激进股东、公司治理挑战与特拉华州法律

D. Parsons, Jason Tyler
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在过去的几年里,美国资本市场见证了所谓的“激进投资者”的数量和影响力的明显上升,这意味着大型机构投资基金采用一种投资策略,即收购上市公司相对大量的股票,并行使其作为股东的合法权利,在公司内部施加某种政策变化,但不试图获得控制权。这一事实同时引发了一场激烈的辩论,即积极分子日益增长的影响力在规范上是“好”还是“坏”。有一件事特别让这场辩论如此有争议,那就是激进主义对简单描述的抵制:一方面,股东维权人士主要只行使公司法(特别是特拉华州普通公司法(“DGCL”),因为特拉华州是美国大多数上市公司的注册州)赋予投资者的合法权利来保护他们的投资,但另一方面,维权活动可能会对相关公司造成附带损害。暗示董事会的信义义务,以保护企业免受对企业堡垒的威胁。简单地说,股东激进主义仅仅代表了特拉华州法律旨在保护的“论坛内的异议”,还是激进主义者是特拉华州法律委托公司董事驱逐的“门口的野蛮人”?无论这些问题和相关问题的答案是什么,股东行动主义在多大程度上主要涉及投资者和董事相互之间的法律权利和义务,这意味着DGCL和特拉华州法院必然发挥重要的中介作用。然而,特拉华州在公司内部事务方面的公共政策是允许私人订购,并避免采用“一刀切”的方法来处理市场参与者在各自情况下可能选择的尽可能有效地配置资本的无数方式。换句话说,特拉华州公司法的意图——以及特拉华州法院在解释和执行该法律方面的功能——不是对围绕股东维权主义的辩论结果采取立场,而是保护辩论本身。在本章中,我们通过实际例子强调特拉华州法院在使用可用工具的背景下决定这些有时令人烦恼的问题的核心能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Activist Stockholders, Corporate Governance Challenges, and Delaware Law
Over the last several years, the U.S. capital markets have witnessed a palpable rise in the number and influence of so-called “activist investors”, meaning large, institutional investment funds employing an investment strategy of acquiring relatively large blocs of stock in publicly traded companies and wielding their legal rights as stockholders to effect some sort of policy change within the company but without attempting to acquire control. This fact concomitantly has engendered a heated debate as to whether activists’ rising influence is normatively “good” or “bad”. One thing in particular that makes this debate so contentious is activism’s resistance to easy characterization: on the one hand, stockholder activists primarily wield only the legal rights that the corporation law (and specifically the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”), as Delaware is the State of incorporation for the majority of the U.S.’s publicly traded corporations) confers on investors to protect their investments, but, on the other hand, activist campaigns may cause collateral damage to the companies involved, implicating boards of directors’ fiduciary duties to protect the enterprise against threats to the corporate bastion. Simply put, does stockholder activism merely represent “dissent within the forum” that Delaware law is designed to safeguard, or are activists the proverbial “barbarians at the gate” that Delaware law entrusts corporate directors to repel? Whatever the answer to these and related questions, the extent to which stockholder activism primarily implicates the legal rights and duties of investors and directors vis-a-vis each other means that the DGCL and the Delaware courts necessarily serve an important intermediary role. And yet, the public policy of the State of Delaware as to matters of corporate internal affairs is to enable private ordering and eschew “one size fits all” approaches to the innumerable ways in which market participants may choose to deploy their capital as efficiently as possible in their respective circumstances. In other words, the intent of Delaware corporation law — and the function of Delaware courts in interpreting and enforcing that law — is not to take a position on the outcome of the debate surrounding stockholder activism, but to safeguard the debate itself. In this chapter, we highlight through practical examples the Delaware courts’ core competency in deciding these sometimes vexing questions in context with the tools available.
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