Dell, Inc. v. Magnetar Global Event Driven Master Fund Ltd.

177 A.3d 1
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedDecember 14, 2017
Docket565, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 177 A.3d 1 (Dell, Inc. v. Magnetar Global Event Driven Master Fund Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dell, Inc. v. Magnetar Global Event Driven Master Fund Ltd., 177 A.3d 1 (Del. 2017).

Opinion

VALIHURA, Justice:

The petitioners left standing in this long-running appraisal saga are former stockholders of Dell Inc. (“Dell” .or the “Company”) who validly exercised their appraisal rights instead of voting for a buyout led by the Company’s founder and CEO, Michael Dell, and affiliates of a private equity firm, Silver Lake Partners (“Silver Lake”). In perfecting their appraisal rights, petitioners acted on their belief that Dell’s shares were worth more than the deal price of‘$13.75 per share— which was already a 37% premium to the Company’s ninety-day-average unaffected stock price.

Our appraisal statute, 8 Del. C. § 262, allows stockholders who perfect their appraisal rights to receive “fair value” for their shares as of the merger date instead of the merger consideration. The appraisal statute requires the Court of Chancery to assess the “fair value” of such shares and, in doing.so, “take into account all relevant factors;” The trial court complied: it took ihto account all the' relevant factors presented by the parties' in advocating for their' view of fair value — including Dell’s stock price and deal price — and then-arrived at its own determination of fair val■‘ue.

The problem with the. trial court’s opinion is not, as the Company argues, that it failed to take into account, the stock price and deal price. The trial court did consider this market data. It simply decided to give it no weight. But the court nonetheless erred because its reasons for giving that data no weight — and for relying instead exclusively on its own discounted cash flow (“DCF”) analysis to ,reach a fair value calculation of $17.62 — do not follow from the court’s key. factual findings and from relevant, accepted financial principles.

“When reviewing a decision in a statutory appraisal, we use an abüse of discretion standard and grant significant deference to the factual findings, of the trial court. This Court ‘will .accept [the Court of Chancery’s] findings if supported by the record ..:. ’ ” 1 We 'defer to the trial court’s fair value determination if it has a “reasonable basis in the record and in accepted financial principles relevant to determining the value of corporations and their stock.” 2

Here, the trial court gave no weight to Dell’s stock price because it found its market to be inefficient. But the evidence suggests that the market for Dell’s shares was actually efficient and, therefore, likely a possible proxy for fair value. Further, the trial court concluded that several features of management-led buyout (“MBO”) transactions render the deal prices resulting from such transactions unreliable. But the trial court’s own findings suggest that, even though this was an MBO transaction, these features were largely absent here. Moreover, even if it were not possible to determine the precise amount of that market data’s imperfection, as the Court of Chancery concluded, the trial court’s decision to rely “exclusively” on its own DCF analysis 3 is based on several assumptions that are not grounded in relevant, accepted financial principles.

We REVERSE, in part, and AFFIRM, in part, and REMAND for these reasons and those that follow. In addition, for reasons discussed in Section IV, we REVERSE and REMAND the Court of Chancery’s decision concerning the allocation of fees and costs among the appraisal class.

I.

A Dell

In June 2012, when the idea of an MBO first arose, Dell was a mature company on the brink of crisis: its stock price had dropped from $18 per share to around $12 per share in just the first half of the year. The advent of new technologies such as tablet computers crippled the traditional PC-maker’s ■ outlook. The Company’s recent transformation struggled to generate investor optimism about its long-term prospects. And the global economy was still hungover from the financial crisis of 2008.

Other than a brief hiatus from 2004 to his return in 2007, Michael Dell had led Dell as CEO, from the Company’s founding in his first-year dorm room at the University of Texas at Austin when he was just nineteen years old, to a Fortune 500 behemoth with global revenues hitting $56.9 billion in the fiscal year ending February 1, 2013. 4 Dell was indisputably one of the world’s largest IT companies. 5

i Michael Dell’s Return and the Company’s Challenges

Upon his return to the Company in 2007, Mr. Dell 6 perceived three key challenges facing Dell. First, low-margin PC-makers such as Lenovo were muscling into Dell’s market share as the performance gap between its higher-end computers and the cheaper alternatives narrowed. Second, starting with the launch of Apple’s iPhone in 2007, the impending onslaught of smart-phones and tablet computers appeared likely to erode traditional PC sales. Third, cloud-based storage from the likes of Amazon.com threatened the Company’s traditional server storage business.

In light of these threats, Mr. Dell believed that, to survive and thrive, the Company should focus on enterprise software and services, which could be accomplished through acquisitions in these spaces. From 2010 through 2012, the Company acquired eleven companies for approximately $14 billion. And Mr. Dell tried to sell the market on this transformation. He regularly shared with equity analysts his view that the Company’s enterprise solutions and services divisions would achieve' annual sales growth in the double-digits and account for more than half of Dell’s profits by 2016.

Yet despite Dell’s M & A spurt and Mr. Dell’s attempts to persuade Wall Street to buy into the Company’s future, the market still “didn’t get” Dell, as Mr. Dell lamented. 7 It still viewed the Company as a PC business, and'its stock hovered in the mid-teens.

ii The Market for Dell’s Stock

Dell’s stock traded on the NASDAQ under the ticker symbol DELL. The Company’s market capitalization of more than $20 billion ranked it in the top third of the S & P 500. 8 Dell had a deep public float 9 and was actively traded as more than 5% of Dell’s shares were traded each week. 10 The stock had a bid-ask spread of approximately 0.08%. 11 It -was also widely covered by equity analysts, 12 and its share price quickly reflected the market’s view on breaking developments. 13 Based on these metrics, the record suggests the market for Dell i stock was semi-strong efficient, meaning that the market’s -digestion and assessment of all publicly available information concerning Dell was quickly impounded into the Company’s stock price. 14

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Bluebook (online)
177 A.3d 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dell-inc-v-magnetar-global-event-driven-master-fund-ltd-del-2017.