A holding Company (A) has acquired
shares of preferred stock of another holding company (B). The preferred
shares are nonvoting and represent approximately 14.2 percent of the
total shareholders’ equity of B.
The preferred shares were not convertible into voting
shares at the time of purchase but could be declared convertible by
the board of directors of B upon the occurrence of a “conversion event.”
The directors may take this action only if a third party has acquired,
or initiated a tender or similar offer to acquire, 25 percent or more
of the outstanding voting shares of B. Moreover, the current directors
of B may rescind the declaration of a conversion event, thereby rescinding
the convertibility features of the preferred stock. B may redeem the shares of preferred
stock without penalty at any time prior to the board of directors’
declaration of a conversion event.
Once B’s directors have declared a conversion event, A
may convert the preferred shares into common shares, provided interstate
banking is permissible and all necessary regulatory approvals have
been obtained. In no event will A be able to convert the preferred
shares into an amount that, when combined with any voting common stock
that Bancorp has otherwise acquired, will equal or exceed 25 percent
of the outstanding voting shares of B.
While a conversion event is pending, A may require B to
redeem its shares of preferred stock at the higher of (1) the original
purchase price for the preferred shares plus any accrued dividends
or (2) the product of the highest price offered in a tender or exchange
offer times the number of shares into which the stock is convertible,
plus any accrued dividends. A has modified its agreement to provide
that this redemption is without penalty, added cost, or interest-rate
subvention.
The purchase agreement provides that A may transfer the
preferred shares it has acquired to third parties, before, during,
or after termination of a conversion event, only in a widely dispersed
public or private sale in which no person or group of related persons
acquires shares convertible into 2 percent or more of the outstanding
voting shares of B. If B is acquired by a third party through merger,
consolidation, or purchase of substantially all of its assets, then
the preferred shares may be exchanged on a pro rata basis for shares,
with substantially similar terms, of the third party. In this regard,
A has eliminated the provisions for a detachable warrant that would
have increased the number of shares of an acquiring third party into
which A’s investment could be exchanged.
The purchase agreement does not include any significant
covenants or restrictions on the management or policies of B, and
A and B have not entered into a merger, asset acquisition, or similar
agreement. Moreover, A has committed that it will not exercise a controlling
influence over the management or policies of B.
This investment was proposed in the context
of a franchise agreement entered into between A and B in 1984, under
which B had, for a fee, obtained a license to use the name and marks
of the A organization. B has also become part of A’s automatic teller
machine network and has agreed to honor checks and credit cards drawn
on A’s bank subsidiaries and its other franchise participants. B is
not required to purchase any other services from A or its subsidiaries.
The franchise agreement does not include provisions restricting
the management or policies of B, which remains an independently operated
bank holding company. B also retains the right to terminate the franchise
agreement at any time, without cause and without penalty, after the
second anniversary of the agreement. A may terminate the franchise
agreement either with the consent of B, after a change in control
of B, if the financial condition of B changes, or if B breaches the
provisions of the agreement.
The termination of the franchise agreement does not trigger
any obligation on the part of B under the stock-purchase agreement,
and, in particular, has been modified to eliminate any obligation
on the part of B to redeem the preferred stock acquired by A in the
event the franchise agreement is terminated for any reason.
As part of the franchise agreement,
B has the option to sell to A a single branch office of B’s choosing
of any bank subsidiary of B for a price equal to fair market value
plus a 10 percent premium, if such a sale is legally permissible.
This option may be terminated by B or by A at any time, without cause
and without penalty or fee.
A will not control B for purposes of the Bank Holding
Company Act by virtue of the structure of the proposed investment
by A or the terms of the franchise agreement. STAFF OP. of Aug. 26,
1985.
Authority: 12 CFR 225.143.