Machiavellian said:
Ryuu, nothing you state means that ABK cannot still walk away from this deal. There is nothing locking ABK now to MS besides their belief that the deal will make it to the finish line. ABK responsibility is still to get the best deal possible and mind you there are other big players who would gladly pay the price now that they know the publisher is up for sale. There is no need to have a contract in place to prevent both parties from leaving the merger unless there is a real scenario where either party could just up and leave at any time during the process. here is no need to renegotiate an extension to the previous deal if there is not a serious case where ABK could leave the merger. If I remember ABK got sued when they accepted the merger and that got no where. I am sure if ABK decides to leave the merger getting sued would also go no where because because ABK can decided to stay or go at anytime no matter what. The thing is I am not sure if that needs to go to a vote but if so then the likelihood of a lawsuit is even less if they voted yes. Also we need to look at ABK structure. This line where ABK as a company has to answer to shareholders is not true. Not all companies shares have voting rights and not all companies have to jump at the whims what shareholders want. Its the same as people kept talking about MS shareholders wanting the Xbox division gone. MS never cared about such things because shareholders do not have enough voting rights to direct the company or the divisions. We will see if another deal gets done but like I said, when there is big money on the line and other suiters who probably would be happen to get ABK, in order for ABK to stay in the deal, it will be interesting to see who has the bigger leverage. The fact we have not heard about another deal being set I believe is not because either ABK and MS feel no hurry. I believe both companies are throwing around some big numbers and they have not come to a resolution yet. ABK could be seriously asking for the world and MS could be saying stick to the original deal. Who blinks in these negotiations will be the winner. |
Activision-Blizzard literally has a legal responsibility to achieve the best for their shareholders. They will not be able to walk away from the deal at this stage unless they have a seriously good counteroffer from another company and there is absolutely zero evidence or even rumblings that has happened or is happening.
"There are other big players who would gladly pay the price now that they know the publisher is up for sale."
Activision-Blizzard was shopping themselves around back when Microsoft acquired them, back when interest rates were shit, back when Gaming was exploding, Microsoft offered the best and nobody else bothered to match them, what makes you think anything has changed now? There's again zero evidence to believe that anything has changed in that regard. Meta refused to acquire Activision-Blizzard and they asked other companies as well.
There is a very strong belief right now, that this deal is done, the current share price is $93 per share, that shows us that shareholders basically think this deal is a lock at this stage. Again, the best offer made back then was Microsoft's and that was when times were even better to snatch up a massive gaming publisher.
It's hilarious to even suggest that Google would exceed Microsoft's $95 a share...It makes absolutely zero sense after everything that has gone on with Google, after they killed their Cloud Gaming and Studios. After how little Google as a company invests into new ideas, ignoring the change in interest rates and market factors have changed since 2021.
Again...You're treating this as if it were a few months ago when CMA/FTC blocked the deal and Activision-Blizzard's share price hit around $75 a share because the deal was assumed dead. Huge developments have happened since then, the share price is now $93 a share which shows everyone thinks the deal is done. The FTC is out of the way and the CMA will be dealt with in the space of a month.
Investors want to be paid out now, they don't want to wait another year filled with uncertainty (and in that time, the stock price will definitely drop from $93) unless the offer is a very good one, one which notable beats Microsoft's offer who by all accounts are already overpaying for Activision at $95 a share in 2023 (made more sense in late 2021) but it's the offer they'll repeat because it's the offer made.
You seriously think that shareholders would be happy at losing billions in Activision's total valuation because Activision Blizzard says "trust us brehs, we can get a better deal, we don't have one now but you guys can suffer and lose huge amounts of money in the meanwhile and wait it out, suckers" when they're right at the finish line with every single shareholder now about to make it big and almost all of them expecting the deal to go through?
They're already planning what they're spending their money on at this stage, Lol.
Again...You're literally ignoring the $93 a share right now...The vast majority of shareholders expect this deal to go through now and stand to lose big if it doesn't. That is completely different to some tiny groups inside of Microsoft wanting the Xbox division gone, the vast majority of shareholders don't give a shit about Xbox either way and have no hard opinion on keeping it or not.
Microsoft has the bigger leverage right now Imo, because if the deal collapses then Activision-Blizzard collapses from $95 to ~$75 and loses billions in valuation, they are extremely unlikely to get a better offer than the one Microsoft is offering right now due to the changing market and financial situations of the world, especially if the deal collapses.
There are few companies that have the cash reserves that Microsoft has and not only that, they'd have to be interested in the market, be willing to overpay, and be willing to face a year of regulatory battles. One reason for the contract is to keep shareholders calm so that the stock price doesn't dip again because then it would be easier for Activision to back out.