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M&A Disclosure – Annotated Form 8-K

Public companies involved in M&A deals face numerous disclosure obligations throughout the process. These obligations stem from stock exchange listing rules, federal securities laws, state fiduciary duties, proxy requirements, antitrust laws, and other regulatory frameworks. Federal securities laws alone mandate various disclosures through a lengthy array of possible forms, schedules, and registration statements. These include Form 8-K, Form 10-K, Form 10-Q, Schedule 14A, Schedule 14C, Schedule TO, Schedule 14D-9, Schedule 13D, Schedule 13G, Schedule 13E-3, Form 3, Form 4, Form 5, Form S-1, Form S-3, Form S-4, and various types of prospectuses.


Today, we'll focus on the primary disclosure obligations, particularly those linked to the Form 8-K Current Report. This form serves to promptly disclose specific material events or situations impacting issuers of registered securities under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Generally, it's mandatory to file or provide this report within four business days of the triggering event or circumstance. In the context of M&A, these events might encompass the following:


  • signing a material transaction agreement 

  • terminating a transaction agreement 

  • closing the deal 

  • borrowing money to finance the transaction 

  • incurring costs in connection with selling assets or subsidiaries 

  • delisting from a stock exchange at closing 

  • issuing unregistered shares as consideration 

  • adopting charter or bylaws amendments 

  • experiencing a change of control 

  • departure of directors and officers 

  • holding a stockholder meeting to approve the transaction  and

  • making selective disclosures of material information

For those unfamiliar with these requirements, navigating them can seem daunting, if not impossible. Even for seasoned practitioners, complying with Form 8-K's requirements poses challenges. Apart from adhering to the Form's instructions, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has established a complex array of supplementary guidance and rules through Exchange Act and Securities Act Rules, adopting releases, Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations, telephone interpretations, no-action letters, informal guidance, and the Financial Reporting Manual.


Gayatri Gupta