The Commercial Appeal

Explainer: What Twitter’s ‘poison pill’ is supposed to do

- Michael Liedtke

Twitter is trying to thwart billionair­e Elon Musk’s takeover attempt with a “poison pill” – a financial device that companies have been wielding against unwelcome suitors for decades.

What are poison pills supposed to do?

The ingredient­s of each poison pill vary, but they’re all designed to give corporate boards an option to flood the market with so much newly created stock that a takeover becomes prohibitiv­ely expensive. The strategy was popularize­d back in the 1980s when publicly held companies were being stalked by corporate raiders such as Carl Icahn – now more frequently described as “activist investors.”

Twitter didn’t disclose the details of its poison pill Friday, but said it would provide more informatio­n in a forthcomin­g filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which the company delayed because public markets were closed Friday.

The San Francisco company’s plan will be triggered if a shareholde­r accumulate­s a stake of 15% or more. Musk, best known as CEO of Tesla, currently holds a roughly 9% stake.

Can a poison pill be a negotiatin­g ploy?

Although they are supposed to help prevent an unsolicite­d takeover, poison pills also often open the door to further negotiatio­ns that can force a bidder to sweeten the deal. If a higher price makes sense to the board, a poison pill can simply be cast aside along with the acrimony it provoked, clearing the way for a sale to completed.

True to form, Twitter left its door open by emphasizin­g that its poison pill won’t prevent its board from “engaging with parties or accepting an acquisitio­n proposal” at a higher price.

Adopting a poison pill also frequently results in lawsuits alleging that a corporate board and management team is using the tactic to keep their jobs against the best interests of shareholde­rs.

How did Elon Musk react to Twitter’s announceme­nt?

Musk, a prolific tweeter with 82 million followers on Twitter, had no immediate reaction to the company’s poison pill. But on Thursday he indicated he was ready to wage a legal battle.

“If the current Twitter board takes actions contrary to shareholde­r interests, they would be breaching their fiduciary duty,” Musk tweeted. “The liability they would thereby assume would be titanic in scale.”

Musk has publicly said that its $43 billion bid is his best and final offer for Twitter, but other corporate suitors have made similar statements before ultimately upping the ante. With an estimated fortune of $265 billion, Musk would seem to have deep enough pockets to raise his offer.

How has this defense worked in the past?

Takeover tussles often dissolve into gamesmansh­ip that include poison pills and other maneuvers designed to make a buyout more difficult. That’s what happened in one of the biggest and most drawn out takeover dances in Silicon Valley history..

After business software maker Oracle made an unsolicite­d $5.1 billion offer for its smaller rival Peoplesoft in June 2003, the two companies spent the next 18 months fighting with each other.

As part of its defense, Peoplesoft not only adopted a poison pill that authorized the board to flood the market with more shares, it also created what it called a “customer assurance program.” That plan promised to pay customers five times the cost of their software licenses if Peoplesoft was sold within the next two years.

Peoplesoft also got another helping hand when the U.S. Department of Justice filed an antitrust lawsuit seek to block a takeover, although a judge ruled in Oracle’s favor.

Even though the company ended up selling to Oracle, Peoplesoft’s defense strategy paid off for its shareholde­rs. Oracle’s final purchase price was $11.1 billion – more than twice its original bid.

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