Eco Oro: OSC trumps TSX, shows willingness to unwind transactions

  • March 12, 2018
  • Daniel Everall, Liam Tracey-Raymont and Jonathan Yantzi

On June 16, 2017, the OSC released the reasons for its April, 2017 order which reversed a tactical private placement in the context of a proxy contest involving Eco Oro Minerals Corp.1 The OSC’s reasons unpacked its determination to overturn a decision of the TSX and cease trade certain recently issued Eco Oro shares.

The order set aside the TSX’s conditional approval of Eco Oro’s issuance of new shares in connection with the conversion, at Eco Oro’s exclusive right, of unsecured convertible notes held by certain Eco Oro investors.

The proxy contest and the conversion

Dissident shareholders of Eco Oro requisitioned a shareholder meeting for the purpose of reconstituting the company’s board. Subsequent to the meeting requisition, Eco Oro applied to the TSX requesting expedited approval of the issuance of the new shares. Proximate to the meeting date, Eco Oro also obtained letters of support regarding its current board from certain shareholders who would ultimately be issued the new shares.

Pursuant to its manual, the TSX will generally require shareholder approval as a condition to accepting private placements where such a transaction, among other things, “materially affects control” of the issuer. In its cover letter to Eco Oro’s counsel, however, the TSX stated, “We confirm your advice that the transaction will not materially affect control of [Eco Oro]” – thus no shareholder approval was required. The TSX conditionally approved the issuance of the new shares.

Eight days prior to the record date for the shareholder meeting, Eco Oro completed the issuance of the new shares by way of conversion of certain debentures.

The reasons for the order

The OSC has jurisdiction to review the decisions of a recognized exchange, such as the TSX, upon the application of a person who is directly affected by a decision of the exchange. It was found that the dissident shareholders had standing to seek a review of the TSX’s decisions as the issuance of the new shares could affect their ability to reconstitute the board of Eco Oro.

The OSC is typically reluctant to interfere with a decision of the TSX, given the latter’s expertise in considering applications. The OSC will only interfere if, among other things, it believes the TSX may have overlooked material evidence or it believes the TSX’s perception of the public interest conflicts with that of the OSC.

In this case, the OSC found that it had ample reasons to interfere, including that the TSX’s conditional approval of issuance of the new shares did not consider: (i) the proxy contest that was underway, (ii) the imminent record date for the requisitioned meeting, and (iii) that support letters were solicited by management and provided by certain recipients of the new shares.

Further, the OSC found that the TSX employed a narrow definition of “materially affect control,” limiting its analysis to whether a new 20 per cent shareholder or voting trust was created. In the view of the OSC, “the public interest requires an evaluation of whether an issuance of shares by a listed issuer is for the purpose of entrenching management in the face of a proxy contest, thwarting the justified expectations of shareholders trusting in a system that appropriately promotes shareholder democracy and board accountability.”

The OSC then found that the issuance of the new shares would allow shareholders supportive of Eco Oro’s management to increase their aggregate voting control from roughly 41 per cent to 46 per cent, which “could reasonably tip the balance in favour of management” and that “[e]ven if the transactions are supported by the objective of an improved balance sheet, there was no compelling business objective for the transaction to close prior to the [requisitioned meeting’s record date] that would negate the tactical motive to tip the vote in favour of management.”

Therefore, the OSC substituted its own decision for that of the TSX, finding that the issuance of the new shares did in fact materially affect control of Eco Oro and that shareholder approval of the issuance was required per the TSX’s company manual. Given that the shares were already issued and so as to prevent the frustration of its requirement for shareholder approval, the OSC then relied on its public interest power to cease trade in the new shares and to prevent Eco Oro from considering the votes attached to the new shares unless their issuance is ratified by Eco Oro shareholders.

Future application of the order

When seeking TSX approval of share issuances, a listed issuer should be mindful of the contextual approach the OSC took in interpreting “materially affect control.” There is no bright line test with respect to new 20 per cent shareholders. Further, as we would think is already obvious, issuers should be sure to include complete information in their regulatory submissions as incomplete contextual information may provide the OSC with a justification for intervening in seemingly settled transactions.

Moreover, the OSC made clear that the same public interest considerations that arise under a takeover bid are at play in a proxy contest, as these are effectively alternative means for effecting a change of control. Therefore, even if shareholder approval is not required for a particular transaction, or there is no specific TSX issue at hand to be contested, the OSC left the door open to separately challenge an issuance completed during a proxy contest pursuant to the OSC’s public interest jurisdiction. As with the OSC’s decisions regarding private placements in the face of a bid, as recently exemplified by Re Hecla Mining, fairness to shareholders and integrity of the markets will be paramount in such public interest challenges.

Daniel Everall and Liam Tracey-Raymont are associates and Jonathan Yantzi was a summer student at Aird & Berlis

End note

  1. Re Eco Oro Minerals Corp., 2017 ONSEC 23.