Directors of software giant CA Inc. adopts poison pill provision
Long Island Business News, Oct 17, 2006 by Jeremy Harrell
The directors of software giant CA Inc. unanimously adopted a poison pill provision, the company announced Monday in a sign that the company believes it's a hostile takeover target.
The company said the "Stockholder Protection Rights Plan" isn't in response to a specific bid from an outside company, but it added that the bylaw "is not intended to prevent a takeover at a full and fair price." The board said it will let CA shareholders vote on the plan at the 2007 annual meeting.
Poison-pill provisions are designed to make hostile bids prohibitively expensive by dramatically increasing a company's stock price in the event of an unsolicited offer.
Neil Kaufman, a securities attorney with Davidoff Malito & Hutcher in Garden City who's written poison-pill provisions for public companies, said corporations adopt protection-rights plans when they believe they're susceptible to outside bids, not when a proposal has already been laid on the table.
"If you adopt it after there is [an offer], it gets held to a higher level of judicial scrutiny," he said.
Kaufman said the "very arcane" bylaws have never actually stopped a company from being acquired, but they give boards of directors greater leverage in negotiations.
"It empowers them to obtain a better price," Kaufman said.
Islandia-based CA, the former Computer Associates International, has been seen a possible takeover target following a series of accounting and corporate-governance scandals.
CA stock (NYSE: CA) closed up 6 cents to $23.94 per share in Monday trading.
Most Recent Business Articles
- Multiple criteria evaluation and optimization of transportation systems
- Multi-criteria analysis procedure for sustainable mobility evaluation in urban areas
- A two-leveled multi-objective symbiotic evolutionary algorithm for the hub and spoke location problem
- Multi-criteria analysis for evaluating the impacts of intelligent speed adaptation
- The development of Taiwan arterial traffic-adaptive signal control system and its field test: a Taiwan experience
Most Recent Business Publications
Most Popular Business Articles
- 7 tips for effective listening: productive listening does not occur naturally. It requires hard work and practice - Back To Basics - effective listening is a crucial skill for internal auditors
- FAS 109: a primer for non-accountants - Financial Accounting Standards Board's "Statement 109: Accounting for Income Taxes"
- Design a commission plan that drives sales - Sales Commissions
- Too Young to Rent a Car? - 25-years-old the minimum age for car renting - Brief Article
- Getting the global view: Nestle, led by Peter Brabeck-Letmathe, climbs to the #1 spot in this year's Best Companies for Leaders


