INVES-

Anticipating Next Year's Option Awards: A Thought Piece About Capturing Option Value

Alert Memo NEW IRS FILING REQUIREMENT FOR U.S. EXECUTIVES WITH NON-U.S. COMPENSATION

Alert Memo. Walker Review of Corporate Governance in UK Banks and Other Financial Institutions

Recent Developments Regarding the Application of German Merger Control to International Transactions

Alert Memo BRUSSELS AND LONDON, DECEMBER 28, Reform of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive: European Commission Consultation

SEC Publishes Final Rules for Credit Rating Agencies, Reproposes Others

Alert Memo. PCAOB Issues Proposals on Related Parties, Significant Unusual Transactions and Financial Relationships with Executive Officers

Alert Memo. The new rules apply to innovative start-ups and include:

SEC Proposes New Requirements for Credit Rating Agencies

Alert Memo. The El Paso/Kinder Morgan Opinion: Further Delaware Guidance on Sell-side Conflicts

Alert Memo. Recovery and Resolution of Banks German Legislative Developments

Alert Memo BRUSSELS, FEBRUARY 21, EU Agrees Stability Mechanism and Fiscal Compact

Alert Memo OVERVIEW OF ESTATE, GIFT AND GST TAX PLANNING IN LIGHT OF 2010 TAX LEGISLATION

Alert Memo. SEC Proposes to Liberalize Solicitation and Advertising in Private Placements

Alert Memo. CFTC Proposes New Federal Position Limits and Exemptions for Certain Energy Commodity Contracts

Alert Memo. CFTC Proposes Uncleared Swap Margin Requirements

Second Circuit Holds That Kazakh Sovereign Wealth Fund Is Not Immune From Securities Fraud Suit

Alert Memo. FDIC Finalizes Rule on Nullification of Subsidiary and Affiliate Cross-Defaults under OLA

Impact of the Draft German Bill on Issuer- Bondholder Relationships on Convertible and Exchangeable Bond Offerings

Alert Memo. Binding Shareholder Say-on-Pay Vote on Route to Reality in the UK: US Companies Take Note

Treasury Proposes Changes to the Regulations Governing Exon-Florio National Security Reviews of Foreign Investment in the United States

Alert Memo. FASB Reproposes Disclosure Requirements for Loss Contingencies

New Form 5500 Rules Greatly Increase Information Required To Be Disclosed About Compensation Received By Service Providers To Plans Subject To ERISA

Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Addresses Scope of Primary Violation Liability Under Rule 10b-5(a) and (c)

Alert Memo. Tax Rules on Debt Securities Issued by Non-Listed Companies Amended

Dismissal of Madoff Trustee s Claims Clarifies Standards for Fraudulent Conveyance Claims

Provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 Relating to Deferral of Cancellation of Debt Income

AIFMD Implementation Guidance from the Commission, ESMA and UK

Alert Memo. ESMA s Technical Advice on Possible Delegated Acts Concerning Amendments to The Prospectus Directive

Alert Memo NEW YORK SEPTEMBER 2, Application of the TARP Compensation Rules in the Fiscal Year in Which the TARP Obligation is Repaid

Abu Dhabi Global Market Brings Core Regulations Into Force

First Circuit Puts the Fund in Pension Underfunding

Alert Memo. Federal Reserve Board Issues Long-Awaited Capital Rules

Alert Memo NEW YORK & WASHINGTON OCTOBER 28, FDIC s Final Safe Harbor Rule Imposes New Securitization Standards

Alert Memo BRUSSELS AND LONDON, MAY 12, European Commission Proposes New Regulatory System for Hedge Funds and Private Equity Funds

Dominant Companies May Not Refuse Ordinary Orders With The Aim Of Restricting Parallel Trade - ECJ Judgment in GlaxoSmithKline AEVE

Alert Memo. Say-on-Pay and the Business Judgment Rule: Lessons from Cincinnati Bell and Beazer Homes

Implementation of Sanctions Relief for Iran

Expanding EU Role in European Financial Regulation

Corporate Governance Group. Client Alert SECOND CIRCUIT VACATES INJUNCTION ISSUED AGAINST HEDGE FUNDS RELATING TO THEIR ACCUMULATION OF CSX STOCK

U.S. TAX PROPOSALS AFFECTING MULTINATIONAL BUSINESSES

The European Approach to Fast-Track Merger Control

The Effect of Sanctions on Arbitration: Alternative Venues

Ruling Creates Uncertainty Under Section 13(d)

I. WTO. Brussels January March 2006

Futures & Derivatives Law

U.S. Banking Law and the FBO What You Need to Know

German M&A Report December 2016

Regulated Prices & EU Energy Law after the Federutility case By Francesco Maria Salerno

The SEC s New Proxy Access Procedures and Related Rules

Derivatives Under the New Italian Takeover Bids Regulation

ASIAN COMPETITION QUARTERLY REPORT JULY SEPTEMBER 2017

Private Investment in Renewable Energy

THE FIGHT AGAINST FINANCIAL CRIMES AND ITS EFFECT ON THE CHIEF COMPLIANCE OFFICER

Client Alert. In its Denial of a Power Plant Sale, FERC Sheds Light on the Meaning of Control and the Importance of Mitigation.

Latham & Watkins Tax Department. The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 Affects Domestic Mergers and Acquisitions Tax Issues

U.S. Regulators Continue Scrutiny of Virtual Currencies and ICOs

CROSS BORDER INVESTMENTS AND FINANCINGS. Vivian Lam, Partner, Paul Hastings

A Series of Fortunate Events

Trusts & Estates. Client Alert. Beijing Frankfurt Hong Kong London Los Angeles Munich New York São Paulo Singapore Tokyo Washington, DC

2017 Financial Highlights

Quarterly Report. Q Financial Highlights QUARTERLY REPORT

Corporate Governance and Executive Compensation Provisions in the Dodd-Frank Act

IFLR Indonesia Forum: Debt Capital Markets

Latham & Watkins Capital Markets Practice Group

Guidance on New SEC Rating Agency Expert Consent Requirement

ASIAN COMPETITION QUARTERLY REPORT APRIL JUNE 2017

EC INTERNAL MARKET REPORT

Client Alert. Amendments to the Prospectus and Transparency Directives. Summary of Key Changes

Kumarina Resources have bidders' dreams come true?

SEC Proposes Amendments to Rule 10b-18 and Announces New Rules Governing Disclosure of Issuer Repurches of Their Equity Securities

China -- Venture Capital Investment Fund Rules Effective March 1, 2003

ATTRACTING ADDITIONAL FUNDING FOR ENTREPRENEURIAL VENTURES: CHALLENGES AND SUGGESTIONS

TransRe Financial Highlights. TransRe 2018 Financial Highlights

Transcription:

Alert Memo JULY 20, 2011 Second Circuit Provides Guidance on Section 13(d) Group Issues but Declines to Address Beneficial Ownership Issues in the Swap Context On July 18, 2011, almost three years after the appeal was argued, the Second Circuit rendered its decision in CSX Corporation v. The Children s Investment Fund Management (UK) LLP, 1 a case raising significant issues under Section 13(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Although it provided some guidance regarding the definition of a group for purposes of Section 13(d), the opinion for the court did not reach a central issue raised by the appeal whether, or under what circumstances, a long party to a cash-settled total-return equity swap agreement will be deemed to beneficially own shares purchased by the short party as a hedge. Two hedge funds -- The Children s Investment Fund Management ( TCI ) and 3G Capital Partners ( 3G ) -- each separately owned shares of CSX and was the long party in cash-settled total-return equity swaps with respect to CSX shares. After filing a Schedule 13D that acknowledged they were acting as a group, the funds launched a proxy contest to elect a minority slate of directors to the CSX board. CSX filed suit in U.S. District Court in response to the proxy contest. The District Court held that TCI was a beneficial owner of all CSX shares owned by the short parties to its swaps and violated Section 13(d) by not reporting ownership of those shares. The court reasoned that such swaps were part of a scheme or plan to evade the reporting requirements of Section 13(d), and therefore, the CSX shares owned by the short parties would be deemed beneficially owned by TCI under Rule 13d-3(b). The court also found that TCI and 3G did not make timely disclosure regarding formation of a group that, in the court s view, occurred several months prior to the filing of the Schedule 13D. The District Court entered a 1 Docket Nos. 08-2899-cv (L), 08-3016-cv (XAP) (2d Cir. July 18, 2011). Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP, 2011. All rights reserved. This memorandum was prepared as a service to clients and other friends of Cleary Gottlieb to report on recent developments that may be of interest to them. The information in it is therefore general, and should not be considered or relied on as legal advice. Throughout this memorandum, "Cleary Gottlieb" and the "firm" refer to Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP and its affiliated entities in certain jurisdictions, and the term "offices" includes offices of those affiliated entities.

broad permanent injunction prohibiting further violations of Section 13(d) by TCI and 3G whether or not relating to CSX shares, but it refused CSX s request that TCI and 3G be prohibited from voting certain of their CSX shares. The decision was appealed to the Second Circuit. At the outset of its discussion of the issues, the Second Circuit panel stated that it would not address the swap issue and instead would focus only on the issue of the TCI and 3G group with respect to shares owned outright by the funds: [T]he panel is divided on numerous issues concerning whether and under what circumstances the long party to [such an equity] swap may be deemed, for purposes of section 13(d), the beneficial owner of shares purchased by the short party as a hedge. In view of that disagreement, we conclude it is appropriate at this time to limit our consideration to the issue of group formation. As a result, despite the seeming centrality of the issue to the case, the opinion for the court did not provide any guidance on the issue of long party beneficial ownership of shares owned by a short party. In this regard, it is worth noting that the District Court s 2008 opinion may have led some long parties to take a more conservative position regarding treating equity swaps as conferring beneficial ownership of the short party s hedge shares, and the Second Circuit s failure to address the issue may lead some including some hedge funds to revert to more aggressive reporting positions. Consequently, some issuers may now consider defining beneficial ownership in nomination by-laws and poison pill rights plans to explicitly include derivative positions. With regard to the group issue, the court noted that the District Court determined only that TCI and 3G formed a group with respect to CSX securities and acted in concert with respect to those securities. The Second Circuit held that this was insufficient for proper appellate review and remanded this issue to the District Court to consider the specific types of concerted action that result in group formation under Rule 13d-5(b)(1). In particular, the Second Circuit 2

instructed the District Court to make a precise finding, adequately supported by specific evidence as to whether the funds formed a group for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting or disposing... CSX shares. Given the limit of the Second Circuit s review, the District Court was further instructed to limit its finding to the CSX shares owned outright by the funds. The court concluded that [o]nly if such a group s outright ownership of CSX shares exceeded the 5 percent threshold prior to the filing of a section 13(d) disclosure can a group violation of section 13(d) be found. The Second Circuit also provided some measure of guidance to the District Court with regard to whether a broad injunction against all Section 13(d) violations by TCI and 3G should issue in the event that the District Court finds a group violation. In particular, the panel stated that weighing against such a broad injunction are the facts that fewer shares will be at issue in the remanded case (i.e., the shares owned by the short parties would be excluded from consideration) and that CSX publicly disclosed the TCI and 3G ownership in its Form 10-Q before any vote of the shareholders. On the other hand, the panel noted that if the District Court concludes, as it did initially, that some of the TCI and 3G parties testified falsely, a broad injunction may be appropriate. Finally, the court affirmed the District Court s denial of the injunction prohibiting TCI and 3G from voting certain of their CSX shares. The Second Circuit noted that the relevant purpose of Section 13(d) is the timely disclosure of required information. As a result, such an injunction is inappropriate where -- as in this case -- the required disclosure is made sufficiently in advance of the shareholder vote. Although the opinion for the court did not address the swap issue, in a separate concurring opinion, Judge Winter rehearsed the arguments why a long party in a total-return cash-settled equity swap should not be deemed to beneficially own hedge shares purchased by the short party. Among other observations, Judge Winter noted that, in itself, such an arrangement does not confer on the long party the investment or voting power over the shares that amount to beneficial ownership under Rule 13d-3(a). Such rights remain under the sole control of the short party. 3

With respect to the District Court s conclusion that the swaps amounted to a scheme or plan to evade the reporting requirements of Section 13(d), Judge Winter argued that to implicate Section 13(d) the transaction must include a component that provides a substantial equivalence of the rights of ownership relevant to control, or include steps that stop short of, or conceal, the vesting of ownership, while nevertheless ensuring that such ownership will vest at the signal of the would-be owner. In other words, the mere desire to avoid filing a Schedule 13D is not in itself enough to create beneficial ownership; rather, the party must have taken steps to avoid otherwise applicable requirements of Section 13(d) through an artifice related to ownership. As a result, Judge Winter concluded that absent an agreement between the long and short parties permitting the long party to acquire the hedge shares or control their voting, total-return cash-settled equity swaps do not confer on the long party beneficial ownership of the short party s hedge shares. However, because the panel as a whole declined to consider the issue, it remains unclear whether the view of the District Court or that of Judge Winter will be law. Please feel free to contact any of your regular contacts at the firm or any of our partners and counsel listed under Mergers, Acquisitions and Joint Ventures in the Practices section of our website (http://www.clearygottlieb.com) if you have any questions. CLEARY GOTTLIEB STEEN & HAMILTON LLP 4

Office Locations New York One Liberty Plaza New York, NY 10006-1470 1 212 225 2000 1 212 225 3999 Fax Washington 2000 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20006-1801 1 202 974 1500 1 202 974 1999 Fax P aris 12, rue de Tilsitt 75008 Paris, France 33 1 40 74 68 00 33 1 40 74 68 88 Fax Brussels Rue de la Loi 57 1040 Brussels, Belgium 32 2 287 2000 32 2 231 1661 Fax London City Place House 55 Basinghall Street London EC2V 5EH, England 44 20 7614 2200 44 20 7600 1698 Fax Mos cow Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLC* Paveletskaya Square 2/3 Moscow, Russia 115054 7 495 660 8500 7 495 660 8505 Fax * an affiliate of Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP Frankfurt Main Tower Neue Mainzer Strasse 52 60311 Frankfurt am Main, Germany 49 69 97103 0 49 69 97103 199 Fax Cologne Theodor-Heuss-Ring 9 50688 Cologne, Germany 49 221 80040 0 49 221 80040 199 Fax R ome Piazza di Spagna 15 00187 Rome, Italy 39 06 69 52 21 39 06 69 20 06 65 Fax Milan Via San Paolo 7 20121 Milan, Italy 39 02 72 60 81 39 02 86 98 44 40 Fax Hong K ong Bank of China Tower One Garden Road Hong Kong 852 2521 4122 852 2845 9026 Fax B eijing Twin Towers West (23rd Floor) 12 B Jianguomen Wai Da Jie Chaoyang District Beijing 100022, China 86 10 5920 1000 86 10 5879 3902 Fax B uenos Aires CGSH International Legal Services, LLP- Sucursal Argentina Avda. Quintana 529, 4to piso 1129 Ciudad Autonoma de Buenos Aires Argentina 54 11 5556 8900 54 11 5556 8999 Fax www.clearygottlieb.com