Australia’s ASX proposes 25% cap on share issuance in public M&A without shareholder vote

Industry:    2 days ago

The Australian Securities Exchange will introduce ​major new changes that cap companies from ‌issuing more than 25% of their existing share capital to fund public takeovers without a shareholder vote, bowing to pressure from investors ​concerned about becoming diluted in corporate buyouts.

The ​draft new rules published Wednesday reduce the number ⁠of shares companies in the S&P/ASX300 index can issue from ​100% of their capitalisation to 25% before seeking shareholder approval.

The ASX ​launched a review last year after James Hardie was given a waiver from the stock exchange making it exempt from ​a shareholder vote when it issued about 35% ​of its shares to fund the $8.8 billion takeover of AZEK.

“We have ‌listened ⁠to the market, and have  heard loud and clear the  market’s support for more  protections against share dilution in public takeovers and mergers,” said Gavin Skene, the ASX’s Acting Group ​Executive, Listings.

James ​Hardie shareholders ⁠were angered their investments were diluted by the company issuing a large number ​of shares without seeking approval before the ​deal ⁠proceeded.

The building products company chair Anne Lloyd and two directors were voted off the board by investors frustrated by ⁠the ​way the takeover was handled by ​the Australian-listed firm.

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