Conditions to Obligations of All Parties

Significance
  1. Insignificant
  2. Moderately Material
  3. Situation-Specific
  4. Deal Driver
Time to Negotiate
  1. Minimal
  2. Moderate
  3. Substantial
Transaction Cost Impact
  1. Minimal
  2. Moderate
  3. Substantial
What It Impacts
  1. Deal Value
  2. Risk Assessment
  3. Ability to Close

What are Conditions to Obligations of All Parties? Certain events will make a transaction impractical or even impossible, and this clause is included to give both parties a legal “out” of the deal if one of those events occurs.

The Middle Ground: This provision lists the conditions that must be met at or prior to Closing for both sides to be obligated to move forward with the transaction. The conditions include: (1) all required filings under the HSR Act have been made and any applicable waiting periods have expired (if the Act applies to the transaction); (2) no Governmental Authority has taken any action that would cause the transaction to be illegal or that would otherwise prevent it from becoming and remaining effective; and (3) all consents, authorizations, etc. required to be obtained by either party from any Governmental Authorities were received and have not been revoked.

Purpose: The intent of this provision is to allow both sides to walk away from the deal without penalty if the government interferes with the transaction (or if their approval is required but not given). While there is a very low probability that any Governmental Authority would implement a law or ruling preventing an acquisition in the lower middle market, if it were to happen it would certainly put an end to the transaction. Similarly, it is highly unlikely that either side would fail to obtain a necessary authorization or consent absent sheer incompetence or severe procrastination. Yet, if such failure were to occur it would also be an almost-certain death knell for the deal. Because of the low probability, high magnitude dynamic at play, the provision is worth paying attention as the Closing approaches, but it is not something that is likely to eat up negotiation time or cause significant disagreement.

Buyer and Seller Preference: None, other than deleting certain inapplicable conditions such as the HSR Act filing requirements or obtaining governmental approvals.

Differences in a Stock Sale Transaction Structure: None.

Previous
Previous

Conditions to Obligations of Buyer

Next
Next

Further Assurances