Abstract:
This
Article argues that once undistorted shareholder choice is ensured
which can be done by making it necessary for hostile bidders
to win a vote of shareholder supportboards should not have
veto power over takeover bids. The Article considers all of the
arguments that have been offered for board vetoincluding
ones based on analogies to other corporate decisions, directors
superior information, bargaining by management, pressures on
managers to focus on the short-run, inferences from IPO charters,
interests of long-term shareholders, aggregate shareholder wealth,
and protection of stakeholders. Examining these arguments both
at the level of theory and in light of all available empirical
evidence, the Article concludes that none of them individually,
nor all of them taken together, warrants a board veto. Finally,
the Article discusses the implications that the analysis has for
judicial review of defensive tactics.