1. What Corporate M&A Transactions Cover and How Deal Structure Shapes Every Outcome
The choice between a merger, a stock acquisition, and an asset acquisition is not merely a tax decision. It determines which liabilities transfer with the business, which contracts require third-party consent to assign, and which regulatory approvals the transaction triggers.
In a statutory merger, two companies combine by operation of law and one survives. All assets and liabilities of the merged entity transfer to the surviving company automatically, including liabilities the buyer did not know existed. In a stock acquisition, the buyer purchases the target's equity directly from the shareholders, again inheriting all of the target company's liabilities as part of the legal entity. In an asset acquisition, the buyer selects which assets to purchase and which liabilities to assume, leaving unknown or undisclosed liabilities behind with the seller.
The liability transfer difference between a merger or stock deal and an asset deal is the most commercially significant structural distinction in corporate M&A. A buyer who chooses a stock deal to avoid the complexity of transferring individual assets and contracts must understand that every undisclosed liability of the target company, including contingent litigation claims, tax assessments, environmental obligations, and employee benefit plan liabilities, transfers with the entity. Representations, warranties, and indemnification provisions are the contractual tools through which stock deal buyers seek to shift that inherited liability back to the seller if post-closing discoveries reveal its existence.
How Earnout Provisions Work and Why They Generate Post-Closing Disputes
An earnout is a contingent payment provision in a purchase agreement that allows a portion of the purchase price to be paid after closing based on the acquired business's future financial performance.
Earnouts bridge the valuation gap between what a buyer is willing to pay based on current performance and what a seller believes the business will be worth once its growth potential is realized. A seller who projects $20 million in EBITDA for the year after closing but whose current trailing twelve months show $12 million can accept a lower guaranteed closing payment in exchange for an earnout that pays additional consideration if the $20 million projection is achieved.
Earnout disputes arise from three recurring problems. First, the metric used to measure performance, whether EBITDA, revenue, gross profit, or a non-financial milestone, is calculated differently by the buyer and seller under accounting principles the purchase agreement did not specify with sufficient precision. Second, the buyer makes post-closing operational decisions, including cost allocations, capital expenditures, and go-to-market changes, that reduce the metric below what it would have been under the seller's prior management. Third, the buyer fails to operate the acquired business in a manner that gives the earnout a genuine opportunity to be achieved, triggering an implied covenant of good faith claim even when the contract is silent on the buyer's post-closing operating obligations. An attorney who handles mergers and acquisitions transactions can draft earnout provisions with the metric specificity and operating covenant protections that reduce, though they cannot eliminate, the probability of post-closing dispute.
| Transaction Structure | Liability Transfer | Contract Assignment | Regulatory Filing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Statutory merger | All liabilities transfer by operation of law | Contracts transfer; anti-assignment clauses may apply | HSR if thresholds met; state merger filing |
| Stock acquisition | All entity liabilities transfer with shares | Contracts stay with entity; change of control triggers may apply | HSR if thresholds met |
| Asset acquisition | Only assumed liabilities transfer | Each assigned contract requires consent if required | HSR if thresholds met; bulk sales notice in some states |
| Merger of equals | All liabilities of both entities combine | All contracts transfer; change of control triggers may apply | HSR and shareholder votes required |
2. How Corporate M&A Due Diligence Protects the Buyer and Where It Fails
Due diligence in corporate M&A is the buyer's opportunity to verify everything the seller represented about the business before the purchase price is fixed and the transaction closes. What the buyer finds, or fails to find, in due diligence determines the representations it can demand and the indemnification it can negotiate.
Legal due diligence reviews the target company's organizational documents, material contracts, intellectual property ownership, litigation history, regulatory compliance, employment agreements, and any other legal matters that could affect the value of the business or the buyer's ability to operate it post-closing. Financial due diligence reviews the accuracy of the financial statements on which the purchase price is based, the quality of earnings, the sustainability of revenue, and the completeness of disclosed liabilities. Operational due diligence evaluates the business's systems, processes, customer relationships, and management team against the assumptions embedded in the buyer's financial model.
Due diligence failures occur when the process is compressed by a competitive sale process that gives buyers insufficient time to review the data room, when the seller's data room is organized in a manner that makes critical documents difficult to locate, or when the buyer's due diligence team focuses on the known risks rather than systematically reviewing the full document set for unknown ones. A material liability that exists in the data room but was not discovered during due diligence typically does not give the buyer a post-closing claim unless it also constitutes a breach of the seller's representations and warranties.
What Representations and Warranties Cover and How Breaches Are Enforced after Closing
Representations and warranties are statements of fact made by the seller in the purchase agreement about the condition of the business at signing or closing, and they serve as the contractual basis for the buyer's post-closing indemnification claims if those statements turn out to be false.
Seller representations in a corporate M&A purchase agreement typically cover the accuracy of the financial statements, the completeness of disclosed litigation, the ownership and validity of intellectual property, the absence of material adverse changes since the last audited period, the compliance of the business with applicable laws, the validity and enforceability of material contracts, and the accuracy of tax returns filed. Each representation is negotiated for scope, including which facts are qualified by materiality or knowledge, and for the survival period during which the buyer can assert a claim.
Indemnification provisions set the financial terms of the seller's obligation to compensate the buyer for losses arising from representation breaches. These provisions typically include a basket or deductible below which the seller has no indemnification obligation, a cap above which the seller's liability does not extend, and a survival period after which claims cannot be brought. The relationship between the basket size, the cap level, and the survival period determines the practical economic value of the indemnification package. An attorney who handles legal due diligence and corporate due diligence matters can evaluate the representation package against the specific risks identified in due diligence and negotiate the indemnification economics to reflect the actual risk profile of the transaction.
3. How Boards and Shareholders Evaluate Corporate M&A and When Courts Step in
Public company M&A transactions trigger fiduciary duty obligations that require the board of directors to evaluate acquisition proposals in a specific legal framework, and departing from that framework can result in litigation that delays or blocks the transaction entirely.
In a negotiated acquisition, Delaware courts apply the business judgment rule to board decisions that do not involve a conflict of interest and that follow an appropriate deliberative process. The board is presumed to have acted in good faith and in the best interests of shareholders, and courts defer to the board's decision unless a plaintiff can overcome that presumption. The Revlon doctrine, established in Revlon, Inc. .. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc., 506 A.2d 173 (Del. 1986), requires boards to maximize shareholder value when they decide to sell the company or engage in a transaction that results in a change of control, imposing a higher standard of review on the process by which the board conducts the sale.
When a board adopts defensive measures in response to an acquisition threat, including poison pills, staggered board provisions, and supermajority voting requirements, Delaware courts apply intermediate scrutiny under the Unocal doctrine, requiring the board to demonstrate that the defensive measure was adopted in response to a reasonably perceived threat and that the measure was reasonable in relation to the threat. Anti-takeover defenses that are disproportionate to the threat, or that were adopted primarily to entrench incumbent management rather than to protect shareholders, are subject to invalidation.
How Hostile Takeovers and Shareholder Activism Change the M&A Equation
A hostile takeover occurs when an acquirer attempts to purchase or gain control of a target company whose board of directors has rejected the acquisition proposal, and the mechanics of a hostile deal are fundamentally different from a negotiated transaction.
The primary hostile takeover mechanisms are a tender offer directly to the target's shareholders, bypassing the board entirely, and a proxy fight in which the acquirer solicits shareholder votes to replace the target's board with directors who will accept the acquisition. A tender offer is regulated by the Williams Act, codified in sections 13(d) and 14(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, which requires disclosure of the acquirer's beneficial ownership when it exceeds 5 percent and establishes procedural requirements for the conduct of the tender offer itself.
Shareholder activism in the M&A context involves institutional shareholders, hedge funds, and activist investors who acquire significant minority stakes in a company and then publicly advocate for changes in strategy, capital allocation, board composition, or corporate structure, including demanding that the board pursue a sale of the company. Activist campaigns that result in board representation give the activist the ability to influence M&A decisions from the inside. An attorney who handles shareholder activism and takeover defense and hostile takeover matters can evaluate the available defensive measures under the specific company's charter and applicable state law and advise on which measures are legally permissible and practically effective given the nature of the acquisition threat.
How Leveraged Buyouts Work and What Makes Them Different from Strategic Acquisitions
A leveraged buyout is a corporate acquisition in which the buyer finances a substantial portion of the purchase price with debt secured by the target company's assets, with the intent of repaying that debt from the target's future cash flows.
LBOs are conducted primarily by private equity funds that identify companies with stable cash flows, undervalued assets, or operational improvement opportunities that can support the debt load imposed by the acquisition financing. The typical LBO uses 60 to 70 percent debt and 30 to 40 percent equity, with the debt structured in layers including senior secured bank debt, second lien debt, and mezzanine or high-yield notes. The purchase price is determined by a multiple of the target's EBITDA, and the return to the private equity fund depends on whether the exit multiple achieved when the company is sold several years later exceeds the entry multiple, adjusted for the debt repayment made from operating cash flows in the intervening period.
Fraudulent transfer risk is a distinctive concern in LBO transactions. When a company takes on significant debt to fund its own acquisition, and the acquiring fund then uses the target's assets as collateral for that debt, the transaction can be challenged as a fraudulent transfer by creditors of the target if the company was insolvent at closing or became insolvent shortly thereafter. An attorney who handles leveraged buyout and distressed M&A transactions can structure the acquisition financing and the post-closing capital structure to minimize fraudulent transfer exposure while achieving the leverage level the fund's return model requires.
4. Frequently Asked Questions about Corporate M&A
Business owners considering a sale, buyers evaluating acquisition targets, and executives managing their first corporate M&A process bring the same core questions about how deals are structured, what risks survive closing, and what happens when transactions do not proceed as planned. The most consistent of those questions are answered here.
What Is Corporate M&A and What Types of Transactions Does It Cover?
Corporate M&A, or mergers and acquisitions, covers the full range of transactions through which companies combine, are acquired, or transfer ownership of significant assets or business operations. Transaction types include statutory mergers in which two entities combine by operation of law, stock acquisitions in which the buyer purchases the seller's equity, asset acquisitions in which the buyer selects specific assets and liabilities to acquire, and hybrid structures including LBOs, going-private transactions, and minority investments. Each structure has distinct legal, tax, and regulatory consequences that affect how the deal is documented and executed.
What Is Due Diligence in an M&A Transaction and How Long Does It Take?
Due diligence is the buyer's investigation of the target company before the transaction closes, covering legal, financial, tax, operational, regulatory, and environmental matters. Its purpose is to verify the seller's representations about the business, identify undisclosed liabilities, and inform the buyer's decision about whether to proceed and at what price. Due diligence in a middle-market transaction typically takes four to eight weeks. Complex transactions involving regulatory businesses, significant intellectual property, or cross-border operations can require several months. Compressed timelines in competitive sale processes increase the risk that material issues will be missed.
What Is a Mac Clause and When Can a Buyer Use It to Walk Away?
A material adverse change clause gives the buyer the right to terminate the purchase agreement if a material adverse change occurs between signing and closing. Courts interpret MAC clauses narrowly, requiring that the adverse change be durationally significant, substantially affect the long-term earning power of the business, and not fall within any of the standard MAC exceptions for general economic conditions, industry-wide trends, or changes in financial markets. In practice, MAC clauses are rarely successfully invoked. A buyer who wants effective walk-away rights for specific risks should negotiate specific conditions to closing rather than relying on the MAC clause as a general exit mechanism.
What Are Representations and Warranties and What Happens When They Are Breached?
Representations and warranties are the seller's statements of fact in the purchase agreement about the condition of the business. When a representation is false, the buyer has an indemnification claim against the seller for losses arising from the misrepresentation, subject to the basket, cap, and survival period negotiated in the indemnification provisions. The basket is the deductible below which the seller has no obligation. The cap is the maximum of the seller's liability. The survival period is the window after closing during which claims can be brought. An attorney who handles M&A litigation cases can evaluate a post-closing indemnification claim and advise on whether the breach, the loss, and the procedure for asserting the claim comply with the purchase agreement's requirements.
What Is an Earnout and What Makes Earnout Disputes so Common?
An earnout is a contingent purchase price component paid after closing based on the acquired business's future financial performance. Earnouts bridge valuation gaps between buyer and seller when current performance does not fully reflect the business's projected growth. Disputes arise when the earnout metric is ambiguously defined, when the buyer's post-closing operational decisions reduce the metric below what it would otherwise have been, or when the buyer fails to operate the business in a way that gives the earnout a genuine opportunity to be achieved. Courts in some jurisdictions imply a covenant of good faith that requires the buyer to take reasonable steps to allow earnout targets to be met even when the contract is silent on this obligation.
What Fiduciary Duties Does a Board Have When Evaluating an Acquisition Offer?
A board has a duty of care and a duty of loyalty when evaluating an acquisition offer. In Delaware, which governs most significant U.S. .ompanies, the business judgment rule presumes that a disinterested board's decision was made in good faith and in the shareholders' best interests. When a board decides to sell the company or engage in a change-of-control transaction, the Revlon doctrine requires the board to take reasonable steps to maximize shareholder value. When a board adopts defensive measures in response to an acquisition threat, the Unocal doctrine requires the board to show the measure was a proportionate response to a reasonably perceived threat. An attorney who handles takeover defense and corporate governance matters can evaluate whether a specific board decision satisfies the applicable standard of review under the relevant state's corporate law.
03 Nov, 2025









