Do You Know Your Legal Risk In An Acquisition?

Chief Executive just ran a great article on how to evaluate legal risk in acquisitions that I believe is a must read for any Supply Management department asked to consult on a Merger or Acquisition. Especially since, like the article states, it is nearly impossible to find a company not involved in some sort of litigation. The traditional analysis of the management team, cash flow, and market share is not enough — a risk assessment on pending litigation must also be made.

So how do you assess legal risk? The first thing you do is get an expert advisor, and a litigation manager in particular. Once you have this individual, who is an attorney with a significant business background as well as a litigation background, you work with her to evaluate the:

  • materiality of the litigation, the
  • potential for future suits, and the
  • connection between the litigation and the business plan.

The materiality is important not just from a relevancy perspective (that attempts to define the validity of the claim and the chance of success by the claimant) but from a cost perspective. If the cost of defending the litigation, regardless of expected outcome, will cost the company more than it can afford, the company will be bankrupted. The potential for future suits is also important because if the business model, or technology platform, opens the company up to other potential litigations based on equally (in) valid claims, the company could be bankrupted as it grows (and becomes a target by patent pirates). Finally, it is critically important to understand if the litigation exposes a problem with the core business model. If this is the case, and there is no easy, or at least manageable way, to correct the model, there is not only a great potential for further suits but a great potential for failure and bankruptcy.

However, if a litigation manager properly evaluates the potential for materiality and future litigation, and the connection between the litigation and the business plan, and finds no significant risks, then investors, who can make informed decisions, with a full understanding of the legal risk associated with a potential company, can confidently invest in the acquisition.

Be sure to check out the article on how to evaluate legal risk in acquisitions. It has a lot of great advice and a great case study on how a residential and commercial brokerage firm sized up the risk of an acquisition.