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Date
Rule
801.10 (c)(1)
Staff
M. Verne
Response/Comments
The acquisition price is determined by using the market price of the acquiring persons voting stock which is being used as consideration. N. Ovuka concurs. B. Michael Verne 10/4/01

Question

From: (redacted)
To: mverne@ftc.gov
Date: 10/3/01 2:06PM

Subject: Another HSR question

A is a company whose stock is publicly traded. A will acquire all of the stock of Company B, whose stock is not publicly traded. Consideration to be paid to the shareholders of Company B is stock of Company A.

When an individual shareholder of Company B values the stock of Company A that he/she will acquire as consideration in the main transaction, he/she uses market price (i.e., lowest closing price in the preceding 45 days, etc.).

When Company A values the stock of Company B, there is no market price for Company B stock, so we fall back on acquisition price. The acquisition price, of course, is stated in terms of the stock of Company A. For that purpose, can Company A value its own stock by using the HSR definition of market price (lowest closing price in preceding 45 days, etc.), or must it use the actual trading price on the closing date? In other words, is 801.10(c)(1) applicable only to value stock that is being acquired? Or can it also be used to value publicly traded stock that is being used as consideration for stock that is being acquired?

About Informal Interpretations

Informal interpretations provide guidance from previous staff interpretations on the applicability of the HSR rules to specific fact situations. You should not rely on them as a substitute for reading the Act and the Rules themselves. These materials do not, and are not intended to, constitute legal advice.

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