The Short and Puzzling Life of the "Implicit Minority Discount" in Delaware Appraisal Law

The "implicit minority discount, " or "IMD, " is a fairly new concept in Delaware appraisal law. A review of the case law discussing the concept, however, reveals that it has emerged haphazardly and has not been fully tested against principles that are generally accepted in the f...

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Veröffentlicht in:University of Pennsylvania law review 2007-11, Vol.156 (1), p.1-61
Hauptverfasser: Hamermesh, Lawrence A., Wachter, Michael L.
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description The "implicit minority discount, " or "IMD, " is a fairly new concept in Delaware appraisal law. A review of the case law discussing the concept, however, reveals that it has emerged haphazardly and has not been fully tested against principles that are generally accepted in the financial community. While control share blocks are valued at a premium because of the particular rights and opportunities associated with control, these are elements of value that cannot fairly be viewed as belonging either to the corporation or its shareholders. In corporations with widely dispersed shareholdings, the firm is subject to agency costs that must be taken into consideration in determining going concern value. A control-block-oriented valuation that fails to deduct such costs does not represent the going concern value of the firm. As a matter of generally accepted financial theory, on the other hand, share prices in liquid and informed markets do generally represent that going concern value, with attendant agency costs factored or priced in. There is no evidence that such prices systematically and continuously err on the low side, requiring upward adjustment based on an "implicit minority discount." Given the lack of serious support for the IMD in finance literature, this Article suggests that the Delaware courts may be relying on the IMD as a means to avoid imposing upon squeezed-out minority shareholders the costs of fiduciary misconduct by the controller. Where either past or estimated future earnings or cash flows are found to be depressed as a result of fiduciary misconduct, however, or where such earnings or cash flows fail to include elements of value that belong to the corporation being valued, the appropriate means to address the corresponding reduction in the determination of "fair value" is an upward adjustment to those earnings or cash flows. This approach to the problem of controller opportunism is more direct, more comprehensive in its application, and more in keeping with prevailing financial principles than the IMD that the Delaware courts have applied in the limited context of comparable company analysis. The Delaware courts can therefore comfortably dispense with resorting to the financially unsupported concept that liquid and informed share markets systematically understate going concern value.
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A review of the case law discussing the concept, however, reveals that it has emerged haphazardly and has not been fully tested against principles that are generally accepted in the financial community. While control share blocks are valued at a premium because of the particular rights and opportunities associated with control, these are elements of value that cannot fairly be viewed as belonging either to the corporation or its shareholders. In corporations with widely dispersed shareholdings, the firm is subject to agency costs that must be taken into consideration in determining going concern value. A control-block-oriented valuation that fails to deduct such costs does not represent the going concern value of the firm. As a matter of generally accepted financial theory, on the other hand, share prices in liquid and informed markets do generally represent that going concern value, with attendant agency costs factored or priced in. There is no evidence that such prices systematically and continuously err on the low side, requiring upward adjustment based on an "implicit minority discount." Given the lack of serious support for the IMD in finance literature, this Article suggests that the Delaware courts may be relying on the IMD as a means to avoid imposing upon squeezed-out minority shareholders the costs of fiduciary misconduct by the controller. Where either past or estimated future earnings or cash flows are found to be depressed as a result of fiduciary misconduct, however, or where such earnings or cash flows fail to include elements of value that belong to the corporation being valued, the appropriate means to address the corresponding reduction in the determination of "fair value" is an upward adjustment to those earnings or cash flows. 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There is no evidence that such prices systematically and continuously err on the low side, requiring upward adjustment based on an "implicit minority discount." Given the lack of serious support for the IMD in finance literature, this Article suggests that the Delaware courts may be relying on the IMD as a means to avoid imposing upon squeezed-out minority shareholders the costs of fiduciary misconduct by the controller. Where either past or estimated future earnings or cash flows are found to be depressed as a result of fiduciary misconduct, however, or where such earnings or cash flows fail to include elements of value that belong to the corporation being valued, the appropriate means to address the corresponding reduction in the determination of "fair value" is an upward adjustment to those earnings or cash flows. 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source HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Appraisals
Business structures
Cash flow
Corporations
Courts
Discounts
Discounts (Sales)
Fair market value
Finance
Going concern (Accounting)
Going concerns
Law
Laws, regulations and rules
Market prices
Minority shareholders
Minority stockholders
Shareholders
Stockholders
Valuation
Value appraisal
title The Short and Puzzling Life of the "Implicit Minority Discount" in Delaware Appraisal Law
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