LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron International Corporation

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 30, 2015
DocketCA 8094-VCP
StatusPublished

This text of LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron International Corporation (LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron International Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron International Corporation, (Del. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

LONGPATH CAPITAL, LLC, ) a Delaware limited liability company, ) ) Petitioner, ) ) C.A. No. 8094-VCP v. ) ) RAMTRON INTERNATIONAL ) CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, ) ) Respondent. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: March 3, 2015 Date Decided: June 30, 2015

David A. Jenkins, Esq., Laurence V. Cronin, Esq., SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Petitioner.

A. Thompson Bayliss, Esq., Sara E. Hickie, Esq., ABRAMS & BAYLISS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for Respondent.

PARSONS, Vice Chancellor. In this appraisal action, the petitioner asks the Court to determine the fair value of

its shares in the respondent. On November 10, 2012, a third party acquired the

respondent in a hostile cash merger for $3.10 per share. The deal had an equity value of

approximately $110 million and paid a 71% premium over the respondent‘s unaffected

stock price of $1.81.

The petitioner acquired its shares after the announcement of the merger and

demanded appraisal pursuant to 8 Del. C. § 262. The respondent contends the merger

price less synergies offers the most reliable measure of the fair value of its shares. That

methodology, as applied by the respondent‘s expert, yields a value of $2.76 per share.

The petitioner‘s expert, relying on a combination of a discounted cash flow (―DCF‖)

analysis and a comparable transactions analysis, contends that the fair value is $4.96 per

share.

For the reasons that follow, I conclude that a DCF analysis is not an appropriate

method of determining fair value in this instance. The utility of a DCF ceases when its

inputs are unreliable; and, in this instance, I conclude that the management projections

that provide the key inputs to the petitioner‘s DCF analysis are not reliable. The parties

agree that there are no comparable companies. The petitioner relies, in part, upon a

comparable transactions approach, but I conclude that his two-observation data set does

not provide a reasonable basis to determine fair value. Although the petitioner

thoroughly disputes this point, I conclude that the sales process in this instance was

thorough and that the transaction price less synergies provides the most reliable method

1 of determining the fair value of the petitioner‘s shares. The respondent, however, has not

shown that the synergies in fact amounted to $0.34 per share, as it claims. Instead, I

adopt the petitioner‘s estimate of $0.03 per share in synergies, resulting in a fair value of

$3.07 per share.

I. BACKGROUND

I begin by providing a brief overview of the parties, the respondent and its

business, and the process leading up to the merger.1 I delve more deeply into several of

these and related topics in subsequent Sections.

A. The Parties

Petitioner, LongPath Capital, LLC (―LongPath‖), is an investment vehicle that

began acquiring shares of the respondent in mid-October 2012, about a month after the

announcement of the merger.2 Overall, LongPath timely demanded and perfected its

appraisal rights as to 484,700 shares of common stock in the respondent.3

Respondent, Ramtron International Corporation (―Ramtron‖ or the ―Company‖), is

a fabless semiconductor company that produces F-RAM. A ―fabless‖ semiconductor

company is one that does not manufacture the silicon wafers used in its products, but

1 The factual record is drawn, in part, from the testimony presented at trial. Citations to such testimony are in the form ―Tr. # (X)‖ with ―X‖ representing the surname of the speaker, if not clear from the text. Exhibits will be cited as ―JX #‖ and facts drawn from the parties‘ pre-trial Joint Stipulation are cited as ―JS ¶ #.‖ 2 Tr. 10 (Davidian). 3 JS ¶ 1.

2 instead, outsources that task to a separate company known as a ―fab‖ or a ―foundry.‖4

RAM stands for random access memory, a ubiquitous component of computers. F-RAM

is ferroelectric RAM.5 The benefits of F-RAM are that it has fast read and write speeds,

can be written to a high number of times, and consumes low power.6 Importantly, F-

RAM will retain memory when power is lost.7

Nonparty Cypress Semiconductor Corporation (―Cypress‖) issued a bear hug letter

to Ramtron on June 12, 2012, offering to buy all of its shares for $2.48 per share.8 After

Ramtron‘s board rejected the offer as inadequate, Cypress initiated a hostile tender offer

on June 21, 2012, at $2.68 per share.9 Ramtron and Cypress eventually reached an

agreement on a transaction price of $3.10 per share and signed a merger agreement on

September 18, 2012.10 Following a subsequent tender offer—apparently in an

unsuccessful effort to acquire 90% or more of the outstanding stock or at least solidify

4 Id. ¶ 4. 5 Tr. 184 (Davenport). 6 JS ¶ 2. 7 Tr. 281 (Rodgers). 8 JS ¶ 11. 9 Id. ¶ 13. 10 Id. ¶ 18.

3 Cypress‘ stock holdings—and a stockholder vote, the long-form merger closed on

November 20, 2012 (the ―Merger‖).11

B. Ramtron’s Operative Reality

Throughout this litigation, Respondent has portrayed Ramtron as a struggling

company unlikely to be able to continue as a business had the transaction with Cypress

not concluded successfully. Petitioner, by contrast, describes Ramtron as a company

with strong patent and intellectual property protection of its core products, a successful

new management team, and excellent business prospects. Indeed, in relying on the

management projections, Petitioner characterizes Ramtron as a company on the verge of

taking off like a rocket. Perhaps unsurprisingly, I find that Ramtron‘s operative reality at

the time of the Merger was somewhere in between these practically polar opposite

characterizations.

1. Ramtron’s foundry situation

As a fabless semiconductor company, Ramtron‘s relationships with its foundries

were vitally important. Indeed, Ramtron depended on its foundry to manufacture its

products. At the time of the Merger, Ramtron‘s primary foundry was Texas Instruments

(―TI‖).12 Ramtron‘s contract with TI provided that, if TI decided to terminate the

contract, it would have to provide three additional years of products to Ramtron. By

11 Id. ¶ 23. 12 Id. ¶ 5.

4 contrast, in the event of a change-in-control transaction at Ramtron, TI could stop

providing foundry services after only ninety days.13

Semiconductor foundries were the subject of a substantial amount of testimony at

trial. As will be seen, the subject of foundries relates to both the reliability of the

management predictions and the disputed cause of Ramtron‘s poor performance in 2012.

Gery Richards, Ramtron‘s CFO at the time of the Merger,14 testified that Fujitsu

previously served as the Company‘s primary foundry. In 2009, Fujitsu gave Ramtron a

―last-time buy‖ notice under the relevant contract, indicating that Fujitsu intended to

terminate its foundry relationship with Ramtron in two years.15

The testimony at trial made clear that transitioning foundries is not a simple

process. Semiconductors are complex products. In fact, even the silicon wafers from

which the semiconductors are created are not commodities but instead vary by

company.16 Additionally, each foundry‘s technology differs and F-RAM, being a

relatively unique product, complicates the process further. Thus, transitioning to a new

13 JX 322, JX 324.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc.
884 A.2d 26 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2005)
M.G. Bancorporation, Inc. v. Le Beau
737 A.2d 513 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1999)
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.
457 A.2d 701 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1983)
Highfields Capital, Ltd. v. AXA Financial, Inc.
939 A.2d 34 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 2007)
Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc.
684 A.2d 289 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 1996)
Glassman v. Unocal Exploration Corp.
777 A.2d 242 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2001)
Golden Telecom, Inc. v. GLOBAL GT LP
11 A.3d 214 (Supreme Court of Delaware, 2010)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron International Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longpath-capital-llc-v-ramtron-international-corpo-delch-2015.