Going Dutch Has New Meaning in Corporate Takeover Battles

The Netherlands, a country long known for its tolerance and openness to outsiders, has found itself in the center of an EU-wide debate between protectionism and consolidation of industry. Luxembourg steelmaker Arcelor SA recently formed a “stichting” in the Netherlands in an attempt to keep its Canadian unit, Dofasco, out of the hands of Mittal. Dutch law, endorsed by the EU, allows for the creation of “stichtings,” or foundations that shelter a company’s assets from hostile takeover. The EU continues to struggle about which is the better economic strategy, protectionism or removal of obstacles to consolidation. For now, protectionism continues to reign in the EU, particularly with a new law that endorses Dutch “stichtings” and similar protectionist practices in other member countries. – YaleGlobal

Going Dutch Has New Meaning in Corporate Takeover Battles

Adam Cohen
Tuesday, May 30, 2006

AMSTERDAM -- When Italian fashion icon Gucci and Luxembourg steelmaker Arcelor SA faced hostile takeover bids, both turned to the same place for their defense -- the Netherlands.

Unlike other European jurisdictions, the Netherlands allows companies to create a foundation, called a stichting in Dutch, that holds shares with special voting rights or shelters assets from corporate predators. Some of the country's lawmakers and lawyers fear these foundations, like Amsterdam's brothels and marijuana shops, are a feature of a permissive society that persists for the pleasure of foreigners.

"Anyone can come here, find a notary, and -- boom -- in 10 minutes you have a stichting," said Judge Huub Willems, who heads the Enterprise Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeals, which hears disputes over such moves.

Arcelor formed the Strategic Steel Stichting in the Netherlands early last month to keep its Canadian unit, Dofasco -- and perhaps itself -- out of Mittal Steel Co.'s reach. Mittal wants to sell Dofasco to avoid antitrust problems and raise cash for its Arcelor buyout, for which it increased its offer to €23.3 billion ($29.76 billion) Friday. But the stichting's bylaws block the sale of Dofasco for five years. Even if the strategy doesn't block a takeover, it may prove a thorn in Mittal's side.

European Union officials are worried about such defensive tactics and have spent almost two decades trying to eliminate obstacles to consolidation in the 25-nation bloc. But on Saturday, a new EU takeover law took effect that allows stichtings and other defensive measures to continue, because EU member countries had balked at losing the ability to protect their companies. A clause that would have prohibited "frustrating action" wasn't included in the final version. Under the new law, for instance, the buyer of a German company needs to consult the company's employees before a deal can be final. In Sweden and Denmark, bidders still will have to contend with special voting rights that let shareholders control a company without holding the majority of the capital. And the stichting still will be allowed in the Netherlands.

A stichting can house charities and other nonprofit groups, but it also has a long tradition as a protectionist device. In 1907, Royal Dutch/Shell Group first established a defensive stichting, giving the company's board enhanced voting powers to counter unwanted buyers. The mind-set of that era was to keep out "bloody foreigners," according to Paul Storm, a lawyer with the law firm NautaDutilh in Rotterdam. Over the past decade, Dutch resistance to foreign ownership has waned. Instead, foreigners are adopting the stichting. In 1997, when the luxury-goods business was consolidating, Gucci hired Scott Simpson, a lawyer at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in London, to design a defense strategy.

A specialist in hostile takeovers, Mr. Simpson has been involved in some of the Continent's largest deals, including Vodafone-Mannesmann and Sanofi-Aventis. Mr. Simpson teamed up with Martin van Olffen, a lawyer at De Brauw Blackstone Westbroek in Amsterdam. When French luxury group LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton SA built a 34% stake in Gucci, the company issued a matching number of shares to the stichting to dilute LVMH's stake. Gucci agreed in 2001 to be sold to LVMH's rival PPR SA. Since then, Mr. Simpson and other lawyers have wielded the stichting to fight other takeovers. "When I saw that Mittal wanted to force the sale of Dofasco, that's when I first thought of the stichting," he said. Mittal says its bid for Arcelor doesn't hinge on the sale of Dofasco. But in a nod to future troubles the stichting could create for Mittal, U.S. antitrust regulators cleared the company's takeover bid with a condition that Mittal sell Dofasco or "alternative assets."

The stichting's statutes could create a situation where a significant part of the world's largest steelmaker -- Dofasco -- is controlled by a hostile three-member board. Two stichting board members are Arcelor General Counsel Federik Van Bladel and former Arcelor board member Robert Hudry. Mittal's lawyers are considering ways to unwind the stichting. Arcelor says it also has other defensive options.

Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved