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New takeover rules limiting poison pills will make it harder to bring hostile bids

New takeover rules will bring fundamental change to the way Bay Street M&A lawyers do deals

Canadian regulators don’t tinker frequently with the technical nuts and bolts from the country’s takeover regime. But new rules to limit using poison pills will disrupt the strategies and tactics we’ve become used to in Canadian takeover battles.

Big change is really a afoot, lawyers say.

“The takeover amendments are expected to profoundly alter the manner in which takeover bids are conducted, and the securities regulators’ role in those transactions,” write lawyers from Goodmans LLP in a note about the rules.

That’s one of many, many law firm bulletins which have flooded into my inbox because the rule changes were announced.

To make sure, while the new rules will probably allow it to be harder to mount unsolicited bids in Canada, they will not make hostile bids impossible. The boards of target companies still aren’t permitted to “just say no” to a hostile bid. Instead the new rules impose a much longer mandatory tender period. Which will give target boards more time to line up alternatives. It will also expose hostile suitors towards the risk competing bidders will go into the mix.

Wanna-be suitors and could-be targets will get creative, lawyers expect.

Some lawyers predict suitors will avoid the new tougher rules by launching proxy battles to consider charge of a target company’s board. Other lawyers suggest target companies might protect themselves in proxy battles by using “voting pills” that expand voting rights. 

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