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In May 2016, Halliburton Co. paid an eye-watering US$3.5 billion reverse break fee to acquisition target, Baker Hughes, after failing to secure anti-trust approval. The fee represented 10% of Baker Hughes’ equity value.
The Halliburton situation and US market practice highlights a sophisticated approach to reverse break fees. Australian acquisition agreements could adopt some of this practice to better allocate and price deal-risk.
A reverse break fee is a fee payable by a bidder to a target if an M&A transaction does not proceed, usually due to an event within the control of the bidder.
Halliburton and Baker Hughes agreed the following ‘failed-deal’ fee structure:
The deal was terminated by the parties on 1 May 2016, after the US Department of Justice took action to block the merger for anti-trust reasons. Halliburton paid a US$3.5 billion reverse break fee to Baker Hughes.
Australian practice
We reviewed 25 Australian public M&A deals announced since 1 January 2015 with a value above $50 million. We found:
US market practice
Thomson Reuters reviewed US public deals in 2015 with a value above US$1 billion, finding:
In recent years, the US market has produced innovative reverse break fee structures, including:
There are obvious issues for the bidder and the target in agreeing to a large fee.
Bidders: Complying with directors’ duties
Agreeing to pay a break fee on certain contingencies requires the directors of the bidder to first assess the risk that the contingency will arise and then assess the benefit to the company from the overall transaction in light of that risk. If the risk of the fee becoming payable is very high, it may be reckless to agree to the fee.
In the Halliburton situation, anti-trust risk was clear. The deal would have merged the world’s second and third largest oil services companies. It is impossible to gauge how Halliburton’s directors considered this risk. However, we presume that they must have received legal advice that there were reasonable prospects of gaining anti-trust approval and that they considered that relying on that advice was reasonable. One might imagine that, where the reverse break fee is so large, the advice would need to express a high degree of confidence that the approval would be forthcoming.
Targets: Unenforceability of penalties
For targets, a large reverse break fee may be susceptible to challenge by the bidder. Under the law of penalties, an agreed amount of damages payable on contract failure will be unenforceable if it does not represent a ‘genuine pre-estimate’ of the loss that may be suffered. Australian and US penalty laws are consistent, though largely untested as they apply to break fees.
Would the US$3.5 billion fee paid by Halliburton have been characterised as a penalty by Australian courts?
For a target worried about enforceability, we think that there may be an alternative approach of structuring a reverse break fee as facilitation fee for the target to co-operate to put the acquisition proposal before shareholders. In Paciocco v ANZ Bank the Court found that a fee for an additional benefit may not be characterised as a penalty. That would assist the target to resist any argument that the fee was not recoverable.
An interesting approach is that taken under the New Zealand Takeover Code. This expressly allows a target to recover costs associated with a takeover bid, even where no cost recovery agreement is in place. This provision was used by Kathmandu in June 2016 to bring an action against Briscoe in the New Zealand High Court to recover NZ$3 million in costs incurred after Briscoe’s non-recommended takeover bid for Kathmandu failed.
Our review shows that Australian practice on reverse break-fees is biased towards specifying material breach by the bidder as the only risk for a bidder to bear and the price of that risk is arbitrarily set at the same size as the target break fee.
US market practice originally had a similar approach to the Australian position. For example, many US transactions in 2005-2007 had a reverse break fee that was the same size as the target’s break fee. However, an increase in bidders failing to complete deals during the global financial crisis resulted in targets questioning the logic of this approach and led to an increase in reverse break fees.
We expect to see Australian target companies increasingly seeking added protection for themselves by requiring a reverse break fee to cover situations where a key approval is not obtained, even if that failure has occurred despite the best efforts of the bidder. Under current practice, a failure of a regulatory condition may not lead to a payment as there may not have been a ‘material breach’ by the bidder as required by typical agreements.
Further, we expect that targets will seek to properly price the risk of deal failure where that is due to breach by the bidder to deliver a key approval. There is no logic, in our view, for a reverse break fee to necessarily be the same as the target break fee. The 1% rule of thumb suggested by the Takeovers Panel for target break fees is, of course, inapplicable. That rule is driven by the need to prevent break fees from deterring competition or acting as a coercive factor on target shareholders. A reverse break fee does not generally give rise to those concerns.
A related point is whether the reverse break fee is to be the exclusive remedy that target can claim. If it is, the reverse break fee can be likened to an option fee that the bidder can pay to terminate the transaction. That may be inappropriate if the reverse break is a lowly 1% of transaction value.
Of course, context will always be important in setting the tone for these negotiations, with the attractiveness of the offer for target shareholders and the likelihood of further bids being relevant considerations.
This article was written by Rodd Levy, Partner, Kam Jamshidi, Senior Associate and Andrew Cameron, Solicitor, Melbourne.
For information regarding possible implications for your business, contact Rodd Levy.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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