Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms

Embraced by United States (“U.S.”) managers in the 1980s as a lifeline in a sea of hostile takeovers, the poison pill fundamentally altered the trajectory of American corporate governance. When a hostile takeover wave seemed imminent in Japan in the mid-2000s, Japanese boards appeared to embrace thi...

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Main Authors: Koh, Alan K., Nakahigashi, Masafumi, Puchniak, Dan W.
Other Authors: Nanyang Business School
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155254
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1552542023-05-19T07:31:19Z Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms Koh, Alan K. Nakahigashi, Masafumi Puchniak, Dan W. Nanyang Business School Business::Law::Business enterprises Business::Law::In Asia::Japan Japan Comparative Corporate Law Embraced by United States (“U.S.”) managers in the 1980s as a lifeline in a sea of hostile takeovers, the poison pill fundamentally altered the trajectory of American corporate governance. When a hostile takeover wave seemed imminent in Japan in the mid-2000s, Japanese boards appeared to embrace this American invention with equal enthusiasm. Japan's experience should have been a ringing endorsement for the utility of American corporate governance solutions in foreign jurisdictions-but it was not to be. Japan's unique interpretation of the “poison pill” that was so eagerly adopted by Japanese companies in the mid-to-late 2000s has turned out to be nothing like their potent American namesakes-and, in fact, the opposite of what would be expected by leading U.S. academics who have built a cottage industry publishing on the U.S. poison pill. Based on hand collected empirical data, we provide the first in-depth analysis of why Japan’s “poison pill” (defensive measures) is heading towards extinction—a watershed reversal that is unexplained in the Japanese literature and has almost entirely escaped the English language literature. By drawing on our hand-collected data, case studies, and Japanese jurisprudence, we illuminate the unique and untold story of how one of the most discussed mechanisms of corporate governance in the U.S. has worked almost entirely differently when transplanted to Japanese soil—the importance of which is heightened as Japan is by far the largest economy in which the poison pill has been tested outside of the United States. Additionally, our analysis sheds light on the unexpected importance of Japan’s recently implemented corporate governance code and stewardship code—two Western legal transplants that have garnered considerable attention in the English language literature, but which have yet to be evaluated in light of their impact on defensive measures in Japan. Published version This work was financially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grant-in-Aid JP18K01336 and by the Centre for Asian Legal Studies at NUS Law. 2022-02-21T07:40:46Z 2022-02-21T07:40:46Z 2020 Journal Article Koh, A. K., Nakahigashi, M. & Puchniak, D. W. (2020). Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms. University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law, 41(3), 687-754. 1086-7872 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155254 2-s2.0-85090756276 3 41 687 754 en University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law © 2022 Penn Law: Legal Scholarship Repository. All rights reserved. This paper was published in University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law and is made available with permission of Penn Law: Legal Scholarship Repository. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Business::Law::Business enterprises
Business::Law::In Asia::Japan
Japan
Comparative Corporate Law
spellingShingle Business::Law::Business enterprises
Business::Law::In Asia::Japan
Japan
Comparative Corporate Law
Koh, Alan K.
Nakahigashi, Masafumi
Puchniak, Dan W.
Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
description Embraced by United States (“U.S.”) managers in the 1980s as a lifeline in a sea of hostile takeovers, the poison pill fundamentally altered the trajectory of American corporate governance. When a hostile takeover wave seemed imminent in Japan in the mid-2000s, Japanese boards appeared to embrace this American invention with equal enthusiasm. Japan's experience should have been a ringing endorsement for the utility of American corporate governance solutions in foreign jurisdictions-but it was not to be. Japan's unique interpretation of the “poison pill” that was so eagerly adopted by Japanese companies in the mid-to-late 2000s has turned out to be nothing like their potent American namesakes-and, in fact, the opposite of what would be expected by leading U.S. academics who have built a cottage industry publishing on the U.S. poison pill. Based on hand collected empirical data, we provide the first in-depth analysis of why Japan’s “poison pill” (defensive measures) is heading towards extinction—a watershed reversal that is unexplained in the Japanese literature and has almost entirely escaped the English language literature. By drawing on our hand-collected data, case studies, and Japanese jurisprudence, we illuminate the unique and untold story of how one of the most discussed mechanisms of corporate governance in the U.S. has worked almost entirely differently when transplanted to Japanese soil—the importance of which is heightened as Japan is by far the largest economy in which the poison pill has been tested outside of the United States. Additionally, our analysis sheds light on the unexpected importance of Japan’s recently implemented corporate governance code and stewardship code—two Western legal transplants that have garnered considerable attention in the English language literature, but which have yet to be evaluated in light of their impact on defensive measures in Japan.
author2 Nanyang Business School
author_facet Nanyang Business School
Koh, Alan K.
Nakahigashi, Masafumi
Puchniak, Dan W.
format Article
author Koh, Alan K.
Nakahigashi, Masafumi
Puchniak, Dan W.
author_sort Koh, Alan K.
title Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
title_short Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
title_full Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
title_fullStr Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
title_full_unstemmed Land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in Japan on their own terms
title_sort land of the falling "poison pill" understanding defensive measures in japan on their own terms
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155254
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