Friendly takeover A
friendly takeover is an acquisition which is approved by the management of the target company. Before a bidder makes an
offer for another company, it usually first informs the company's
board of directors. In a private company, because the shareholders and the board are usually the same people or closely connected with one another, private acquisitions are usually friendly. If the shareholders agree to sell the company, then the board is usually of the same mind or sufficiently under the orders of the equity shareholders to cooperate with the bidder. This point is not relevant to the UK concept of takeovers, which always involve the acquisition of a public company. A "bear hug" is an unsolicited takeover bid which is so generous that the shareholders of the target company are very likely to submit, accepting the offer.
Hostile takeover A
hostile takeover allows a bidder to take over a target company whose
management is unwilling to agree to a
merger or takeover. The party who initiates a hostile takeover bid approaches the
shareholders directly, as opposed to seeking approval from officers or directors of the company. A takeover is considered
hostile if the target company's board rejects the offer, and if the bidder continues to pursue it, or the bidder makes the offer directly after having announced its firm intention to make an offer. Development of the hostile takeover is attributed to
Louis Wolfson. An SEC working paper tracking hostile takeovers from 1965 to 2013 found that such deals accounted for about 40% of total M&A activity in the late 1960s but declined to around 5% by 2013, making them a small share of overall takeover activity by the 2000s. Additionally, a study of M&A transactions from 1990-2005 found that approximately 24% of hostile takeovers succeed. A hostile takeover can be conducted in several ways. A
tender offer can be made where the acquiring company makes a public offer at a fixed price above the current
market price. An acquiring company can also engage in a
proxy fight, whereby it tries to persuade enough shareholders, usually a
simple majority, to replace the management with a new one which will approve the takeover. The main consequence of a bid being considered hostile is practical rather than legal. If the board of the target cooperates, the bidder can conduct extensive
due diligence into the affairs of the target company, providing the bidder with a comprehensive analysis of the target company's finances. In contrast, a hostile bidder will only have more limited, publicly available information about the target company available, rendering the bidder vulnerable to hidden risks regarding the target company's finances. Since takeovers often require loans provided by
banks in order to service the offer, banks are often less willing to back a hostile bidder because of the relative lack of target information which is available to them. Under
Delaware law, boards must engage in defensive actions that are proportional to the hostile bidder's threat to the target company. A well-known example of an extremely hostile takeover was
Oracle's bid to acquire
PeopleSoft. As of 2018, about 1,788 hostile takeovers with a total value of US$28.86 billion had been announced.
Reverse takeover A
reverse takeover is a type of takeover where a private company acquires a public company. This is usually done at the instigation of the private company, the purpose being for the private company to effectively
float itself while avoiding some of the expense and time involved in a conventional
IPO. However, in the
UK under
AIM rules, a reverse takeover is an acquisition or acquisitions in a twelve-month period which for an AIM company would: • exceed 100 percent in any of the class tests; or • result in a fundamental change in its business, board or voting control; or • in the case of an investing company, depart substantially from the investing strategy stated in its admission document or, where no admission document was produced on admission, depart substantially from the investing strategy stated in its pre-admission announcement or, depart substantially from the investing strategy. An individual or organization, sometimes known as a
corporate raider, can purchase a large fraction of the company's stock and, in doing so, get enough votes to replace the board of directors and the
CEO. With a new agreeable management team, the stock is, potentially, a much more attractive investment, which might result in a price rise and a
profit for the corporate raider and the other shareholders. A well-known example of a reverse takeover in the United Kingdom was
Darwen Group's 2008 takeover of
Optare plc. This was also an example of a back-flip takeover (see below) as Darwen was rebranded to the more well-known Optare name.
Backflip takeover A
backflip takeover is any sort of takeover in which the acquiring company turns itself into a
subsidiary of the purchased company. This type of takeover can occur when a larger but less well-known company purchases a struggling company with a very well-known brand. Examples include: • The
Texas Air Corporation takeover of
Continental Airlines but taking the Continental name as it was better known. • The SBC takeover of the ailing
AT&T and subsequent rename to AT&T. • Westinghouse's 1995 purchase of CBS and 1997 renaming to
CBS Corporation, with
Westinghouse becoming a brand name owned by the company. •
NationsBank's takeover of the
Bank of America, but adopting Bank of America's name. • Norwest purchased
Wells Fargo but kept the latter due to its name recognition and historical legacy in the American West. •
Interceptor Entertainment's acquisition of
3D Realms, but kept the name 3D Realms. • Nordic Games buying
THQ assets and trademark and renaming itself to
THQ Nordic. • Infogrames Entertainment, SA becoming
Atari SA. • The Avago Technologies takeover of
Broadcom Corporation and subsequent rename to
Broadcom Inc. •
Overkill Software's takeover of
Starbreeze. == Takeover financing ==