DealLawyers.com Blog

March 23, 2026

Premerger Notification Office Accepting Old HSR Form Again

After a US district court vacated the rules implementing the FTC & DOJ’s overhaul of the HSR reporting regime, the FTC appealed the decision to the Fifth Circuit. At the time, due to a temporary stay of the order while the Fifth Circuit considered the FTC’s request for a stay pending appeal on the merits, HSR filings were still being prepared under the new regime. That’s no longer the case, as of late last week.

That’s because a Fifth Circuit panel ruled against the FTC on its motion for a stay pending appeal, so the district court’s ruling is currently in effect. The FTC’s Premerger Notification Program posted these notices:

IMPORTANT NOTICE: On March 19, 2026, the U.S. Court of Appeals denied the Commission’s motion for a stay pending appeal. Therefore, the district court’s judgment vacating the new form is effective immediately. The Commission is now accepting HSR filings using the Form and Instructions that were in place before the February 10, 2025, effective date of the new rule. The agency is in the process of updating its website to effectuate the court’s order and will be making relevant HSR filing materials available for filers soon. The agency will continue to accept HSR filings made pursuant to the February 10, 2025, Form and Instructions should filers voluntarily decide to submit them. (03/19/26)

The HSR Form and Instructions that were in place prior to February 10, 2025, are now available. Additional filing guidance is forthcoming. Please also refer to the PNO’s submission requirements and tips. (03/20/26)

Gibson Dunn shares these key takeaways:

The 2024 Rule Is No Longer in Effect. As of March 19, 2026, the premerger notification requirements have reverted to the prior HSR rule. While transacting parties may opt to file under the 2024 Rule’s form, there is no obligation to do so. Regardless of the FTC’s decision, the Court’s decision will not affect the recently-announced jurisdictional thresholds and filing fees for 2026.

The FTC May Promulgate Revised HSR Filing Requirements. The Court’s decision rests on procedural grounds, not a rejection of the FTC’s authority to modify the HSR form. Given the previous bipartisan FTC support for changes to HSR filing requirements, the FTC still may promulgate a new, more burdensome rule with a more developed administrative record. Dealmakers should not expect a permanent return to the pre-2024 filing regime.

Agency Staff Retain Significant Investigative Tools. Despite the 2024 Rule’s vacatur, FTC and DOJ Antitrust Division staff retain authority to request similar information from merging parties on a voluntary basis during the initial HSR waiting period, and on a mandatory basis at a later stage for transactions that trigger a Second Request. The practical implication: the information the FTC sought to require upfront through the 2024 Rule, including ordinary course business documents, will likely still be requested in transactions that draw agency interest.

We’re posting memos and resources in our “Antitrust” Practice Area.

Meredith Ervine 

March 20, 2026

Sale of Business Non-Competes: The Forfeiture for Competition Alternative

A recent Mayer Brown memo discusses the advisability of considering forfeiture for competition (FFC) clauses in acquisition transactions in lieu of the more traditional non-compete agreements. Here’s an excerpt:

Under recent Delaware decisions, numerous non-competition provisions have failed to pass reasonableness muster. Given this uncertainty, we noted in a previous Legal Update . . . that buyers should consider using FFC provisions alongside or in place of traditional non-competition provisions.

Upheld only recently by the Delaware Supreme Court, FFC provisions provide that the buyer will deliver to a party a supplemental benefit (i.e., something distinct from the purchase price, such as the payment of an additional sum of cash), that can be revoked or clawed back if the party chooses to compete against the acquired company. Because FFC provisions provide an incentive not to compete and are not an absolute bar on competition enforced by an injunction, they generally are not subject to judicial reasonableness review.

If your reaction to this is “well, what if we just limit our remedy under the non-compete to damages?” instead of using a FFC provision, it looks like that’s probably not going to work. The memo points to Vice Chancellor Zurn’s letter ruling in Fortiline v. McCall, (Del. Ch; 6/25), in which she held that, because reasonableness review of non-competes is based on the restrictions to which an individual is subject and not the remedy, this kind of workaround would not avoid that kind of review.  The Delaware Supreme Court subsequently issued an order affirming the Vice Chancellor’s decision.

John Jenkins

March 19, 2026

Rollover Equity: Considerations for a Seller

My former Calfee Halter colleague Sam Totino recently published a blog addressing issues that sellers should keep in mind when considering rolling over a portion of their ownership interest in the target into a stake in the acquiring entity. This except discusses call option mechanics:

An entire article could be dedicated to “call option” mechanics that are included in nearly all equityholder agreements of a buyer. However, in short, a “call option” is an option available to the buyer to repurchase the equity of the buyer held by a rollover seller in certain circumstances (often triggered by a termination of employment of the seller post-closing). While a full discussion of all the nuances of the mechanics of a call option is beyond the scope of this article, this is one area where sellers really need to pay attention to avoid ending up in a situation the seller may not have bargained for at the time the deal closed.

Buyers can use a call option as a future negotiating tool and a significant source of post-closing leverage over a seller, given that the consequences of exercising the call option may lead to less than desirable outcomes for the seller (for example, the potential in some circumstances for repurchasing the buyer equity held by the seller at a purchase price less than fair market value, the ability to pay any purchase price over an extended term of years, etc.).

While certain rollover sellers may have the leverage to negotiate an elimination of the call option, that may not be possible for many (most) sellers. Therefore, careful consideration should be given to call option mechanics to ensure that, at the very least, the seller understands the “rules of the game” and appropriate limitations on the buyer’s ability to exercise the call option are included where possible.

The blog also highlights the reasons why buyers and sellers may find an equity rollover to be an attractive option and addresses points sellers should keep in mind when it comes to preemptive rights, tag-along rights, and information rights.

John Jenkins

 

March 18, 2026

Special Committees: A Guide for the Perplexed

Debevoise recently published “Special Committees in Conflict Transactions: A Practical Guide,” which  provides practical guidance on the “when, why and how” of the appointment and operation of transactional special committees. Here’s an excerpt from the Guide’s discussion of the selection of advisors to a special committee:

The special committee will generally need legal and financial advisors to help it negotiate and evaluate a proposed transaction. While the company may identify a selection of potential independent advisors for the committee’s consideration (alongside any advisors that the committee may independently identify), the choice must be made by the committee in the exercise of its independent judgment.

Although it may be tempting to use advisors that have a preexisting relationship with the company because of the special committee members’ familiarity with those advisors, those advisors may have their own conflicts of interest or create the appearance of improper coordination between the company and the special committee.

The special committee should investigate any connections that its advisors—including individual deal team members—may have with the parties or other relevant individuals or entities to make sure they are not beholden to anybody else involved in the transaction. It is not required that advisors have no prior, current, or prospective relationships with transaction parties; instead, those relationships must be disclosed so that the special committee can form a view as to whether the relationships are sufficiently material to compromise independent judgment and advice.

The recent material business relationships of any advisors with the company and the acquirer must be disclosed to the company’s stockholders under SEC and FINRA regulations. Insufficient disclosure of advisor conflicts could subject the transaction to entire fairness review. In recent years, courts have focused increasingly on the importance of disclosing potential conflicts on the part of legal advisors.

Other topics addressed in the Guide include when to form a special committee, the selection of its members, what to include in the resolutions establishing the committee, and how the business of the special committee should be conducted and documented.

John Jenkins

March 17, 2026

Navigating Insider Conflicts: A Delaware and Nevada Playbook

It’s probably an understatement to say that transactions in which directors, officers or controlling stockholders have conflicts have received quite a bit of attention from courts and legislatures in recent years, so this recent Cooley memo (co-authored by Courtney Tygesson and our own Liz Dunshee) that provides a “playbook” for navigating conflict transactions under Delaware & Nevada law is a timely and helpful resource.  Here’s an excerpt from the intro:

Completing your initial public offering (IPO) is an exciting time, with capital inflows taking you to the next level. But if you are getting ready to go public – or recently closed your IPO – it is important to recognize the litigation risks that come with selling stock to the public and operating as a public company.

Those risks are amplified in some ways if controlling stockholders, interested directors or officers are in the mix, which is not uncommon, especially for tech companies. Among other things, the US Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules require disclosing related-party transactions and other relationships. Minority stockholders tend to scrutinize decisions that appear to benefit some holders more than others and may challenge them as unfair.

Your best defense is not a heroic legal argument after the fact. It is boring excellence in process and disclosure, especially in the run-up to and during significant transactions and fundraising rounds. That begins with understanding how corporate law safe harbors and guardrails would apply to the company’s circumstances in various scenarios.

Tracking ownership thresholds and approvals, along with the following baseline good practices – such as keeping careful minutes and disclosing accurate information to the board and stockholders – can save you from trouble down the road.

The playbook lays out, in summary fashion, how to assess transactions that may be “conflicted” for Delaware corporations and Nevada corporations. It also contains a brief “cheat sheet” that provides a high-level summary of the applicable legal standards.

John Jenkins

March 16, 2026

Deal Lawyers Download Podcast – Mike O’Bryan on M&A Trends for 2026

In our latest Deal Lawyers Download podcast, Mike O’Bryan of Morrison & Foerster joined me for a discussion of some of the M&A developments and trends identified in his firm’s recent report. We covered the following topics in this 32-minute podcast:

1. Evolving due diligence practices relating to AI
2. Implications of changing antitrust and national security review regimes
3. Evolving contractual arrangements for “acquihires” and other hybrid transactions
4. Most consequential recent tax law changes for M&A
5. Expectations about how the SB 21 safe harbor will influence market practice in controller transactions
6. Drafting to reduce the litigation risk of earnouts
7. Influence of activism on board’s strategic review processes
8. How regulatory uncertainties are being addressed in acquisition agreements

We’re always looking for new podcast content, so if you have something you’d like to talk about, please reach out to me at john@thecorporatecounsel.net or Meredith at mervine@ccrcorp.com. We’re wide open when it comes to topics – an interesting new judicial decision, other legal or market developments, best practices, war stories, tips on handling deal issues, interesting side gigs, or anything else you think might be of interest to the members of our community are all fair game.

– John Jenkins

March 13, 2026

‘Time-Is-of-the-Essence’ Clauses in Private M&A Agreements

In the wake of the Delaware Supreme Court decision in Thompson Street Capital Partners, IV v. Sonova (Del. Sup.; 4/25) that applied the equitable doctrine “common law abhors a forfeiture” to noncompliance with a merger agreement’s notice of claims requirement, a number of drafting changes have been proposed. One such suggestion — by Glenn West in Business Law Today — is that the survival clause state that compliance with the notice provisions is a material part of the bargained-for exchange, combined with “time is of the essence” language. This led Glenn and Mitu Gulati to do a deep dive on time-is-of-the-essence clauses in M&A agreements, which they wrote about in the winter edition of The Business Lawyer.

They were surprised by the application of this equitable doctrine in the context of a seller’s indemnification obligation in Thompson Street Capital. They review the history of the doctrine, which resulted from the court’s reluctance to condition the continued grant of possessory land interests on time-based requirements. Time-is-of-the-essence clauses arose in the context of those land-based relationships. They wondered, with the abhorrence of forfeiture being applied to sophisticated M&A agreements, might a time-is-of-the-essence provision work here too? They started with a survey of the inclusion of this language in M&A agreements, and the results surprised them — and everyone else.

We expected to see few or no time-is-of-the-essence clauses in M&A agreements. Instead, between 2010 and 2025, they appeared in roughly 20 percent of the approximately 4,200 publicly available private company M&A agreements our research assistants examined. Except for a handful, the inclusion of these provisions predates Thompson Street Capital. And when these provisions are used, we found that they typically are more all-encompassing regarding the various deadlines found in a private company acquisition agreement than may have been truly intended or necessary.

They had questions about why these provisions were included in these deals and not the other 80%, and there wasn’t already available data to answer those questions. So they conducted interviews with practitioners, including some who drafted the agreements that contained the clauses.

The response we received during our interviews was that there was either no or only limited familiarity with or understanding of the time-is-of-the-essence provision in the M&A bar—at least prior to the Thompson Street Capital decision. And that 20 percent number surprised almost every lawyer we asked about it, including those who had included a time-is-of-the-essence clause in their own documents.

What did the practitioners they chatted with say about Glenn’s proposed drafting fix? Many were in the early stages of considering how to respond to Thompson Street Capital and were open to the suggestion, but worried about “the law of unintended consequences.” To that end, Glenn suggests a “targeted approach” and provides a possible “boilerplate” clause for consideration. It’s worth your time to read the article in full and consider the suggested “Materiality of Conditions” provision.

Meredith Ervine 

March 12, 2026

More on the New CDIs on Cross Border Tender Offers

Late last month, I blogged about a number of new and updated M&A CDIs, a few of which relate to cross-border tender offers. This White & Case alert says the additional flexibility for offerors to make purchases of target shares outside of a tender offer that qualifies for Tier I or Tier II relief addresses an often significant concern. Here’s more:

Several exemptions from US tender offer regulatory requirements are available for cross border tender offers that meet certain conditions based on, among other things, the level of US ownership in the target. For cross border tender offers that qualify for “Tier I” relief, existing rules allow the offeror to purchase target shares outside of the tender if, among other things, the offering documents given to the US holders prominently disclose the possibility of, or intent to make, such purchases.

In new CDI 166.02, the SEC has expanded this exemption to purchases of target shares by an offeror after the public announcement of the tender offer, but before the tender offer is launched and offering documents are distributed. The new CDI indicates that, when distributed, the offering documents should disclose that purchases outside of the tender offer have already occurred and may continue during the offer. Similar relief applies to certain existing exceptions for purchases outside of a “Tier II” cross border tender offer.

In addition, in cross border tender offers that are eligible for Tier II relief, an offeror, its affiliates and affiliates of the offeror’s financial advisor may purchase target shares outside of the tender offer under certain conditions. One of these conditions is that purchases by an affiliate of an offeror’s financial advisor cannot be made to facilitate the tender offer.

New CDI 166.03 provides that this condition only applies when the affiliate of the offeror’s financial advisor is acting on its own behalf, rather than acting as an agent of the offeror. The CDI states that any purchases as an agent of the offeror are subject to the other existing conditions, including the requirement that the tender offer price be increased to match any greater price paid outside of the tender offer.

Meredith Ervine 

March 11, 2026

The Partial Government Shutdown’s Impact on Deals

This Freshfields blog discusses what the partial federal government shutdown, which began in mid-February, means for dealmakers. It says that the Treasury and all CFIUS agencies (except DHS) remain funded, but the shutdown still has an impact on deals, and that impact varies more, deal-by-deal, than other shutdowns.

Similar to previous government shutdowns, CFIUS statutory deadlines are currently tolled, but the impact of this shutdown is more limited and varies between transactions, depending, for example, on the stage at the time of the shutdown. The Committee is providing feedback on draft filings, requesting information from transaction parties, negotiating mitigation agreements, and approving transactions.

However, transactions where DHS has leading equities will likely experience longer delays, and CFIUS generally is not formally initiating the review of transactions that were not already on the clock, potentially resulting in a significant backlog as the shutdown drags on. Therefore, while Treasury is trying to move cases forward and minimize the negative impacts to transactions caused by the shutdown, parties need to be prepared for extended timelines.

The blog suggests:

– Determine the longstop date for your transaction. Because CFIUS’s deadlines are tolled, CFIUS approval could be significantly delayed. Transaction parties should assess whether the longstop date should be extended or consider the risks of closing the transaction prior to receiving CFIUS approval.
– Assess the potential impact of the partial shutdown on your transaction.  If there are any connections between the transaction and DHS such as, for example, contracts with DHS, the current partial shutdown may have a substantial effect on CFIUS’s ability to clear the transaction.
– Promptly submit filings. CFIUS is still actively reviewing cases, and all regulatory requirements imposed on parties remain in effect during a lapse in appropriations. Not waiting to file your transaction can help ensure that it is not at the back of the line once the shutdown ends should there be a significant backlog and CFIUS may begin evaluating the transaction even if it has not initiated the review period.
– Communicate with CFIUS on changes or updates to the transaction.  Parties should generally keep the Committee informed of their transaction and key transaction deadlines. Additionally, promptly responding to CFIUS’s questions helps mitigate the risk of longer delays.

Meredith Ervine 

March 10, 2026

DGCL Section 122(18): What About Deal Protections?

In January, VC Zurn denied a Comerica stockholder’s motion for a temporary restraining order enjoining the closing of the stock-for-stock merger with Fifth Third Bancorp. Later that month, she issued a letter opinion explaining the reasoning in advance of the merger closing. In HoldCo Opportunities Fund V v. Arthur G. Angulo et al. (Del. Ch.; 1/26), the stockholder alleged, among other things, that Comerica’s fiduciaries agreed to unenforceable deal protection provisions that were invalid under DGCL Section 141(a).

HoldCo contends the force-the-vote provision, the no-shop and fiduciary out, the mandatory renegotiation provision, the one-year outside date, and the 4.7% termination fee locked Comerica into the Fifth Third deal for a year without the right to terminate it for a better deal. HoldCo sought to enjoin closing the Merger—but not the stockholder vote—until Defendants redrafted the Merger Agreement to relax its deal protection provisions [. . .] HoldCo asserts the deal protections are illegal under [DGCL Section] 141(a) and Omnicare, as per se invalid constraints on the Comerica board’s authority, and unreasonable under Unocal, in that they forced upon stockholders a deal that entrenched Comerica fiduciaries in Fifth Third roles.

You already know VC Zurn didn’t find these arguments persuasive.

Boards are required to bargain for effective fiduciary out clauses permitting them to discharge their managerial authority in fidelity to stockholders, [but . . .] a fiduciary out need not be coupled with a termination right, or be free of a break fee, to give the board the necessary freedom to exercise its fiduciary duties [. . .] The one-year outside date does not strip the board of its managerial authority to decide if the Merger is best for stockholders: it defines how long the board must work to close the highly regulated Merger once stockholders approve it.

In her blog post on this letter opinion, Law Prof Ann Lipton asks whether the DGCL 141(a) challenge to these deal protections survives after the adoption of Section 122(18). Put another way, she asks “Does 122(18) apply to deal protections?” She points out the many references to Moelis in the briefings and notes, “Certainly, an acquirer is a ‘prospective stockholder,’ so doesn’t that mean the board has at least the authority to tie its own hands in a merger agreement?”

In its alert about the “market practice” DGCL amendments, Fried Frank referred to merger agreements when discussing the effectiveness of Section 122(18). VC Laster has written about the potential implications of Section 122(18) in the context of a merger (but focusing on the extent to which a contract can require a board to recommend a merger under Section 251).

Meredith Ervine