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1 Eur. Company L. 4 (2004)

handle is hein.kluwer/eurcompl0001 and id is 1 raw text is: EDITORIAL

We all want to go to heaven
but nobody wants to die
BY JAAP WINTER
PROFESSOR OF COMPANY LAW, UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS
~41

This saying epitomises the 13th Directive's original objective,
the process of its negotiations and the end result as agreed by
Member States after a decade and a half of negotiations. The objec-
tive was to create rules for takeover bids on listed companies, offer-
ing a mechanism for consolidating and integrating Europe's indus-
try in order for European business to make optimal use of the EU's
single market. That is one of the cornerstones of the transformation
of the EU into the most competitive market, which Member States
in Lisbon said they wished to achieve by 2010. The proposals
specifically provided that the board of a target company could not
unilaterally frustrate a takeover bid that has been announced or is
imminent, but needs specific shareholder approval for putting up
defensive measures against a bid (Art. 9, the non-frustration rule).
Fourteen out of fifteen Member States agreed to this proposal in
2001, but the proposal was rejected in the European Parliament
through a curious and unique blocking vote (273 against 273). The
key argument against the proposal was that it did not create a level
playing field, as the proposal would only restrict post-bid defences,
but would not affect pre-bid structures already in place in a com-
pany's constitution way before any bid is announced or becomes
imminent. These pre-bid defences are part of the company law
arrangements in almost all Member States. The High Level Group
was called to provide a solution for this problem. It suggested a
breakthrough rule as a mechanism that could effectively deal with
pre-bid defensive structures after a substantially successful bid.
The Commission's proposal of October 2002, the following
negotiations between Member States and the end result of the
adopted Directive, showed what the whole debate was really about.
A number of Member States went out of their way to ensure that
their national industries would not become subject to a takeover
regime that could actually result in a succesful takeover by others.
The outcome is a takeover regime where the two basic provisions
that can ensure that takeover bids can be made successfUlly, the
non-frustration rule and the breakthrough rule, have become
optional only: Member States do not have to impose these rules
on their companies, but must offer them the ability to elect to be
subject to these rules. This opt-out/opt-in system is combined
with a reciprocity rule that ensures that even companies that have
voluntarily chosen to be subject to rules that allow for a successful
takeover bid, can put up defences against a bidder that is not itself

subject to these rules. As a consequence national regimes can
continue as they are.
So how should we judge the Directive? Assuming that most if not all
Member States will not impose the takeover facilitating rules on
their companies, the merit of the Directive largely depends on
whether the Directive contains sufficient incentives for companies to
voluntarily subject themselves to the takeover facilitating rules. If
economic theory becomes practice, then investors should generally
tend to prefer to invest in companies subject to these rules, as they
expect higher returns from those companies and the potential for a
premium in case of a takeover bid. This is reinforced by elements of
the Directive such as the requirement to disclose and therefore justi-
fy defensive mechanisms (Art. 10) and the reciprocity rule, of which
the inverse effect is that companies that want to be players on the
takeover market rather than targets must first accept the takeover
facilitating rules to apply to themselves. All of this will take place
against the background of explicit takeover facilitating rules that will
have to be included in national legislation as an optional regime in
all Member States and a revision of the effects of the Directive after
five years of implementation, in 2011. 1 do not expect these incen-
tives to have similar effects everywhere. It will depend on factors
such as national sentiments as well as the characteristics of the
economic sectors in which companies operate whether these incen-
tives will create a noticeable move to application of the takeover
facilitating rules. An example where the incentives may already have
some effect may be the Swedish telecom company Ericsson, which
has recently announced it will reduce the voting rights of its multi-
ple voting right class A shares from 1,000 votes per share to ten votes
per share (as opposed to the class B shares with only one vote per
share). This will reduce the voting block of its key shareholder
Investor (controlled by the Wallenberg family) from 28 per cent to
thirteen per cent. Most of the country reports in this first issue of
European Company Law, as well as the analysis of Editor Steef
Bartman, express similar expectations as to a development towards
application of takeover facilitating rules in the EU.
Getting to heaven generally is a difficult and painful process. The
13th Directive process and outcome are only exemplary of a general
struggle to redefine national interests in an EU single market per-
spective. For now the 13th Directive takes us one step closer, albeit a
small and uncertain step.

EUROPEAN COMPANY LAW

APRIL 2004, ISSUE 1

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