Abstract

This Article argues that the conventional wisdom about corporate raiders and activist hedge funds—raiders break things, and activists fix them—is wrong. Because activists have a higher risk of mistargeting—mistakenly shaking things up at firms that only appear to be underperforming—they are much more likely than raiders to destroy value and, ultimately, social wealth. As corporate outsiders who challenge the incompetence or disloyalty of incumbent management, raiders and activists play similar roles in reducing “agency costs” at target firms. The difference between them comes down to a simple observation about their business models: raiders buy entire companies, while activists take minority stakes. This means that raiders are less likely to mistarget firms underperforming by only a slight margin, and they are less able to shift the costs of their mistakes onto other shareholders. The differences in incentives between raiders and activists only increase after the acquisition of their stake. Raiders have unrestricted access to nonpublic information after acquiring ownership of a target company, which allows them to look under the hood to determine whether changing the target’s business strategy is truly warranted. Activists, by contrast, have limited information and face structural conflicts of interest that impair their ability to objectively evaluate what’s best for the target company. This insight has profound implications for corporate law and policy. Delaware and federal law alike have focused on building walls to keep raiders outside the gates, but they ignore the real threat—shareholder activists—that are already inside. We propose reforms to both state and federal law that would equalize the regulation of raiders and activists.

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