It may be a record for any takeover: the expense of closing the deal – defined within the circular as the per share estimated transaction cost – amount to about 25 per cent of the items shareholders will get.
But this is the state of affairs at Opta Minerals, which is set to become put out of its misery at month-end when its shareholders gather to vote with an offer from Speyside Equity Fund.
And while the vote is really a mandatory area of the process, it won’t have an effect on the outcome considering that SunOpta, the major shareholder and former 100 per cent owner, has decided to vote its 65.8 per cent block to aid the transaction. SunOpta is deemed to become area of the minority.
While shareholders will get an internet $0.52 a share, the way the deal continues to be structured, the sale may very well be cash payment of “$0.6933 per Opta share minus the per share estimated transaction cost” of $0.1731. Those transaction costs include meeting expenses, the expense of the fairness opinion along with other advisory fees (understood to be US$1 million), costs of D&O insurance plus change of control payments ($866,000 in most) to five management staff.
“It’s exorbitant and I’ve never seen shareholders having to pay for such costs from their proceeds. We have already voted our 584,538 shares against the amalgamation. We own 3.2 percent and will likely be exercising our right of dissent,” noted Stephen Takacsy, chief investment officer at Montreal-based Lester Asset Management.