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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Expro International Group Plc, Re Companies Act 1985 & 2006 [2008] EWHC 1543 (Ch) (26 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/1543.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1543 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
COMPANIES COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF EXPRO INTERNATIONAL GROUP PLC | ||
and | ||
IN THE MATTER OF THE COMPANIES ACT 1985 AND 2006 |
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A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Moore QC and S Horam appeared on behalf of Halliburton.
Mr M Crystal QC and MR J Cone appeared on behalf of Candover.
Mr D Mabb QC and MS C Bryant appeared on behalf of the Takeover Panel.
Mr R Hildyard appeared on behalf of Mason Capital.
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Crown Copyright ©
"An independent competing offeror not announcing a higher cash offer in accordance with the requirements of rule 2.5 of the Takeover Code on or before 20 June, 2008."
"The Code is designed principally to ensure that shareholders are treated fairly and are not denied an opportunity to decide on the merits of a takeover and that shareholders of the same class are afforded equivalent treatment by an offeror. The Code also provides an orderly framework within which takeovers are conducted. In addition, it is designed to promote, in conjunction with other regulatory regimes, the integrity of the financial markets.
"The Code is not concerned with the financial or commercial advantages or disadvantages of a takeover. These are matters for the company and its shareholders. Nor is the Code concerned with those issues, such as competition policy, which are the responsibility of government and other bodies.
"The code has been developed since 1968 to reflect the collective opinion of those professionally involved in the field of takeovers as to appropriate business standards and as to how fairness to shareholders and an orderly framework for takeovers can be achieved."
"At any time following the announcement of a possible offer (provided the potential offeror has been publicly named) the offeree company may request that the Panel impose a time limit for the potential offeror to clarify its intentions with regard to the offeree company. If a time limit for clarification is imposed by the Panel the potential offeror must, before the expiry of the time limit, announce either a firm intention to make an offer for the offeree company in accordance with rule 2.5 or that it does not intend to make an offer for the offeree company, in which case the announcement will be treated as a statement to which rule 2.8 applies."
"An offeror should only announce a firm intention to make an offer after the most careful and responsible consideration. Such an announcement should be made only when an offeror has every reason to believe that it can and will continue to be able to implement the offer. Responsibility in this connection also rests on the financial adviser to the offeror."
The identity of the offeror, the terms of the offer and other matters prescribed by rule 2.5B must be included in the announcement.
"When there has been an announcement of a firm intention to make an offer, the offeror must normally proceed with the offer unless, in accordance with the provisions of rule 13, the offeror is permitted to invoke a precondition to the posting of the offer or would be permitted to invoke a condition to the offer if the offer were made."
"A person making a statement that he does not intend to make an offer for a company should make his statement as clear and unambiguous as possible. Except with the consent of the Panel, unless there is a material change of circumstances or there has occurred an event which the person specified in his statement as an event which would enable it to be set aside, neither the person making the statement, nor any person who acted in concert with him, nor any person who is subsequently acting in concert with either of them, may within six months from the date of the statement (a) announce an offer or possible offer for the offeree company ..."
I need not read the rest of that:
"(b) acquire any interest in shares of the offeree company if any such person would thereby become obliged under rule 9 to make an offer."
I need not read (c):
"(d) make any statement which raises or confirms the possibility that an offer may be made for the offeree company, or (e) take any steps in connection with a possible offer for the offeree company where knowledge of the possible offer might be extended outside those who need to know in the potential offeror and its immediate advisers."
Rule 2.8 goes on to provide that:
"Failure to comply with this rule may lead to the period of six months referred to above being extended."
"Parties to an offer or potential offer and their advisers must take care not to issue statements which while not factually inaccurate may mislead shareholders and the market or may create uncertainty. In particular an offeror must not make a statement to the effect that it may improve its offer, or that it may make a change to the structure, conditionality or the non-financial terms of its offer, without committing itself to do to doing so and specifying the improvement or change."
I need not read the rest of that, but I should read the first note to that rule, headed "Holding statements":
"While an offeror may need to consider its position in the light of new developments, and may make a statement to that effect, and while a potential competing offeror may make a statement that it is considering making an offer, it is not acceptable for such statements to remain unclarified for more than a limited time in the later stages of the offer period. Before any statements of this kind are made the Panel must be consulted as to the period allowable for clarification. This does not detract in any way from the obligation to make timely announcements under rule 2."
"If a competitive situation continues to exist in the later stages of the offer period, the Panel will normally require revised offers to be published in accordance with an auction procedure, the terms of which will be determined by the Panel. That procedure will normally require final revisions to competing offers to be announced by the 46th day following the posting of the competing offer document but enable an offeror to revise its offer within a set period in response to any revision announced by a competing offeror on or after the 46th day. The procedure will not normally require any revised offer to be posted before the expiry of a set period after the last revision to either offer is announced. The Panel will consider applying any alternative procedure which is agreed between competing offerors and the board of the offeree company."
"Expro has confirmed that it will not postpone or adjourn either the first court hearing past 23 June 2008 or the second court hearing past 25 June 2008 as a result of the revised offer unless an independent competing offeror announces a higher cash offer in accordance with the requirements of rule 2.5 of the Takeover Code on or before 20 June 2008."
"The Expro independent directors via their rule 3 adviser [that is their financial adviser] have been encouraged by the Takeover Panel to think about a potential further auction process should Halliburton company issue a rule 2.5 announcement, thereby becoming a competing offeror for the purposes of the Takeover Code. Accordingly the advisers to the Expro independent directors have prepared an outline of an auction procedure... an e-mail from the company's rule 3 adviser stated that the Panel had asked JP Morgan Cazenove to think about how we might conduct an auction assuming Halliburton makes a rule 2.5 announcement this week. It was on this basis that the outline of the auction procedure was presented, both for Umbrellastream and to Halliburton Company."
"The Expro independent directors also considered that there was a higher general transactional risk for Expro shareholders in accepting the Halliburton proposal. The first area of risk was, had the Halliburton proposal been accepted, there could be no certainty that Umbrellastream would have participated in any subsequent auction of Expro. If Umbrellastream did not, Expro shareholders would have been left only with the Halliburton proposal, which represented a lower value offer to Expro shareholders than the revised [Umbrellastream] offer."
Mr McAlistair returned to this point in paragraph 28 of his witness statement of 25 June, expressing the concern that Halliburton would potentially have been able to use the auction process to delay the currently more favourable offer from Umbrellastream to a time at which it was lower in value than Halliburton's offer.