defm14a
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
SCHEDULE 14A
Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Filed by the Registrant þ
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant ¨
Check the appropriate box:
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Preliminary Proxy Statement |
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Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 14a-6(e)(2)) |
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Definitive Proxy Statement |
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Definitive Additional Materials |
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Soliciting Material Pursuant to § 240.14a-12 |
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
(Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)
(Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)
Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):
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No fee required. |
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Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11. |
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Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies: |
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Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies: |
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Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed pursuant to Exchange
Act Rule 0-11 (set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
was determined): |
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Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction: |
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Fee paid previously with preliminary materials. |
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Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange
Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify the filing for which the
offsetting fee was paid previously. Identify the previous filing
by registration statement number, or the Form or Schedule and the
date of its filing. |
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Amount Previously Paid: |
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Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.: |
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October 28,
2011
SPECIAL
MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
MERGER
PROPOSED YOUR VOTE IS VERY IMPORTANT
Dear Shareholder:
The board of directors of Global Industries, Ltd., a Louisiana
corporation, or Global Industries, has unanimously approved a
merger agreement pursuant to which Global Industries will be
acquired by an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip
S.A., a société anonyme organized under the
laws of France.
If the merger contemplated by the merger agreement is completed,
holders of our common stock will be entitled to receive $8.00 in
cash, less any required withholding taxes, for each share of our
common stock owned at the effective time of the merger. The
merger consideration will be paid without interest. Receipt of
the merger consideration will be taxable to our shareholders for
U.S. federal income tax purposes.
Our shareholders will be asked to approve and adopt the merger
agreement and an amendment to our amended and restated articles
of incorporation (each of which is a condition to the merger) at
a special meeting. Our shareholders will also be asked to
approve, on an advisory, non-binding basis, the merger-related
compensation arrangements for our named executive officers. Our
board of directors has unanimously approved resolutions
(i) determining that the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby are in the best interests of
Global Industries shareholders, (ii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, (iii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the adoption of amended and
restated articles of incorporation, and (iv) recommending
approval and adoption of the merger agreement and amended and
restated articles of incorporation by our shareholders. In
reaching this determination, our board of directors considered a
variety of factors that are discussed in the attached proxy
statement. Our board of directors unanimously recommends that
all of our shareholders vote FOR the approval and adoption of
the merger agreement and FOR the approval and adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation. Additionally,
our board of directors unanimously recommends that all of our
shareholders vote FOR the proposal regarding certain
merger-related compensation arrangements for our named executive
officers.
The affirmative vote of holders of at least two-thirds of the
shares of our common stock present in person or represented by
proxy at the special meeting is required to approve and adopt
the merger agreement and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation. Additionally, the affirmative vote of a majority
of the shares of our common stock present in person or
represented by proxy at the special meeting and entitled to vote
is required to approve, on an advisory, non-binding basis, the
proposal regarding certain merger-related executive compensation
arrangements. Each holder of our common stock is entitled to one
vote per share. Proxies returned to us that are properly signed
and dated but not marked to indicate your voting preference will
be counted as votes FOR approval and adoption of the
merger agreement, FOR approval and adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation, and FOR
the proposal regarding certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements. The merger and the adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation are each
conditional upon the other. Neither the merger nor the amendment
of the articles of incorporation will take place unless the
other is also approved by our shareholders.
The date, time and place of the special meeting are as follows:
November 30, 2011
10 a.m. Central time
Houston Marriott Westchase
2900 Briarpark Dr.
Houston, TX 77042
The proxy statement attached to this letter provides you with
information about the special meeting of our shareholders and
the proposed merger. We encourage you to read the entire proxy
statement carefully. Please do not send in your stock
certificates at this time. If the merger is completed, you will
receive instructions regarding the surrender of your stock
certificates and payment for your shares of common stock.
Your vote is very important. Whether or not
you plan to attend the special meeting, if you are a holder of
our common stock please complete, sign, date and mail the
enclosed proxy card to us or submit your proxy by telephone or
Internet. If you attend the special meeting, you may vote in
person even if you previously returned your proxy.
Sincerely,
John A. Clerico
Chairman of the Board of Directors
The proxy statement is dated October 28, 2011, and is first
being mailed to our shareholders on or about October 28,
2011.
GLOBAL
INDUSTRIES, LTD.
NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS
To the shareholders of Global Industries, Ltd.:
Notice is hereby given that on November 30, 2011, at 10
a.m., Central time, Global Industries, Ltd., a Louisiana
corporation, or Global Industries, will hold a special meeting
of its shareholders (the special meeting) at the
Houston Marriott Westchase, 2900 Briarpark Dr., Houston, TX
77042, for the following purposes:
1. To consider and vote upon a proposal to approve and
adopt the agreement and plan of merger, dated as of
September 11, 2011, among Technip S.A., a
société anonyme organized under the laws of
France (Technip), Apollon Merger Sub B, Inc.
(Merger Sub), a Louisiana corporation and an
indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip, and Global
Industries (the merger agreement);
2. To consider and vote upon a proposal to approve and
adopt amended and restated articles of incorporation to remove
the limitation on
non-U.S. ownership
of Global Industries common stock contained in the existing
articles of incorporation of Global Industries;
3. To consider and approve, solely on an advisory,
non-binding basis, certain compensation arrangements for Global
Industries named executive officers in connection with the
merger contemplated by the merger agreement (the
merger); and
4. To transact such other business as may properly come
before the special meeting or any adjournment or postponement of
the special meeting.
The merger proposal is described more fully in the proxy
statement of which this notice forms a part. Please give your
careful attention to all of the information in the proxy
statement.
Only holders of record of Global Industries common stock at the
close of business on October 26, 2011, the record date, or
their proxies can vote at the special meeting or any adjournment
of the special meeting. Approval and adoption of the merger
agreement and the amended and restated articles of incorporation
each require the affirmative vote of holders of at least
two-thirds of the shares of our common stock present in person
or represented by proxy at the special meeting. The affirmative
vote of a majority of the shares of our common stock present in
person or represented by proxy at the special meeting and
entitled to vote is required to approve, on an advisory,
non-binding basis, the proposal regarding certain merger-related
executive compensation arrangements.
The list of shareholders entitled to vote at the special meeting
is available, upon request, at Global Industries offices,
at 11490 Westheimer, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77077,
for examination by any Global Industries shareholder.
Dissenting shareholders who comply with the procedural
requirements of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law will be
entitled to receive payment of the fair cash value
of their shares, as determined by our agreement with such
shareholders or a Louisiana state court, if the merger is
effected upon approval by less than 80 percent of Global
Industries total voting power.
Your vote is important. Whether or not you expect to attend
the special meeting in person, you are urged to complete, sign,
date and return the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction
card at your earliest convenience or to submit your vote by
Internet or telephone. Instructions for voting your shares are
included on the enclosed proxy card or voting instruction card.
If you are a record holder and you send in your proxy and then
decide to attend the Global Industries special meeting to vote
your shares, you may still do so. You may revoke your proxy in
the manner described in the proxy statement at any time before
it has been voted at the special meeting. If you have any
questions about the proposals or about your shares, please
contact Innisfree M&A Incorporated, who may be contacted by
banks and brokers at
(212) 750-5833
and by all others toll free at
(877) 456-3463.
By Order of the Board of Directors,
Russell J. Robicheaux
Corporate Secretary
Houston, Texas
October 28, 2011
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
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iii
CAUTIONARY
NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS
This proxy statement contains certain forward-looking
statements within the meaning of the safe harbor
provisions of the United States Private Securities Litigation
Reform Act of 1995. Forward-looking statements are statements
that are not historical facts. Words such as
expect(s), feel(s),
believe(s), will, may,
anticipate(s), intend(s) and similar
expressions are intended to identify such forward-looking
statements. These statements include, but are not limited to,
the expected timing of the acquisition; the ability of Technip
and Global Industries to close the acquisition; the performance
of the parties under the terms of the merger agreement and
related transaction documents; and statements regarding future
performance. All of such information and statements are subject
to certain risks and uncertainties, the effects of which are
difficult to predict and generally beyond our control, that
could cause actual results to differ materially from those
expressed in, or implied or projected by, the forward-looking
information and statements. Investors are cautioned not to place
undue reliance on these forward-looking statements that speak
only as of the date of this proxy statement. Investors are also
urged to carefully review and consider the various disclosures
in our periodic and interim reports filed with the Securities
and Exchange Commission (the SEC), including but not
limited to our Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010, Quarterly
Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2011 and
June 30, 2011 and Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed from time to time by us, as well as the following factors:
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uncertainties associated with the acquisition of Global
Industries by Technip;
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uncertainties as to the timing of the merger;
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the failure to receive approval of the transaction by our
shareholders;
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the ability of the parties to satisfy closing conditions to the
transaction, including the receipt of regulatory approvals;
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changes in economic, business, competitive, technological
and/or
regulatory factors;
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the outcome of any legal proceedings that have been or may be
instituted against Global Industries
and/or
others relating to the merger agreement;
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failure of a party to comply with its obligations under the
merger agreement and the related transaction documents; and
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the amount of costs, fees, expenses and charges related to the
merger.
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Consequently, all of the forward-looking statements we make in
this document are qualified by the information contained or
incorporated by reference herein, including, but not limited to,
(a) the information contained under this heading and
(b) the information contained under the heading Risk
Factors and in our consolidated financial statements and
notes thereto included in our most recent filings on
Forms 10-Q
and 10-K
(see the section entitled Where You Can Find More
Information). We are under no obligation to publicly
release any revision to any forward-looking statement contained
or incorporated herein to reflect any future events or
occurrences.
You should carefully consider the cautionary statements
contained or referred to in this section in connection with any
subsequent written or oral forward-looking statements that may
be issued by us or persons acting on our behalf.
iv
QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS ABOUT THE MERGER AND THE SPECIAL MEETING
The following questions and answers are intended to address
briefly some commonly asked questions regarding the merger, the
merger agreement and the special meeting. These questions and
answers may not address all questions that may be important to
you as a shareholder. Please refer to the Summary
and the more detailed information contained elsewhere in this
proxy statement, the annexes to this proxy statement and the
documents referred to or incorporated by reference in this proxy
statement, which you should read carefully. You may obtain the
information incorporated by reference in this proxy statement
without charge by following the instructions under the section
entitled Where You Can Find More Information.
Throughout this proxy statement, Global
Industries, we, us and
our refer to Global Industries, Ltd.,
Technip refers to Technip S.A., a société
anonyme organized under the laws of France, and Merger
Sub refers to Apollon Merger Sub B, Inc., a Louisiana
corporation and an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip.
We refer to the merger between Global Industries and Merger Sub
as the merger, and the agreement and plan of merger,
dated as of September 11, 2011 among Technip, Merger Sub
and Global Industries as the merger agreement. All
references to the merger consideration refer to the
consideration of $8.00 per share in cash, without interest and
subject to reduction for any required withholding taxes, to be
received by the holders of shares of our common stock pursuant
to the merger agreement.
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What is the proposed transaction? |
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The proposed transaction is the acquisition of Global Industries
by Technip pursuant to the merger agreement. Once the merger
agreement has been adopted by Global Industries
shareholders and the other closing conditions under the merger
agreement have been satisfied or waived, Merger Sub will merge
with and into Global Industries. Global Industries will be the
surviving corporation in the merger (the surviving
corporation) and will become an indirect, wholly-owned
subsidiary of Technip. |
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Why am I receiving the proxy materials? |
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You are receiving this proxy statement and the enclosed proxy
card or enclosed voting instruction form because our board of
directors is soliciting your proxy to vote at the special
meeting of Global Industries shareholders in connection
with a proposal to approve and adopt the merger agreement. Our
board of directors is also soliciting your vote in connection
with a proposal to approve and adopt the amended and restated
articles of incorporation that would remove certain restrictions
from our current articles of incorporation with respect to the
ownership of our common stock by
non-U.S.
citizens. In addition, our board of directors is soliciting your
vote on an advisory, non-binding basis for certain compensation
arrangements for Global Industries named executive
officers in connection with the merger. |
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What will I receive in the merger? |
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If the merger is completed, you will be entitled to receive the
merger consideration for each share of our common stock that you
own at the effective time of the merger. For example, if you own
100 shares of our common stock, you will receive $800.00 in
cash, less any required withholding taxes, in exchange for those
shares, unless you have properly exercised your dissenters
rights in accordance with the Louisiana Business Corporation Law
with respect to such shares. You will not own any shares of
capital stock in the surviving corporation. |
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How does our board of directors recommend I vote? |
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Our board of directors has unanimously adopted resolutions
(i) determining that the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby are in the best interests of
Global Industries shareholders, (ii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, (iii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the adoption of the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, and (iv) recommending
approval and adoption of the merger agreement and the amended
and restated articles of incorporation by our shareholders. Our
board of directors unanimously recommends that all of our
shareholders vote FOR the approval and adoption of the
merger agreement and FOR the approval and adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation. The reasons for
our board of directors determination are discussed in this
proxy statement. Additionally, our board of directors |
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unanimously recommends that you vote FOR the proposal
regarding certain merger-related executive compensation
arrangements. |
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Who will own Global Industries after the merger? |
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After the merger, Global Industries will be an indirect,
wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip. As a result of the receipt
of cash in exchange for your shares of Global Industries common
stock, you will no longer benefit from any increase in Global
Industries value, nor will you acquire an ownership
interest in Technip. |
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What conditions are required to be fulfilled to complete the
merger? |
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The respective obligations of us, Technip and Merger Sub to
consummate the merger are subject to the satisfaction or waiver
of certain customary conditions, including the approval and
adoption of the merger agreement by our shareholders, approval
and adoption of the amended and restated articles of
incorporation by our shareholders which will remove the
limitation in the current articles of incorporation of Global
Industries on
non-U.S.
ownership of Global Industries common stock, receipt of required
antitrust approvals, notification that the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States (CFIUS) has
determined not to investigate the transactions contemplated by
the merger agreement (or that such investigation has been
terminated), the accuracy of the representations and warranties
of the parties, compliance by the parties with their respective
obligations under the merger agreement, and the absence of any
event, occurrence, revelation, or development of a state of
circumstances or facts which, individually or in the aggregate,
has had or would reasonably be expected to have a materially
adverse effect on Global Industries. See the sections entitled
The Merger Agreement Conditions to the Closing
of the Merger, The Merger Agreement
Conditions to the Obligations of Technip and Merger Sub,
and The Merger Agreement Conditions to Our
Obligation. |
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When do you expect the merger to be completed? |
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We are working to complete the merger as soon as possible. The
merger cannot be completed until each closing condition has been
satisfied or waived. While we cannot predict the exact timing of
the effective time of the merger or whether the merger will be
consummated, assuming timely satisfaction of necessary closing
conditions, we anticipate that the merger will be completed by
or during the fourth quarter of 2011. If our shareholders vote
to adopt and approve the merger agreement and the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, the merger will become
effective as promptly as practicable following the satisfaction
or waiver of the other conditions to the merger. See the
sections entitled The Merger Agreement
Conditions to the Closing of the Merger, The Merger
Agreement Conditions to the Obligations of Technip
and Merger Sub, and The Merger Agreement
Conditions to Our Obligation. Either Technip or we may
terminate the merger agreement if the merger has failed to occur
by the outside date (as defined below); provided, that
the right to terminate the merger agreement is not available to
a party whose breach of any provision of the merger agreement
has resulted in the failure of the closing to occur on or before
that date. See The Merger Agreement
Termination. |
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What happens if the merger is not completed? |
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If the merger agreement is not adopted by our shareholders or if
the merger is not completed for any other reason, our
shareholders will not receive any payment for their shares of
our common stock in connection with the merger. Instead, we will
remain an independent public company and our common stock will
continue to be listed and traded on The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
(NASDAQ). Under specified circumstances, we may be
required to pay to Technip a fee with respect to the termination
of the merger agreement as described under the section entitled
The Merger Agreement Termination Fees and
Expenses. |
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Is the merger expected to be taxable to me? |
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If you are a U.S. taxpayer, your receipt of cash in the merger
will be treated as a taxable sale of your Global Industries
common stock for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In general,
you will recognize gain or loss equal to the difference, if any,
between (i) the amount of cash you receive in the merger in
exchange |
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for your shares of our common stock and (ii) the adjusted
tax basis of your shares of our common stock. You should consult
your tax advisor on how specific tax consequences of the merger
apply to you. |
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What will happen in the merger to stock options, restricted
stock and other stock-based awards that have been granted to
employees, officers and directors of Global Industries? |
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The merger agreement provides that all outstanding stock options
to purchase shares of our common stock, whether or not
exercisable or vested, shall be cancelled, and we shall pay to
each holder, at or promptly after the effective time of the
merger, for each such cancelled option an amount, less any
required withholding taxes, in cash determined by multiplying
(i) the excess, if any, of the merger consideration over
the applicable exercise price per share of common stock subject
to the stock option by (ii) the number of shares of common
stock such holder could have purchased (assuming full vesting of
the stock option) had such holder exercised such option in full
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger. The
merger agreement also provides that each restricted share of
common stock that is outstanding shall become fully vested, and
shall be treated as a share of common stock and eligible to
receive the merger consideration to be paid with respect to our
common stock. In addition, the merger agreement provides that,
at or immediately prior to the effective time of the merger,
each performance unit shall be canceled, and we shall pay each
holder at or promptly after the effective time of the merger for
each such cancelled performance unit an amount in cash, less any
required withholding taxes, equal to (i) the merger
consideration multiplied by (ii) the number of shares of
common stock issuable pursuant to such performance unit,
assuming achievement of the target level of performance
applicable to such performance unit. |
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Do any of our directors or officers have interests in the
merger that may differ from or be in addition to my interests as
a shareholder? |
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Yes. In considering the recommendation of the board of directors
with respect to the adoption of the merger agreement, you should
be aware that our directors and executive officers have
interests in the merger that are different from, or in addition
to, the interests of our shareholders generally. The board of
directors was aware of and considered these interests, among
other matters, in evaluating and negotiating the merger
agreement and the merger, and in recommending that the merger
agreement be adopted by our shareholders. See the section
entitled The Merger Interests of Global
Industries Executive Officers and Directors in the
Merger. |
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When and where is the special meeting? |
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The special meeting of our shareholders will be held on
November 30, 2011, at 10 a.m. Central Time, at the
Houston Marriott Westchase, 2900 Briarpark Dr., Houston, TX
77042. |
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What vote is needed to approve and adopt the merger agreement
and the amended and restated articles of incorporation? |
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The affirmative vote of holders of at least two-thirds of the
shares of our common stock present in person or represented by
proxy at the special meeting is required to approve and adopt
each of the merger agreement and the amended and restated
articles of incorporation. |
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Why are we asking that our shareholders approve, on an
advisory, non-binding basis, certain compensation arrangements
for our named executive officers? |
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Rules adopted recently by the SEC require that we provide our
shareholders with the opportunity to vote to approve, on an
advisory, non-binding basis, the compensation arrangements
between us and our named executive officers that are based on or
that otherwise relate to the merger. Approval of these
compensation arrangements is not a condition to completion of
the merger, and the vote with respect to this proposal is
advisory only. Accordingly, the vote will not be binding on us
or Technip, our or their board of directors or our compensation
committee. |
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What vote is needed to approve the advisory, non-binding
proposal relating to certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements for our named executive officers? |
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The affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of our common
stock present in person or represented by proxy at the special
meeting and entitled to vote is required to approve the
advisory, non-binding proposal relating to certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements for our named
executive officers. |
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Am I entitled to dissenters rights? |
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Dissenting shareholders who comply with the procedural
requirements of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law will be
entitled to receive payment for the fair cash value
of their shares, as determined by our agreement with the
shareholder or a Louisiana state court, if the merger is
effected upon approval by less than eighty percent of our total
voting power. For more information regarding your right to
dissent from the merger, please read the section of this proxy
statement entitled The Merger Dissenters
Rights. We have also attached a copy of the relevant
provision of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law (La. Rev.
Stat. § 12:131) as Annex D to this proxy
statement. |
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Who can vote at the special meeting? |
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All holders of our common stock of record as of the close of
business on October 26, 2011, the record date for the
special meeting, are entitled to receive notice of, and to vote
at, the special meeting. Each holder of our common stock is
entitled to cast one vote on each matter properly brought before
the special meeting for each share of common stock that such
holder owned as of the record date. |
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How do I vote? |
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If you are a shareholder of record, you may vote your shares of
common stock in any of the following ways: |
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in person you may attend the special
meeting and cast your vote there; or
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by proxy shareholders of record have a
choice of submitting a proxy:
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over the Internet (the website for submitting your
proxy over the Internet is on your proxy card); |
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by using a toll-free telephone number noted on your
proxy card; or
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by completing, signing, dating and returning the
enclosed proxy card in the accompanying prepaid reply envelope.
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If you are not a shareholder of record, please refer to the
instructions provided by your bank, brokerage firm or other
nominee to see which of the above choices are available to you.
Please note that if you are a beneficial owner and wish to vote
in person at the special meeting, you must provide a legal proxy
from your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee. |
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A control number, located on your proxy card, is designed to
verify your identity and allow you to vote your shares of common
stock, and to confirm that your voting instructions have been
properly recorded when submitting a proxy over the Internet or
by telephone. Please be aware that if you submit a proxy over
the Internet, you may incur costs such as telephone and Internet
access charges for which you will be responsible. |
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What is the difference between holding shares as a
shareholder of record and as a beneficial owner? |
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If your shares of common stock are registered directly in your
name with our transfer agent, American Stock
Transfer & Trust Company, you are considered,
with respect to those shares of common stock, the
shareholder of record. This proxy statement, and
your proxy card and voting instructions, have been sent directly
to you by us. |
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If your shares of common stock are held through a bank,
brokerage firm or other nominee, you are considered the
beneficial owner of shares of common stock held in
street name. In that case, this proxy statement has been
forwarded to you by your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee
who is considered, with respect to those shares of common stock,
the shareholder of record. As the beneficial owner, you have the |
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right to direct your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee how
to vote your shares of common stock by following their
instructions for voting. |
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I am the beneficial owner of my shares of common stock, but
my shares are held in street name by my bank,
brokerage firm or other nominee. Will my bank, brokerage firm or
other nominee vote my shares of common stock for me? |
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Your broker will not be able to vote your shares without
instructions from you. You should instruct your broker to vote
your shares by following the procedures provided by your broker. |
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How can I change or revoke my vote? |
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You have the right to revoke a proxy, whether delivered over the
Internet, by telephone or by mail, at any time before it is
exercised, by submitting a different proxy at a later date
through any of the methods available to you, by giving written
notice of revocation to our Corporate Secretary, which must be
filed with the Corporate Secretary by the time the special
meeting begins, or by attending the special meeting and voting
in person. If you have instructed a broker to vote your shares,
you must follow directions received from your broker to change
your instructions. |
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What is a proxy? |
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A proxy is your legal designation of another person, referred to
as a proxy, to vote your shares of stock. The written document
describing the matters to be considered and voted on at the
special meeting is called a proxy statement. The document used
to designate a proxy to vote your shares of stock is called a
proxy card. Our board of directors has designated John B. Reed
and C. Andrew Smith, and each of them, with full power of
substitution, as proxies for the special meeting. |
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If a shareholder gives a proxy, how are the shares of common
stock voted? |
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Regardless of the method you choose to vote, the individuals
named on the enclosed proxy card, as your proxies, will vote
your shares of common stock in the way that you indicate. When
completing the Internet or telephone processes or the proxy
card, you may specify whether your shares of common stock should
be voted for or against, or to abstain from voting, on all, some
or none of the specific items of business to come before the
special meeting. |
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If you are the shareholder of record, and you properly sign your
proxy card but do not mark the boxes showing how your shares
should be voted on a matter, the shares represented by your
properly signed proxy will be voted FOR
approval and adoption of the merger agreement,
FOR approval and adoption of the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, and FOR
the proposal regarding certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements. If you are the beneficial owner of
shares held in street name, your broker will not be able to vote
your shares without instructions from you. |
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What do I do if I receive more than one proxy or set of
voting instructions? |
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If you hold shares of common stock in street name
and also directly as a record holder or otherwise, you may
receive more than one proxy and/or set of voting instructions
relating to the special meeting. Each proxy should be voted
and/or returned separately in accordance with the instructions
provided in this proxy statement in order to ensure that all of
your shares of common stock are voted. |
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What happens if I sell my shares of common stock before the
special meeting? |
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The record date for shareholders entitled to vote at the special
meeting is earlier than both the date of the special meeting and
the consummation of the merger. If you transfer your shares of
common stock after the record date but before the special
meeting you will, unless special arrangements are made, retain
your right to vote at the special meeting but will transfer the
right to receive the merger consideration to the person to whom
you transfer your shares. |
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Who will solicit and pay the cost of soliciting proxies? |
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The expenses of preparing, printing and mailing this proxy
statement and the proxies solicited hereby will be borne by us.
Our directors, officers and employees may also solicit proxies
by telephone, by facsimile, by mail, on the Internet or in
person. They will not be paid any additional amounts for
soliciting proxies. |
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We have engaged Innisfree M&A Incorporated to assist in the
solicitation of proxies for the special meeting. We estimate
that we will pay Innisfree M&A Incorporated a fee of
approximately $25,000, plus customary administrative fees for
expenses related to calls made to or received from our
shareholders. We will reimburse Innisfree M&A Incorporated
for reasonable
out-of-pocket
expenses and will indemnify Innisfree M&A Incorporated and
its affiliates against certain claims, liabilities, losses,
damages and expenses. |
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We may also reimburse brokers, banks and other custodians,
nominees and fiduciaries representing beneficial owners of
shares of common stock for their expenses in forwarding
soliciting materials to beneficial owners of common stock and in
obtaining voting instructions from those owners. |
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What do I need to do now? |
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Even if you plan to attend the special meeting, after carefully
reading and considering the information contained in this proxy
statement, please submit a proxy promptly to ensure that your
shares are represented and voted at the special meeting. If you
hold your shares of common stock in your own name as the
shareholder of record, please submit a proxy to have your shares
of common stock voted at the special meeting by completing,
signing, dating and returning the enclosed proxy card in the
accompanying prepaid reply envelope; by using the telephone
number printed on your proxy card; or by using the Internet
instructions printed on your proxy card. If you decide to attend
the special meeting and vote in person, your vote by ballot will
revoke any proxy previously submitted. If you are a beneficial
owner, please refer to the instructions provided by your bank,
brokerage firm or other nominee to see which of the above
choices are available to you. |
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Should I send in my Global Industries stock
certificates now? |
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No. After the merger is completed, you will receive written
instructions for exchanging your shares of our common stock for
the merger consideration for each share of our common stock that
you own at the effective time of the merger, subject to the
terms of the merger agreement. |
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Who can help answer my other questions? |
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If you have additional questions about the merger, need
assistance in submitting your proxy or voting your shares of
common stock, or need additional copies of the proxy statement
or the enclosed proxy card, please call Innisfree M&A
Incorporated, our proxy solicitor, who may be contacted by banks
and brokers at (212) 750-5833 and by all others toll-free
at (877) 456-3463. |
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SUMMARY
The following summary highlights selected information in this
proxy statement and may not contain all the information that may
be important to you. Accordingly, we encourage you to read
carefully this entire proxy statement, its annexes and the
documents referred to or incorporated by reference in this proxy
statement. Each item in this summary includes a page reference
directing you to a more complete description of that topic. You
may obtain the information incorporated by reference in this
proxy statement at no charge by following the instructions under
the section entitled Where You Can Find More
Information.
The
Parties to the Merger (Page 11)
Global
Industries, Ltd.
Global Industries, Ltd., a Louisiana corporation, is a leading
solutions provider of offshore construction, engineering,
project management and support services including pipeline
construction, platform installation and removal, deepwater/SURF
installations, IRM, and diving to the oil and gas industry
worldwide.
Technip
S.A.
Technip S.A., or Technip, a société anonyme
organized under the laws of France, is a world leader in
project management, engineering and construction for the energy
industry, including deep subsea oil & gas developments
as well as large and complex offshore and onshore
infrastructures. Technip has approximately 25,000 employees
and is present in 48 countries, with
state-of-the-art
industrial assets on all continents and operates a fleet of
specialized vessels for pipeline installation and subsea
construction. Technip shares are listed on the NYSE Euronext
Paris exchange and the USA
over-the-counter
(OTC) market as an American Depositary Receipt (ADR: TKPPK).
Apollon
Merger Sub B, Inc.
Apollon Merger Sub B, Inc., or Merger Sub, a Louisiana
corporation and an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip,
was formed solely for the purpose of engaging in the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, has engaged
in no other business activities and has conducted its operations
only as contemplated by the merger agreement.
The
Special Meeting of Global Industries Shareholders
(Page 12)
Time, Date and Place. A
special meeting of our shareholders will be held on
November 30, 2011, at 10 a.m., Central time, at the
Houston Marriott Westchase, 2900 Briarpark Dr., Houston, TX
77042 to consider and vote upon a proposal to approve and adopt
the merger agreement and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation. You will also be asked to consider and vote upon
an advisory, non-binding proposal regarding certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements for Global
Industries named executive officers.
Record Date and Voting
Power. You are entitled to vote at the
special meeting if you owned shares of our common stock at the
close of business on October 26, 2011, the record date for
the special meeting. You will have one vote at the special
meeting for each share of our common stock you owned at the
close of business on the record date. As of the record date,
there were 115,748,003 shares of our common stock
outstanding held by approximately 584 holders of record.
Required Quorum and
Votes. The holders of a majority of the
issued and outstanding shares of our common stock that are
entitled to vote at the special meeting must be present in
person or represented by proxy at the special meeting for a
quorum to be present. The proposal to approve and adopt the
merger agreement and the proposal to approve and adopt the
amended and restated articles of incorporation each require the
affirmative vote of holders of at least two-thirds of the shares
of our common stock present in person or represented by proxy at
the special meeting.
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The advisory, non-binding proposal relating to certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements for Global
Industries named executive officers requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of our common stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the special meeting
and entitled to vote.
The
Merger (Page 15)
Description
of the Merger (Page 15)
Our board of directors has unanimously approved the merger
agreement and the merger whereby Global Industries will become
an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip upon completion
of the merger. If the merger agreement is approved and adopted
by Global Industries shareholders and the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, which will remove the
limitation in the current articles of incorporation of Global
Industries on
non-U.S. ownership
of Global Industries common stock, are approved and adopted by
Global Industries shareholders, then, subject to other
closing conditions as described below in the section captioned
The Merger Agreement Conditions to the Closing
of the Merger, Merger Sub will be merged with and into
Global Industries, and Global Industries will be the surviving
corporation in the merger. Upon completion of the merger, Global
Industries will become an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of
Technip.
If the merger is completed, you will be entitled to receive the
merger consideration in exchange for each share of our common
stock that you own at the effective time of the merger.
After the merger is completed, you will have the right to
receive the merger consideration, but you will no longer have
any rights as a shareholder of Global Industries. In the case of
shares of our common stock represented by certificates, you will
receive the merger consideration for your shares of common stock
after exchanging your stock certificates in accordance with the
instructions contained in a letter of transmittal to be sent to
you shortly after completion of the merger. In the case of
shares of our common stock held in book-entry form, you will
receive the merger consideration for your shares of common stock
as promptly as practicable following the merger without the
requirement to deliver a stock certificate or letter of
transmittal.
Reasons
for the Merger (Page 24)
At a meeting of our board of directors held on
September 10, 2011, our board of directors unanimously
approved the merger and the merger agreement with Technip and
recommended approval by our shareholders. In making its
determination and recommendation set forth above, our board of
directors considered, among other things, the following:
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its knowledge of the current state of our business, including
our financial condition, operations, business plans, management,
competitive position and prospects;
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our financial and strategic plan and the initiatives and the
potential execution risks associated with such plan, and, in
connection with these considerations, the attendant risk that,
if we did not enter into the merger agreement, the price that
might be received by Global Industries shareholders
selling our common stock in the open market, both from a
short-term and long-term perspective, could be less, in present
value terms, than the merger consideration, especially in light
of recent economic trends in the stock market and the currently
challenging business environment;
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its belief, based on its knowledge of the matters enumerated
above, that the certainty of the merger consideration of $8.00
per share outweighed the substantial risk that our shares might
not trade at prices substantially above $8.00 per share for some
substantial period;
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the fact that the $8.00 per share merger consideration to be
received by our shareholders represented a premium of
approximately 55% over the closing stock price of our shares as
reported on the Nasdaq Global Select Market on September 9,
2011 (which was the last full trading day prior to our board of
directors approval of the merger agreement with Technip)
and a 92% premium over the average closing stock price of our
shares as reported on the Nasdaq Global Select Market for the 30
trading days ending on September 9, 2011;
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its belief, based on advice of Simmons & Company
International (Simmons) and assessment of the
ability and willingness of other potential buyers to acquire
Global Industries, that the premium offered by Technip was
greater than any purchase price reasonably available through a
public auction, and that the boards retention of a right
to terminate the merger agreement in favor of a superior
proposal would permit a superior proposal, if any, to emerge and
be considered by the board; and
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the financial advice of Simmons, as well as the opinion of
Simmons, dated September 10, 2011, to our board of
directors as to the fairness, from a financial point of view and
as of the date of the opinion, of the $8.00 per share merger
consideration.
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In the course of its deliberations, our board of directors also
considered a number of additional material positive factors and
a number of potentially negative factors regarding the merger.
Our board of directors concluded that the potentially negative
factors were substantially outweighed by the opportunity
presented by the merger for our shareholders to monetize their
Global Industries investment for $8.00 per share in cash if the
merger conditions were satisfied, which our board of directors
believed would maximize the value of the shares of Global
Industries common stock. Accordingly, our board of directors
concluded that the merger was in the best interests of our
shareholders.
Global
Industries Board of Directors Recommendation
(Page 26)
Our board of directors has unanimously approved resolutions:
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determining that the merger agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby are in the best interests of our
shareholders;
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approving, adopting and declaring advisable the merger agreement
and the transactions contemplated thereby;
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approving, adopting and declaring advisable the adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation; and
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recommending approval and adoption of the merger agreement and
the amended and restated articles of incorporation by our
shareholders.
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Our board of directors has also unanimously approved a
resolution recommending approval of the advisory, non-binding
proposal relating to certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements for our named executive officers.
Financial
Advisors Opinion Regarding the Merger Consideration
(Page 26)
Simmons acted as financial advisor to the board of directors of
Global Industries in connection with the merger. Simmons
delivered to the board of directors of Global Industries a
written opinion, dated September 10, 2011, as to the
fairness, from a financial point of view and as of the date of
such opinion based upon the various assumptions and limitations
set forth therein, of the merger consideration to be received by
the shareholders of Global Industries pursuant to the terms of
the merger agreement. The full text of Simmons written
opinion, dated September 10, 2011, which describes, among
other things, certain assumptions made, procedures followed,
factors considered and limitations on the review undertaken, is
attached to this proxy statement as Annex C and is
incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Global
Industries shareholders are encouraged to read this
opinion carefully in its entirety for a description of certain
assumptions made, procedures followed, factors considered and
limitations on the review. Simmons provided its opinion to the
board of directors for the benefit and use of the board of
directors in connection with and for purposes of its evaluation
of the merger consideration from a financial point of view.
Simmons opinion did not address any other aspect of the
merger and does not constitute a recommendation to any
shareholder as to how to vote or act in connection with the
proposed merger.
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Interests
of Global Industries Executive Officers and Directors in
the Merger (Page 41)
When our shareholders consider the recommendation of our board
of directors that Global Industries shareholders vote in
favor of the proposal to approve and adopt the merger agreement,
they should be aware that the officers and directors of Global
Industries may have interests in the merger that may be
different from, or in addition to, the interests of Global
Industries shareholders generally. These interests
include, among others, the acceleration of vesting and removal
of restrictions with respect to stock options and other stock
awards, change of control payments and continuation of rights to
indemnification and liability insurance. Our board of directors
was aware of and considered these interests when it approved the
merger agreement and the merger.
As of the record date, directors and executive officers of
Global Industries, and their affiliates, had the right to vote
approximately 2,375,448 shares of Global Industries common
stock, or approximately 2.05% of the outstanding Global
Industries common stock at that date.
Amended
and Restated Articles of Incorporation of Global Industries
(Page 50)
The Global Industries board of directors has unanimously
approved, subject to shareholder approval and completion of the
merger, the adoption of the amended and restated articles of
incorporation to remove a limitation on the ownership of our
common stock by
non-United
States citizens currently found in our articles of
incorporation. The form of amended and restated articles of
incorporation is included in this proxy statement as
Annex B. The adoption of the amended and restated
articles of incorporation is a condition to the completion of
the merger. In the event that the merger agreement is approved
but the amended and restated articles of incorporation are not
adopted, the merger will not be completed. In the event the
amended and restated certificate of incorporation is approved by
our shareholders, but the merger is not completed, the amended
and restated articles of incorporation will not become effective.
Regulatory
Matters (Page 50)
Antitrust Clearance. Under the terms of the
merger agreement, the merger cannot be completed until certain
approvals, consents and consultations required to consummate the
merger pursuant to applicable U.S. and foreign antitrust
laws, including the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976 (the HSR Act),
have been obtained or any applicable waiting period thereunder
has been terminated or has expired. Under the HSR Act and the
rules promulgated thereunder by the Federal Trade Commission
(the FTC), the merger cannot be completed until each
of Global Industries and Technip files a notification and report
form with the FTC and the Antitrust Division of the Department
of Justice (the Antitrust Division), under the HSR
Act, and the applicable period has expired or been terminated.
On September 23, 2011 (within the time period required by
contract), Global and Technip submitted their respective filings
to the FTC and the Antitrust Division. Each asked for early
termination, which was granted on October 24, 2011.
The merger is also subject to the Federal Economic Competition
Law (LFCE) in Mexico. Technip and Global Industries
are obligated to submit a filing to the Federal Competition
Commission of Mexico (the FCC). It is a condition to
the consummation of the merger that any applicable waiting
period imposed under the LFCE has expired. Each of Global
Industries and Technip made such filing on September 26,
2011 (within the time period required by contract). The
applicable waiting period expired on October 20, 2011,
thereby satisfying such closing condition in the merger
agreement. However, the FCC is continuing to review the merger.
The merger is also subject to review by the competition
authorities in Brazil. The Brazilian competition authorities
were required to be notified of the transactions contemplated by
the merger agreement within 15 business days of execution of the
merger agreement. Notification of this transaction is a
condition to the merger, but approval by the Brazil competition
authorities is not. The required notification was submitted on
September 28, 2011 (within the time period required by
contract and Brazilian law).
Exon-Florio. The merger is also subject to
review by CFIUS pursuant to Sec. 721 of Title VII of the
Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended by the Foreign
Investment and National Security Act of 2007, P.L.
110-49, 121
Stat. 246 and regulations thereto 31 C.F.R. Part 800.
On October 7, 2011, Technip and Global
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Industries submitted a joint voluntary notice to CFIUS of the
proposed acquisition of Global Industries. Within thirty days of
accepting the notification, CFIUS must conclude a preliminary
review and determine whether a full investigation of the
proposed transaction should be undertaken. The thirty-day review
period expires at 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on November 9,
2011.
We cannot assure you that an antitrust, CFIUS or other
regulatory challenge to the merger will not be made.
Dissenters
Rights (Page 52)
Dissenting shareholders who comply with the procedural
requirements of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law will be
entitled to receive payment of the fair cash value of their
shares if the merger is effected upon approval by less than
eighty percent of our total voting power. If you do not follow
the prescribed procedures, you will not be entitled to
dissenters rights with respect to your shares.
Delisting
and Deregistration of Global Industries Common Stock
(Page 54)
If the merger is completed, our common stock will no longer be
traded on NASDAQ and will be deregistered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (the Exchange Act).
Material
United States Federal Income Tax Consequences of the Merger
(Page 54)
The exchange of shares of our common stock for the merger
consideration will be taxable to our shareholders that are
U.S. taxpayers for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
In general, each shareholder that is a U.S. taxpayer will
recognize a gain or loss equal to the difference, if any,
between the cash payment received and the shareholders tax
basis in the shares surrendered in the merger.
Tax matters can be complicated, and the tax consequences of the
merger to you will depend on the facts of your own situation.
You should consult your own tax advisor to fully understand the
tax consequences of the merger to you.
Litigation
Relating to the Merger (Page 56)
Shortly after the announcement of the merger, several putative
class action lawsuits challenging the merger were filed in the
District Courts of Harris County, Texas, the District Court in
the Parish of Calcasieu, Louisiana, and the United States
District Court for the Southern District of Texas against
various combinations of Global Industries, Technip, Merger Sub,
and the individual members of our board of directors. The
complaints filed in those lawsuits generally allege, among other
things, that the members of our board of directors breached
their fiduciary duties owed to our public shareholders and
Global Industries by entering into the merger agreement,
approving the proposed merger, failing to take steps to maximize
our value to our public shareholders, ignoring alleged conflicts
of interest, and issuing a preliminary proxy statement that
omitted material information, and that Global Industries and
Technip aided and abetted such breaches of fiduciary duties. In
addition, the complaints allege that the proposed merger
improperly favors Technip and that certain provisions of the
merger agreement unduly restrict our ability to negotiate with
other potential bidders. The complaints generally seek, among
other things, declaratory and injunctive relief concerning the
alleged fiduciary breaches, injunctive relief prohibiting the
defendants from consummating the proposed merger and other forms
of equitable relief.
On October 27, 2011, the parties to all of these actions
entered into a memorandum of understanding setting forth the
terms and conditions of an agreement in principle to resolve all
of the claims relating to the merger in exchange for the
inclusion of certain supplemental disclosures in this definitive
proxy statement.
5
The
Merger Agreement (Page 58)
General
(Page 58)
The following is a summary of certain of the principal
provisions of the merger agreement and is qualified in its
entirety both by the more detailed description that appears
later in this proxy statement and by the full text of the merger
agreement attached as Annex A to this proxy
statement.
The merger agreement contemplates the merger of Merger Sub with
and into Global Industries, with Global Industries surviving the
merger. Upon completion of the merger, Global Industries will
become an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip. The
merger will become effective at such date and time as the
certificate of merger is duly filed with the Louisiana Secretary
of State or at such subsequent date and time that we and Technip
agree to and specify in the certificate of merger. Upon
completion of the merger, holders of our common stock other than
holders that have properly exercised dissenters rights in
accordance with the Louisiana Business Corporation Law with
respect to such common stock will be entitled to receive the
merger consideration in exchange for each share of our common
stock held at the effective time of the merger.
The merger agreement contains representations and warranties by
Global Industries and by Technip that are customary for
agreements of this nature. The merger agreement also contains
customary covenants, including Global Industries covenant
to conduct its business in the ordinary course consistent with
past practice and to obtain Technips consent before
engaging in certain activities.
Equity
Plans (Page 58)
Stock Options. As of the record date,
1,391,867 options to purchase our common stock were outstanding,
of which 297,134 had a per share exercise price that was less
than the merger consideration. Pursuant to the terms of the
merger agreement, at or immediately prior to the effective time
of the merger, each outstanding option to purchase our common
stock, whether or not exercisable or vested, shall be cancelled,
and we shall pay each holder at or promptly after the effective
time of the merger for each such cancelled option an amount in
cash, less any required withholding taxes, determined by
multiplying (i) the excess, if any, of the merger
consideration over the applicable exercise price per share of
common stock subject to such stock option by (ii) the
number of shares of common stock such holder could have
purchased (assuming full vesting of the stock option) had such
holder exercised such option in full immediately prior to the
effective time of the merger.
Restricted Stock. As of the record date,
1,523,050 unvested shares of our restricted common stock were
outstanding. Pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement, at
or immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, each
restricted share of common stock that is outstanding shall
become fully vested, and shall be treated as a share of common
stock and eligible to receive the merger consideration.
Performance Units. As of the record date,
1,115,562 performance units with respect to our common stock
were outstanding (assuming attainment of the applicable target
level of performance). Pursuant to the terms of the merger
agreement, at or immediately prior to the effective time of the
merger, each performance unit shall be canceled, and we shall
pay each holder at or promptly after the effective time of the
merger for each such cancelled performance unit an amount in
cash, less any required withholding taxes, equal to (i) the
merger consideration multiplied by (ii) the number of
shares of common stock issuable pursuant to such performance
unit, assuming achievement of the target level of performance
applicable to such performance unit.
Solicitation
of Transactions (Page 64)
Pursuant to the merger agreement, we have agreed not to:
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solicit, initiate or take any action to knowingly facilitate or
encourage the submission of any acquisition proposal (as defined
in the merger agreement and described in the section captioned
The Merger Agreement Definitions of
Acquisition Proposal and Superior Proposal) for us;
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enter into or participate in any discussions or negotiations
with, furnish any information relating to us or our subsidiaries
or afford access to our, or our subsidiaries, business,
properties, assets or books, or otherwise cooperate in any way
with, or knowingly assist, participate in, facilitate or
encourage any effort by, any third party to make an acquisition
proposal;
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fail to make, withdraw or modify in a manner adverse to Technip,
the approval or recommendation of our board of directors of the
merger agreement, or the transactions contemplated thereby, and
the amended and restated articles of incorporation, or recommend
any acquisition proposal or take any action or make any public
statement inconsistent with the recommendation of our board of
directors, except as permitted by the merger agreement;
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grant any waiver or release under any standstill or similar
agreement with respect to any class of our, or our
subsidiaries, equity securities; or
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enter into any agreement in principle, letter of intent, term
sheet, merger agreement, acquisition agreement, option agreement
or other similar instrument relating to an acquisition proposal
(other than a confidentiality agreement with a third party as
permitted by the terms of the merger agreement).
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We have also agreed that we will immediately cease and terminate
any and all existing activities, discussions or negotiations
with any persons that were conducted by us prior to the date of
the merger agreement with respect to any acquisition proposal.
Even though we have agreed to the provisions described above
relating to the non-solicitation of acquisition proposals, our
board of directors may take and disclose to our shareholders a
position with respect to an acquisition proposal pursuant to
Rules 14d-9
and 14e-2(a)
or Item 1012(a) of
Regulation M-A
promulgated under the Exchange Act.
Furthermore, notwithstanding the foregoing restrictions, at any
time prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by our
shareholders, we, directly or indirectly through our advisors,
agents or other intermediaries, may, with respect to any person
that has made a superior proposal (as defined in the merger
agreement and described in the section captioned The
Merger Agreement Definitions of Acquisition Proposal
and Superior Proposal) or an acquisition proposal that our
board of directors reasonably believes will lead to a superior
proposal, engage in negotiations or discussions with such
person, if such acquisition proposal was not solicited,
initiated, or a result of any action taken to knowingly
facilitate or encourage such acquisition proposal after the date
of the merger agreement in breach of the prohibitions described
above.
In addition, we may furnish to such person non-public
information relating to us or our subsidiaries and afford access
to our, or our subsidiaries, business, properties, assets,
books or records or otherwise cooperate, assist, facilitate and
encourage such person; provided, however, that, prior to
taking such actions, we are required to enter into a
confidentiality agreement with terms no less favorable to Global
Industries than those contained in the confidentiality agreement
we entered into with Technip on July 15, 2011, with an
effective date as of July 13, 2011 (the
Confidentiality Agreement), except that such
confidentiality agreement may contain a less restrictive
standstill restriction or no standstill restriction, in which
case the Confidentiality Agreement shall be deemed to be amended
to contain only such less restrictive provision, or to omit such
provision, as applicable.
Additionally, we have agreed with Technip that our board of
directors will not fail to make, withdraw or modify in a manner
adverse to Technip, the approval or recommendation of our board
of directors of the merger agreement, the transactions
contemplated thereby, and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation, or recommend any acquisition proposal or take any
action or make any public statement inconsistent with the
recommendation of our board of directors (an adverse
recommendation change), unless:
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our board of directors determines in good faith, after
consultation with outside legal counsel, that
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an acquisition proposal constitutes a superior proposal and the
failure to take such action would be reasonably likely to be
inconsistent with its fiduciary duties under applicable
law, or
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in the absence of an acquisition proposal, if due to events or
changes in circumstances after the date hereof that were neither
known to nor reasonably foreseeable by us as of or prior to the
date of the merger agreement, the failure to take such action
would be reasonably likely to be inconsistent with its fiduciary
duties under applicable law
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(each of the foregoing, a fiduciary determination);
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we have notified Technip in writing that our board of directors
intends to make such a fiduciary determination; and
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at least five business days have elapsed following receipt by
Technip of such notice (except that any subsequent notice period
following any amendment to the financial or material terms of a
superior proposal is two business days).
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Conditions
to the Closing of the Merger (Page 66)
The respective obligations of us, Technip and Merger Sub to
consummate the merger are subject to the satisfaction or waiver
of certain customary conditions, including the approval and
adoption of the merger agreement by our shareholders, the
approval and adoption of the amended and restated articles of
incorporation, which will remove the limitation on ownership of
Global Industries common stock by
non-U.S. persons,
by our shareholders, notification of the transaction to certain
antitrust authorities and receipt of required antitrust
approvals (or lapse of applicable waiting period) in the
U.S. and Mexico, notification that CFIUS has determined not
to investigate the transactions contemplated by the merger
agreement (or that such investigation has been terminated), the
accuracy of the representation and warranties of the parties,
compliance by the parties with their respective obligations
under the merger agreement, and the absence of any event,
occurrence, revelation, or development of a state of
circumstances or facts which, individually or in the aggregate,
has had or would reasonably be expected to have a materially
adverse effect on Global Industries.
Termination
(Page 67)
The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by mutual written consent of the parties to the merger
agreement, or by either Technip or us if:
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the merger has not been completed by April 23, 2012 (the
outside date) provided, that the right to so
terminate the merger agreement is not available to a party whose
breach of any provision of the merger agreement results in the
failure of the merger to be consummated by such time;
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there is an applicable law, order, writ, assessment, decision,
injunction, decree, ruling, judgment or similar action, whether
temporary, preliminary or permanent, making consummation of the
merger illegal or otherwise prohibited, or otherwise enjoining
us or Technip from consummating the merger, and the same shall
have become final and non-appealable; provided, that the
right to so terminate the merger agreement is not available to a
party whose breach of any provision of the merger agreement
results in such action or event; or
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our shareholders fail to approve and adopt both the merger
agreement and the amended and restated articles of incorporation.
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The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by Technip if:
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our board of directors has made an adverse recommendation
change, or an acquisition proposal has been publicly announced
and our board of directors has failed to reaffirm its
recommendation with 10 business days after such public
announcement; provided, however, that the right to
terminate the merger agreement pursuant to this termination
right as a result of such action must be exercised by Technip
within 10 business days following the event giving rise to such
right to terminate or, if sooner, immediately prior to the
special meeting;
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we shall have breached any of our representations and warranties
or we have failed to perform any covenant or agreement under the
merger agreement, other than those under the non-solicitation
provisions of the merger agreement, that would give rise to the
failure of certain conditions to closing, in either case in a
situation where such breach is incapable of being satisfied by
the outside date; provided, however, that Technip shall
have given us 10 business days notice prior to
termination; or
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prior to the special meeting, there has been an intentional and
material breach by us of any covenants or obligations under the
non-solicitation provisions of the merger agreement;
provided, however, that Technip shall have given us 10
business days notice prior to termination (as described in the
section captioned The Merger Agreement
Solicitation of Transactions).
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The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by us if:
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prior to the special meeting, our board of directors shall have
made an adverse recommendation change in order to enter into a
definitive, written agreement concerning a superior proposal;
provided, however, that we shall have paid any required
termination fee; or
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Technip or Merger Sub shall have breached any of their
representations and warranties or Technip or Merger Sub has
failed to perform any of their covenants or agreements under the
merger agreement that would give rise to the failure of certain
conditions to closing, in either case in a situation where that
breach is incapable of being satisfied by the outside date,
provided, however, that we shall have given Technip 10
business days notice prior to termination.
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Termination
Fees and Expenses (Page 68)
We must pay a termination fee of $30,000,000 (the
termination fee) to Technip under the following
circumstances:
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Technip terminates the merger agreement because (i) our
board of directors has made an adverse recommendation change, or
an acquisition proposal has been publicly announced and our
board of directors has failed to reaffirm its recommendation
with 10 business days after such public announcement;
(ii) we shall have breached any of our representations and
warranties or we have failed to perform any covenant or
agreement under the merger agreement, which would give rise to
the failure of certain conditions to closing, in either case in
a situation where such breach or failure is (a) intentional
and (b) incapable of being satisfied by the outside date;
or (iii) prior to the special meeting, there has been an
intentional and material breach of any covenants or obligations
under the non-solicitation provisions of the merger agreement;
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prior to the special meeting, our board of directors shall have
made an adverse recommendation change in order to enter into a
definitive, written agreement concerning a superior proposal and
we terminate the merger agreement; or
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(i) the merger agreement or the amended and restated
articles of incorporation are not approved and adopted by our
shareholders at the special meeting, or any adjournment thereof,
(ii) prior to such termination, an acquisition proposal
shall have been publicly announced or otherwise been
communicated to our shareholders and such acquisition proposal
is not publicly withdrawn prior to the special meeting and
(iii) within nine months following the date of such
termination, we shall have entered into a definitive agreement
with respect to, or recommended to our shareholders, an
acquisition proposal or an acquisition proposal shall have been
consummated (provided, however, that for purposes of this
clause (iii), each reference to 15% in the
definition of acquisition proposal in the merger agreement shall
be deemed to be a reference to 50%).
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All
out-of-pocket
fees and expenses incurred in connection with the merger will be
paid by the party incurring such fees and expenses, whether or
not the merger is consummated, except that, if we fail to pay
the termination fee when due in the circumstances described
above, we have agreed to pay any costs and expenses
9
incurred by Technip or Merger Sub in connection with a legal
action to enforce the merger agreement that results in a
judgment against us for such amount, plus interest thereon.
If we become obligated to pay a termination fee as described
above, and we pay such termination fee in full, Technip and
Merger Sub shall be precluded from any other remedy against us,
at law or in equity or otherwise, and neither Technip nor Merger
Sub shall seek to obtain any recovery, judgment, or damages of
any kind, including consequential, indirect or punitive damages,
against us or any of our subsidiaries or any of our or their
respective partners, managers, members, shareholders, or our or
their respective representatives, in connection with the merger
agreement or the transactions contemplated thereby.
If the merger agreement is terminated by us
and/or
Technip, then the merger agreement shall be void and of no
effect, and neither Global Industries, on the one hand, nor
Technip and Merger Sub, on the other, shall have any liability
under the merger agreement; provided, that, if such
termination results from fraud or the intentional failure of a
party to fulfill a condition to the performance of the
obligations of the other party, or to perform a covenant under
the merger agreement, that party shall be fully liable for any
and all liabilities and damages incurred or suffered by the
other party as a result of such failure (including, in the case
of Global Industries, damages based on the consideration that
would have otherwise been payable to the holders of common
stock, stock options, restricted stock and performance units).
The parties to the merger agreement are entitled to an
injunction or injunctions, without the posting of any bond and
without proof of actual damages, to prevent breaches of the
merger agreement and to enforce specifically the performance of
the terms and provisions thereof in any federal or state court
located in the State of New York, in addition to any other
remedy to which they are entitled at law or in equity.
In addition, Global Industries has the right to enforce, on
behalf of the holders of Global Industries common stock, stock
options, restricted stock and performance units, the rights of
such holders to pursue claims for damages and other relief,
including equitable relief, for Technip or Merger Subs
breach or wrongful termination of the merger agreement or fraud.
The merger agreement may be amended, or any provision thereof,
waived, by the parties at any time prior to the effective time
of the merger (but only if such amendment or waiver is in
writing or signed, in the case of an amendment, by each party to
the merger agreement or, in the case of a waiver, by each party
against whom the waiver is to be effective), before or after our
shareholders have approved and adopted both the merger agreement
and the amended and restated articles of incorporation;
provided, that, after our shareholders approve and adopt
the merger agreement and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation, no amendment or waiver of the merger agreement
may be made that would require the further approval of our
shareholders under the Louisiana Business Corporation Law
without such approval having first been obtained.
Market
Price of Our Common Stock (Page 75)
Our common stock is listed on NASDAQ under the symbol
GLBL. On September 9, 2011, the last full
trading day prior to the public announcement of the proposed
merger, our common stock closed at $5.15. On October 27,
2011, the last practicable trading day prior to the date of this
proxy statement, our common stock closed at $7.96. We urge
shareholders to obtain a current quotation.
10
THE
PARTIES TO THE MERGER
The
Company
Global Industries, Ltd.
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77077
(281) 529-7799
Global Industries, a Louisiana corporation, is a leading
solutions provider of offshore construction, engineering,
project management and support services including pipeline
construction, platform installation and removal, deepwater/SURF
installations, IRM, and diving to the oil and gas industry
worldwide.
Additional information regarding Global Industries is contained
in our filings with the SEC. See Where You Can Find More
Information.
Technip
Technip S.A.
89 avenue de la Grand Armée
75116 Paris
France
(+33) 1-4778-2400
Technip S.A., or Technip, a société anonyme
organized under the laws of France, is a world leader in
project management, engineering and construction for the energy
industry, including deep subsea oil & gas developments
as well as large and complex offshore and onshore
infrastructures. Technip has approximately 25,000 employees
and is present in 48 countries, with
state-of-the-art
industrial assets on all continents and operates a fleet of
specialized vessels for pipeline installation and subsea
construction. Technip shares are listed on the NYSE Euronext
Paris exchange and the USA
over-the-counter
(OTC) market as an American Depositary Receipt (ADR: TKPPK).
Merger
Sub
Apollon Merger Sub B, Inc.
c/o Technip
S.A.
89 avenue de la Grand Armée
75116 Paris
France
(281) 870-1111
Apollon Merger Sub B, Inc., or Merger Sub, a Louisiana
corporation and an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip,
was formed solely for the purpose of engaging in the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement, has engaged
in no other business activities and has conducted its operations
only as contemplated by the merger agreement. Upon completion of
the merger, Merger Sub will cease to exist.
11
THE
SPECIAL MEETING
We are furnishing this proxy statement to our shareholders as
part of the solicitation of proxies by our board of directors
for use at the special meeting, and at any adjournments or
postponements of the special meeting.
Date,
Time and Place
We will hold the special meeting at the Houston Marriott
Westchase, 2900 Briarpark Dr., Houston, TX 77042, at 10
a.m., Central time, on November 30, 2011.
Purpose
of Special Meeting
At the special meeting, we will ask holders of our common stock
to approve and adopt both the merger agreement and the amended
and restated articles of incorporation. Our shareholders will
also be asked to approve, on an advisory, non-binding basis, the
merger-related compensation arrangement for our named executive
officers. Our board of directors has unanimously approved
resolutions (i) determining that the merger agreement and
the transactions contemplated thereby are in the best interests
of Global Industries shareholders, (ii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, (iii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the adoption of the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, and (iv) recommending
approval and adoption of the merger agreement and the amended
and restated articles of incorporation by our shareholders. Our
board of directors unanimously recommends that all of our
shareholders vote FOR the approval and adoption of the
merger agreement and FOR the approval and adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation. Additionally,
our board of directors unanimously recommends that you vote
FOR the proposal regarding certain merger-related
executive compensation arrangements.
Record
Date; Stock Entitled to Vote; Quorum
Only holders of record of our common stock at the close of
business on October 26, 2011, which is the record date for
the special meeting, are entitled to notice of and to vote at
the special meeting. As of the record date,
115,748,003 shares of our common stock were outstanding and
held by approximately 584 holders of record. A majority of
the shares of our common stock issued and outstanding and
entitled to vote at the special meeting present in person or
represented by proxy at the special meeting is required for a
quorum. Shares of our common stock represented at the special
meeting but not voting, including shares of our common stock for
which proxies have been received but for which shareholders have
abstained, will be treated as present at the special meeting for
purposes of determining the presence or absence of a quorum for
the transaction of all business at the special meeting.
Votes
Required
The proposal to approve and adopt the merger agreement and the
proposal to approve and adopt the amended and restated articles
of incorporation each require the affirmative vote of holders of
at least two-thirds of the shares of our common stock present in
person or represented by proxy at the special meeting, and each
is conditional upon approval of the other. Accordingly, not
voting at the special meeting will have no effect on the outcome
of this proposal, but abstentions will have the effect of a vote
against this proposal. If you hold your shares in street
name through a broker, bank or other nominee, you must
direct your broker, bank or other nominee how to vote your
shares of common stock by following their instructions for
voting. Brokers, banks or other nominees who hold shares of our
common stock in street name for customers who are the beneficial
owners of those shares may not vote those customers shares
in the absence of specific instructions from those customers.
The advisory, non-binding proposal relating to certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements for Global
Industries named executive officers requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of our common stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the special meeting
and entitled to vote. Accordingly, not voting at the special
meeting will have no effect on the outcome of this proposal, but
abstentions will have the effect of a vote against this
proposal. The proposal to approve the compensation
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arrangements between Global Industries and its named executive
officers that are based on or that otherwise relate to the
merger is on an advisory, non-binding basis. Approval of these
compensation arrangements is not a condition to completion of
the merger, and the vote with respect to this proposal is
advisory only. Accordingly, the vote will not be binding on
Global Industries or Technip, their boards of directors or on
our compensation committee.
If you are a shareholder of record, you may vote your shares of
common stock in any of the following ways:
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in person you may attend the special meeting and
cast your vote there; or
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by proxy shareholders of record have a choice of
submitting a proxy:
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over the Internet (the website for submitting your proxy over
the Internet is on your proxy card);
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by using a toll-free telephone number noted on your proxy
card; or
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by completing, signing, dating and returning the enclosed proxy
card in the accompanying prepaid reply envelope.
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If you are not a shareholder of record, please refer to the
instructions provided by your bank, brokerage firm or other
nominee to see which of the above choices are available to you.
Please note that if you are a beneficial owner and wish to vote
in person at the special meeting, you must obtain a legal proxy
from your bank, brokerage firm or other nominee.
A control number, located on your proxy card, is designed to
verify your identity and allow you to vote your shares of common
stock, and to confirm that your voting instructions have been
properly recorded when submitting a proxy over the Internet or
by telephone. Please be aware that if you submit a proxy over
the Internet, you may incur costs such as telephone and Internet
access charges for which you will be responsible.
Holders of record of our common stock on the record date are
entitled to one vote per share on each matter to be considered
at the special meeting.
As of the record date, directors and executive officers of
Global Industries, and their affiliates, had the right to vote
2,375,448 shares of Global Industries common stock, or
2.05% of the outstanding Global Industries common stock at that
date.
Voting of
Proxies
All shares represented by properly executed proxies received in
time for the special meeting will be voted at the special
meeting in the manner specified by the holders thereof. Properly
executed proxies that do not contain voting instructions will be
voted FOR the approval and adoption of the merger
agreement, FOR the approval and adoption of the amended
and restated articles of incorporation and FOR the
proposal regarding certain merger-related executive compensation.
Revocability
of Proxies
The grant of a proxy on the enclosed form of proxy does not
preclude a shareholder from voting in person at the special
meeting. A shareholder may revoke a proxy at any time prior to
its exercise by:
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filing with our Corporate Secretary a written notice of
revocation;
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submitting a different proxy at a later date through any of the
methods available to you; or
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attending the special meeting and voting in person; however,
attendance at the special meeting will not in and of itself
constitute revocation of a proxy.
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If you have instructed your broker to vote your shares, you must
follow directions received from your broker to change these
instructions.
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Global Industries shareholders who require assistance
should contact the persons at the phone number provided on
page x of this proxy statement.
Delivery
of Proxy Materials to Households Where Two or More Global
Industries Shareholders Reside
The SEC has adopted rules that permit companies and
intermediaries (e.g., brokers) to satisfy the delivery
requirements for proxy statements being sent to two or more
shareholders sharing the same address by delivering a single
proxy statement addressed to those shareholders. This process,
which is commonly referred to as householding,
potentially means extra convenience for shareholders and
cost-savings for companies.
In connection with the Global Industries special meeting, a
number of brokers with account holders who are Global
Industries shareholders will be householding Global
Industries proxy materials. As a result, a single proxy
statement will be delivered to multiple shareholders sharing an
address unless contrary instructions have been received from the
applicable shareholders. Once a Global Industries
shareholder receives notice from its broker that they will be
householding communications to such shareholders address,
householding will continue until such shareholder is notified
otherwise or until such shareholder revokes its consent. If, at
any time, a Global Industries shareholder no longer wishes
to participate in householding and would prefer to receive a
separate proxy statement, such shareholder should notify its
broker or contact Global Industries orally or in writing at
Global Industries, Ltd., 11490 Westheimer, Suite 400,
Houston, Texas 77077,
(281) 529-7799,
Attention: Corporate Secretary, and Global Industries will
promptly deliver a separate copy of the proxy statement. Global
Industries shareholders who currently receive multiple
copies of this proxy statement at their address and would like
to request householding of their communications should contact
their broker.
Solicitation
of Proxies
All costs related to the solicitation of proxies, including the
printing and mailing of this proxy statement, will be borne by
us. We have retained Innisfree M&A Incorporated to aid in
the solicitation of proxies and to verify records relating to
the solicitation. Innisfree M&A Incorporated will receive a
fee for its services of $25,000, fees per call to shareholders
and expense reimbursement. In addition, our directors, officers
and employees may, without additional compensation, solicit
proxies from shareholders by mail, telephone, facsimile, or in
person. However, you should be aware that certain members of our
board of directors and our officers have interests in the merger
that are different from, or in addition to, yours. See The
Merger Interests of Global Industries
Executive Officers and Directors in the Merger.
We will also reimburse brokers and other custodians, nominees
and fiduciaries for their expenses in sending these materials to
you and getting your voting instructions.
Stock
Certificates
Shareholders should not send stock certificates with their
proxies. A letter of transmittal with instructions for the
surrender of our common stock certificates will be mailed to our
shareholders as soon as practicable after completion of the
merger.
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THE
MERGER
Description
of the Merger
Our board of directors has unanimously approved the merger
agreement and the merger whereby Global Industries will become
an indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip upon completion
of the merger. If the merger agreement is approved and adopted
by Global Industries shareholders and the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, which will remove the
limitation on ownership of Global Industries common stock by
non-U.S. persons,
is approved and adopted by Global Industries shareholders,
then, subject to other closing conditions as described below in
the section captioned The Merger Agreement
Conditions to the Closing of the Merger, Merger Sub will
be merged with and into Global Industries, and Global Industries
will be the surviving corporation in the merger. Upon completion
of the merger, Global Industries will become an indirect,
wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip. We strongly encourage you to
read carefully the merger agreement in its entirety, a copy of
which is attached as Annex A to this proxy
statement, because it is the legal contract that governs the
merger.
If the merger is completed, holders of our common stock other
than holders that have properly exercised dissenters
rights in accordance with the Louisiana Business Corporation Law
with respect to such common stock will receive the merger
consideration in exchange for each share of Global Industries
common stock held at the effective time of the merger. You will
also be entitled to receive any declared but unpaid dividends.
After the merger is completed, you will have the right to
receive the merger consideration but you will no longer have any
rights as a shareholder of Global Industries. In the case of
shares of our common stock represented by certificates, you will
receive the merger consideration for your shares of common stock
after exchanging your stock certificates in accordance with the
instructions contained in a letter of transmittal to be sent to
you shortly after completion of the merger. In the case of
shares of our common stock held in book-entry form, you will
receive the merger consideration for your shares of common stock
as promptly as practicable following the merger without the
requirement to deliver a stock certificate or letter of
transmittal.
Global Industries common stock is currently registered under the
Exchange Act and is designated for trading on NASDAQ under the
symbol GLBL. Following the merger, Global Industries
common stock will be delisted from NASDAQ and will no longer be
publicly traded, and the registration of our common stock under
the Exchange Act will be terminated.
Please see The Merger Agreement for additional and
more detailed information regarding the merger agreement.
Background
of the Merger
The Global Industries board of directors and senior management
regularly evaluate Global Industries business strategy and
prospects for growth, and consider potential opportunities to
improve Global Industries operations and financial
performance in order to maximize value for its shareholders. As
part of this evaluation, the Global Industries board of
directors and senior management have considered, among other
things, Global Industries competitive market position;
growth and revenue potential; and the viability of potential
strategic alternatives, such as acquisitions, divestitures,
expansion of service offerings and the potential merger or sale
of the company.
In early May 2011, Thierry Pilenko, the Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Technip, approached John B. Reed, Global
Industries Chief Executive Officer, to request a meeting.
On May 11, 2011, Mr. Pilenko met with Mr. Reed
and expressed Technips interest in exploring a potential
transaction with Global Industries. Mr. Reed informed
Mr. Pilenko that he would discuss the matter with the
Global Industries board of directors, but that he did not
believe that the board would be interested in pursuing a sale of
Global Industries. Later that day, Mr. Reed discussed his
conversation with Mr. Pilenko with John A. Clerico, the
Chairman of Global Industries board. On May 17, 2011,
Mr. Pilenko called Mr. Reed again to reiterate
Technips interest in commencing discussions concerning a
potential transaction with Global Industries. Mr. Reed
informed
15
Mr. Pilenko that he would get back to Mr. Pilenko
after discussing the matter with the full Global Industries
board of directors at the boards next regularly scheduled
meeting.
On May 18, 2011, at a regularly scheduled meeting of the
Global Industries board of directors, Mr. Reed advised the
board of his conversations with Mr. Pilenko. The Global
Industries board of directors and management discussed Global
Industries financial condition, strategic plan and
alternatives, as well as the lack of specificity from Technip
regarding the proposed transaction. After discussion, the Global
Industries board of directors determined not to pursue a
possible sale to Technip at that time. Thereafter, Mr. Reed
contacted Mr. Pilenko and informed him of the boards
position.
On June 6, 2011, Mr. Pilenko called Mr. Reed to
express his desire to ensure that the Global Industries board of
directors understood Technips rationale in pursuing a
potential transaction with Global Industries. Subsequently,
Mr. Pilenko sent Mr. Reed a letter, which, among other
things, formally expressed Technips interest in acquiring
Global Industries, outlined the reasons why Technip believed
that a strategic transaction involving the two companies could
offer an attractive value-creation opportunity for the
shareholders of Global Industries, and indicated that Technip
anticipated that it would pay a premium in any transaction with
Global Industries. On June 7, 2011, Mr. Reed spoke
with Mr. Clerico, and they agreed that Mr. Reed should
meet with Mr. Pilenko to better understand Technips
motives in pursuing a potential transaction with Global
Industries. Mr. Reed and C. Andrew Smith, Senior Vice
President and Chief Financial Officer of Global Industries, also
contacted Simmons, Global Industries long-time financial
advisor, to discuss Technips interest in a potential
transaction with Global Industries. That same day, Mr. Reed
updated the Global Industries board of directors on
Mr. Pilenkos phone call and letter, as well as his
conversation with Mr. Clerico. On June 8, 2011,
Mr. Reed informed Mr. Pilenko that, while the Global
Industries board of directors remained uninterested in the sale
of the company, the board would consider a reasonable proposal
that potentially could offer a value-maximizing alternative to
Global Industries shareholders. On or about June 9,
2011, Mr. Pilenko and Mr. Reed scheduled a meeting for
June 15, 2011 in Paris at which time Mr. Reed would be
in Europe on other business matters. On June 9, 2011,
Mr. Reed updated the Global Industries board of directors
on his communications with Mr. Pilenko.
Between June 7, 2011 and June 15, 2011, Mr. Reed
and Mr. Clerico continued to have periodic discussions
regarding Technips interest in a potential transaction
with Global Industries and Mr. Reeds upcoming meeting
with Mr. Pilenko. On June 14, Mr. Reed and
Mr. Smith met with representatives of Simmons to discuss
Mr. Reeds planned meeting with Mr. Pilenko. On
June 15, 2011, Mr. Reed met with Mr. Pilenko and
Julian Waldron, Technips Chief Financial Officer in Paris
to discuss Technips interest in a potential transaction
with Global Industries. During the meeting, Mr. Reed
informed Mr. Pilenko that before Global Industries could
consider any transaction with Technip, Technip needed to provide
the Global Industries board of directors with an indication of
value. Mr. Pilenko advised Mr. Reed that Technip
needed to better understand Global Industries shallow
water business before making an indicative offer.
On June 28 and 29, 2011, Mr. Reed, together with
Mr. Smith and Ashit Jain, Senior Vice President and Chief
Operating Officer of Global Industries, met with
Mr. Waldron, Remi Birkeland, Technips Senior Vice
President, Business Development & Strategy
Subsea, Arnaud Real, Technips Deputy Chief Financial
Officer, and Scott Munro, Technips Vice President,
Commercial Subsea, to discuss Global
Industries shallow water business generally and based on
public information. Mr. Waldron suggested that the parties
should have their respective financial advisors engage in
preliminary discussions. However, Mr. Smith informed
Mr. Waldron that, before such discussions could take place,
Global Industries would require Technip to provide an indication
of value.
On July 5, 2011, Mr. Pilenko sent Mr. Reed a
letter expressing a preliminary, non-binding proposal, which
would remain open until July 15, 2011, for Technip to
acquire all of the outstanding shares of Global Industries
common stock for $7.80 per share in cash without any financing
contingency. Technips proposal represented a 41% premium
to the closing price of Global Industries common stock on
July 1, 2011, the last trading day before the proposal. The
letter also expressed Technips interest in entering into a
confidentiality agreement with Global Industries and proposed a
period of exclusive negotiations.
On July 7, 2011, the Global Industries board of directors
met telephonically to discuss Technips proposal. At this
meeting, Mr. Reed summarized discussions with Technip.
Representatives of Simmons shared with the
16
board their preliminary analysis concerning Technips
proposal. Simmons reviewed the oil and natural gas markets and
the offshore construction markets generally, expected rig
counts, deepwater and shallow water activity and Global
Industries historical performance and future outlook.
Simmons discussed with the board of directors its preliminary
views on the attractiveness of Technips offer. Simmons
also reviewed with the board of directors potential other
acquirers. The directors engaged in a robust discussion with
Simmons concerning Simmons report and analyses. Simmons
then left the meeting. The board of directors discussed the
implications of the advice it had received and its views of
near- and long-term value for the shareholders. After further
discussion, the board of directors reached a unanimous view
that, based on the then-current and historical trading price of
Global Industries common stock, the outlook for future financial
performance based on expectations of improved market conditions,
the companys strategic plan and the potential synergies in
a combination of the parties, Technips proposal was
financially inadequate. Vinson & Elkins LLP, which is
referred to herein as Vinson & Elkins, outside counsel
to Global Industries, then discussed with the board of directors
its duties in considering Technips proposal and Global
Industries potential responses to Technip. The directors
instructed Mr. Clerico to work with senior management and
Vinson & Elkins to develop a response that the board
would consider at a meeting scheduled for July 11, 2011.
On July 11, 2011, the Global Industries board of directors
met again telephonically. Mr. Clerico reported to the other
directors that he had developed, together with senior management
and Vinson & Elkins, a proposed response to
Technips proposal pursuant to which Mr. Reed would
communicate to Technip that the Global Industries board of
directors was not interested in pursuing a transaction at the
price indicated, but was open to considering a proposal at an
increased offer price.
Later that day, Mr. Reed contacted Mr. Pilenko and
informed him that, based on the then-current and historical
trading prices of Global Industries common stock, Global
Industries financial outlook and strategic plan and
potential synergies, the Global Industries board of directors
did not find Technips proposal to offer sufficient value
to Global Industries shareholders, but that the Global
Industries board was willing to consider an offer that
appropriately reflected the value of Global Industries.
Mr. Pilenko responded that in order to increase its offer,
Technip would need to conduct preliminary due diligence,
including in-depth discussions with Global Industries
senior management. Mr. Reed and Mr. Pilenko agreed
that further discussions should be conducted only after the
parties entered into a mutually acceptable confidentiality
agreement. Mr. Pilenko further noted that, if Technip were
to engage in such preliminary due diligence, it would request a
period of exclusivity.
Also on July 11, 2011, Mr. Reed provided a
confidentiality agreement drafted by Vinson & Elkins
to Mr. Pilenko. Vinson & Elkins, on behalf of
Global Industries, also delivered the draft confidentiality
agreement to Technip and its outside counsel, Davis
Polk & Wardwell LLP, which is referred to herein as
Davis Polk.
On July 12, 2011, Mr. Pilenko sent Mr. Reed a
letter regarding Technips proposed diligence review and
reiterating Technips request for a period during which
Global would negotiate exclusively with Technip.
Mr. Pilenko attached a proposed form of exclusivity
agreement to the letter. Also on July 12, 2011, Davis Polk
provided comments to the confidentiality agreement to
Vinson & Elkins, as well as a copy of the draft
exclusivity agreement provided to Mr. Reed by
Mr. Pilenko. Vinson & Elkins informed Davis Polk
that Global Industries was unwilling to entertain an exclusivity
arrangement at that point in time. After further negotiations on
the confidentiality agreement, the parties executed the
confidentiality agreement with a standstill
provision on July 15, 2011, with an effective date as of
July 13, 2011. Beginning on July 15, 2011, Global
Industries provided Technip with access to an electronic data
room created to assist with Technips understanding and
investigation of Global Industries.
From July 20, 2011 through July 22, 2011, members of
Global Industries senior management, including
Mr. Reed, Mr. Smith, Mr. Jain, Russell J.
Robicheaux, Global Industries Senior Vice President, Chief
Administrative Officer, General Counsel and Secretary, Trudy P.
McConnaughhay, Global Industries Vice President and
Controller, James G. Osborn, Global Industries Chief Marketing
Officer, and David R. Sheil, Global Industries Senior Vice
President, Human Resources, along with representatives of
Simmons and Vinson & Elkins, met with members of
management of Technip, and representatives of Ernst &
Young LLP, Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. LLC
(Tudor Pickering), and Blackstone Advisory Partners
(Blackstone), Technips financial advisors,
Mars & Co, Technips strategic consultant, Davis
Polk, and Phelps Dunbar LLP,
17
Technips Louisiana counsel, in Houston, Texas to provide
responses to diligence questions of Technip and its advisory
teams in panels covering, among other things, Global
Industries operating units and financial results.
Mr. Reed and Mr. Pilenko met twice in person during
this period to discuss the progress of the due diligence process.
Following the in-person due diligence sessions in Houston and
through mid-August 2011, Technip continued to conduct its due
diligence review of Global Industries.
On July 25, 2011, the board of directors of Technip held a
meeting and discussed, among other things, Technips
interest in a potential transaction with Global Industries.
Technips senior management updated the board on the status
of and findings arising from the due diligence process and the
strategic rationale of the potential transaction and answered
the directors questions. Following deliberation, the board
of directors authorized the submission by Technip of a
non-binding proposal to acquire all of the outstanding shares of
Global Industries common stock for $7.80 per share in cash.
On August 3, 2011, the Global Industries board of directors
held a regularly scheduled board meeting, at which Global
Industries second quarter operating results were
discussed. Mr. Reed updated the board of directors on
Technips ongoing due diligence. That same day, Global
Industries issued a press release announcing its operating
results for the three months ended June 30, 2011, including
revenue, net loss and loss per diluted share of
$202.9 million, $61.1 million and $0.54, respectively,
for the six months ended June 30, 2011, as compared to
revenue, net loss and loss per diluted share of
$228.6 million, $20.0 million and $0.18, respectively,
for the six months ended June 30, 2010. Global
Industries stock price declined to $3.25 by
August 10, 2011. From late July through mid-August 2011,
Mr. Reed received inquiries from three other offshore
construction companies. Two of these inquiries were discussed
over lunch meetings and did not lead to an indication of
interest or any other developments beyond preliminary
discussions. The third inquiry came from the chief executive
officer of a company that is a strategic competitor of Global
Industries, referred to herein as Company A, regarding a
potential business combination. On August 15, 2011, Global
Industries formally engaged Simmons in connection with a
potential transaction with Technip by entering into an
engagement letter that had been presented to Global Industries
on August 1, 2011 and was dated as of August 1, 2011.
On August 17, 2011, Mr. Pilenko returned to Houston to
meet in-person with Mr. Reed. Mr. Pilenko and
Mr. Reed discussed the state of the equity markets and
Technips view of its preliminary offer of $7.80 per share
in light of the downturn in the equity markets and Global
Industries recently announced operating results.
Mr. Pilenko suggested that, in light of market declines, he
believed an offer of $7.00 per share reflected a fair valuation
of Global Industries. Mr. Reed informed Mr. Pilenko
that Global Industries would not be willing to continue
discussions if Technips offer was below $7.80 per share
and that Mr. Pilenko should reconsider Technips
position if negotiations were to continue. Mr. Pilenko told
Mr. Reed he would need to discuss the matter with
Technips board of directors and would contact
Mr. Reed in a few days.
On August 18, 2011, the chief executive officer of Company
A informed Mr. Reed that Company A was interested in
exploring a combination of Company A and Global Industries
pursuant to which Global Industries shareholders could
receive a combination of cash and common stock of Company A.
Mr. Reed informed the chief executive officer of Company A
that if Company A was serious about a potential transaction, it
needed to provide a concrete indication of interest and
demonstrate a commitment to negotiating a transaction in a
timely fashion. In light of these developments, the Global
Industries board of directors scheduled a special meeting for
August 19, 2011.
On the morning of August 19, 2011, Mr. Pilenko sent
Mr. Reed a letter concerning Technips interest in a
potential transaction with Global Industries. The letter noted
that, as Mr. Pilenko had discussed with Mr. Reed on
August 17, 2011, in light of the changes in the risk and
outlook for Global Industries business, including those
highlighted by Global Industries second quarter results,
the increase in volatility in the industry, and Technips
more modest view of synergies, Technip continued to believe that
an offer of $7.00 per share reflected a fair valuation of Global
Industries. However, the letter noted that Technip was willing
to extend its non-binding proposal to acquire all of the
outstanding shares of Global Industries common stock at $7.80
per share in cash if Global Industries granted Technip a
30-day
period of exclusivity and an agreement by Global
18
Industries to pay Technip a termination fee of
$37.0 million in certain circumstances (assuming execution
of a definitive merger agreement). Mr. Pilenkos
letter also noted that Technips proposal would remain open
until August 21, 2011. Technips revised proposal
represented a 106% premium to the closing price of Global
Industries common stock on August 18, 2011, the last
trading day before Technips proposal. Mr. Reed and
Mr. Pilenko discussed Technips proposal.
Mr. Pilenko reiterated that Technips $7.80 per share
proposal was conditioned on Global Industries agreement to
a period of exclusivity (and reflected value ascribed by Technip
for such exclusivity). Mr. Pilenko also indicated that
Technip was unwilling to participate in, and would not continue
negotiations in the event of, an auction process.
Later the morning of August 19, 2011, the Global Industries
board of directors met telephonically. Mr. Reed advised the
board of his recent discussions with Mr. Pilenko and the
chief executive officer of Company A. Mr. Reed then updated
the board on the financial performance of Global Industries and
managements outlook as a stand-alone company.
Mr. Reed detailed for the board continuing weak market
conditions since the board first considered Technips
proposed offer of $7.80 per share in early July 2011 and Global
Industries difficulty in adding additional backlog or
obtaining higher margins on its contracts. Simmons provided the
board of directors with Simmons preliminary analysis of
Technips proposal and its view of the merits and
likelihood of potential alternative transactions, including with
Company A. Simmons also shared its view on the outlook for
Global Industries on a stand-alone basis. Vinson &
Elkins then reviewed the directors duties with respect to
evaluating Technips proposal and request for exclusivity,
as well as alternative responses to Technips proposal. The
Global Industries board of directors did not believe it was
necessary to create a special committee to evaluate
Technips proposal because, among other things, a majority
of the board is comprised of independent directors, the board
did not expect that Technip would retain senior executive
management following the proposed transaction, and the
previously executed change in control agreements between Global
Industries and Mr. Reed and Mr. Clerico would govern
any
change-in-control
compensation they might receive in a transaction.
After discussion, the board advised Mr. Reed to contact
Mr. Pilenko and inform him that the board was considering
Technips offer but needed time to evaluate the exclusivity
provisions of the offer. The board of directors further
instructed Mr. Reed to contact the chief executive officer
of Company A regarding a potential alternative transaction and
to request a specific indication of value and a commitment to
negotiating a transaction in a timely manner. The board then
requested that Simmons provide background on Company A,
including the value of Company As common stock. Finally,
the board requested that management provide the board with an
update of managements evaluation of Global
Industries strategic plan going forward and the potential
synergies or strategic fit of Global Industries and Company A.
Later on August 19, 2011, following the Global Industries
board meeting, Mr. Reed contacted the chief executive
officer of Company A to further discuss Company As
interest in pursuing a potential transaction with Global
Industries. At Mr. Reeds request, representatives
from Simmons contacted the chief executive officer of Company A
and reiterated that if Company A was serious about a potential
transaction with Global Industries, it needed to demonstrate a
commitment to negotiating a transaction in a timely fashion. The
chief executive officer of Company A told representatives of
Simmons that Company As board of directors was planning on
meeting early the following week, and that Company A would
contact Global Industries and Simmons following the board
meeting.
On August 22, 2011, Mr. Reed contacted
Mr. Pilenko and informed him that Global Industries was
unwilling to grant Technip exclusivity at the $7.80 per share
offer price or to agree to a termination fee of
$37.0 million (assuming execution of a definitive merger
agreement). Mr. Pilenko asked Mr. Reed to propose a
per-share purchase price at which Global Industries would be
willing to grant exclusivity. Mr. Reed explained that he
would need to discuss this request with the Global Industries
board of directors and get back to Mr. Pilenko.
Mr. Reed then contacted the chief executive officer of
Company A, who informed Mr. Reed that the Company A board
of directors had met and that, while the Company A board was
interested in the potential transaction, Company A would need to
undertake a due diligence review of Global Industries before it
was prepared to make an indicative offer. This due diligence
review was estimated by Company A to require up to
19
two weeks. Mr. Reed explained to the chief executive
officer of Company A that an alternative transaction was
available at a compelling offer price, and that if Company A was
seriously interested in Global Industries, it needed to provide
a preliminary indication of interest on a faster timeline.
Also on August 22, 2011, Vinson & Elkins
contacted Davis Polk and advised it of certain changes to the
form of exclusivity agreement, should Global Industries and
Technip reach agreement on a price level at which Global
Industries was willing to grant exclusivity. These changes
included deletion of an obligation by Global Industries to
disclose the names of any third parties who contacted Global
Industries about a potential combination transaction and certain
exceptions to allow Global Industries to respond to any tender
offers made by third parties. Vinson & Elkins also
advised Davis Polk that Global Industries would only grant
exclusivity on the basis of price and would not negotiate other
terms of the merger agreement, such as deal protection and
termination fees, except in the context of a definitive
agreement.
On August 23, 2011, the Global Industries board of
directors met telephonically. Mr. Reed updated the board on
his discussions with Mr. Pilenko and with Company A.
Management then provided the board with its updated views on
future financial performance, which again noted a deterioration
in the global economy overall and a challenging environment for
adding additional backlog and obtaining higher margins on
contracts. Vinson & Elkins then provided the board
with its analysis of the exclusivity provisions and an update on
Vinson & Elkins discussions with Davis Polk on
these points. Simmons presented to the board an update of
Simmons preliminary analyses of Technips offer and
its view of the feasibility of an alternative transaction with
Company A. The board discussed its concern that Technip might
withdraw its offer if Global Industries continued to refuse
Technips request for exclusivity. In addition, the board
of directors discussed Technips stated refusal to
participate in an auction process and the potential distraction
and disruption an auction process could present to Global
Industries employees, customers and suppliers. The board
discussed the proposed terms of the exclusivity agreement,
including changes negotiated by Vinson & Elkins.
Moreover, the board concluded that a
30-day
period of exclusivity was reasonable, in light of the
exclusivity agreement as a whole. The board also recognized
that, while it was not determining to sell the company at that
time, if a definitive agreement were reached with Technip during
the exclusivity period, third parties, including Company A,
would have the opportunity to present superior proposals after
the announcement of the transaction with Technip. In particular,
the board discussed Company As continued unwillingness to
provide even a preliminary indication of its valuation of Global
Industries despite repeated requests from Global Industries, the
boards belief, based in part on its advice from its
financial advisor, that Company A was unlikely to offer a price
in excess of Technips proposal, and the fact that Company
A would have the opportunity to make such a proposal even after
a definitive agreement was reached with Technip. After a lengthy
discussion, and based on the boards view of continuing
weak market conditions, the board instructed Mr. Reed to
seek an increase in the $7.80 per share price but authorized
Mr. Reed to enter into an exclusivity arrangement as
presented to the board of directors at that price or higher.
Mr. Reed then met with members of senior management and
discussed the anticipated response to Mr. Pilenko. Based on
the concern of the Global Industries board of directors that
Technip might withdraw its offer of $7.80, the fact that the
$7.80 offer price represented a premium of over 100% of the
then-current trading price of Global Industries common stock,
Simmons preliminary analysis of the Technip offer, the
downturn in the equity markets, the markets reaction to
Global Industries second quarter financial results, and
the boards authorization to enter into exclusivity at the
$7.80 offer price, Mr. Reed and management determined to
request a reasonably higher purchase price increase of
approximately five percent, or $8.20.
On August 23, 2011, Mr. Reed proposed in writing a
price of $8.20 per share in exchange for exclusivity.
Mr. Pilenko advised Mr. Reed that he would consult
with Technips board of directors and get back to him.
Mr. Reed then contacted the chief executive officer of
Company A and informed him that Global Industries was prepared
to enter into exclusive negotiations with a third party and that
if Company A was serious about an alternative transaction, it
would need to provide an indication of interest. The chief
executive officer of Company A expressly declined to provide any
details about Company As proposal, including the value it
was willing to offer for Global Industries stock.
20
On August 24, 2011, Mr. Pilenko indicated that Technip
was unwilling to pursue a transaction with Global Industries at
its proposed per share price and that the highest price it was
willing to pay was $8.00 per share and only if Global Industries
agreed to exclusivity. Mr. Reed and Mr. Pilenko agreed
that the companies would enter into a
30-day
period of exclusive negotiations on the basis of an $8.00 per
share proposal, subject to documentation. Mr. Pilenko sent
Mr. Reed a letter which included an offer to pay $8.00 per
share if an exclusivity period were granted, and indicated a new
termination fee proposal of $30 million. An offer price of
$8.00 per share represented a 117% premium to the closing price
of Global common stock on August 23, 2011, the last trading
day prior to the offer. The parties executed an exclusivity
agreement later that afternoon, but no agreement was reached
with respect to termination fee terms.
On the afternoon of August 25, 2011, Davis Polk, on behalf
of Technip, distributed a draft merger agreement to
Vinson & Elkins. Among other things, the merger
agreement provided for $8.00 per share consideration and a
termination fee of $30.0 million to be payable in certain
circumstances. Davis Polk also delivered a draft voting
agreement to Vinson & Elkins, to be signed by William
J. Doré, Global Industries founder and owner of
approximately 10% of Global Industries outstanding common
stock.
From August 29, 2011 through September 2, 2011,
representatives of Technip and Global Industries met in Houston,
Texas to conduct and discuss additional due diligence.
On August 30, 2011, Vinson & Elkins sent a
revised draft merger agreement to Davis Polk. The requested
changes included a two-tier termination fee whereby if Global
Industries terminated the transaction in favor of a superior
proposal within 45 days of the announcement of the merger
agreement, the termination fee would be $23.0 million,
while if such termination occurred after such
45-day
period, the termination fee would be $37.0 million. Other
requested changes included (i) reducing Technips time
period to match superior proposals to two (as opposed to five)
business days and eliminating such matching rights if the
superior proposal represented consideration in excess of 110% of
the consideration to be paid under the merger agreement,
(ii) allowing the Global Industries board of directors to
change its recommendation for reasons other than a superior
proposal, (iii) reducing the number of circumstances under
which a termination fee was payable by Global Industries,
(iv) providing that if Global Industries paid a termination
fee, that payment would be Technips exclusive remedy and
(v) an agreement by the parties that Global Industries
could seek damages in the event of a breach by Technip that
would be measured based on the difference of the Global
Industries stock price relative to the $8.00 per share price.
The Vinson & Elkins revised draft merger agreement
also reserved discussion on the voting agreement request, the
scope of the government approvals covenant, the treatment of
Global Industries employees and the conditioning of
Technips obligations to close on receipt of CFIUS approval
and the consent of the U.S. Maritime Administration to the
change of control under Global Industries Title XI
Bonds.
Separately on August 30, 2011, Mr. Sheil met with
Steve Allen, Technips Senior Vice President
Human Resources, to discuss generally the treatment of Global
Industries existing employees and retention arrangements
for key employees. Technip indicated that it intended to retain
the majority of Global Industries employees following the
transaction. Mr. Sheil and Mr. Allen discussed
Technips willingness to maintain base salaries,
opportunities to receive bonuses, and standard severance
policies for Global Industries employees who continued with
Global Industries following the transaction at substantially the
same levels as prior to the transaction. There were no
discussions regarding the retention of members of Global
Industries senior executive management team.
On August 31, 2011, Vinson & Elkins and Davis
Polk discussed a number of the issues raised in
Vinson & Elkins revised draft of the merger
agreement, including Technips desire to have
Mr. Doré enter into a voting agreement.
On September 1, 2011, the Global Industries board of
directors met in Houston, Texas, with certain members of the
board participating telephonically. Also in attendance were
members of management and representatives of Simmons and
Vinson & Elkins. Mr. Reed updated the board on
Technips ongoing due diligence and the historical
performance of and outlook for Global Industries.
Vinson & Elkins then discussed with the board its
duties in considering the proposed transaction with Technip as
well as a detailed summary of the key terms and provisions of
the proposed merger agreement. Simmons then presented to the
board its
21
updated analysis of the transaction. Simmons also presented the
board information regarding a number of potential alternative
buyers, including Company A, and their likely strategic interest
and ability to consummate a transaction, particularly at an
offer price near the price offered by Technip. Simmons
considered certain other potential strategic acquirors based on
financial capability and strategic focus to pursue a transaction
with Global Industries and presented this analysis to the board.
The board, along with its advisors, discussed at length, among
other things, (1) the prospects for Global Industries as a
going concern both in the near term and long term, and the
challenges to achieve those potential results given
underutilization of Global Industries fleet and low
margins, (2) the financial analysis prepared and presented
by Simmons, (3) the lack of any other offers for Global
Industries, including the fact that none of the three inbound
inquiries following the announcement of Global Industries
second-quarter results led to a proposal to acquire Global
Industries, (4) Simmons analysis of other potential
bidders and the potential synergies with certain potential
bidders, (5) the likelihood that other potential bidders
would be able to offer a price that exceeded Technips,
(6) the terms and conditions in the proposed merger
agreement, and (7) the fact that potential bidders were
free to submit potential superior proposals to acquire Global
Industries following the announcement of a merger
agreement with Technip, and that the Global board of directors
retained the right to terminate the merger agreement in favor of
a superior proposal. Mr. Sheil then reported that Technip
indicated that it intended to retain the majority of Global
Industries employees following the transaction. He
explained that base salaries, opportunities to receive bonuses,
and standard severance policies for Global Industries employees
who continued with Global Industries following the transaction
would remain at substantially the same levels as prior to the
transaction. He then reported that Global Industries had
identified approximately 43 key managers and that Global
Industries intended to put in place
change-in-control
agreements for these managers. Mr. Sheil then briefly
described the terms of the proposed
change-in-control
agreements for these key managers. The board then engaged in a
discussion about Technips request that Mr. Doré
sign a voting agreement. The board determined that Mr. Reed
and Vinson & Elkins should convey to Technip and Davis
Polk that the board was unwilling to condition the potential
transaction on Mr. Doré entering into a voting
agreement. Further, the board determined that Mr. Reed,
Ambassador Edward P. Djerejian, a member of the Global
Industries board of directors, and a representative from
Vinson & Elkins would discuss the transaction
confidentially with Mr. Doré prior to announcement.
On September 2, 2011, Davis Polk delivered to
Vinson & Elkins a revised merger agreement. The
requested changes included changing the bifurcated termination
fee from $23.0 million/$37.0 million to
$28.0 million/$35.0 million. In addition, Technip
continued to request a five business day matching right period
and rejected the elimination of matching rights in the event of
a superior proposal in excess of 110% of the merger
consideration. That evening, Mr. Reed reiterated to
Mr. Pilenko that while members of the board of directors of
Global Industries intended to discuss the transaction with
Mr. Doré confidentially prior to announcement, the
board was unwilling to condition the transaction on
Mr. Doré signing a voting agreement. Mr. Pilenko
agreed to withdraw this request.
On September 3, 2011, Vinson & Elkins and Davis
Polk discussed certain outstanding points on the merger
agreement, including the commitments Technip would undertake to
obtain regulatory approval, conditioning the transaction on
approval by CFIUS, the standard by which a breach by Global
Industries of the non-solicitation covenant could lead to a
termination right and the obligation to pay a termination fee.
The parties also agreed that the time period for Technips
ability to match a superior proposal would be five business days
initially, but would be two business days for revisions to a
superior proposal from the same third party. Vinson &
Elkins also proposed that the bifurcated termination fee be
$25.0 million for terminations due to a superior proposal
within 45 days of signing and $35.0 million for all
other terminations.
On September 4, 2011, Davis Polk delivered to
Vinson & Elkins a revised merger agreement, which
continued to provide that Technip was not obligated to take any
remedial action to obtain regulatory approval and which reserved
comment on Technips covenant concerning Global
Industries employees. Moreover, Technip proposed
eliminating the bifurcated termination fee and reverting to a
$30.0 million termination fee in all instances where a
termination fee was owed.
On September 5 and 6, 2011, Global Industries and Technip
continued to discuss diligence matters on certain tax-related
items as well as the effect of a possible transaction on Global
Industries 2011 incentive
22
compensation arrangements. In addition, Global Industries
management discussed with Technip its desire to put in place
change-in-control agreements with certain key employees after
the entry into the merger agreement in order to ensure
operational continuity prior to the consummation of any
potential transaction. There were no discussions regarding the
retention of members of Global Industries senior executive
management team.
At the direction of the board, on September 7, 2011,
Mr. Reed, Ambassador Djerejian and a representative from
Vinson & Elkins met with Mr. Doré at the
office of Ambassador Djerejian and, under an oral agreement of
confidentiality, summarized the transaction terms to
Mr. Doré. Mr. Doré indicated that he
appreciated the consultation.
On September 8, 2011, Vinson & Elkins delivered
to Davis Polk a revised merger agreement that, among other
things, required Technip to take certain remedial actions in
order to obtain regulatory approval so long as it did not result
in a burdensome condition on Technip and continued to request a
bifurcated termination fee of
$25.0 million/$35.0 million. The parties ultimately
agreed that Technip would agree to remedial actions that did not
result in a burdensome condition and that the termination fee
would be a flat $30.0 million.
On September 8, 2011, Technips board of directors met
in Paris, France, with certain members of the board
participating telephonically. Also in attendance by telephone or
in person were members of management and representatives of
Blackstone, Tudor Pickering and Davis Polk. Mr. Pilenko
updated the board on the findings of Technips due
diligence investigation of Global Industries, and the valuation
exercise undertaken. John Harrison, Technips General
Counsel, presented a detailed summary of the key terms and
provisions of the proposed merger agreement. The board then
engaged in discussion of the transaction and asked questions of
management and the advisors. Following this discussion, the
board approved Technips entry into the transaction with
Global Industries and authorized Technips officers to
finalize and execute the merger agreement as described.
On September 10, 2011, the Global Industries board of
directors held a specially scheduled board meeting attended by
all members of the board, as well as members of management and
representatives of Simmons and Vinson & Elkins. At the
meeting, Mr. Reed updated the board on the principal
financial and other terms of the transaction and discussed the
history of the negotiations commencing with the initial written
proposal on June 6, 2011. He also discussed his view of the
principal benefits to Global Industries and its shareholders of
the combination. Vinson & Elkins then reviewed with
the Global Industries board of directors its fiduciary duties
and discussed with the board the terms and conditions of the
draft merger agreement, including provisions that permitted
Global Industries to terminate the merger agreement with Technip
in favor of a superior proposal from a third party. A discussion
then ensued in which the directors inquired about various
aspects of the draft merger agreement. Simmons presented its
financial analyses of the proposed merger, including the merger
consideration, and summarized the content of its written opinion
to the effect that, based upon and subject to the various
assumptions and limitations set forth therein, as of
September 10, 2011, the $8.00 in cash to be received by the
Global Industries shareholders pursuant to the terms of the
merger agreement was fair, from a financial point of view, to
such shareholders. Global Industries board considered many
of the same factors it had considered in its September 1,
2011 board meeting. The board again reviewed Global
Industries internal business projections and its
assessment that the likelihood of a market recovery was low
given continuing under -utilization of Global Industries
fleet and that Global Industries share price had
underperformed relative to its peers share prices. The
board also considered the fact that the $8.00 per share proposed
price under the merger agreement was higher than research
analysts price targets for Global Industries shares, which
were based on EBITDA projections that were higher than Global
Industries internal projections. Later that day Simmons
electronically delivered its written opinion dated
September 10, 2011 to the board of directors of Global
Industries. See The Merger Financial
Advisors Opinion Regarding the Merger Consideration.
Following further review and discussion among the members of the
Global Industries board of directors, the board determined that
the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated by the
merger agreement were advisable and in the best interests of
Global Industries shareholders, and the Global Industries
directors voted unanimously to approve the merger agreement and
the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement.
Following the conclusion of the special meeting of the Global
Industries board of directors, the merger agreement and related
documentation were finalized. Later that day, Technip agreed to
certain requests by
23
Global Industries with respect to the payment of 2011 incentive
compensation at target levels if the transaction did not close
prior to December 31, 2011, as well as a request to put in
place change-in-control agreements with certain key employees
after the entry into the merger agreement in order to ensure
operational continuity prior to the consummation of any
potential transaction. There were no discussions regarding the
retention of members of Global Industries senior executive
management team.
On September 11, 2011, Technip and Global Industries
executed the merger agreement.
Prior to the commencement of trading on the Paris Stock Exchange
on September 12, 2011, each of Global Industries and
Technip announced the transaction. Various communications and
the merger agreement were filed with the SEC on
September 12, 2011 and thereafter.
Reasons
for the Merger
At the meeting of our board of directors on September 10,
2011, our board of directors approved the merger with Technip
and recommended it to our shareholders. See The
Merger Background of the Merger, and The
Merger Global Industries Board of Directors
Recommendation.
In making its determination and recommendation set forth above,
our board of directors considered, among other things:
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its knowledge of the current state of our business, including
our financial condition, operations, business plans, management,
competitive position and prospects;
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our financial and strategic plan and the initiatives and the
potential execution risks associated with such plan, and in
connection with these considerations, the attendant risk that,
if we did not enter into the merger agreement, the price that
might be received by Global Industries shareholders
selling our common stock in the open market, both from a
short-term and long-term perspective, could be less, in present
value terms, than the merger consideration, especially in light
of recent economic trends in the stock market and the currently
challenging business environment;
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its belief, based on its knowledge of the matters enumerated
above, that the certainty of the merger consideration of $8.00
per share outweighed the substantial risk that our shares might
not trade at prices substantially above $8.00 per share for some
substantial period;
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the fact that the merger consideration to be received by our
shareholders represented a premium of approximately 55% over the
closing stock price of our shares as reported on the Nasdaq
Global Select Market on September 9, 2011 (which was the
last full trading day prior to our board of directors
approval of the merger agreement with Technip) and a 92% premium
over the average closing stock price of our shares as reported
on the Nasdaq Global Select Market for the 30 trading days
ending on September 9, 2011;
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its belief, based on advice of Simmons and an assessment of the
ability and willingness of other potential buyers to acquire
Global Industries, that the premium offered by Technip was
greater than any purchase price reasonably available through a
public auction, and that the boards retention of a right
to terminate the merger agreement in favor of a superior
proposal would permit a superior proposal, if any, to emerge and
be considered by the board;
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the opinion of Simmons, dated September 10, 2011, to our
board of directors as to the fairness, from a financial point of
view and as of the date of the opinion, of the merger
consideration to be received by holders of Global
Industries common stock, as more fully described below in
the section entitled The Merger Financial
Advisors Opinion Regarding the Merger Consideration,
as well as the presentation Simmons made to our board of
directors on that date regarding the analyses performed in
connection with its fairness opinion;
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historical and current information concerning our business,
financial performance and condition, operations, management and
competitive position, and current industry, economic and market
conditions;
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24
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the fact that the merger consideration is all cash, which
provides certainty of value to our shareholders compared to a
transaction in which they would receive stock or other non-cash
consideration;
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the experience, reputation and financial capabilities of Technip
and thus the probability that the transaction would close;
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the terms of the merger agreement, including the parties
representations, warranties and covenants, and the conditions to
their respective obligations, which were negotiated on an
arms-length basis and with the advice of legal and financial
advisors;
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the likelihood that the merger will be consummated in light of
the nature of the conditions to Technips obligation to
complete the merger;
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the absence of any financing condition to Technips
obligation to consummate the merger;
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the fact that dissenters rights would be available to
Global Industries shareholders (for more information, see
the section entitled The Merger
Dissenters Rights); and
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the fact that the merger agreement permits our board of
directors to authorize us to participate in discussions and
negotiations with, and furnish information to, third parties in
connection with bona fide written acquisition proposals that
such third parties might wish to submit to Global Industries and
to change its recommendation in favor of the merger following
receipt of a superior proposal to potentially enter into a
transaction with another acquirer, subject to the limitations
described under The Merger Agreement
Solicitation of Transactions and subject to the payment of
the termination fee (approximately 3.2% of our fully diluted
equity value).
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In the course of its deliberations, our board of directors also
considered, among other things, the following potentially
negative factors regarding the merger:
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the facts that the price of our shares may have been depressed
prior to the announcement of the merger due to cyclical factors
in our markets and our shareholders would not benefit from any
potential future increase in our value beyond $8.00 per share;
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the fact that gains from the sale of shares in the merger would
be taxable to our shareholders for U.S. federal income tax
purposes;
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the restrictions that the merger agreement would impose on our
ability to operate our business until the merger was completed
or until the merger agreement was terminated;
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the possibility of a disruption to our operations and personnel
following the announcement of the execution of the merger
agreement and the resulting potentially adverse effect on Global
Industries if the merger were not to close;
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the customary restrictions the merger agreement imposes on
soliciting competing bids and the fact that we may be obligated
to pay to Technip the termination fee (approximately 3.2% of our
fully diluted equity value) and the possibility that the
termination fee could discourage others from submitting a
competing proposal to acquire Global Industries or reduce the
price in an alternative transaction; and
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the interests that our directors and our executive officers may
have with respect to the merger in addition to their interests
as shareholders generally, as described in The
Merger Interests of Global Industries
Executive Officers and Directors in the Merger.
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Our board of directors concluded that these potentially negative
factors were substantially outweighed by the opportunity
presented by the merger for our shareholders to monetize their
Global Industries investment for $8.00 per share in cash if the
merger conditions were satisfied, which our board of directors
believed would maximize the value of shareholders shares
and eliminate the risk that inherent uncertainty affecting our
future prospects could result in a diminution in the market
value of their shares. Accordingly, our board of directors
concluded that the merger was in the best interests of our
shareholders.
25
The preceding discussion of the factors considered by our board
of directors is not, and is not intended to be, exhaustive, but
does set forth the material factors considered. In light of the
variety of factors considered in connection with its evaluation
of the merger and the complexity of these matters, our board of
directors did not find it practicable to, and did not, quantify
or otherwise attempt to assign relative weights to the various
factors considered in reaching its determination, nor did it
undertake to make any specific determination as to whether any
particular factors (or any aspect of any particular factors) was
favorable or unfavorable to its ultimate determination. Rather,
our board of directors reached its conclusion and recommendation
based on its evaluation of the totality of the information
presented, considered and analyzed. In considering the factors
discussed above, individual directors may have ascribed
differing significance to different factors.
Global
Industries Board of Directors Recommendation
Our board of directors has unanimously approved resolutions
(i) determining that the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby are in the best interests of
Global Industries shareholders, (ii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the merger agreement and the
transactions contemplated thereby, (iii) approving,
adopting and declaring advisable the adoption of the amended and
restated articles of incorporation, and (iv) recommending
approval and adoption of the merger agreement and the amended
and restated articles of incorporation by our shareholders.
Accordingly, our board of directors unanimously recommends
that all of our shareholders vote FOR the approval and adoption
of the merger agreement and FOR the approval and adoption of the
amended and restated articles of incorporation. Additionally,
our board of directors unanimously recommends that all of our
shareholders vote FOR the proposal regarding certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements.
The merger and the adoption of the amended and restated
articles of incorporation are each conditional upon the other.
Neither the merger nor the amendment of the articles of
incorporation will take place unless the other is also approved
by our shareholders.
Financial
Advisors Opinion Regarding the Merger
Consideration
Simmons acted as financial advisor to the board of directors of
Global Industries in connection with the merger. Simmons is an
internationally recognized investment banking firm that
specializes in the energy industry and is continually engaged in
the valuation of businesses and their securities in connection
with mergers and acquisitions, leveraged buyouts, negotiated
underwritings, secondary distributions of listed and unlisted
securities and private placements. Simmons was selected to act
as financial advisor to the board of directors of Global
Industries in connection with the merger on the basis of
Simmons experience in similar transactions, its reputation
in the investment community and its familiarity with Global
Industries and its business.
On September 10, 2011, Simmons delivered to the board of
directors of Global Industries the written opinion of Simmons to
the effect that, based on and subject to various assumptions and
limitations described in its opinion, as of September 10,
2011, the $8.00 in cash to be received by the shareholders of
Global Industries pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement
is fair, from a financial point of view, to such shareholders.
For the complete terms of Simmons opinion, holders of
Global Industries common stock are referred to the full text of
Simmons written opinion to the board of directors of
Global Industries, which describes, among other things, certain
assumptions made, procedures followed, factors considered and
limitations on the review undertaken. The full text of
Simmons written opinion is attached as Annex C hereto
and is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Simmons
delivered its opinion to the board of directors of Global
Industries for the benefit and use of the board of directors of
Global Industries in connection with and for purposes of its
evaluation of the merger consideration from a financial point of
view. Simmons opinion did not address the relative merits
of the merger as compared to other business strategies or
transactions that might be available with respect to Global
Industries or Global Industries underlying business
decision to effect the merger. Simmons opinion did not
address any other aspect of the merger and does not constitute a
recommendation to any shareholder of Global
26
Industries as to how to vote or act in connection with the
proposed merger. Holders of Global Industries common stock are
urged to read Simmons opinion in its entirety.
In connection with rendering its opinion, Simmons, among other
things:
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reviewed and analyzed a draft merger agreement dated as of
September 9, 2011;
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reviewed and analyzed the financial statements and other
information concerning Global Industries, including Global
Industries (a) Annual Reports on
Form 10-K
for each of the years in the three-year period ended
December 31, 2010; (b) Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the quarters ended June 30, 2011 and March 31,
2011; (c) Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed on August 4, 2011, May 23, 2011, May 5,
2011, March 17, 2011, February 28, 2011,
February 25, 2011 and February 24, 2011; and
(d) Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed on
April 5, 2011;
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reviewed and analyzed certain other internal information,
primarily financial in nature, relating to Global Industries,
which was provided to Simmons by the management of Global
Industries, including internal financial forecasts and other
estimates of the future operating and financial performance of
Global Industries, in each case developed by the management of
Global Industries;
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reviewed and analyzed certain publicly available information
concerning the trading of, and the trading market for, the
common stock of Global Industries;
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reviewed and analyzed certain publicly available information
with respect to certain other companies that Simmons believed to
be comparable to Global Industries and the trading markets for
certain of such companies securities;
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reviewed and analyzed certain publicly available information
concerning the estimates of the future operating and financial
performance of Global Industries and the comparable companies
prepared by industry experts unaffiliated with Global Industries;
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reviewed and analyzed certain publicly available information
concerning the markets in which Global Industries operates
prepared by industry experts unaffiliated with Global Industries;
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reviewed and analyzed certain publicly available information
concerning the nature and terms of certain other transactions
considered relevant to Simmons analysis;
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reviewed and analyzed such other analyses and examinations as
Simmons deemed necessary and appropriate;
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met with certain officers and employees of Global Industries to
discuss the foregoing, as well as other matters believed
relevant to Simmons analysis; and
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considered such other information, financial studies, analyses
and investigations, and financial, economic and market criteria
which Simmons deemed relevant.
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In arriving at its opinion, Simmons did not independently verify
any of the foregoing information and relied on it being complete
and accurate in all material respects. With respect to the
financial forecasts, Simmons assumed that they were reasonably
prepared on bases reflecting the best currently available
estimates and judgments of Global Industries management as
to the future financial performance of Global Industries.
Simmons assumed that the final/execution version of the merger
agreement was substantially the same as the latest draft of such
document that Simmons reviewed and that the merger would be
consummated in accordance with the terms set forth in the merger
agreement without any waiver, amendment or delay of any material
terms or conditions. Simmons assumed that in connection with the
receipt of all necessary governmental, regulatory or other
approvals and consents required for the merger, no delays,
limitations, conditions or restrictions would be imposed that
would have a material adverse effect on the receipt of the
merger consideration by the shareholders of Global Industries.
Simmons is not a legal, tax or regulatory advisor and has relied
upon, without independent verification, the assessment of Global
Industries and its legal, tax and regulatory advisors with
respect to such matters. Simmons did not perform any tax
analysis, nor was Simmons furnished with any such analysis. In
addition, Simmons did not make an independent evaluation
27
or appraisal of the assets of Global Industries. While Simmons
was asked to analyze certain third parties as potential
transaction parties, Simmons was not requested to, and did not,
solicit third party indications of interest in acquiring all or
any part of Global Industries.
In conducting its analysis and arriving at its opinion, Simmons
considered such financial and other factors as it deemed
appropriate under the circumstances including, among others, the
following: (i) the historical and current financial
position and results of operations of Global Industries;
(ii) the business prospects of Global Industries;
(iii) the historical and current market for the common
stock of Global Industries and for the equity securities of
certain other companies believed to be comparable to Global
Industries; (iv) the value of the discounted cash flows of
Global Industries under several scenarios and related
sensitivities; and (v) the nature and terms of certain
other acquisition transactions that Simmons believed to be
relevant. Simmons also took into account its assessment of
general economic, market and financial conditions and its
experience in connection with similar transactions and
securities valuation generally. Simmons opinion
necessarily was based upon conditions as they existed and could
be evaluated on, and on the information made available at,
September 10, 2011. Events occurring after such date may
affect Simmons opinion and the assumptions used in
preparing it, and Simmons does not assume any obligation to
update, revise or reaffirm its opinion.
Simmons opinion is only for the information and assistance
of the board of directors of Global Industries in connection
with its consideration of the merger. Simmons opinion did
not address Global Industries underlying business decision
to pursue the merger or the relative merits of the merger as
compared to any alternative business strategies that might exist
for Global Industries. Simmons opinion did not address the
fairness of the amount or nature of the compensation to any of
Global Industries officers, directors or employees, or
class of such persons, relative to the compensation to the
public shareholders of Global Industries. Simmons opinion
did not constitute a recommendation to any shareholder as to how
such shareholder should vote on the merger.
The following represents a brief summary of the material
financial analyses presented by Simmons to the board of
directors of Global Industries in connection with its opinion.
The following summary, however, does not purport to be a
complete description of the financial analyses performed by
Simmons. The order of analyses described does not represent
relative importance or weight given to those analyses by
Simmons. Some of the summaries of the financial analyses include
information presented in tabular format. The tables must be read
together with the full text of each summary and are alone not a
complete description of Simmons financial analyses.
Considering the summary data and tables alone without
considering the full narrative description of the financial
analyses, including the methodologies and assumptions underlying
the analyses, could create a misleading or incomplete view of
the financial analyses performed by Simmons. Except as otherwise
noted, the following quantitative information, to the extent
that it is based on market data, is based on market data as it
existed on or before September 10, 2011 and is not
necessarily indicative of current market conditions.
Financial Analysis. Simmons reviewed Global
Industries historical and projected financial performance,
including Global Industries historical and projected free
cash flow results, historical balance sheets, historical
backlog, historical vessel utilization, and historical and
projected income statement data, including revenue, EBITDA,
EBIT, net income and diluted earnings per share, among other
items.
28
Transaction Premium Analysis. Simmons also
analyzed the merger consideration to be received by the
shareholders of Global Industries common stock as set forth in
the merger agreement based on the historical market prices of
Global Industries common stock. The following table presents the
results of this analysis:
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Stock Price of
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Implied Premium/
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Global Industries
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(Discount) At Offer
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Date/Time Period (through September 9, 2011)
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Common Stock
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($8.00)
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As of September 9, 2011
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$
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5.15
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55.3
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%
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10-trading day average
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4.65
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72.0
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%
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30-trading day average
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4.17
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92.1
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%
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60-trading day average
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4.76
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67.9
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%
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90-trading day average
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5.21
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53.6
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%
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One week prior
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4.57
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75.1
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%
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Two weeks prior
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3.95
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102.5
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%
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Three weeks prior
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3.50
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128.6
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%
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Four weeks prior
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3.50
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128.6
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%
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Year-to-date
2011 average
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6.77
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18.1
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%
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52-week average
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6.55
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22.1
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%
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52-week high
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10.11
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(20.9
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)%
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52-week low
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3.25
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146.2
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%
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29
Simmons also analyzed certain information relating to the
following 39 selected public energy service transactions since
2005:
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Date Announced
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Acquiror
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Target
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August 2011*
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Transocean Ltd.
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Aker Drilling ASA
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July 2011*
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National Oilwell Varco, Inc.
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Ameron International Corporation
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April 2011
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Chesapeake Energy Corp.
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Bronco Drilling Company, Inc.
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April 2011
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Clean Harbors, Inc.
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Peak Energy Services Ltd.
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April 2011
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Western Energy Services Corp.
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Stoneham Drilling Trust
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February 2011
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ENSCO plc
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Pride International, Inc.
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January 2011
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Robbins & Myers, Inc.
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T-3 Energy Services, Inc.
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August 2010
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Seawell Limited
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Allis-Chalmers Energy Inc.
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August 2010
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Nabors Industries Ltd.
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Superior Well Services, Inc.
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July 2010
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Rowan Companies, Inc.
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Skeie Drilling & Production ASA
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June 2010
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Wellspring Capital Management LLC
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OMNI Energy Services Corp.
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April 2010
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Seadrill Limited
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Scorpion Offshore Limited
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April 2010
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Halliburton Company
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Boots & Coots Inc.
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February 2010
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Schlumberger Ltd.
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Smith International, Inc.
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December 2009
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Superior Energy Services, Inc.
|
|
Hallin Marine Subsea International Ltd.
|
August 2009
|
|
Baker Hughes Incorporated
|
|
BJ Services Company
|
June 2009
|
|
Cameron International Corporation
|
|
NATCO Group, Inc.
|
March 2009
|
|
Emerson Electric Co.
|
|
Roxar ASA
|
November 2008
|
|
Compagnie Generale de Geophysique - Veritas
|
|
Wavefield Inseis ASA
|
July 2008
|
|
China Oilfield Services Ltd.
|
|
Awilco Offshore ASA
|
June 2008
|
|
Smith International, Inc.
|
|
W-H Energy Services, Inc.
|
April 2008
|
|
First Reserve Corporation and others
|
|
Saxon Energy Services Inc.
|
February 2008
|
|
First Reserve Corporation
|
|
CHC Helicopter Corporation
|
December 2007
|
|
First Reserve Corporation
|
|
Abbot Group plc
|
December 2007
|
|
National Oilwell Varco, Inc.
|
|
Grant Prideco, Inc.
|
September 2007
|
|
General Electric Company
|
|
Sondex plc
|
June 2007
|
|
GS Capital Partners LP and others
|
|
CCS Income Trust
|
June 2007
|
|
Cal Dive International, Inc.
|
|
Horizon Offshore, Inc.
|
May 2007
|
|
Ssab Svenskt Stal AB
|
|
IPSCO Inc.
|
March 2007
|
|
Hercules Offshore, Inc.
|
|
TODCO
|
February 2007
|
|
Tenaris S.A.
|
|
Hydril Company
|
October 2006
|
|
National Oilwell Varco, Inc.
|
|
NQL Energy Services Inc.
|
September 2006
|
|
Superior Energy Services, Inc.
|
|
Warrior Energy Services Corporation
|
September 2006
|
|
IPSCO Inc.
|
|
NS Group, Inc.
|
September 2006
|
|
Compagnie Generale de Geophysique
|
|
Veritas DGC Inc.
|
June 2006
|
|
Tenaris S.A.
|
|
Maverick Tube Corporation
|
February 2006
|
|
Mullen Group Income Fund
|
|
Producers Oilfield Services Inc.
|
December 2005
|
|
Seadrill Limited
|
|
Smedvig ASA
|
March 2005
|
|
SEACOR Holdings Inc.
|
|
Seabulk International, Inc.
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Transaction announced but not yet closed. |
30
For each of the selected transactions and for the transaction
contemplated by the merger agreement, Simmons calculated and
compared the type of consideration, transaction value and the
premium or discount to the
one-day and
30-trading day average closing market prices. The proposed
transaction premiums are based on closing prices as of
September 9, 2011. While none of the companies included in
the preceding transaction premium analysis are directly
comparable to Global Industries, Simmons selected these
companies for comparison because they have operations that, for
the purposes of analysis, may be considered similar to certain
of Global Industries results, market size and service
profile. The following table summarizes this analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Proposed
|
Transactions Involving All Forms of Consideration
|
|
Range
|
|
Median
|
|
Transaction
|
|
Premium/(Discount) to
one-day
closing market price
|
|
(0.8)%-98.5%
|
|
|
27.7
|
%
|
|
|
55.3
|
%
|
Premium to 30-trading day average closing market price
|
|
6.3%-90.7%
|
|
|
26.5
|
%
|
|
|
92.1
|
%
|
The premiums and discounts presented above were obtained from
Bloomberg and Securities Data Corporation. Bloomberg and
Securities Data Corporation data is available to the public at a
subscription cost.
Simmons also analyzed
one-day and
four-week prior premiums and discounts paid in U.S. public
mergers and acquisitions transactions greater than
$200 million since January 1, 2000, excluding mergers
of equals and any stock-funded transactions, using data obtained
from Securities Data Corporation. For each of the transactions
and for the transaction contemplated by the merger agreement,
Simmons analyzed the transaction value and the premium or
discount to the
one-day and
four-week prior closing market prices. The proposed transaction
premiums are based on closing prices as of September 9,
2011. The following table presents the results of this analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
One-day Premiums
|
|
Four-week Prior Premiums(1)
|
Range of Percent Premium
|
|
Number of Transactions
|
|
Range of Percent Premium
|
|
Number of Transactions
|
|
< (10)%
|
|
8
|
|
< (10)%
|
|
11
|
(10)% to 0%
|
|
28
|
|
(10)% to 0%
|
|
28
|
0% to 10%
|
|
103
|
|
0% to 10%
|
|
58
|
10% to 20%
|
|
142
|
|
10% to 20%
|
|
126
|
20% to 30%
|
|
140
|
|
20% to 30%
|
|
130
|
30% to 40%
|
|
114
|
|
30% to 40%
|
|
129
|
40% to 50%
|
|
64
|
|
40% to 50%
|
|
93
|
50% to 60%
|
|
38
|
|
50% to 60%
|
|
43
|
60% to 70%
|
|
18
|
|
60% to 70%
|
|
27
|
70% to 80%
|
|
13
|
|
70% to 80%
|
|
19
|
80% to 90%
|
|
6
|
|
80% to 90%
|
|
5
|
> 90%
|
|
20
|
|
> 90%
|
|
25
|
Proposed Transaction
|
|
55.3%
|
|
|
|
128.6%
|
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Calculated using the share price at closing exactly four weeks
prior to deal announcement. |
Selected Companies Analysis. Simmons reviewed
and compared certain financial information of Global Industries
to corresponding financial information, ratios and market
multiples for the following publicly traded companies in the
offshore construction services industry:
|
|
|
|
|
Aker Solutions ASA;
|
|
|
|
Cal Dive International, Inc.;
|
|
|
|
Clough Limited;
|
|
|
|
Gulf Island Fabrication, Inc.;
|
31
|
|
|
|
|
Helix Energy Solutions Group Inc.;
|
|
|
|
McDermott International, Inc.;
|
|
|
|
Oceaneering International, Inc.;
|
|
|
|
Saipem SpA;
|
|
|
|
Subsea 7 SA;
|
|
|
|
TETRA Technologies, Inc.; and
|
|
|
|
Technip.
|
Simmons selected these companies on the basis of their
comparable business characteristics to Global Industries.
Although none of the selected companies is directly comparable
to Global Industries, the selected companies are publicly traded
companies with business and market characteristics that, for
purposes of analysis, may be considered similar to certain
business and market characteristics of Global Industries. Each
of the selected companies has one or more of the following in
common with Global Industries: industry demand drivers,
customers, locations and service lines.
Simmons calculated and compared various financial multiples and
ratios of the selected companies, and for Global Industries,
based on SEC
and/or
international securities law filings by the respective companies
and the mean of estimates of securities research analysts
obtained from Bloomberg, using closing prices on
September 9, 2011. Simmons calculated the enterprise value,
referred to herein as the Enterprise Value, of each
company as the market value of its common equity, plus the book
values of its debt and preferred stock (where applicable), plus
minority interests held by other companies, minus investments in
unconsolidated affiliates and cash and cash equivalents,
including short-term and long-term marketable securities and
restricted cash. Simmons calculated Enterprise Value to EBITDA
multiples of each company by dividing such companys
Enterprise Value by such companys EBITDA. Simmons used
publicly available company SEC and international securities law
filings for historical EBITDA data. For projected EBITDA data
for the selected companies and Global Industries, Simmons used
the mean of estimates of securities research analysts obtained
by Bloomberg (referred to as consensus estimates).
Bloomberg data is available to the public at a subscription
cost. The results of these analyses are summarized as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aker
|
|
Cal Dive
|
|
|
|
Gulf Island
|
|
Helix Energy
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TETRA
|
|
|
|
|
Solutions
|
|
International
|
|
Clough
|
|
Fabrication
|
|
Solutions
|
|
McDermott
|
|
Oceaneering
|
|
Saipem
|
|
Subsea 7
|
|
Technologies
|
|
Technip
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ratio of Enterprise Value to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011 Projected EBITDA
|
|
5.3x
|
|
8.2x
|
|
7.5x
|
|
9.0x
|
|
4.1x
|
|
5.6x
|
|
9.0x
|
|
7.5x
|
|
7.6x
|
|
3.9x
|
|
7.1x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
4.9x
|
|
3.0x
|
|
7.1x
|
|
3.6x
|
|
3.8x
|
|
4.5x
|
|
7.4x
|
|
6.6x
|
|
6.3x
|
|
3.8x
|
|
6.0x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2013 Projected EBITDA
|
|
4.1x
|
|
n/a
|
|
7.1x
|
|
n/a
|
|
n/a
|
|
3.8x
|
|
6.5x
|
|
6.1x
|
|
5.3x
|
|
n/a
|
|
5.3x
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Global Industries
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
at September 9,
|
|
Selected Companies
|
|
Range(1)
|
|
Median(1)
|
|
2011 (Consensus)
|
|
|
Ratio of Enterprise Value to:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011 Projected EBITDA
|
|
3.9x-9.0x
|
|
7.5x
|
|
|
Nmf(2)
|
|
2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
3.0x-7.4x
|
|
4.9x
|
|
|
5.4x
|
|
2013 Projected EBITDA
|
|
3.8x-7.1x
|
|
5.3x
|
|
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Excluding Global Industries. |
|
(2) |
|
No meaningful figure is available because Global
Industries 2011 Projected EBITDA is less than zero. |
Simmons then applied a selected range of comparable multiples
(based on the preceding analyses) to both Global
Industries consensus estimates for projected 2011 and 2012
EBITDA and certain projection scenarios provided by Global
Industries management described herein as Case I and
Case III for projected 2011, 2012 and 2013 EBITDA to
generate implied share prices. The range of implied share prices
was $1.62 to $7.97 (excluding one outlier result approximating
zero) with mean and median implied share prices of $4.28 and
32
$5.00, respectively. For a discussion of the assumptions
underlying Case I and Case III, see The Merger
Projected Financial Information. The results of these
analyses are summarized as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Range Of Comparable
|
|
Implied Price Per
|
|
|
Multiples
|
|
Share
|
|
Consensus 2011 Projected EBITDA
|
|
6.5x-7.5x
|
|
Nmf - Nmf(1)
|
Consensus 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
5.5x-6.5x
|
|
$5.20-$6.25
|
Case I/Case II 2011 Projected EBITDA
|
|
6.5x-7.5x
|
|
Nmf-Nmf(1)
|
Case I/Case II 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
5.5x-6.5x
|
|
Nmf-$0.10(1)
|
Case I/Case II 2013 Projected EBITDA
|
|
4.5x-5.5x
|
|
$4.00-$5.00
|
Case III 2011 Projected EBITDA
|
|
6.5x-7.5x
|
|
Nmf-Nmf(1)
|
Case III 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
5.5x-6.5x
|
|
$1.62-$2.01
|
Case III 2013 Projected EBITDA
|
|
4.5x-5.5x
|
|
$6.42-$7.97
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
No meaningful figure is available because Global
Industries Implied Price Per Share is less than zero. |
Relative Trading Analysis. Simmons also
analyzed historical relative trading performance of Global
Industries common stock compared to the performance of the stock
prices of certain comparable publicly traded companies in the
offshore construction services segment over various periods. The
comparable group of certain publicly traded companies consisted
of Technip, Subsea 7 SA, Oceaneering International, Inc., Saipem
SpA, McDermott International, Inc. and Cal Dive
International, Inc. The six selected comparable publicly traded
companies operate offshore construction vessels and have
business lines similar to those of Global Industries, whereas
the other publicly traded companies identified above in the
subsection entitled Selected Companies Analysis have
additional business lines that represent material portions of
their financial results and are different than those of Global
Industries
and/or do
not operate or have limited offshore construction vessels,
negatively influencing the comparability to Global Industries.
The following table summarizes this analysis based on prices as
of September 9, 2011:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Range(1)
|
|
Global Industries
|
|
Since January 1, 2006
|
|
(81.5)%-221.7%
|
|
|
(54.6
|
)%
|
Since January 1, 2008
|
|
(81.8)%-18.9%
|
|
|
(76.0
|
)%
|
Since January 1, 2010
|
|
(68.1)%-38.3%
|
|
|
(27.8
|
)%
|
Since January 1, 2011
|
|
(58.3)%-7.9%
|
|
|
(26.2
|
)%
|
Since July 11, 2011
|
|
(59.2)%-(5.6)%
|
|
|
(1.3
|
)%
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
Excluding Global Industries. |
Simmons also reviewed recent relative trading performance of
Global Industries common stock compared to the median
performance of certain comparable publicly traded companies in
the offshore construction services segment from August 10,
2011. The group consisted of Technip, Subsea 7 SA, Oceaneering
International, Inc., Saipem SpA, McDermott International, Inc.
and Cal Dive International, Inc. From August 10, 2011
through September 9, 2011, the cumulative daily percentage
change in Global Industries share price was 45.2% versus a
4.8% increase for the cumulative peer group median daily share
price change.
Implied Price Analysis Based on Comparable Company Trading
Performance. Simmons analyzed the merger
consideration compared to potential implied stock prices of
Global Industries had the common stock of Global Industries
traded similarly to those of certain comparable publicly traded
companies in the offshore construction services segment from
May 1, 2011 to September 9, 2011. The comparable group
consisted of Technip, Subsea 7 SA, Oceaneering International,
Inc., Saipem SpA, McDermott International, Inc. and
Cal Dive International, Inc. Simmons selected these six
comparable publicly traded companies based on its belief that,
of the companies included in the Selected Companies
Analysis above, they shared the greater similarities with
Global Industries business. This analysis resulted in
implied Global Industries share prices ranging from $2.51 to
$6.66, with a mean of $4.99 and implied premiums ranging from
20.1% to 218.6%, with a premium of 60.3% relative to the $4.99
mean stock price.
33
Simmons also analyzed the merger consideration compared to
potential implied stock prices of Global Industries had common
stock of Global Industries traded similarly to an index of
certain comparable publicly traded companies in the offshore
construction services segment since various dates. The peer
index consisted of Technip, Subsea 7 SA, Oceaneering
International, Inc., Saipem SpA, McDermott International, Inc.
and Cal Dive International, Inc. The following table
summarizes the implied premium/discount analysis based on the
dates set forth below:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Implied Global
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Industries Share
|
|
|
Implied Premium/
|
|
|
|
|
|
Price as of
|
|
|
(Discount) at Offer
|
|
Start Date
|
|
Description
|
|
September 9, 2011
|
|
|
($8.00)
|
|
|
September 16, 2009
|
|
2-year high
|
|
$
|
10.86
|
|
|
|
(26.3
|
)%
|
August 10, 2011
|
|
2-year low
|
|
|
2.82
|
|
|
|
183.3
|
%
|
August 3, 2011
|
|
Earnings release for the six months ended June 30, 2011
|
|
|
3.25
|
|
|
|
145.9
|
%
|
July 1, 2011
|
|
Last trading day before Technips initial offer
|
|
|
3.56
|
|
|
|
125.0
|
%
|
May 4, 2011
|
|
Earnings release for the three months ended March 31, 2011
|
|
|
5.54
|
|
|
|
44.4
|
%
|
January 3, 2011
|
|
First trading day in 2011
|
|
|
4.74
|
|
|
|
68.9
|
%
|
January 4, 2010
|
|
First trading day in 2010
|
|
|
7.20
|
|
|
|
11.2
|
%
|
January 2, 2009
|
|
First trading day in 2009
|
|
|
7.81
|
|
|
|
2.4
|
%
|
January 2, 2008
|
|
First trading day in 2008
|
|
|
14.68
|
|
|
|
(45.5
|
)%
|
Discounted Cash Flow Analysis. Simmons
performed a discounted cash flow analysis on Global Industries
for the projected five-year period beginning on July 1,
2011 and ending on June 30, 2016. Simmons utilized two
projection scenarios provided by Global Industries
management (Case I and Case III) to develop three
discounted cash flow cases. As further described below,
Case II was developed by Simmons and was based on Case I.
Simmons developed Case II in order to make calculations of
Global Industries value based on Case I projected
financial performance, but without a market downturn after 2014
as projected in Case I. Each case utilized projections provided
by Global Industries management for the projected six
months ended December 31, 2011. Each of Case I,
Case II and Case III reflect the following
assumptions: (i) the valuation of Global Industries as of
June 30, 2011; (ii) Global Industries financial
performance for the six months ended December 31, 2011 is
evenly allocated between the two quarters; (iii) Global
Industries corporate tax rate is 35%; (iv) discount
rates of 10%, 12.5% and 15%; (v) exit date as of
June 30, 2016; (vi) terminal value calculated
utilizing a multiple of 2016 projected EBITDA;
(vii) terminal EBITDA multiples of 6.0x, 7.0x and 8.0x,
based on peer forward EBITDA multiples; and (viii) working
capital, capital expenditures and other items per projections
provided by Global Industries management. Case I,
Case II and Case III results do not reflect any
transaction adjustments or forecasted synergies.
In addition,
Case I reflects the following:
|
|
|
|
|
Global Industries Vessel 1201 (Global 1201)
achieves 36.6% utilization in 2012; Global Industries
Vessel 1200 (Global 1200) achieves 76.7% utilization
in 2012;
|
|
|
|
Maximum utilization of Global 1201 and Global 1200 is achieved
in 2013 at 86.6%, and decreases thereafter;
|
|
|
|
For the rest of Global Industries fleet of vessels,
utilization reaches 59.9% in 2013, and decreases thereafter;
|
|
|
|
Gross margins increase until 2014, and decrease
thereafter; and
|
|
|
|
Selling, general and administrative expenses increase 3.0% per
year from 2012 until 2014, and 1.0% per year thereafter.
|
34
Case II utilizes the same performance assumptions as Case I
until 2014, with performance remaining consistent with 2014
levels thereafter. The unaudited projections in Case II
included the following estimates of Global Industries
future financial performance:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011P
|
|
2012P
|
|
2013P
|
|
2014P
|
|
2015P
|
|
2016P
|
|
|
(Dollar amounts in millions)
|
|
Revenue
|
|
$
|
367.2
|
|
|
$
|
722.3
|
|
|
$
|
923.0
|
|
|
$
|
1,100.4
|
|
|
$
|
1,100.4
|
|
|
$
|
1,100.4
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
|
(56.8
|
)
|
|
|
11.4
|
|
|
|
117.0
|
|
|
|
169.7
|
|
|
|
169.7
|
|
|
|
169.7
|
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
|
|
(106.2
|
)
|
|
|
(37.1
|
)
|
|
|
53.6
|
|
|
|
101.5
|
|
|
|
101.5
|
|
|
|
101.5
|
|
Capital Expenditures
|
|
|
(135.7
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
Case III reflects the following:
|
|
|
|
|
Global 1201 achieves 53.6% utilization in 2012; Global 1200
achieves 76.7% utilization in 2012;
|
|
|
|
Maximum utilization of Global 1201 and Global 1200 is achieved
in 2015 at 100.0%, and remains steady thereafter;
|
|
|
|
For the rest of Global Industries fleet of vessels,
utilization reaches 65.8% in 2014, and remains steady thereafter;
|
|
|
|
Gross margins increase until 2015, and remain steady
thereafter; and
|
|
|
|
Selling, general and administrative expenses increase 3.0% per
year from 2012 until 2014, and 1.0% per year thereafter.
|
Simmons calculated illustrative implied present values of
unlevered free cash flows, defined as EBITDA minus cash taxes,
minus capital expenditures, minus increases (plus decreases) in
net working capital and minus other one-time items, for the
projected five-year period beginning on July 1, 2011 and
ending on June 30, 2016 and illustrative implied terminal
values, using discount rates ranging from 10% to 15%. The
discount rate was derived using a weighted average cost of
capital (WACC) methodology. The WACC sensitivity
range was determined by comparing capital structure, equity
volatility and cost of debt across a peer group of oilfield
services companies. The peer group of oilfield services
companies utilized to calculate WACC included: Subsea 7 SA,
Oceaneering International, Inc., McDermott International, Inc.
and Cal Dive International, Inc. Simmons selected these
four comparable publicly traded companies based on its belief
that, of the companies included above in the subsection entitled
Selected Companies Analysis, they shared the greater
similarities with Global Industries business and necessary
data was available. Simmons calculated illustrative terminal
values for Global Industries based on multiples ranging from
6.0x to 8.0x, in each case, of Global Industries 2016
estimated EBITDA. Simmons derived the ranges of these selected
terminal value multiples based on its professional judgment and
experience, including its judgment on business characteristics
of Global Industries relative to the other companies identified
under the captions Selected Companies Analysis set
forth above and Selected Transactions Analysis set
forth below, and other factors, including, but not limited to,
historical financial performance, profitability and scale of
business.
Simmons calculated net working capital, defined as current
assets (excluding cash) minus current liabilities (excluding the
current portion of long-term debt and any other short-term
debt), at the end of each year, during the projected five-year
period beginning on July 1, 2011 and ending on
June 30, 2016, and assumed that its components
intensity remained similar to historical results. The change in
this amount between each such year was either subtracted or
added as a component of unlevered free cash flow. Net operating
losses (NOLs) were not included in the discounted
cash flow analysis as the likelihood of utilizing NOLs was
deemed unlikely in the relevant tax jurisdictions. This analysis
resulted in implied per share values ranging from
(a) $1.95-$3.54, under Case I, (b) $4.38- $7.47,
under Case II and (c) $9.27-$14.95, under
Case III.
Capitalization and Valuation Multiples
Summary. Simmons calculated the Enterprise Value
of Global Industries and various financial multiples and ratios
based on information obtained from Bloomberg and Global
Industries management. Simmons calculated Enterprise Value
to EBITDA multiples by dividing the Global Industries
Enterprise Value by Global Industries EBITDA. For
consensus projected EBITDA data for
35
Global Industries, Simmons used the mean of estimates of
securities research analysts obtained by Bloomberg. Bloomberg
data is available to the public at a subscription cost. Simmons
used information provided by Global Industries management
for Case I, Case II and Case III projected
EBITDA. Simmons calculated the adjusted book value of Global
Industries as the book value of its shareholders equity,
plus the book value of its debt, plus minority interests held by
other companies, minus investments in unconsolidated affiliates
and cash and cash equivalents, including short-term and
long-term marketable securities and restricted cash. The
multiples and ratios of Global Industries were calculated using
the closing price on September 9, 2011. The results of
these analyses are summarized as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
Global Industries
|
|
At Market
|
|
At Offer ($8.00)
|
|
Ratio of Enterprise Value to:
|
|
|
|
|
Consensus 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
5.4x
|
|
8.3x
|
Case I/Case II 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
58.0x
|
|
87.9x
|
Case III 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
14.5x
|
|
22.0x
|
Adjusted Book Value
|
|
0.8x
|
|
1.3x
|
Book Equity Analysis. Simmons analyzed the
merger consideration to be received by the shareholders of
Global Industries common stock as set forth in the merger
agreement based on the implied value per share of Global
Industries common stock as of June 30, 2011. Based on
information provided by Global Industries management, as
of June 30, 2011, Global Industries
shareholders equity book value was $720 million and
Global Industries had 116.0 million shares outstanding. As
of June 30, 2011, the offer price implies a premium of
28.9% per outstanding share of Global Industries common stock.
Research Analyst Price Targets. Simmons
analyzed the price targets (which are typically
12-month
price targets) of Global Industries, as determined by five
research analysts who had updated price targets since
July 1, 2011. The offer price represents a 45.5% premium to
the average undiscounted research analyst target price of Global
Industries, a 60.0% premium to the present value of the average
target price of Global Industries using a 10% discount rate and
a 74.5% premium to the present value of the average target price
of Global Industries using a 20% discount rate. Each of the five
research analyst price targets are below the offer price. The
following table summarizes this analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Undiscounted
|
|
Discounted Price Target
|
Research Analyst Price Target
|
|
Price Target
|
|
10% Discount Rate
|
|
20% Discount Rate
|
|
Median
|
|
$
|
5.50
|
|
|
$
|
5.00
|
|
|
$
|
4.58
|
|
Premium to Median at Offer ($8.00)
|
|
|
45.5
|
%
|
|
|
60.0
|
%
|
|
|
74.5
|
%
|
Selected Transactions Analysis. Simmons also
analyzed certain information relating to 12 selected energy
service transactions since 2004. This sample of transactions was
considered to evaluate the contemplated transaction in
comparison to selected energy service transactions on a
transaction
value-to-EBITDA
ratio basis. Transactions were selected based on the acquired
companys services being related in certain respects to
those services provided by Global Industries. For each of the
selected transactions and for the transaction contemplated by
the merger agreement, Simmons calculated and compared the ratio
of the transaction value to the trailing twelve month EBITDA and
projected EBITDA. EBITDA multiples for the selected transactions
were derived primarily from public sources (company filings,
press releases, Bloomberg and IHS Herold). Bloomberg and IHS
Herold data are both available to the public at a subscription
cost. Simmons has certain material, non-public and proprietary
information regarding transactions that it receives in the
course of conducting its business. Simmons used this information
in its analyses, but refrains from
36
releasing specific, identifying transaction details. The
following table summarizes this analysis (code names are used
for transactions in which Simmons has confidential information):
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ratio Of Transaction Value To:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Projected
|
Closing
|
|
Acquiror
|
|
Target
|
|
Trailing Twelve-Months EBITDA
|
|
EBITDA
|
|
2011
|
|
Acquiror A
|
|
Target A
|
|
|
n/a
|
|
|
|
6.5x
|
|
2010
|
|
Acquiror B
|
|
Target B
|
|
|
3.9x
|
|
|
|
5.6x
|
|
2010
|
|
Acergy S.A.
|
|
Subsea 7, Inc.
|
|
|
4.7x
|
|
|
|
5.9x
|
|
2009
|
|
Superior Energy Services, Inc.
|
|
Hallin Marine Subsea International plc
|
|
|
10.0x
|
|
|
|
5.3x
|
|
2008
|
|
Acquiror C
|
|
Target C
|
|
|
10.6x
|
|
|
|
8.3x
|
|
2008
|
|
Trico Marine Services, Inc.
|
|
Deep Ocean ASA
|
|
|
11.4x
|
|
|
|
n/a
|
|
2006
|
|
Acquiror D
|
|
Target D
|
|
|
6.9x
|
|
|
|
5.8x
|
|
2005
|
|
Acquiror E
|
|
Target E
|
|
|
5.9x
|
|
|
|
6.3x
|
|
2005
|
|
Acquiror F
|
|
Target F
|
|
|
6.2x
|
|
|
|
3.9x
|
|
2005
|
|
Cal Dive International, Inc.
|
|
Stolt Offshores diving and shallow water pipelay assets
|
|
|
6.7x
|
|
|
|
4.3x
|
|
2004
|
|
Acquiror G
|
|
Target G
|
|
|
7.4x
|
|
|
|
4.3x
|
|
2004
|
|
Acquiror H
|
|
Target H
|
|
|
4.9x
|
|
|
|
4.2x
|
|
For each of the selected transactions and for the transaction
contemplated by the merger agreement, Simmons calculated and
compared the ratio of the transaction value to each of the
trailing twelve-month and projected EBITDA multiples. The
following table summarizes this analysis:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Range
|
|
Median
|
|
Mean
|
|
Ratio of Transaction Value to Trailing Twelve-Months EBITDA
Multiple
|
|
|
3.9x 11.4x
|
|
|
|
6.7x
|
|
|
|
7.1x
|
|
Ratio of Transaction Value to Projected EBITDA Multiple
|
|
|
3.9x 8.3x
|
|
|
|
5.6x
|
|
|
|
5.5x
|
|
Simmons then applied a selected range of comparable multiples
(based on the preceding analysis) to both Global Industries
consensus estimates and Case I and Case III assumptions for
projected 2012 EBITDA to generate implied share prices. The
range of implied share prices was $1.62 to $6.77 (excluding one
outlier result approximating zero) with mean and median implied
share prices of $3.19 and $2.21, respectively. The results of
these analyses are summarized as follows:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Range Of Comparable Multiples
|
|
|
Implied Price Per Share
|
|
|
Consensus 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
|
5.5x-7.0x
|
|
|
$
|
5.20-$6.77
|
|
Case I/Case II 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
|
5.5x-7.0x
|
|
|
Nmf-$
|
0.14
|
(1)
|
Case III 2012 Projected EBITDA
|
|
|
5.5x-7.0x
|
|
|
$
|
1.62-$2.21
|
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
No meaningful figure is available because Global
Industries Implied Price Per Share is less than zero. |
Miscellaneous. As noted above, the discussion
set forth above is a summary of the material financial analyses
presented by Simmons to the board of directors of Global
Industries in connection with the opinion of Simmons and is not
a comprehensive description of all analyses undertaken by
Simmons in connection with such opinion. The presentation of an
opinion as to the fairness, from a financial point of view, of
consideration to be paid pursuant to a proposed transaction is a
complex analytical process involving various determinations as
to the most appropriate and relevant methods of financial
analysis and the application of those methods to the particular
circumstances and, therefore, a financial analysis is not
readily susceptible to partial analysis or
37
summary description. Simmons believes that its analyses
summarized above must be considered as a whole. Simmons further
believes that selecting portions of its analyses and the factors
considered or focusing on information presented in tabular
format, without considering all analyses and factors or the
narrative description of the analyses, could create a misleading
or incomplete view of the processes underlying Simmons
analyses and opinion. The fact that any specific analysis has
been referred to in the summary above is not meant to indicate
that such analysis was given greater weight than any other
analysis referred to in the summary.
In performing its analyses, Simmons considered industry
performance, general business and economic conditions and other
matters, many of which are beyond the control of Global
Industries. The estimates of the future performance of Global
Industries in or underlying Simmons analyses are not
necessarily indicative of actual values or actual future
results, which may be significantly more or less favorable than
those estimates or those suggested by Simmons analyses.
These analyses were prepared solely as part of Simmons
analysis of the fairness, from a financial point of view, of the
merger consideration to be paid by Technip to the holders of
Global Industries common stock and were provided to the board of
directors of Global Industries in connection with the delivery
of Simmons opinion. The analyses do not purport to be
appraisals or to reflect the prices at which a company might
actually be sold or the prices at which any securities have
traded or may trade at any time in the future. Accordingly, the
estimates used in, and the ranges of valuations resulting from,
any particular analysis described above are inherently subject
to substantial uncertainty and should not be taken to be
Simmons view of actual values with respect to Global
Industries.
The type and amount of consideration payable to holders of
Global Industries common stock were determined through
negotiations between Global Industries and Technip, rather than
by any financial advisor, and was approved by the board of
directors of Global Industries. The decision to enter into the
merger agreement was solely that of the board of directors of
Global Industries. As described above, Simmons opinion and
analyses were only one of many factors considered by the board
of directors of Global Industries in its evaluation of the
merger and should not be viewed as determinative of the views of
the Global Industries board of directors or management
with respect to the merger or the merger consideration.
Pursuant to the terms of its engagement with Simmons, Global
Industries has agreed to pay Simmons for its financial advisory
services in connection with the merger an aggregate transaction
fee estimated to be approximately $8,000,000, which is payable
upon the consummation of the merger. Simmons has also received a
fixed fee of $1,000,000 for rendering its opinion, as to the
fairness of the consideration to be paid by Technip pursuant to
the merger, which fixed fee was payable without regard to the
conclusions expressed in the opinion and will be deducted from
the transaction fee payable to Simmons upon consummation of the
merger.
In addition, Global Industries has also agreed to reimburse
Simmons for its reasonable
out-of-pocket
expenses, including the reasonable fees and expenses of its
legal counsel, incurred in connection with the engagement,
including the delivery of the opinion, and to indemnify Simmons
against certain losses or liabilities that may arise out of
Simmons engagement.
During the last five years, Global Industries has engaged
Simmons as a financial advisor on two separate occasions
unrelated to the potential transaction to provide certain
financial advisory services. As part of the prior engagement
agreements with Global Industries, Simmons received aggregate
fees of approximately $675,000.
A foreign affiliate of Simmons, Simmons & Company
International Limited (SCIL), has previously
performed work for Technip. During the last five years, SCIL has
acted as financial advisor to Technip on three separate
assignments unrelated to the merger and any potential
transaction between Technip and Global Industries. As part of
the prior engagement agreements with Technip, SCIL received
aggregate fees of approximately $3,700,000. Two of the prior
SCIL engagements with Technip were publicly disclosed and
included: (i) SCIL acting as financial advisor to Technip
in its divestiture of Perry Slingsby Systems division and
(ii) SCIL acting as financial advisor to Technip in its
acquisition of Subocean Group Holdings Ltd.
38
In the ordinary course of Simmons business, Simmons
actively trades the debt and equity securities of both Global
Industries and Technip for its own account and for the accounts
of its customers and, accordingly, may at any time hold a long
or short position in securities of Global Industries and Technip.
Projected
Financial Information
As part of Global Industries strategic planning process,
in May 2011, Global Industries management prepared a set
of unaudited projections of Global Industries financial
performance through 2016 as a standalone public company.
Subsequently, at the Global Industries board of
directors request, in early July 2011, Global
Industries management prepared a second set of unaudited
projections of Global Industries financial performance
through 2016 as a standalone public company assuming a more
timely and robust market reversal. For purposes of the following
discussion, Global Industries refers to the initial set of
unaudited projections as Case I and the second set
of unaudited projections as Case III. In addition,
as part of Global Industries discussions with Technip,
Global Industries management prepared and, in mid-July
2011, provided to Technip a set of unaudited projections of
Global Industries financial performance through 2016 as a
standalone public company. For purposes of the following
discussion, Global Industries refers to the unaudited
projections provided to Technip as the Shared
Projections.
Global Industries reviewed both Case I and Case III with
the Global Industries board of directors during the Summer of
2011. Case II, which was prepared by Simmons and is described in
The Merger Financial Advisors Opinion
Regarding the Merger Consideration, was also reviewed with
the Global Industries board of directors. In addition, Global
Industries provided both Case I and Case III to Simmons for
its use in preparing its financial analyses and provided Simmons
with the Shared Projections. Simmons did not conduct any
activities to verify or authenticate the unaudited projected
financial information set forth below and did not render any
opinion on such unaudited projected financial information.
The divergence in unaudited projections of Global
Industries financial performance between Case I and
Case III results from significant differences in the
assumptions made about future performance based on utilization
and market conditions. Global Industries management
expressed its view to the Global Industries board of directors
that Global Industries was more likely to achieve the results
set forth in Case I than the results set forth in Case III.
The assumptions underlying the two cases differ primarily in the
following ways:
|
|
|
|
|
Utilization of Global 1201 and 1200:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Case I assumes that Global 1201 achieves 36.6% utilization in
2012 and Global 1200 achieves 76.7% utilization in 2012, and
that both Global 1201 and 1200 achieve maximum utilization in
2013 of 86.6% and decrease thereafter.
|
|
|
|
Case III assumes that Global 1201 achieves 53.6%
utilization in 2012 and Global 1200 achieves 76.7% utilization
in 2012, and that both Global 1201 and 1200 achieve maximum
utilization in 2015 at 100% and remain steady thereafter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Rest of Fleet Utilization:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Case I assumes utilization reaches 59.9% in 2013, and decreases
thereafter.
|
|
|
|
Case III assumes utilization reaches 65.8% in 2014 and
remains steady thereafter.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Case I assumes gross margins increase until 2014 and decrease
thereafter.
|
|
|
|
Case III assumes gross margins increase until 2015 and
remain steady thereafter.
|
The divergence in unaudited projections of Global
Industries financial performance between Case III and
the Shared Projections results primarily from a different set of
assumptions related to the timing and magnitude of the gross
margin increase, with the Shared Projections being more
optimistic in each respect.
39
All of the unaudited financial projections prepared by the
management of Global Industries are subject to substantial risks
and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ
materially from the unaudited projected results, including
important factors described under the heading Risk
Factors in Global Industries Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2010 and Global
Industries Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2011 and
June 30, 2011. All unaudited projections are
forward-looking statements, and these and other forward-looking
statements are expressly qualified in their entirety by the
risks and uncertainties identified in Global Industries
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2010, Global
Industries Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the fiscal quarters ended March 31, 2011 and
June 30, 2011 and Global Industries Current Reports
on
Form 8-K.
The unaudited projected financial information below does not
take into account any circumstances or events occurring after
September 2, 2011 (with respect to Case I and Case
III) or July 16, 2011 (with respect to the Shared
Projections), the respective dates on which such unaudited
projected financial information was last reviewed for updating
by management. The unaudited projected financial information
below does not give effect to the proposed transaction.
The unaudited projections in Case I included the following
estimates of Global Industries future financial
performance:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011P
|
|
2012P
|
|
2013P
|
|
2014P
|
|
2015P
|
|
2016P
|
|
|
(Dollar amounts in millions)
|
|
Revenue
|
|
$
|
367.2
|
|
|
$
|
722.3
|
|
|
$
|
923.0
|
|
|
$
|
1,100.4
|
|
|
$
|
894.1
|
|
|
$
|
826.2
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
|
(56.8
|
)
|
|
|
11.4
|
|
|
|
117.0
|
|
|
|
169.7
|
|
|
|
111.2
|
|
|
|
84.6
|
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
|
|
(106.2
|
)
|
|
|
(37.1
|
)
|
|
|
53.6
|
|
|
|
101.5
|
|
|
|
43.4
|
|
|
|
12.4
|
|
Capital Expenditures
|
|
|
(135.7
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
The unaudited projections in Case III included the
following estimates of the Global Industries future
financial performance:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011P
|
|
2012P
|
|
2013P
|
|
2014P
|
|
2015P
|
|
2016P
|
|
|
(Dollar amounts in millions)
|
|
Revenue
|
|
$
|
367.2
|
|
|
$
|
736.7
|
|
|
$
|
1,134.7
|
|
|
$
|
1,335.2
|
|
|
$
|
1,451.2
|
|
|
$
|
1,506.8
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
|
(56.8
|
)
|
|
|
45.5
|
|
|
|
179.5
|
|
|
|
256.1
|
|
|
|
290.9
|
|
|
|
308.4
|
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
|
|
(106.2
|
)
|
|
|
(7.1
|
)
|
|
|
112.0
|
|
|
|
182.2
|
|
|
|
210.6
|
|
|
|
222.1
|
|
Capital Expenditures
|
|
|
(135.7
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
The unaudited projections in the Shared Projections included the
following estimates of Global Industries future financial
performance:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2011P
|
|
2012P
|
|
2013P
|
|
2014P
|
|
2015P
|
|
2016P
|
|
|
(Dollar amounts in millions)
|
|
Revenue
|
|
$
|
395.1
|
|
|
$
|
736.7
|
|
|
$
|
1,099.6
|
|
|
$
|
1,234.0
|
|
|
$
|
1,315.7
|
|
|
$
|
1,367.3
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA
|
|
|
(25.5
|
)
|
|
|
45.5
|
|
|
|
221.6
|
|
|
|
294.7
|
|
|
|
324.0
|
|
|
|
342.5
|
|
Adjusted EBIT
|
|
|
(74.7
|
)
|
|
|
(7.1
|
)
|
|
|
154.1
|
|
|
|
220.8
|
|
|
|
243.6
|
|
|
|
256.1
|
|
Capital Expenditures
|
|
|
(135.7
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
|
|
(50.0
|
)
|
Global Industries does not as a matter of course make public any
projections as to future revenues, net income or other results
due to, among other reasons, business volatility and the
uncertainty of the underlying assumptions and estimates. The
previously non-public Case I and Case III unaudited
projections set forth above are included in this proxy statement
only because this information was part of the information
considered by the board of directors of Global Industries in
evaluating Technips offer. The previously non-public
Shared Projections set forth above are included in this proxy
statement only because this information was provided to Technip.
The unaudited projections also were provided to Simmons, Global
Industries financial advisor. The unaudited projections
were not prepared for use in this proxy statement or with a view
to public disclosure of any kind. The unaudited projections also
were not prepared in compliance with the published guidelines of
the SEC or the guidelines established by the American Institute
of Certified Public
40
Accountants regarding projections or forecasts. The unaudited
projections do not purport to present operations in accordance
with generally accepted accounting principles in the United
States (GAAP), and specifically the Adjusted EBITDA
and Adjusted EBIT financial metrics. Adjusted EBITDA means
earnings (net income (loss)) before net interest expense, other
expense/income, income tax expense, non-cash stock compensation
expense, non-cash goodwill and intangible impairment,
gains/losses on asset disposal, depreciation and amortization
and excludes restructuring charges, interests in equity of
uncontrolled subsidiaries, transaction costs and asset
write-downs. Adjusted EBIT means Adjusted EBITDA less
depreciation and amortization and non-cash stock compensation
expense. Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBIT, as defined herein,
may not be comparable to similarly titled measures employed by
other companies and are not measures of performance calculated
in accordance with GAAP. Neither Adjusted EBITDA nor Adjusted
EBIT should be considered in isolation or as a substitute for
operating income, net income, cash flows provided by operating,
investing and financing activities or other income or cash flow
statement data prepared in accordance with GAAP. Global
Industries independent registered public accounting firm
has not examined, compiled or otherwise applied procedures to
the unaudited projections and accordingly assumes no
responsibility for them. Global Industries internal
financial forecasts, upon which the unaudited projections were
based in part, are, in general, prepared solely for internal
use, such as budgeting and other management decisions, and are
subjective in many respects. As a result, these unaudited
internal financial forecasts are susceptible to interpretations
and periodic revision based on actual experience and business
developments. The unaudited projections reflect numerous
assumptions made by Global Industries management at the
time they were prepared, and general business, economic, market
and financial conditions and other matters, all of which are
difficult to predict and many of which are beyond Global
Industries control. Accordingly, there can be no assurance
that the assumptions made in preparing the unaudited projections
will prove accurate or that any of the unaudited projections
will be realized.
The inclusion of the unaudited projections in this proxy
statement should not be regarded as an indication that Global
Industries or its affiliates or representatives considered or
consider the unaudited projections to be a prediction of actual
future events, and the unaudited projections should not be
relied upon as such. None of Global Industries or its affiliates
or representatives intends to update or otherwise revise the
unaudited projections to reflect circumstances existing or
arising after the date such unaudited projections were generated
or to reflect the occurrence of future events, even in the event
that any or all of the assumptions underlying the unaudited
projections are shown to be in error.
Global Industries shareholders are cautioned not to place
undue reliance on the unaudited projections included in this
proxy statement. The selected unaudited projected financial
information is not being included in this proxy statement to
influence a Global Industries shareholders decision how to
vote or act in connection with the proposed merger, but because
it represents projected financial information prepared by
management of Global Industries that was used for purposes of
the financial analyses performed by Simmons and that was
presented to Global Industries board of directors.
Interests
of Global Industries Executive Officers and Directors in
the Merger
You should be aware that our directors and officers have
interests in the merger that are described below and may be
different from or in addition to the interests of our
shareholders generally and that may present a conflict of
interest. Our board of directors was aware of and considered
these interests in making its determinations and recommendations
in connection with the merger agreement and the transactions
contemplated thereby. You should consider the interests of our
directors and officers that are described in this proxy
statement.
Treatment
of Outstanding Equity Awards
Stock Options. As described in The
Merger Agreement Equity Plans Stock
Options, the merger agreement provides that, at or
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, each
outstanding option to purchase our common stock, whether or not
exercisable or vested, shall be cancelled, and we shall pay each
holder at or promptly after the effective time of the merger for
each such cancelled option an amount in cash, less any required
withholding taxes, determined by multiplying (i) the excess
of the merger consideration over
41
the applicable exercise price per share of common stock subject
to such stock option by (ii) the number of shares of common
stock such holder could have purchased (assuming full vesting of
the stock option) had such holder exercised such option in full
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger.
Restricted Stock. As described in The
Merger Agreement Equity Plans Restricted
Stock, the merger agreement provides that at or
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, each
restricted share of common stock that is outstanding shall
become fully vested, and shall be treated as a share of common
stock and eligible to receive the merger consideration.
Performance Units. As described in The
Merger Agreement Equity Plans
Performance Units, the merger agreement provides, that at
or immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, each
performance unit shall be canceled, and we shall pay each holder
at or promptly after the effective time of the merger for each
such canceled performance unit an amount in cash, less any
required withholding taxes, equal to (i) merger
consideration multiplied by (ii) the number of shares of
common stock issuable pursuant to such performance unit,
assuming achievement of the target level of performance
applicable to such performance unit.
In addition, should the effective time of the merger not occur
prior to December 31, 2011, performance units with a
performance period expiring on such date may, at the discretion
of the compensation committee of our board of directors, be
settled as early as such date, calculated as if the target level
of performance had been achieved.
Change
in Control Agreements
We have entered into change in control agreements with
substantially uniform terms with our current executive officers
and Mr. Clerico, the chairman of our board of directors.
James J. Doré, our former Senior Vice President, Worldwide
Diving, retired on March 31, 2011 and Peter Atkinson, our
former Executive Vice President, retired on December 31,
2010 and each of their respective change in control agreements
terminated as of such retirement. As described in more detail
below, each change in control agreement generally provides for
the acceleration of equity awards and, in the event of certain
qualifying terminations (as described below),
severance benefits, including lump sum salary and bonus
payments, continuation of benefits, payment for unvested
contributions in our 401(k) retirement plan, and reimbursement
for legal fees and relocation expenses.
In the event of a qualifying termination (as
described below) within two years following a change in
control, which includes the merger, the change in control
agreements generally entitle such individual to (a) a lump
sum payment equal to three times the sum of (x) the
individuals annual base salary and (y) the greater of
(i) the highest annual bonus earned by the individual in
respect of any of the five most recently completed fiscal years
or (ii) the individuals annual target bonus for the
year in which the termination occurs, (b) an amount equal
to the greater of (i) the highest annual bonus earned by
the individual in respect of any of the five most recently
completed fiscal years or (ii) the individuals annual
target bonus for the year in which the termination occurs, pro
rated based upon the number of days such individual has worked
during the fiscal year in which termination occurs, (c) a
cash payment for unvested contributions under our 401(k)
retirement plan as of the date of termination and
(d) reimbursement of legal fees incurred as a result of any
dispute as to the termination and certain relocation expenses,
if applicable. In lieu of the benefits described above, upon
such a qualifying termination the change in control
agreement with Mr. Clerico entitles him to (a) a fixed
lump sum in the amount of $3.6 million, (b) an amount
equal to his target bonus, if any, for the year in which the
termination occurs, pro rated based upon the number of days he
has worked during the fiscal year in which termination occurs,
and (c) reimbursement of legal fees incurred as a result of
any dispute as to the termination. However, as Mr. Clerico
is not currently a participant in the Management Incentive Plan
and does not have a target bonus, any payment to him in the
event of a qualifying termination would not
currently include an amount related to a target annual bonus.
A qualifying termination includes a termination of
employment by the individual for good reason or a
termination of the individuals employment by us without
cause. Under the terms of the change in control
agreements, (i) good reason means (a) a
substantial change in the individuals responsibilities or
position,
42
(b) a reduction in the individuals base salary or
total compensation or the failure to increase the
individuals total salary and payment under the bonus
incentive plan each year after the change in control by an
amount which at least equals, on a percentage basis, the mean
average percentage increase in total compensation for all of our
officers during the three full fiscal years immediately
preceding the change in control, (c) the failure to
continue the bonus incentive plan substantially on the basis in
effect prior to the change in control, or a failure by us to
continue the individual as a participant on at least the same
basis as his or her participation for the fiscal year
immediately preceding a change in control, (d) relocation
of the individuals principal place of employment by more
than 30 miles from his or her principal place of employment
prior to the date on which a change in control occurs,
(e) a material reduction in the individuals benefits,
(f) the failure of a successor entity to assume the
agreement, or (g) any purported termination not satisfying
the notice requirements of the change in control agreement, and
(ii) cause means (a) the individual
committed an act of dishonesty constituting a felony and
resulting in a personal benefit at our expense or (b) the
willful and continued failure by the individual to substantially
perform his or her duties, resulting in material injury to
Global Industries.
In addition, following any termination other than for
cause or due to death or disability (including the
individuals resignation without good reason)
during the two years following a change in control,
each executive officer (but not Mr. Clerico), will be
entitled to two years of medical, dental and life insurance
coverage under Global Industries welfare plans for the
executive and their eligible dependents at a cost not to exceed
the executive officers cost to participate in such plan
prior to the change in control.
The change in control agreements also provide for the
acceleration of all unvested options to purchase shares of
common stock, unvested shares of restricted common stock and
unvested performance units with respect to our common stock held
by such individual upon a change in control.
However, as described above, all outstanding equity awards will
be canceled and cashed out pursuant to the terms of
the merger agreement.
Each change in control agreement also provides that in the event
that the individual receives an excess parachute
payment, as defined in Section 280G(b)(1) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the
Code), which subjects him or her to an excise tax
under Section 4999 of the Code, his or her total severance
payments and benefits will be reduced to an amount such that he
or she is not subject to the excise tax. However, the severance
payments and benefits will be reduced only if the individual
would be in a better net after-tax position after the reduction
than he or she would be in without such reduction taking into
consideration payment of the excise tax under Section 4999
of the Code. In all events, the individual is responsible for
any excise tax that may be due on any such payments.
Management
Incentive Plan
Each executive officer participates in our Management Incentive
Plan, which is an annual cash incentive plan. In the event the
employment of a participant in the Management Incentive Plan
terminates for any reason during the year following a
change in control, which includes the merger, such
participant will be entitled to a payment equal to his or her
target bonus, pro rated based upon the number of days such
executive has worked during the fiscal year in which termination
occurs. Mr. Clerico, the chairman of our board of
directors, does not participate in the Management Incentive Plan
and would not currently receive a payment related to a bonus in
the event of his termination.
In addition, should the effective time of the merger not occur
prior to December 31, 2011, we may, at the discretion of
the compensation committee of our board of directors, pay
bonuses for 2011 as early as such date, calculated as if the
target level of performance had been achieved.
Non-Employee
Director Compensation Policy
Each of our non-employee directors (including Mr. Clerico)
is compensated through our non-employee director compensation
policy. Our non-employee director compensation policy provides
that upon a change in control that results in such
non-employee directors membership on our board of
directors being terminated, which includes the merger, each
non-employee director is entitled to a payment in an amount
equal to the portion of the annual cash retainer and value of
the annual equity grant such non-employee director would
43
have otherwise been entitled to receive through the end of the
then-current director election cycle pursuant to our
non-employee director compensation policy.
Indemnification
of Directors and Officers
For six years from and after the effective time of the merger,
Technip and Global Industries as the surviving corporation will,
jointly and severally, indemnify and hold harmless our, and our
subsidiaries, present and former officers and directors
and each person who acts or has acted as a fiduciary under any
of our, or our subsidiaries, employee benefit plans in
respect of acts or omissions occurring at or prior to the
effective time of the merger to the fullest extent permitted by
the Louisiana Business Corporation Law or any other applicable
law or provided under our articles of incorporation and bylaws
in effect as of September 11, 2011. Technip is required to
maintain in effect provisions in the surviving
corporations articles of incorporation and bylaws (or in
such documents of any successor to the business of the surviving
corporation) regarding elimination of liability of directors,
indemnification of officers, directors and employees and
advancement of expenses that are no less advantageous to the
intended beneficiaries than the corresponding provisions in
existence on September 11, 2011. Technip is also obligated
to maintain substantially equivalent, and in any event no less
favorable, directors and officers liability
insurance or to purchase tail period coverage for a
period of six years after the completion of the merger;
provided the annual cost is not greater than 200% of our
current annual premium, in which case Technip is obligated to
provide as much insurance as may be purchased at such cost.
Quantification
of Payments and Benefits
The following tables show the amounts of payments and benefits
that each of our directors and executive officers would receive
in connection with the merger, assuming (i) the
consummation of the merger occurs on December 23, 2011, and
(ii) in the case of our chairman and each of our executive
officers, that the executive officers or chairmans
employment or chairmanship was terminated by us without
cause or by the executive officer or chairman for
good reason, or in the case of our non-employee
directors, that their membership on our board of directors was
terminated, in each case on December 23, 2011. These
amounts may change if the date on which the merger is
consummated or the executive officer or chairman experiences a
qualifying termination differs from our assumption.
The first table below, entitled Golden Parachute
Compensation: Named Executive Officers, along with its
footnotes, shows the compensation payable to the chairman of our
board of directors (who served as our principal executive
officer until March 2, 2010), our chief executive officer,
our chief financial officer, our executive vice president (who
served as our principal financial officer from January 28,
2010 until April 26, 2010) and the other three most
highly compensated executives as determined for purposes of our
most recent annual proxy statement (together, our named
executive officers), and is covered by an advisory,
non-binding vote of our shareholders, as described in
Approval of Executive Compensation Related to the
Merger. The second table below, entitled Golden
Parachute Compensation: Other Executive Officers, along
with its footnotes, shows the compensation payable to our other
executive officers and non-employee directors (other than
Mr. Clerico, who is also a named executive officer), and is
not subject to such an advisory vote. Although the rules of the
SEC do not require the second table, it has been included so
that quantification of the payments and benefits that could be
received by all our executive officers and directors is
presented in a uniform manner.
Golden
Parachute Compensation: Named Executive Officers*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pension/
|
|
Perquisites/
|
|
Tax
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash
|
|
Equity
|
|
NQDC
|
|
Benefits
|
|
Reimbursement
|
|
Other
|
|
Total
|
Name
|
|
($)(1)
|
|
($)(2)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)(3)
|
|
($)(4)
|
|
($)(5)
|
|
($)(6)(7)
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
5,317,299
|
|
|
|
5,686,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
36,726
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
11,040,025
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
3,650,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
3,650,000
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
1,717,222
|
|
|
|
1,385,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
44,091
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
3,146,313
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson(8)
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
192,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
192,000
|
|
James J. Doré(9)
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
256,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
256,000
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
1,496,712
|
|
|
|
896,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
46,299
|
|
|
|
682,923
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
3,121,934
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
1,666,340
|
|
|
|
952,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
44,091
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
2,662,431
|
|
44
|
|
|
* |
|
Covered by the Advisory Vote on Golden Parachute
Compensation. |
|
(1) |
|
As described above, except with respect to Mr. Clerico, the
cash amounts consist of a lump sum equal to (a) a pro-rated
bonus for 2011 and (b) a severance payment equal to three
times the executives base salary and bonus. A pro-rated
bonus in the year of termination and the severance payments are
payable under the terms of the change in control agreements. In
the case of Mr. Clerico the cash amounts consist of a fixed
amount stipulated under the terms of his change in control
agreement as well as a payment in lieu of the portion of his
annual equity grant for the current director election cycle that
would otherwise be made after December 23, 2011 under the
terms of our non-employee director compensation policy. No
amounts have been included with respect to payment of
Mr. Clericos annual cash retainer pursuant to the
terms of the non-employee director compensation policy because
no portion of such annual cash retainer for the current director
election cycle would otherwise be paid after December 23,
2011. The pro-rated 2011 bonus and severance payment amounts are
only payable upon a qualifying termination during
the two years following the merger and as such are considered
double trigger payments. The director fee payment
amount is only payable upon a termination of
Mr. Clericos directorship upon the merger and as such
is also a double trigger payment. The three amounts
are broken down as follows: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pro-rated
|
|
Severance
|
|
Director Fee
|
Name
|
|
2011 Bonus ($)
|
|
Payment ($)
|
|
Payment ($)
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
745,299
|
|
|
|
4,572,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
3,600,000
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
178,050
|
|
|
|
1,539,150
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
James J. Doré
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
146,712
|
|
|
|
1,350,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
163,340
|
|
|
|
1,503,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
|
(2) |
|
As described above, the equity amounts consist of the cash
payments payable pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement
in respect of unvested (i) options to purchase common stock
with an exercise price less than $8.00 (the merger
consideration) (each such stock option, an Unvested
In-The-Money
Stock Option), (ii) shares of restricted stock, and
(iii) performance units with respect to our common stock
(assuming a target payout in the case of performance units).
This acceleration of equity awards is single-trigger
because it will occur immediately upon consummation of merger,
whether or not employment is terminated. The following table
shows the amounts in this column payable pursuant to each type
of unvested equity award held by our named executive officers: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In-the-Money
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
Restricted Shares
|
|
Performance Units
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
86,000
|
|
|
|
2,400,000
|
|
|
|
3,200,000
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
33,001
|
|
|
|
600,000
|
|
|
|
752,000
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
192,000
|
|
James J. Doré
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
256,000
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
400,000
|
|
|
|
496,000
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
200,000
|
|
|
|
752,000
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The equity amounts do not include cash payments in respect of
vested stock options with an exercise price less than $8.00
(each a Vested
In-The-Money
Stock Option), the merger consideration, and fully-vested |
45
|
|
|
|
|
shares of common stock. The following table shows the amounts
with respect to Vested
In-The-Money
Stock Options and fully-vested shares of common stock: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vested
|
|
|
|
|
In-the-Money
|
|
Fully-Vested
|
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
Shares
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
43,000
|
|
|
|
320,000
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
4,804,408
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
16,499
|
|
|
|
352,000
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson(a)
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
901,200
|
|
James J. Doré(a)
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
1,335,848
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
761,840
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
795,016
|
|
|
|
|
|
(a)
|
Numbers regarding fully-vested shares are current as of
Mr. Atkinsons retirement on December 31, 2010
and Mr. Dorés retirement effective
March 31, 2011.
|
|
|
|
(3) |
|
As described above, the perquisite and other benefit amounts
with respect to each individual include the value of two years
of subsidized medical, dental and life insurance coverage under
our welfare benefit plans for the executives and their eligible
dependents provided under the terms of the change in control.
These benefits are double trigger because they will
only be provided following termination of employment other than
for cause or due to death or disability, during the
two years following the merger. Amounts reported in this column
have been calculated in accordance with the assumptions used for
financial reporting purposes under generally accepted accounting
principles. Mr. Clerico does not participate in our welfare
benefit programs. |
|
|
|
(4) |
|
The amount included in this column reflects an estimated
reimbursement amount, payable pursuant to the terms of
Mr. Borjas employment, for income taxes in Mexico.
Mr. Borja is not entitled to reimbursement for any income
taxes other than those incurred in Mexico. Reimbursement for
income taxes due in Mexico relating to Mr. Borjas
equity awards is single trigger because
Mr. Borja will receive the benefit, regardless of whether
he experiences a qualifying termination immediately
upon consummation of the merger. Reimbursement for income taxes
due in Mexico relating to other payments received by
Mr. Borja, as described herein, is double
trigger because Mr. Borja will only receive the
benefit following certain terminations of employment during the
two years following the merger. The following table shows the
single trigger and double trigger
amounts estimated with respect to Mr. Borjas
reimbursement for income taxes in Mexico: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tax
|
|
Tax
|
|
|
Reimbursement
|
|
Reimbursement
|
|
|
on Single Trigger
|
|
on Double Trigger
|
Name
|
|
Payments ($)
|
|
Payments ($)
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
250,880
|
|
|
|
432,043
|
|
|
|
|
(5) |
|
We have not included amounts with respect to (a) the
estimated value of reimbursement for legal fees incurred as a
result of the termination, (b) certain relocation expenses
that could become payable in connection with each executive
officers change in control agreement and (c) the
estimated value of the cash payment for unvested contributions
under our 401(k) retirement plan as of the date of termination,
in each case, which would be provided under the terms of the
change in control agreements because we do not believe any of
these benefits will be payable in connection with the merger.
All contributions under our 401(k) retirement plan are currently
fully-vested, and we do not anticipate that our named executive
officers will incur legal fees or be entitled to relocation
benefits as a result of a termination of employment. If payable,
each of these benefits would be double trigger
because amounts will only become payable upon a qualifying
termination during the two years following the merger. |
|
|
|
(6) |
|
As described above, the change in control agreements provide
that in the event an individual would receive an excess
parachute payment that would subject him or her to an
excise tax under Section 4999 of the Code, his or her total
severance payments and benefits will be reduced (a
Section 280G Cutback) to an |
46
|
|
|
|
|
amount such that he or she is not subject to the excise tax.
However, the severance payments and benefits will be reduced
only if the individual would be in a better net after-tax
position after the reduction than he or she would be in without
such reduction, taking into consideration payment of the excise
tax under Section 4999 of the Code. The totals reflected
above do not reflect any estimated Section 280G Cutback
with respect to each of our named executive officers in
accordance with this provision. We currently estimate that none
of our named executive officers will be put in a better net
after-tax position by a Section 280G Cutback. |
|
|
|
(7) |
|
The following table sets forth the aggregate single
trigger and double trigger payments and
benefits with respect to each of our non-employee directors and
named executive officers: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Single Trigger
|
|
Double Trigger
|
|
|
Compensation
|
|
Compensation
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
5,686,000
|
|
|
|
5,354,225
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
3,650,000
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
1,385,000
|
|
|
|
1,761,313
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson
|
|
|
192,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
James J. Doré
|
|
|
256,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
1,146,880
|
|
|
|
1,975,054
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
952,000
|
|
|
|
1,710,431
|
|
|
|
|
(8) |
|
Mr. Atkinson retired effective December 31, 2010 and
his change in control agreement terminated on that date. |
|
|
|
(9) |
|
Mr. Doré retired on March 31, 2011 and his change
in control agreement terminated on that date. |
Golden
Parachute Compensation: Other Executive Officers*
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pension/
|
|
Perquisites/
|
|
Tax
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cash
|
|
Equity
|
|
NQDC
|
|
Benefits
|
|
Reimbursement
|
|
Other
|
|
Total
|
Name
|
|
($)(1)(2)
|
|
($)(3)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)(4)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)(5)
|
|
($)(6)(7)
|
|
Executive Officers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Russell J. Robicheaux
|
|
|
1,648,310
|
|
|
|
776,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
38,934
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
2,463,244
|
|
James Osborn
|
|
|
1,651,373
|
|
|
|
1,059,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
49,050
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
2,759,423
|
|
Byron W. Baker
|
|
|
1,473,255
|
|
|
|
448,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
36,911
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
1,958,166
|
|
David R. Sheil
|
|
|
1,277,195
|
|
|
|
616,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
46,366
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
1,939,561
|
|
Non-Employee Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Charles O. Buckner
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Lawrence R. Dickerson
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Edward P. Djerejian
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Charles R. Enze
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Larry E. Farmer
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Edgar G. Hotard
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Richard A. Pattarozzi
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Not covered by the Advisory Vote on Golden Parachute
Compensation. |
|
|
|
(1) |
|
As described above, the cash amounts with respect to our
executive officers consist of a lump sum equal to (a) a
pro-rated bonus for 2011 and (b) a severance payment equal
to three times the executives base salary and bonus. The
pro-rated bonus for 2011 and the severance payments are payable
under the terms |
47
|
|
|
|
|
of the change in control agreements. These amounts are only
payable upon a qualifying termination during the two
years following the merger and as such are considered
double trigger payments. The two amounts are broken
down as follows: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Pro-rated
|
|
Severance
|
|
|
2011 Bonus
|
|
Payment
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Russell J. Robicheaux
|
|
|
177,347
|
|
|
|
1,470,963
|
|
James Osborn
|
|
|
161,873
|
|
|
|
1,489,500
|
|
Byron W. Baker
|
|
|
165,138
|
|
|
|
1,308,117
|
|
David R. Sheil
|
|
|
125,195
|
|
|
|
1,152,000
|
|
|
|
|
(2) |
|
As described above, the cash amounts with respect our
non-employee directors (other than Mr. Clerico) consist
solely of a payment in lieu of the portion of each such
non-employee directors annual equity grant for the current
director election cycle that would otherwise be made after
December 23, 2011 under the terms of our non-employee
director compensation policy. No amounts have been included with
respect to payment of any non-employee directors annual
cash retainer pursuant to the terms of the non-employee director
compensation policy because no portion of such annual cash
retainer for the current director election cycle would otherwise
be paid after December 23, 2011. This amount is only
payable upon a termination of such non-employee directors
directorship upon the merger and as such is a double
trigger payment. |
|
(3) |
|
As described above, the equity amounts consist of the cash
payments pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement in
respect of Unvested
In-The-Money
Stock Options, unvested shares of restricted common stock and
unvested performance units with respect to our common stock
(assuming a target payout in the case of performance units).
This acceleration of equity awards is single-trigger
because it will occur immediately upon consummation of merger,
whether or not employment is terminated. Our non-employee
directors do not hold unvested equity awards. The following
table shows the amounts in this column payable pursuant to each
of type of unvested equity award held by our executive officers
covered by this table: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Unvested
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In-the-Money
|
|
Restricted
|
|
Performance
|
|
|
Stock Options
|
|
Shares
|
|
Units
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Russell J. Robicheaux
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
280,000
|
|
|
|
496,000
|
|
James Osborn
|
|
|
27,000
|
|
|
|
312,000
|
|
|
|
720,000
|
|
Byron W. Baker
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
64,000
|
|
|
|
384,000
|
|
David R. Sheil
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
120,000
|
|
|
|
496,000
|
|
48
|
|
|
|
|
The equity amounts do not include cash payments in respect of
Vested
In-The-Money
Stock Options and fully-vested shares of common stock. The
following table shows the amounts with respect to Vested
In-The-Money
Stock Options and fully-vested shares of our common stock: |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Vested In-the
|
|
|
|
|
Money Stock
|
|
Fully-Vested
|
Name
|
|
Options ($)
|
|
Shares ($)
|
|
Executive Officers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Russell J. Robicheaux
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
947,664
|
|
James Osborn
|
|
|
13,500
|
|
|
|
148,344
|
|
Byron W. Baker
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
997,352
|
|
David R. Sheil
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
309,312
|
|
Non-Employee Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Charles O. Buckner
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
131,056
|
|
Lawrence R. Dickerson
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
376,104
|
|
Edward P. Djerejian
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
692,000
|
|
Charles R. Enze
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
53,328
|
|
Larry E. Farmer
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
455,368
|
|
Edgar G. Hotard
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
571,888
|
|
Richard A. Pattarozzi
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
603,816
|
|
|
|
|
(4) |
|
As described above, the perquisite and other benefit amounts
with respect to each individual include the value of two years
of subsidized medical, dental and life insurance coverage under
our welfare benefit plans for the executives and their eligible
dependents provided under the terms of the change in control
agreements. These benefits are double trigger
because they will only be provided following termination of
employment other than for cause or due to death or
disability, during the two years following the merger. Amounts
reported in this column have been calculated in accordance with
the assumptions used for financial reporting purposes under
generally accepted accounting principles. |
|
(5) |
|
We have not included amounts with respect to (a) the
estimated value of reimbursement for legal fees incurred as a
result of the termination, (b) certain relocation expenses
that could become payable in connection with each executive
officers change in control agreement and (c) the
estimated value of the cash payment for unvested contributions
under our 401(k) retirement plan as of the date of termination,
in each case, which would be provided under the terms of the
change in control agreements because we do not believe any of
these benefits will be payable in connection with the merger.
All contributions under our 401(k) retirement plan are currently
fully-vested, and we do not anticipate that our executive
officers will incur legal fees or be entitled to relocation
benefits as a result of a termination of employment. If payable,
each of these benefits would be double trigger
because amounts will only become payable upon a qualifying
termination during the two years following the merger. |
|
(6) |
|
As described above, the change in control agreements provide
that in the event an individual would receive an excess
parachute payment that would subject him or her to an
excise tax under Section 4999 of the Code, his or her total
severance payments and benefits will be reduced (a
Section 280G Cutback) to an amount such that he
or she is not subject to the excise tax. However, the severance
payments and benefits will be reduced only if the individual
would be in a better net after-tax position after the reduction
than he or she would be in without such reduction, taking into
consideration payment of the excise tax under Section 4999
of the Code. The totals above do not reflect any estimated
Section 280G Cutback in accordance with this provision.
However, we currently estimate that Mr. Robicheaux will be
put in a better net after-tax position by a Section 280G
Cutback. The Section 280G Cutback with respect to
Mr. Robicheaux is currently estimated at $167,346. None of
the other executive officers included in this table are expected
to be put in a better net after-tax position by a
Section 280G Cutback. |
49
|
|
|
(7) |
|
The following table sets forth the aggregate single
trigger and double trigger payments and
benefits with respect to each of our executive officers (other
than our named executive officers): |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Single Trigger
|
|
Double Trigger
|
|
|
Compensation
|
|
Compensation
|
Name
|
|
($)
|
|
($)
|
|
Executive Officers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Russell J. Robicheaux
|
|
|
776,000
|
|
|
|
1,687,244
|
|
James Osborn
|
|
|
1,059,000
|
|
|
|
1,700,423
|
|
Byron W. Baker
|
|
|
448,000
|
|
|
|
1,510,166
|
|
David R. Sheil
|
|
|
616,000
|
|
|
|
1,323,561
|
|
Non-Employee Directors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Charles O. Buckner
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Lawrence R. Dickerson
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Edward P. Djerejian
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Charles R. Enze
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Larry E. Farmer
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Edgar G. Hotard
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Richard A. Pattarozzi
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
Amended
and Restated Articles of Incorporation of Global
Industries
The Global Industries board of directors has unanimously
approved, subject to shareholder approval, the amended and
restated articles of incorporation to remove a limitation on the
ownership of our outstanding common stock by
non-United
States citizens. In the event that the merger agreement is
approved but the amended and restated articles of incorporation
are not adopted, the merger will not be completed. In the event
the amended and restated certificate of incorporation is
approved by our shareholders, but the merger is not completed,
the amended and restated articles of incorporation will not
become effective.
The form of amended and restated articles of incorporation is
included in this proxy statement as Annex B.
Regulatory
Matters
Antitrust Clearance. Under the HSR Act, and
the related rules and regulations that have been issued by the
FTC, acquisitions exceeding certain thresholds may not be
consummated until a Premerger Notification and Report Form have
been furnished to the FTC and the Antitrust Division and certain
waiting period requirements have been satisfied. These
requirements of the HSR Act apply to the merger. Under the HSR
Act, the merger may not be completed until the expiration of a
30 calendar day waiting period following the filing by Technip
and Global Industries of a Premerger Notification and Report
Form concerning the merger with the FTC and the Antitrust
Division, unless the waiting period is earlier terminated by the
FTC and the Antitrust Division.
Technip and Global Industries each filed Premerger Notification
and Report Forms on September 23, 2011 with the FTC and the
Antitrust Division in connection with the merger (within the
time period required by contract) and requested early
termination of the waiting period. Early termination was granted
on October 24, 2011.
At any time before or after the completion of the merger, the
Antitrust Division or the FTC could take such action under the
antitrust laws as it deems necessary or desirable in the public
interest, including seeking to enjoin the merger or seeking the
divestiture of substantial assets of Technip or its
subsidiaries, or of Global Industries or its subsidiaries.
Private parties and state governments may also bring legal
action under the antitrust laws under certain circumstances.
While the parties believe that consummation of the merger would
not violate any antitrust law, there can be no assurance that a
challenge to the merger on antitrust grounds will not be made
or, if a challenge is made, what the result will be.
50
Mexico. The merger is also subject to the LFCE
in Mexico. Technip and Global Industries are obligated to submit
a filing to the FCC. Each of Global Industries and Technip made
such filing on September 26, 2011 (within the time period
required by contract). The FCC has 10 business days following
the date of filing, to issue an order preventing the parties
from closing the merger while the FCC reviews the merger. If
after such term the FCC does not issue such an order, the
parties are allowed to close the transaction before clearance.
The FCC has 5 business days from the date of filing, to request
basic information that should have been included in the initial
filing and the FCC has 15 business days, from the later of the
date of filing or the date upon which information was requested,
to request additional documents from the parties. The FCC has 35
business days from the later of the date of filing or, if
applicable, the date from which the parties complete their
response to an information request, to determine whether to
approve the transaction. In complicated cases, the FCC may
extend the period for 40 additional business days to
and/or make
a decision as to whether the transaction complies with the LFCE.
The parties believe that after obtaining the required approvals,
consummation of the merger would not violate the LFCE. In this
regard, please note that pursuant to the LFCE, a transaction
that has been approved by the FCC may not be challenged, except
on grounds that the parties furnished false information to the
FCC. Prior to obtaining a decision, however, there is no
assurance that the FCC would approve the transaction or approve
the transaction without changes. Under the terms of the merger
agreement, if the FCC issues an order preventing the closing of
the merger a waiting period will commence and we must have
subsequently received an approval from the FCC following the
issuance of such an order, in order for the closing conditions
to be met.
The applicable waiting period imposed under the LFCE expired on
October 20, 2011, thereby satisfying the relevant closing
condition in the merger agreement. However, the FCC is
continuing to review the merger.
Brazil. The merger is also subject to review
by the competition authorities in Brazil. The appropriate
Brazilian competition authorities were required to be notified
of the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement within
15 business days of its execution. Notification of this
transaction is a condition to the merger, but approval by the
Brazil competition authorities is not. The required notification
was submitted on September 28, 2011 (within the time period
required by contract and Brazilian law).
Exon-Florio. The merger is also subject to
review by CFIUS pursuant to Section 721 of Title VII
of the Defense Production Act of 1950, as amended by the Foreign
Investment and National Security Act of 2007
(Exon-Florio). Exon-Florio authorizes CFIUS to
review the effects on national security of mergers, acquisitions
and takeovers by or with foreign persons which could result in
foreign control of persons engaged in interstate commerce in the
United States. The President has delegated authority to
investigate proposed transactions to CFIUS. In order for the
President to exercise his authority to suspend or prohibit a
transaction, the President must make two findings: (i) that
there is credible evidence that leads the President to believe
that the foreign interest exercising control might take action
that threatens to impair national security and (ii) that
provisions of law other than Exon-Florio and the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act do not, in the Presidents
judgment, provide adequate and appropriate authority for the
President to protect the national security in connection with
the transaction. The Presidents actions are not subject to
judicial review. If the President makes such findings, he may
take action for such time as he considers appropriate to suspend
or prohibit the relevant transaction. The President may direct
the Attorney General to seek appropriate relief, including
divestment relief, in the district courts of the United States
in order to implement and enforce Exon-Florio. Absent certain
conditions, Exon-Florio does not obligate the parties to a
covered transaction to notify CFIUS of a proposed transaction.
However, if notice of a proposed transaction is not submitted,
then the transaction remains subject to review by the President
under Exon-Florio.
On October 7, 2011, Technip and Global Industries submitted
a joint voluntary notice to CFIUS of the proposed acquisition of
Global Industries. Within thirty days of accepting the
notification, CFIUS must conclude a preliminary review and
determine whether a full investigation of the proposed
transaction should be undertaken. The thirty-day review period
expires at 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on November 9, 2011.
We cannot assure you that an antitrust, CFIUS or other
regulatory challenge to the merger will not be made.
51
Dissenters
Rights
Dissenting shareholders who comply with the procedural
requirements of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law will be
entitled to receive payment of the fair cash value of their
shares as of the day before the special meeting if the merger is
effected upon approval by less than eighty percent of our total
voting power. These provisions establish the exclusive means by
which you may exercise your right to dissent from the merger. If
the merger is approved by the holders of at least eighty percent
of our outstanding common stock, you will not be entitled to
dissenters rights. The following is a summary of the
dissenters rights provisions and is qualified in its
entirety by reference to the statute. Because it is a summary,
it may not contain all of the information that is important to
you. We have attached a copy of Section 131 of the
Louisiana Business Corporation Law (La. Rev. Stat.
§ 12:131) as Annex D to this proxy
statement, which we urge you to read carefully in conjunction
with this summary.
To dissent from the merger, you will be required to deliver to
us a written objection prior to or at the special meeting.
Thereafter, you must vote (in person or by proxy) against the
proposal to approve the merger agreement and the merger. Neither
a vote against the merger agreement nor a specification in a
proxy to vote against the merger agreement will in and of itself
constitute the necessary written objection to the merger
agreement. Moreover, by voting in favor of, or abstaining from
voting on, the merger agreement, or by returning the enclosed
proxy without instructing the proxy holders to vote against the
merger agreement, a shareholder waives his or her rights under
Section 131. Please remember that a shareholder who
executes and returns an unmarked proxy card will have his shares
voted FOR the merger agreement and the merger
and, as a consequence, that shareholder will be foreclosed from
exercising rights as a dissenting shareholder under
Section 131.
If the merger agreement and the merger are approved by the
holders of less than eighty percent of our total voting power,
we will promptly notify in writing by mail, after the merger is
completed, each shareholder who filed the written objection
described above and voted against the merger. Each of these
shareholders is referred to in this section as a
dissenting shareholder. Within 20 days after we
mail the notice of shareholder approval (but not thereafter),
the dissenting shareholder must file with us his written demand
for the fair cash value of his shares of stock, valued as of the
day before the special meeting. In addition to stating the value
that he is demanding, the written demand must provide a post
office address to which we may respond.
At the same time, the dissenting shareholder will be required to
deposit his stock certificates in escrow at a bank or trust
company located in Calcasieu Parish. The certificates must be
duly endorsed and transferred to us upon the sole condition that
we pay the dissenting shareholder the fair cash value of his
shares as determined under Section 131 of the Louisiana
Business Corporation Law. To verify the deposit in escrow, the
dissenting shareholder will be required to deliver to us a
written acknowledgement of the depository bank or trust company
that holds his shares. Unless the shareholder objects to and
votes against the merger agreement, demands payment, endorses
and deposits his certificates and delivers the required written
acknowledgment in accordance with the procedures and within the
time periods set forth above, the shareholder will conclusively
be presumed to have acquiesced to the merger agreement and will
forfeit any right to seek payment pursuant to Section 131.
Within 20 days after we have received the dissenting
shareholders written demand and acknowledgement, we will
notify the dissenting shareholder in writing if we either
(i) disagree with the fair cash value demanded or
(ii) take the position that no payment is due to him. If we
determine that a payment is due to the dissenting shareholder,
we will state in the notice of disagreement the price deemed by
us to be the fair cash value of his shares. If we fail to
respond timely to the dissenting shareholders written
demand and acknowledgement, we will be liable for the amount
that the dissenting shareholder has demanded. In this regard,
shareholders should be aware that opinions of investment banking
firms as to fairness from a financial point of view, including
the opinion of Simmons described in this proxy statement, are
not opinions as to fair cash value under Louisiana
law, and a determination of the fair cash value of the shares
could be more or less than the consideration to be paid in the
merger.
Thereafter, if any disagreement remains with respect to whether
a payment is due or the fair cash value of the dissenting
shareholders shares of stock, the dissenting shareholder,
within 60 days after receipt of
52
notice in writing of our notice of disagreement (but not
thereafter), may file suit against us in a Calcasieu Parish
district court, requesting that the court determine the fair
cash value of his shares of stock as of the day before the
special meeting. Any shareholder entitled to file such suit may,
within such
60-day
period but not thereafter, intervene as a plaintiff in any suit
filed against us by another former shareholder for a judicial
determination of the fair cash value of such other
shareholders shares. If the dissenting shareholder is
entitled to file a suit under the provisions of Section 131
of the Louisiana Business Corporation Law, but fails to file
within 60 days after he receives the notice of
disagreement, he will be deemed to have accepted (i) our
statement that no payment is due if we have contended that no
payment is due or (ii) the fair cash value for his shares
as fixed by us in the notice of disagreement.
When we have agreed upon the fair cash value of the shares with
the shareholder, or when we have become liable for the fair cash
value demanded by the shareholder because of our failure to give
notice of disagreement and of the price deemed by us to be the
fair cash value of the shares, or when the shareholder has
become bound to accept the fair cash value of the shares we
agree is due because of the shareholders failure to bring
suit within 60 days after receipt of notice of our
disagreement, the action of the shareholder to recover such
value must be brought within five years from the date the fair
cash value was agreed upon or our liability became fixed.
If we, in our notice of disagreement, have offered to pay to the
dissenting shareholder on demand an amount in cash deemed by us
to be the fair cash value of the dissenting shareholders
shares and, if, on institution of a suit by the dissenting
shareholder claiming an amount in excess of the amount offered
by us, we deposit in the registry of the court the amount
offered by us, then the costs of the proceeding will be taxed
against us if the amount finally awarded to the shareholder,
exclusive of interest and costs, is more than the amount offered
and deposited by us. Otherwise, the costs of the proceeding will
be taxed against the shareholder.
The dissenting shareholder will cease to have any of the rights
of a shareholder, except the rights under the dissenters
rights provisions, when the dissenting shareholder files his
written demand for the fair cash value of his shares of stock.
The dissenting shareholder will have the unconditional right to
withdraw his demand to proceed under the dissenters rights
provisions and accept the terms offered under the merger
agreement at any time before the dissenting shareholder receives
the notice of disagreement from us. After the dissenting
shareholder receives the notice of disagreement, the dissenting
shareholder will be required to obtain our written consent
before he may withdraw his demand to proceed under the
dissenters rights provisions. If the dissenting
shareholder withdraws his demand or if he otherwise loses his
right to dissent from the merger, he will receive the
consideration to which he is entitled under the merger agreement.
If you do not follow the prescribed procedures, you will not be
entitled to dissenters rights with respect to your shares.
A shareholder who is a beneficial, but not the registered, owner
of our common stock who wishes to exercise the rights of a
dissenting shareholder under the Louisiana Business Corporation
Law cannot do so in his own name and should have the record
ownership of the shares transferred to his name or instruct the
record owner thereof to take all required action to comply on
his behalf with the procedures under Section 131 of the
Louisiana Business Corporation Law.
Because of the complexity of the procedures necessary to
exercise the rights of a dissenting shareholder, we recommend
that any shareholder wishing to exercise the right to dissent
consult with his own legal counsel.
Dissenting shareholders should send any communications regarding
their rights to Russell J. Robicheaux, Corporate Secretary,
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77077. All
such communications should be signed by or on behalf of the
dissenting shareholder in the form in which his shares are
registered on the books of Global Industries, Ltd.
53
Delisting
and Deregistration of Global Industries Common Stock
If the merger is completed, our common stock will no longer be
traded on NASDAQ and will be deregistered under the Exchange Act.
Accounting
Treatment
The merger will be accounted for as a purchase
transaction for financial accounting purposes.
Material
United States Federal Income Tax Consequences of the
Merger
The following is a summary of the material U.S. federal
income tax consequences of the merger to beneficial owners of
shares of Global Industries common stock who exchange their
shares of Global Industries common stock for cash pursuant to
the merger. This summary is based on the Code, applicable
Treasury Regulations, and administrative and judicial
interpretations thereof, each as of the date hereof, all of
which may change, possibly with retroactive effect. No ruling
has been or will be sought from the Internal Revenue Service
(the IRS) with respect to the matters discussed
below, and there can be no assurance that the IRS will not take
a contrary position regarding the tax consequences of the merger
or that any such contrary position would not be sustained by a
court.
This summary is limited to beneficial holders of shares of
Global Industries common stock who hold their shares as capital
assets within the meaning of Section 1221 of the Code. In
addition, this summary does not address tax considerations which
may be applicable to a holders particular circumstances or
to (i) holders that may be subject to special tax rules
(e.g., financial institutions, mutual funds, insurance
companies, broker-dealers, tax-exempt organizations and certain
expatriates or former long-term residents of the United States),
(ii) holders who acquired shares of Global Industries
common stock in connection with stock option, stock purchase,
stock appreciation right, restricted stock unit or restricted
stock plans or in other compensatory transactions, or as part of
a straddle, hedge, conversion, constructive sale, or other
integrated security transaction for U.S. federal income tax
purposes, or (iii) holders who perfect dissenters
rights with respect to the merger, all of whom may be subject to
tax rules that differ significantly from those discussed below.
This discussion assumes that the shares of Global Industries
common stock are not U.S. real property interests within
the meaning of section 897 of the Code. In addition, this
summary does not address any U.S. federal estate or gift
tax consequences, nor any state, local or foreign tax
consequences, of the merger.
BECAUSE YOUR INDIVIDUAL CIRCUMSTANCES MAY BE UNIQUE, YOU ARE
URGED TO CONSULT YOUR TAX ADVISOR WITH RESPECT TO THE
APPLICATION OF THE U.S. FEDERAL INCOME TAX LAWS TO YOUR
PARTICULAR SITUATION, AS WELL AS ANY TAX CONSEQUENCES OF THE
MERGER ARISING UNDER THE FEDERAL ESTATE OR GIFT TAX
RULES OR UNDER THE LAWS OF ANY STATE, LOCAL, FOREIGN OR
OTHER TAXING JURISDICTION OR UNDER ANY APPLICABLE TAX TREATY.
U.S.
Holders
For purposes of this summary, a U.S. Holder is
a beneficial owner of shares of Global Industries common stock
that is, for U.S. federal income tax purposes, (i) a
citizen or individual resident of the United States;
(ii) a corporation or an entity treated as a corporation
for U.S. federal income tax purposes created or organized
in or under the laws of the United States, or any state or
political subdivision thereof; (iii) an estate, the income
of which is subject to U.S. federal income tax regardless
of its source; or (iv) a trust, (A) the administration
of which is subject to the primary supervision of a United
States court and which has one or more United States persons who
have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the
trust or (B) that has validly elected to be treated as a
U.S. person for U.S. federal income tax purposes.
If a partnership (or other entity taxed as a partnership for
U.S. federal income tax purposes) holds shares of Global
Industries common stock, the tax treatment of a partner in such
partnership generally will depend upon the status of the partner
and the activities of the partnership. Accordingly, partnerships
that hold shares
54
of Global Industries common stock and partners in such
partnerships are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding
the specific U.S. federal income tax consequences to them
of the merger.
Effect of the Merger. With respect to
U.S. Holders, the receipt of cash in exchange for shares of
Global Industries common stock in the merger will be a taxable
transaction for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In
general, a U.S. Holder will recognize capital gain or loss
for U.S. federal income tax purposes equal to the
difference, if any, between the amount of cash received and the
U.S. Holders adjusted tax basis in the shares of
Global Industries common stock exchanged in the merger. Any such
gain or loss would be long-term capital gain or loss if the
U.S. Holders holding period for the shares of Global
Industries common stock exchanged exceeds one year. For
non-corporate taxpayers, long-term capital gains are generally
taxable at a reduced rate. The deductibility of capital losses
is subject to certain limitations. Gain or loss must be
calculated separately for each block of shares of Global
Industries common stock (i.e., shares of Global Industries
common stock acquired at the same cost in a single transaction)
exchanged for cash in the merger.
Information Reporting and Backup
Withholding. Payments made to a U.S. Holder
in the merger generally will be subject to information reporting
and may be subject to backup withholding at a rate of 28%. To
avoid backup withholding, U.S. Holders that do not
otherwise establish an exemption should complete and return the
Substitute
Form W-9
included in the letter of transmittal, which will be sent to our
common shareholders of record if the merger is completed. The
Substitute
Form W-9
should certify that such holder is a U.S. person, the
taxpayer identification number provided is correct, and that
such holder is not subject to backup withholding. Certain
holders (including corporations) generally are not subject to
backup withholding. Backup withholding is not an additional tax.
Any amounts withheld under the backup withholding rules will be
allowed as a credit against the U.S. Holders
U.S. federal income tax liability, and such
U.S. Holder may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld in
excess of the U.S. Holders U.S. federal income
tax liability provided the required information is timely
furnished to the IRS.
Non-U.S.
Holders
The following is a summary of certain U.S. federal income
tax consequences that will apply to
Non-U.S. Holders
of shares of Global Industries common stock. The term
Non-U.S. Holder
means a beneficial owner of shares of Global Industries common
stock, other than a partnership (or entity treated as a
partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes), that is
not a U.S. Holder.
Effect of the merger. The receipt of cash in
exchange for shares of Global Industries common stock pursuant
to the merger generally will be exempt from U.S. federal
income tax, unless:
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the gain on the exchange, if any, is effectively connected with
the conduct by a
Non-U.S. Holder
of a trade or business in the United States (and, if an income
tax treaty applies, such gain is attributable to a permanent
establishment maintained by the
Non-U.S. Holder
in the United States); or
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the
Non-U.S. Holder
is an individual who is present in the United States for
183 days or more in the taxable year of the sale or
exchange, and certain other conditions are met.
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If gain is effectively connected with the conduct by a
Non-U.S. Holder
of a U.S. trade or business, such
Non-U.S. Holder
generally will be subject to U.S. federal income tax, on a
net income basis, on the gain derived from the sale or exchange,
except as otherwise required by an applicable U.S. income
tax treaty. If the
Non-U.S. Holder
is a corporation, any such effectively connected gain received
by it may also, under certain circumstances, be subject to the
branch profits tax at a 30% rate (or such lower rate as may be
prescribed under an applicable U.S. income tax treaty). If
the
Non-U.S. Holder
is described in the second bullet point above, the
Non-U.S. Holder
will be subject to a 30% U.S. federal income tax on the
gain derived from the sale or exchange of shares of Global
Industries common stock, which may be offset by U.S. source
capital losses, even though the
Non-U.S. Holder
is not considered a resident of the United States.
Information Reporting and Backup
Withholding. In general, a
Non-U.S. Holder
will not be subject to backup withholding or information
reporting with respect to a payment made with respect to shares
of Global Industries common stock exchanged for cash in the
merger if it provided the paying agent with a properly completed
IRS
Form W-8BEN
(or a
Form W-8ECI
if the gain is effectively connected with the conduct of a
55
U.S. trade or business). If shares of Global Industries
common stock are held through a foreign partnership or other
flow-through entity, certain documentation requirements also
apply to the partnership or other flow-through entity. If a
Non-U.S. Holder
fails to provide the properly completed forms, such
Non-U.S. Holder
will be subject to backup withholding at the rates provided in
the Code (currently at a rate of 28%) on the cash received in
the merger or upon the exercise of dissenters rights.
Backup withholding is not an additional tax and any amounts
withheld under the backup withholding rules will be credited
against the
Non-U.S. Holders
U.S. federal income tax liability, and the
Non-U.S. Holder
may obtain a refund of any amounts withheld in excess of the
Non-U.S. Holders
U.S. federal income tax liability; provided, that
the
Non-U.S. Holder
furnish the required information to the IRS in a timely manner.
Litigation
Related to the Merger
Shortly after the announcement of the merger, several putative
class action lawsuits challenging the merger were filed in the
District Court of Harris County, Texas, the District Court in
the Parish of Calcasieu, Louisiana, and the United States
District Court for the Southern District of Texas against
various combinations of Global Industries, Technip, Merger Sub,
and the individual members of our board of directors.
District
Court of Harris County Texas
Beginning on September 13, 2011, six putative class action
lawsuits challenging the merger were filed in the District
Courts of Harris County Texas against Global Industries,
Technip, Merger Sub, and the individual members of our board of
directors. On October 10, 2011, the District Court of
Harris County Texas, 11th Judicial District, consolidated these
actions under the caption Mihalakelis v. Global
Industries, Ltd.,
2011-54430
(the Texas State Court Action) and appointed interim
class counsel. On October 19, 2011, the plaintiffs in the
Texas State Court Action filed a consolidated amended class
action petition, which alleges, among other things, that the
members of our board of directors breached their fiduciary
duties owed to our public shareholders by entering into the
merger agreement, approving the proposed merger, failing to take
steps to maximize our value to our public shareholders, ignoring
alleged conflicts of interest, and issuing a preliminary proxy
statement on October 7, 2011 that omitted material
information, and that Global Industries and Technip aided and
abetted such breaches of fiduciary duties. The plaintiffs
generally seek, among other things, declaratory and injunctive
relief concerning the alleged fiduciary breaches, injunctive
relief prohibiting the defendants from consummating the proposed
merger and other forms of equitable relief.
As described below, on October 27, 2011, the parties to the
Texas State Court Action, along with the parties to the related
federal action (also described below), entered into a memorandum
of understanding setting forth the terms and conditions of an
agreement in principle to resolve all of the claims asserted in
the shareholder litigation challenging the proposed merger.
District
Court in the Parish of Calcasieu, Louisiana
On September 13, 2011, a putative class action lawsuit
challenging the merger was filed in the 14th Judicial
District Court in the Parish of Calcasieu, Louisiana against
Global Industries, Merger Sub, and the individual members of our
board of directors. The lawsuit was captioned Miller vs.
Global Industries Ltd., et al, 2011.004336-H. On
October 6, 2011, Global Industries and the individual
members of our board of directors moved to stay the Louisiana
litigation pending resolution of the Texas State Court Action.
On October 11, 2011, the plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed
the lawsuit filed in Louisiana state court.
United
States District Court for the Southern District of
Texas
On October 11, 2011, a putative class action lawsuit
challenging the merger was filed in the United States District
Court for the Southern District of Texas against Global
Industries and the individual members of our board of directors.
The lawsuit is captioned Miller et. al. v. Global
Industries Ltd.,
No. 4:11-cv-03625
(the Texas Federal Court Action). The Texas Federal
Court Action generally alleges, among other things, that the
members of our board of directors violated Sections 14(a)
and 20(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 in connection
with the filing of the preliminary proxy statement on
October 7, 2011 in so far as the preliminary
56
proxy statement allegedly omitted material information. The
plaintiffs generally seek, among other things, declaratory and
injunctive relief prohibiting the defendants from consummating
the proposed merger and other forms of equitable relief. On
October 11 and 12, 2011, the plaintiffs filed motions to
expedite discovery proceedings and to preliminarily enjoin the
shareholder vote on the proposed transaction. On
October 21, 2011, defendants filed a motion to dismiss the
complaint for failure to state a claim.
As described below, on October 27, 2011, the parties to the
Texas Federal Court Action, along with the parties to the Texas
State Court Action, entered into a memorandum of understanding
setting forth the terms and conditions of an agreement in
principle to resolve all of the claims asserted in the
shareholder litigation challenging the proposed merger.
Proposed
Settlement of All Shareholder Litigation Related to the
Merger
On October 27, 2011, the parties to the Texas State Court
Action and the Texas Federal Court Action (together, the
Actions) entered into a memorandum of understanding
(the MOU) setting forth the terms and conditions of
an agreement in principle to resolve all of the claims asserted
in the Actions. Pursuant to the MOU, defendants have agreed that
Global Industries would include in this definitive proxy
statement certain supplemental disclosures concerning the
merger. The MOU further provides that (1) the parties will
agree upon and execute a stipulation of settlement (the
Stipulation), which will replace the MOU, and will
submit the Stipulation to the District Court of Harris County,
Texas for review and approval; (3) the Stipulation will
provide for dismissal of the Actions with prejudice on the
merits; (4) the Stipulation will include a general release
of defendants from any and all claims relating to, among other
things, the merger, the merger agreement and any disclosures
made in connection therewith; and (5) the MOU is, and the
Stipulation will be, conditioned on, among other things,
consummation of the merger, completion of certain confirmatory
discovery, class certification and final approval by the
District Court of Harris County, Texas following notice to the
shareholders of Global Industries. In connection with the
settlement, Global Industries or its
successor-in-interest
has agreed to pay, subject to court approval, an award of fees
and expenses to plaintiffs counsel in an amount of
$837,500.00.
The defendants have denied and continue to deny any wrongdoing
or liability with respect to all claims, events and transactions
complained of in the aforementioned actions or that they have
engaged in any wrongdoing. The defendants have entered into the
MOU solely to eliminate the uncertainty, burden, risk, expense
and distraction of further litigation.
The settlement will not affect the form or amount of
consideration to be received by Global Industries in the merger.
57
THE
MERGER AGREEMENT
The following summary of the material terms of the merger
agreement is qualified in its entirety by reference to the
complete text of the merger agreement, which is incorporated by
reference in this proxy statement and attached to this proxy
statement as Annex A. The merger agreement has been
included to provide you with information regarding its terms. It
is not intended to provide you with any other factual
information about Global Industries, Technip or Merger Sub. Such
information can be found elsewhere in this proxy statement and
in other public filings made by Global Industries with the SEC,
which are available without charge at www.sec.gov or as more
fully described in the section titled Where You Can Find
More Information. Our shareholders are urged to read the
full text of the merger agreement in its entirety.
The
Merger
Under the terms of the merger agreement, Merger Sub, an
indirect, wholly-owned subsidiary of Technip, will merge with
and into Global Industries and following completion of the
merger Global Industries will be an indirect, wholly-owned
subsidiary of Technip.
Amended
and Restated Articles of Incorporation
As a condition to the merger, the articles of incorporation of
Global Industries are to be amended and restated to remove the
limitation on ownership by
non-U.S. persons
of Global Industries common stock.
Effective
Time
The closing of the merger will occur no later than two business
days after the date that the closing conditions contained in the
merger agreement (other than conditions that by their nature are
to be satisfied at the closing, but subject to the satisfaction
or, to the extent permissible, waiver of those conditions at the
closing) have been satisfied or, to the extent permissible,
waived by the party or parties entitled to the benefit of such
conditions. The merger will become effective at such date and
time as the certificate of merger is duly filed with the
Louisiana Secretary of State or at such subsequent date and time
that we and Technip agree to and specify in the certificate of
merger. We are working with Technip to complete the merger as
soon as practicable and are targeting completion of the merger
by or during the fourth quarter of 2011. However, we cannot be
certain when, or if, the conditions to the merger will be
satisfied or waived, or that the merger will be completed.
Merger
Consideration
Immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, any
shares of Global Industries capital stock held by Global
Industries itself as treasury stock or by Technip, Merger Sub,
or any of their affiliates, will be canceled and cease to exist
and no consideration will be paid for such shares. Each other
share of our common stock outstanding immediately prior to the
effective time of the merger shall be converted into the right
to receive the merger consideration. At the effective time of
the merger, all such shares of our common stock shall no longer
be outstanding and will automatically be canceled and retired
and shall cease to exist, and shall thereafter represent only
the right to receive the merger consideration. The merger
consideration will be equitably adjusted in the event of any
reclassification, recapitalization, stock split or combination,
exchange or readjustment of shares, or any stock dividend, with
respect to our common stock that occurs or has a record date
prior to the effective time of the merger.
Equity
Plans
Stock Options. As of the record date,
1,391,867 options to purchase our common stock were outstanding,
of which 297,134 had a per share exercise price that was less
than the merger consideration. Pursuant to the terms of the
merger agreement, at or immediately prior to the effective time
of the merger, each outstanding option to purchase our common
stock, whether or not exercisable or vested, shall be cancelled,
and we shall pay each holder at or promptly after the effective
time of the merger for each such cancelled option an amount in
cash without interest, less any required withholding taxes,
determined by multiplying
58
(i) the excess of the merger consideration over the
applicable exercise price per share of common stock subject to
the stock option by (ii) the number of shares of common
stock such holder could have purchased (assuming full vesting of
the stock option) had such holder exercised such option in full
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger.
Restricted Stock. As of the record date,
1,523,050 unvested shares of our restricted common stock were
outstanding. Pursuant to the terms of the merger agreement, at
or immediately prior to the effective time of the merger, each
restricted share of common stock that is outstanding shall
become fully vested, and shall be treated as a share of common
stock and eligible to receive the merger consideration.
Performance Units. As of the record date,
1,115,562 performance units with respect to our common stock
were outstanding (assuming attainment of the applicable target
level of performance). Pursuant to the terms of the merger
agreement, at or immediately prior to the effective time of the
merger, each performance unit shall be canceled and, and we
shall pay to each holder at or promptly after the effective time
of the merger for each such canceled performance unit an amount
in cash without interest, less any required withholding taxes,
equal to (i) the merger consideration multiplied by
(ii) the number of shares of common stock issuable pursuant
to such performance unit assuming achievement of the target
level of performance applicable to such performance unit.
Convertible
Debentures
At the effective time of the merger, Global Industries
senior convertible debentures shall remain outstanding and be
treated in accordance with their terms. The merger will
constitute a fundamental change as such term is
defined in the indenture governing the debentures, and the
holders of the debentures will have the rights related to a
fundamental change under the indenture.
Exchange
of Stock Certificates
Promptly following the effective time of the merger, Technip
shall send, or cause the exchange agent appointed by it to send,
to each holder of record of our common stock at the effective
time of the merger a letter of transmittal and instructions
(which shall specify that the delivery shall be effected, and
risk of loss and title shall pass, only upon proper delivery of
the stock certificates or transfer of the uncertificated shares
to the exchange agent) for use in the exchange of shares of our
common stock for the merger consideration. These instructions
will also explain what to do in the event that a certificate has
been lost, stolen or destroyed. Until surrendered or
transferred, as the case may be, each stock certificate or
uncertificated share of common stock shall represent after the
effective time of the merger for all purposes only the right to
receive the merger consideration.
Representations
and Warranties
The merger agreement contains representations and warranties of
Global Industries and Technip customary for agreements of this
nature with regard to their respective businesses, financial
condition and other facts pertinent to the merger. The
representations made by us relate to the following:
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our, and our subsidiaries, corporate organization and
other corporate matters;
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our authorization, execution, delivery and performance and the
enforceability of the merger agreement and the merger;
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the shareholder approval required to adopt the merger agreement
and the amended and restated articles of incorporation;
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approval by our board of directors of the merger agreement and
the adoption of the amended and restated articles of
incorporation;
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required consents, approvals, orders and authorizations of
governmental or regulatory authorities or other persons,
relating to the merger agreement and related matters;
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the absence of violations of, or conflicts with, our governing
documents, applicable law and certain agreements as a result of
our entering into and performing under the merger agreement and
the transactions contemplated thereby;
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our, and our subsidiaries, capital structure and
outstanding securities;
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documents filed by us with governmental and regulatory
authorities, including the SEC, and the accuracy of the
financial statements and other information contained in those
documents;
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the accuracy of the information included in this proxy statement;
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absence of changes or certain events involving Global Industries
since June 30, 2011, including any occurrence of a material
adverse effect (as defined in the merger agreement and described
in the section captioned The Merger Agreement
Definition of Material Adverse Effect) on Global
Industries;
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the absence of certain undisclosed material liabilities;
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our, and our subsidiaries, compliance with applicable laws;
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pending or threatened litigation, or claims that could give rise
to litigation, involving us or our subsidiaries;
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title to personal property and other assets;
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our ownership of, and leases for, real property;
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our interests in vessels and attendant plants used by us and our
subsidiaries in our business;
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our intellectual property;
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our filing of tax returns, payment of taxes and other tax
matters;
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our employee benefit plans, matters relating to the Employee
Retirement Income Security Act and other matters concerning
employee benefits and employment agreements;
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labor matters;
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environmental matters;
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our, and our subsidiaries, compliance with material
contracts, and the extent of our obligations thereunder;
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the absence of brokers other than Simmons;
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the receipt by our board of directors of an opinion from Simmons
as to the fairness of the merger consideration, from a financial
point of view, to Global Industries shareholders.
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the inapplicability of anti-takeover statutes and regulations to
the merger agreement and the merger;
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the absence of material violations of the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act, export restrictions, anti-boycott regulations or
embargo regulations applicable to Global Industries or any of
its subsidiaries; and
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the absence of a shareholder rights plan.
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In the merger agreement, Technip made representations and
warranties to us relating to the following:
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its and Merger Subs respective corporate organization and
other corporate matters;
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its and Merger Subs respective authorization, execution,
delivery and performance and the enforceability of the merger
agreement and the merger;
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required consents, approvals, orders and authorizations of
governmental or regulatory authorities or other persons relating
to the merger agreement and related matters;
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the absence of violations of, or conflicts with, its or Merger
Subs governing documents, applicable law and certain
agreements as a result of their entering into and performing
under the merger agreement and the transactions contemplated
thereby;
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the accuracy of the information that Technip has supplied to us
for inclusion in this proxy statement; and
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Technips possession of sufficient funds to satisfy its
obligations to pay the merger consideration in respect of shares
of common stock, stock options, and stock awards under the
merger agreement.
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The assertions embodied in our representations and warranties
summarized above are subject, in some cases, to specified
exceptions and qualifications contained in the merger agreement,
in the disclosure schedule we delivered in connection therewith,
or in the public filings we have made with the SEC. Accordingly,
you should not rely on our representations, warranties and
covenants as characterizations of the actual state of facts,
since they are modified in part by the disclosure schedule and
our public filings. Moreover, information concerning the subject
matter of our representations, warranties and covenants may have
changed since the date of the merger agreement and the
representations, warranties and covenants will not reflect any
such subsequent changes in facts.
Definition of Material Adverse Effect
Several of the representations and warranties made by us and
Technip in the merger agreement and certain conditions to
Technips performance of its obligations under the merger
agreement are qualified by reference to whether the item in
question would have a material adverse effect on us
or Technip, as the case may be.
The merger agreement provides that a material adverse
effect, with respect to any person, means a material
adverse effect on (i) the condition (financial or
otherwise), business, assets or results of operations of such
person and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole, excluding any
effect resulting from:
(a) changes in the financial or securities markets or
general economic or political conditions;
(b) changes or conditions generally affecting the industry
in which such person or its subsidiaries operate;
(c) acts of war, sabotage, terrorism, insurrection, or
piracy, or natural disasters;
(d) any changes, or prospective changes, in applicable law,
GAAP or other applicable accounting standards after the date of
the merger agreement;
(e) the execution of, or compliance with, the merger
agreement or the announcement or consummation of the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement
(provided, that this subclause (e) shall not qualify
any representation or warranty or related condition requiring
disclosure based on the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement);
(f) any change in the trading prices or trading volume of
such persons capital stock or debt (but not any change or
effect underlying such change in prices or volume unless
otherwise excluded from the definition of material adverse
effect) or any fluctuations in interest or exchange rates;
(g) the failure of such person to meet internal or
analysts expectations or projections (but not any change
or effect underlying or giving rise to such failure unless
otherwise excluded pursuant to the definition of material
adverse effect); and
(h) with respect to Global Industries, any action taken by
us or any of our subsidiaries upon the express written request
of Technip or Merger Sub;
provided, that any occurrence, condition, change, event
or effect referred to in clauses (a) through (d) above
may be taken into account in determining whether or not there
has been a material adverse effect to the extent such
occurrence, condition, change, event or effect has a materially
disproportionate adverse effect on such person or its
subsidiaries, taken as a whole, as compared to other
participants in the industries and geographic
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regions in which such person or its subsidiaries operate, in
which case the incremental materially disproportionate impact or
impacts may be taken into account in determining whether or not
there has been or may be a material adverse effect or
(ii) such persons ability to consummate the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement.
Covenants Relating to the Conduct of Our Business
During the period between the date of the merger agreement and
the effective time of the merger, we have agreed with Technip
that we and our subsidiaries will conduct our business in all
material respects in the ordinary course consistent with past
practice (except as set forth in the disclosure schedules we
delivered to Technip and Merger Sub or as expressly contemplated
by the merger agreement, and except for any actions
substantially consistent with the terms of any bids tendered to
any potential customer prior to the date of the merger
agreement, as required by applicable law or otherwise consented
to by Technip), and that we will use our reasonable best efforts
to (i) preserve intact our present business organization,
(ii) maintain in effect all of our material foreign,
federal, state and local licenses, permits, consents,
franchises, approvals and authorizations, (iii) keep
available the services of our directors, officers and certain
designated employees (provided, however, that we shall not be
required to increase the compensation of, or make any other
payments not otherwise due to, such persons) and
(iv) maintain satisfactory relationships with our
customers, creditors, suppliers and others having material
business relationships with us.
Prior to the effective time of the merger, we have agreed not to
do any of the following, nor to permit our subsidiaries to do
any of the following (except as contemplated by the merger
agreement, as required by applicable law or consented to by
Technip):
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amend or otherwise change our or any of our subsidiaries
certificates of incorporation or bylaws or equivalent
organizational documents (other than to adopt the amended and
restated articles of incorporation);
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split, combine or reclassify any shares of our capital stock;
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declare, set aside or pay any dividend or other distribution
(whether in cash, stock, property or any combination thereof) in
respect of our capital stock, except for dividends by any of our
wholly-owned subsidiaries or as set forth in the disclosure
schedule we delivered to Technip and Merger Sub;
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redeem, repurchase or otherwise acquire or offer to redeem,
repurchase or otherwise acquire any of our securities or the
securities of our subsidiaries (other than pursuant to the
forfeiture of equity incentive awards, the acquisition of shares
of our common stock in settlement of the exercise price of a
stock option or for the purposes of satisfying tax withholding
obligations with respect to holders of equity incentive awards);
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issue, deliver or sell, or authorize any of the foregoing
actions, any of our securities or the securities of our
subsidiaries, other than the issuance of any shares of our
common stock upon the exercise of equity incentive awards
outstanding as of the date of the merger agreement and the
issuance of any securities of our subsidiaries to us or any
other of our wholly-owned subsidiaries;
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amend any terms of our securities, or the securities of any of
our subsidiaries, or the terms of our outstanding senior
convertible debentures (except for changes to equity incentive
awards in the ordinary course consistent with past practice);
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incur any capital expenditures or other obligations or
liabilities in respect thereof except (i) as is
contemplated by our capital expenditure budget for the year
ending December 31, 2011, (ii) for the year ending
December 31, 2012, capital expenditures not in excess of
$5,000,000, (iii) any unbudgeted capital expenditures not
to exceed $1,000,000 individually or $3,000,000 in the
aggregate, and (iv) to repair damage resulting from insured
casualty events;
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except as set forth in the disclosure schedule we delivered to
Technip and Merger Sub, or as contemplated by the merger
agreement, acquire (by merger, consolidation, acquisition of
stock or assets or otherwise), directly or indirectly, any
assets, securities, properties, interests or businesses, other
than
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(i) equipment, components, raw materials or supplies in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice and
(ii) acquisitions with a purchase price (including assumed
indebtedness) that does not exceed $500,000 individually or
$2,000,000 in the aggregate;
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sell, lease, license, abandon, permit to lapse or otherwise
transfer, or create or incur any lien on, any of our or our
subsidiaries assets, properties, rights, interests or
businesses, other than sales of assets, properties, interests or
businesses (i) in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice (other than vessels we own not
held for sale as of September 11, 2011) or
(ii) with a value (including any related assumed
indebtedness) that does not exceed $500,000 individually or
$2,000,000 in the aggregate;
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other than in connection with actions permitted by the merger
agreement, make any loans, advances or capital contributions to,
or investments in, any other person, other than (i) in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice
(including extensions of payment terms to customers) or
(ii) intercompany loans, advances or capital contributions
between us and our wholly-owned subsidiaries or between any of
our wholly-owned subsidiaries;
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create, incur, assume or otherwise become liable with respect to
any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantees thereof having
an aggregate principal amount (together with all our, and our
subsidiaries, other indebtedness for borrowed money) outstanding
at any time greater than $5,000,000; except for
cash-collateralization of letters of credit under our credit
facility;
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enter into any contract, agreement, arrangement or understanding
that restricts our and our subsidiaries (or after the
consummation of the merger, Technips, the surviving
corporations or any of their respective
subsidiaries) ability to (a) sell any products or
services to any other person or in any geographic region,
(b) engage in any line of business, or (c) compete
with or to obtain products or services from any person or
limiting the ability of any person to provide products or
services to us or our subsidiaries (or after the consummation of
the merger, Technip, the surviving corporation or any of their
respective subsidiaries).
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other than in the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice (including to address change orders or any
disputes with customers or vendors), enter into, amend or modify
in any material respect or terminate any material contract (or
any contract entered into after the date of the merger agreement
that would have been a material contract if entered into prior
to the date of the merger agreement) or otherwise waive, release
or assign any of our or our subsidiaries material rights,
claims or benefits thereunder;
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except to the extent required by the terms of any of our or our
subsidiaries employee benefit plans, (i) with respect to
any director, officer or employee whose annual compensation
exceeds $125,000, (a) grant or increase any severance or
termination pay or amend any existing severance pay or
termination arrangement; (b) enter into any employment,
consultancy, deferred compensation, severance or other similar
agreement (or amend any such existing agreement); or
(c) increase benefits payable under any existing severance
or termination pay policies or employment agreements, except in
the case of each of clauses (a) through (c) for the
participation in employee benefits plans generally available to
employees and customary compensation arrangements, in each case
for newly hired non-executive, non-officer employees in the
ordinary course consistent with past practice;
(ii) establish, adopt or materially amend any collective
bargaining, bonus, profit-sharing, thrift, pension, retirement,
deferred compensation, stock option, restricted stock or other
benefit plan or arrangement; or (iii) increase or make any
other favorable change to the compensation, bonus or other
benefits payable to any of our or our subsidiaries
directors, officers, or employees, except, with respect to any
non-executive employees whose annual compensation does not
exceed $125,000, for increases in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice;
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change materially our methods of accounting, except as required
by changes in GAAP or in
Regulation S-X
of the Exchange Act, as agreed to by our independent public
accountants;
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settle, or offer or propose to settle, (i) any material
litigation, investigation, arbitration, proceeding or other
claim involving or against us or any of our subsidiaries, except
(a) in the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice (including settling change orders or any disputes with
customers or vendors) or (b) any settlement of the matters
disclosed, reflected or reserved against in our most recent
financial statements (or the notes thereto) included in the our
SEC filings for an amount not materially in excess of the amount
so disclosed, reflected or reserved; (ii) any shareholder
litigation or dispute against us or any of our officers or
directors; or (iii) any litigation, arbitration, proceeding
or dispute that relates to the transactions contemplated
hereby; or
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agree, resolve or commit to do any of the foregoing.
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Solicitation
of Transactions
Pursuant to the merger agreement, we have agreed not to:
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solicit, initiate or take any action to knowingly facilitate or
encourage the submission of any acquisition proposal (as defined
in the merger agreement and described below in the section
captioned The Merger Agreement Definitions of
Acquisition Proposal and Superior Proposal) for us;
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enter into or participate in any discussions or negotiations
with, furnish any information relating to us or our subsidiaries
or afford access to our, or our subsidiaries, business,
properties, assets, or books, or otherwise cooperate in any way
with, or knowingly assist, participate in, facilitate or
encourage any effort by, any third party to make an acquisition
proposal;
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fail to make, withdraw or modify in a manner adverse to Technip,
the approval or recommendation of our board of directors of the
merger agreement, or the transactions contemplated thereby, and
the amended and restated articles of incorporation, or recommend
any acquisition proposal or take any action or make any public
statement inconsistent with the recommendation of our board of
directors, except as permitted by the merger agreement;
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grant any waiver or release under any standstill or similar
agreement with respect to any class of our, or our
subsidiaries, equity securities; or
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enter into any agreement in principle, letter of intent, term
sheet, merger agreement, acquisition agreement, option agreement
or other similar instrument relating to an acquisition proposal
(other than a confidentiality agreement with a third party as
permitted by the terms of the merger agreement).
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We have also agreed that we will immediately cease and terminate
any and all existing activities, discussions or negotiations
with any persons that were conducted by us prior to the date of
the merger agreement with respect to any acquisition proposal.
Even though we have agreed to the provisions described above
relating to the non-solicitation of acquisition proposals, our
board of directors may take and disclose to our shareholders a
position with respect to an acquisition proposal pursuant to
Rules 14d-9
and 14e-2(a)
or Item 1012(a) of
Regulation M-A
promulgated under the Exchange Act.
Furthermore, notwithstanding the foregoing restrictions, at any
time prior to the adoption of the merger agreement by our
shareholders, we, directly or indirectly through our advisors,
agents or other intermediaries, may, with respect to any person
that has made a superior proposal or an acquisition proposal
that our board of directors reasonably believes will lead to a
superior proposal, engage in negotiations or discussions with
such person, if such acquisition proposal was not solicited,
initiated, or a result of any action taken to knowingly
facilitate or encourage such acquisition proposal after the date
of the merger agreement in breach of the prohibitions described
above.
In addition, we may furnish to such person non-public
information relating to us or our subsidiaries and afford access
to our, or our subsidiaries, business, properties, assets,
books or records or otherwise cooperate, assist, facilitate and
encourage such person; provided, however, that,
(i) prior to taking such actions, we are required to enter
into a confidentiality agreement with terms no less favorable to
Global Industries than those
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contained in the Confidentiality Agreement, except that such
confidentiality agreement may contain a less restrictive
standstill restriction or no standstill restriction, in which
case the Confidentiality Agreement shall be deemed to be amended
to contain only such less restrictive provision, or to omit such
provision, as applicable, and (ii) all such non-public
information (to the extent that such information has not been
previously provided or made available to Technip) is provided or
made available to Technip, as the case may be, prior to or
substantially concurrent with the time it is provided or made
available to such person).
We have also agreed that we will promptly (and in any event
within one calendar day) notify Technip of any acquisition
proposal or any request for non-public information relating to
us or our subsidiaries or access to the business, properties,
books or records of us or our subsidiaries in each case by any
person that has informed us that it is considering making, or
has made, an acquisition proposal.
Additionally, we have agreed with Technip that our board of
directors will not fail to make, withdraw or modify in a manner
adverse to Technip, the approval or recommendation of our board
of directors of the merger agreement, the transactions
contemplated thereby, and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation, or recommend any acquisition proposal or take any
action or make any public statement inconsistent with the
recommendation of our board of directors (an adverse
recommendation change), unless (i) our board of directors
determines in good faith, after consultation with outside legal
counsel, that (a) an acquisition proposal constitutes a
superior proposal and the failure to take such action would be
reasonably likely to be inconsistent with its fiduciary duties
under applicable law or (b) in the absence of an
acquisition proposal, if due to events or changes in
circumstances after the date hereof that were neither known to
nor reasonably foreseeable by us as of or prior to the date of
the merger agreement, the failure to take such action would be
reasonably likely to be inconsistent with its fiduciary duties
under applicable law, (ii) we have notified Technip in
writing that our board of directors intends to make such a
fiduciary determination, and (iii) at least five business
days have elapsed following receipt by Technip of such notice.
If the board of directors fiduciary determination was made
with respect to an acquisition proposal, we have agreed with
Technip that our board of directors will not make an adverse
recommendation change, unless (i) we have notified Technip
that our board of directors has determined that an acquisition
proposal is a superior proposal and that we intend to terminate
the merger agreement in order to enter into a binding agreement
with respect to such superior proposal, (ii) the notice to
the Technip is accompanied by a copy of the binding agreement,
and all other documentation, to be entered into with respect to
such superior proposal, and (iii) the fifth business day
after such notice is received by Technip has elapsed (except
that any subsequent notice period following any amendment to the
financial or material terms of the same superior proposal is two
business days), and we have not received from Technip a written
proposal to amend the terms of the merger agreement that the
board of directors determines in good faith, after consultation
with its financial advisor and outside legal counsel, to be at
least as favorable, from a financial point of view, to the our
shareholders than the superior proposal.
Definitions
of Acquisition Proposal and Superior Proposal
For purposes of the merger agreement (and this summary),
acquisition proposal means any third party offer or
proposal relating to, or any third party indication of interest
in, (i) any acquisition or purchase, directly or
indirectly, of 15% or more of our consolidated assets or 15% or
more of any class of our equity or voting securities, or of any
of our subsidiaries whose assets, individually or in the
aggregate, constitute 15% or more of our consolidated assets,
(ii) any tender offer (including a self-tender offer) or
exchange offer that, if consummated, would result in such third
party beneficially owning 15% or more of any class of our equity
or voting securities, or of any of our subsidiaries whose
assets, individually or in the aggregate, constitute 15% or more
of our consolidated assets, or (iii) a merger,
consolidation, share exchange, business combination,
reorganization, recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or
other similar transaction involving us or any of our
subsidiaries whose assets, individually or in the aggregate,
constitute 15% or more of our consolidated assets.
For purposes of the merger agreement (and this summary),
superior proposal means a bona fide, written
acquisition proposal for all of the outstanding shares of our
capital stock or all or substantially all of our and our
subsidiaries consolidated assets on terms that our board
of directors determines in good faith by a
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majority vote, after considering the advice of a financial
advisor and outside legal counsel and taking into account all
relevant factors, (i) if accepted, is reasonably expected
to be consummated on the terms and conditions proposed,
including any
break-up
fees, expense reimbursement provisions and conditions to
consummation, and (ii) if consummated, would result in a
transaction more favorable, from a financial point of view to
our shareholders than provided under the merger agreement
(taking into account any proposal by Technip to amend the terms
of the merger agreement).
Conditions
to the Closing of the Merger
The respective obligations of us, Technip and Merger Sub to
consummate the merger are subject to the satisfaction or waiver
of the following conditions:
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the adoption of the merger agreement by our shareholders;
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the adoption of the amended and restated articles of
incorporation by our shareholders;
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no applicable law prohibits the consummation of the
merger; and
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the expiration or termination of the waiting periods applicable
to the consummation of the merger under the HSR Act and Mexican
antitrust law.
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Conditions
to the Obligations of Technip and Merger Sub
The obligations of Technip and Merger Sub to complete the merger
are subject to the satisfaction or waiver of each of the
following additional conditions:
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we shall have, in all material respects, performed all of our
obligations required by the merger agreement to be performed by
us at or prior to the effective time of the merger;
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our representations and warranties contained in the merger
agreement with respect to our corporate organization, our
authority to enter into the merger agreement, the shareholder
approval required to adopt the merger agreement and the amended
and restated articles of incorporation, and our capital
structure and outstanding securities must be true and correct in
all respects at and as of the effective time of the merger
(other than such representations and warranties that by their
terms address matters only as of another specified time, which
shall be true and correct in all respects only as of such time),
except for, in respect of representations and warranties
relating to our capital structure, inaccuracies that would that
would result in payment of $1,000,000 or less of additional
merger consideration in respect of shares of common stock, stock
options or stock awards, in the aggregate;
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our other representations and warranties contained in the merger
agreement must be true and correct (disregarding all materiality
and material adverse effect qualifications contained therein) at
and as of the effective time of the merger as if made at and as
of such time, (other than such representations and warranties
that by their terms address matters only as of another specified
time, which shall be true and correct only as of such time),
except where the failure to be so true and correct has not had
and would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in
the aggregate, a material adverse effect on Global Industries;
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we shall have delivered to Technip a certificate, signed by an
executive officer, certifying to the above;
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there shall not have been instituted or pending (or overtly
threatened) any action or proceeding by any governmental
authority challenging or seeking to make illegal, to delay
materially or otherwise directly or indirectly to restrain or
prohibit the consummation of the merger;
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there shall not have occurred after the date of the merger
agreement any event, occurrence, revelation or development of a
state of circumstances or facts which, individually or in the
aggregate, has had or would reasonably be expected to have a
material adverse effect on us; and
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CFIUS shall have notified Technip that it has determined not to
investigate the transactions contemplated by the merger
agreement (including the merger) or, in the event that CFIUS has
undertaken such
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an investigation, CFIUS has terminated such investigation or the
President of the United States has determined not to take any
action.
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Conditions
to Our Obligation
Our obligation to effect the merger is further subject to the
satisfaction or waiver of the following conditions:
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each of Technip and Merger Sub shall have performed in all
material respects all of its obligations hereunder required to
be performed by it at or prior to the effective time of the
merger;
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the representations and warranties of Technip in the merger
agreement relating to its corporate organization and authority
to enter into the merger agreement shall be true and correct in
all respects at and as of the effective time of the merger as if
made at and as of such time (other than such representations and
warranties that by their terms address matters only as of
another specified time, which shall be true and correct in all
respects only as of such time);
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the other representations and warranties of Technip and Merger
Sub contained in the merger agreement (disregarding all
materiality and material adverse effect qualifications contained
therein) shall be true and correct at and as of the effective
time of the merger as if made at and as of such time (other than
representations and warranties that by their terms address
matters only as of another specified time, which shall be true
and correct only as of such time), with such exceptions as have
not had and would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a material adverse effect on
Technip; and
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we shall have received a certificate signed by an executive
officer of Technip certifying to the above.
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Termination
The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by mutual written consent of the parties to the merger
agreement, or by either Technip or us:
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if the merger has not been completed by the outside date;
provided, that the right to so terminate the merger
agreement is not available to a party whose breach of any
provision of the merger agreement results in the failure of the
merger to be consummated by such time;
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if there is an applicable law, order, writ, assessment,
decision, injunction, decree, ruling, judgment or similar
action, whether temporary, preliminary or permanent, making
consummation of the merger illegal or otherwise prohibited, or
otherwise enjoining us or Technip from consummating the merger,
and the same shall have become final and non-appealable;
provided, that the right to so terminate the merger
agreement is not available to a party whose breach of any
provision of the merger agreement results in such action or
event; or
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if our shareholders fail to approve and adopt the merger
agreement and the amended and restated articles of incorporation.
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The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by Technip if:
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our board of directors has made an adverse recommendation
change, or an acquisition proposal has been publicly announced,
and our board of directors has failed to reaffirm its
recommendation with 10 business days after such public
announcement; provided, however, that the right to
terminate the merger agreement pursuant to this termination
right as a result of such action must be exercised by Technip
within 10 business days following the event giving rise to such
right to terminate or, if sooner, immediately prior to the
special meeting;
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we shall have breached any of our representations and warranties
become or we have failed to perform any covenant or agreement
under the merger agreement, other than those under the
non-solicitation
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provisions of the merger agreement, which would give rise to the
failure of certain conditions to closing, in either case in a
situation where such breach is incapable of being satisfied by
the outside date; provided, however, that Technip shall
have given us 10 business days notice prior to termination;
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prior to the special meeting, there has been an intentional and
material breach of any covenants or obligations under the
provisions of the merger agreement restricting our ability to
solicit transactions after the date of the merger agreement
(described above in the section captioned The Merger
Agreement Solicitation of Transactions).
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The merger agreement may be terminated, and the merger may be
abandoned at any time prior to the effective time of the merger,
by us if:
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prior to the special meeting, our board of directors shall have
made an adverse recommendation change in order to enter into a
definitive, written agreement concerning a superior proposal;
provided, however, that we shall have paid any required
termination fee; or
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Technip or Merger Sub shall have breached any of their
representations and warranties or Technip or Merger Sub has
failed to perform any of their covenants or agreements under the
merger agreement, which would give rise to the failure of
certain conditions to closing, in either case in a situation
where that breach is incapable of being satisfied by the outside
date; provided, however, that we shall have given us 10
business days notice prior to termination.
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Termination
Fees and Expenses
We must pay the termination fee to Technip under the following
circumstances:
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Technip terminates the merger agreement because (i) our
board of directors has made an adverse recommendation change, or
an acquisition proposal has been publicly announced and our
board of directors has failed to reaffirm its recommendation
with 10 business days after such public announcement;
(ii) we shall have breached any of our representations and
warranties or we have failed to perform any covenant or
agreement under the merger agreement, which would give rise to
the failure of certain conditions to closing, in either case in
a situation where such breach is (a) intentional and
(b) incapable of being satisfied by the outside date;
provided, however, that Technip shall have given us 10
business days notice prior to termination; or (iii) prior
to the special meeting, there has been an intentional and
material breach of any covenants or obligations under the
non-solicitation provisions of the merger agreement;
provided, however, that Technip shall have given us 10
business days notice prior to termination (described in the
section captioned The Merger Agreement
Solicitation of Transactions);
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prior to the special meeting, our board of directors shall have
made an adverse recommendation change in order to enter into a
definitive, written agreement concerning a superior proposal and
we terminate the merger agreement; or
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(i) the merger agreement or the amended and restated
articles of incorporation are not approved and adopted by our
shareholders at the special meeting, or any adjournment thereof,
(ii) prior to such termination, an acquisition proposal
shall have been publicly announced or otherwise been
communicated to our shareholders and such acquisition proposal
is not publicly withdrawn prior to the special meeting and
(iii) within nine months following the date of such
termination, we shall have entered into a definitive agreement
with respect to, or recommended to our shareholders, an
acquisition proposal or an acquisition proposal shall have been
consummated (provided, however, that for purposes of this
clause (iii), each reference to 15% in the
definition of acquisition proposal shall be deemed to be a
reference to 50%).
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All
out-of-pocket
fees and expenses incurred in connection with the merger will be
paid by the party incurring such fees and expenses, whether or
not the merger is consummated, except that, if we fail to pay
the termination fee when due in the circumstances described
above, we have agreed to pay any costs and expenses
68
incurred by Technip or Merger Sub in connection with a legal
action to enforce the merger agreement that results in a
judgment against us for such amount, plus interest thereon.
If we become obligated to pay a termination fee as described
above, and we pay such termination fee in full, Technip and
Merger Sub shall be precluded from any other remedy against us,
at law or in equity or otherwise, and neither Technip nor Merger
Sub shall seek to obtain any recovery, judgment, or damages of
any kind, including consequential, indirect or punitive damages,
against us or any of our subsidiaries or any of our or their
respective partners, managers, members, shareholders or our or
their respective representatives in connection with the merger
agreement or the transactions contemplated thereby.
Access
to Information; Confidentiality
We have agreed to provide Technip and its counsel, financial
advisors, auditors and other authorized representatives
reasonable access to our and our subsidiaries offices,
properties, books and records, to furnish Technip, its counsel,
financial advisors, auditors and other authorized
representatives such financial and operating data and other
information as they may reasonably request and to instruct our
employees, counsel, financial advisors, auditors and other
authorized representatives to cooperate with Technip in its
investigation of us and our subsidiaries. Such access,
information request and investigation shall be conducted in such
manner as not to interfere unreasonably with the conduct of our
or our subsidiaries business. We are not required to
provide any access, or to disclose any information (a) if
providing such access or disclosing such information could
violate any applicable law (including United States or foreign
antitrust and privacy laws) or (b) if such information is
protected by attorney-client privilege to the extent such
privilege cannot be protected by us through exercise of
reasonable efforts.
Regulatory
Approvals
One of the conditions to both Global Industries and
Technips obligations to complete the merger contained in
the merger agreement is the expiration or termination of any
applicable waiting periods under the HSR Act and the Mexican
antitrust law. On September 23, 2011 (within the time
period required by contract), Technip and Global Industries
filed HSR Act notification forms with the FTC and the Antitrust
Division and requested early termination of the waiting period.
Early termination was granted on October 24, 2011.
The merger is also subject to the LFCE in Mexico. Technip and
Global Industries are obligated to submit a filing to the FCC.
Each of Global Industries and Technip made such filing on
September 26, 2011 (within the time period required by
contract). The FCC has 10 business days following the date of
filing, to issue an order preventing the parties from closing
the merger while the FCC reviews the merger. If after such term
the FCC does not issue such an order, the parties are allowed to
close the transaction before clearance. The FCC has 5 business
days from the date of filing, to request basic information that
should have been included in the initial filing and the FCC has
15 business days, from the later of the date of filing or the
date upon which information was requested, to request additional
documents from the parties. The FCC has 35 business days from
the later of the date of filing or, if applicable, the date from
which the parties complete their response to an information
request, to determine whether to approve the transaction. In
complicated cases, the FCC may extend the period for 40
additional business days to
and/or make
a decision as to whether the transaction complies with the LFCE.
The parties believe that after obtaining the required approvals,
consummation of the merger would not violate the LFCE. In this
regard, please note that pursuant to the LFCE, a transaction
that has been approved by the FCC may not be challenged, except
on grounds that the parties furnished false information to the
FCC. Prior to obtaining a decision, however, there is no
assurance that the FCC would approve the transaction or approve
the transaction without changes. Under the terms of the merger
agreement, if the FCC issues an order preventing the closing of
the merger a waiting period will commence and we must have
subsequently received an approval from the FCC following the
issuance of such an order, in order for the closing conditions
to be met.
The applicable waiting period imposed under the LFCE expired on
October 20, 2011, thereby satisfying the relevant closing
condition in the merger agreement. However, the FCC is
continuing to review the merger.
69
The merger is also subject to review by the competition
authorities in Brazil. The appropriate Brazilian competition
authorities were required to be notified of the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement within 15 business days of
its execution. Notification of this transaction is a condition
to the merger, but approval by the Brazil competition
authorities is not. The required notification was submitted on
September 28, 2011 (within the time period required by
contract and Brazilian law).
One of the conditions to Technips obligation to complete
the merger contained in the merger agreement is the notification
by CFIUS to Technip that it has determined not to investigate
the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement (including
the merger) or, in the event that CFIUS has undertaken such an
investigation, CFIUS has terminated such investigation or the
President of the United States has determined not to take any
action.
On October 7, 2011, Technip and Global Industries submitted
a joint voluntary notice to CFIUS of the proposed acquisition of
Global Industries. Within thirty days of accepting the
notification, CFIUS must conclude a preliminary review and
determine whether a full investigation of the proposed
transaction should be undertaken. The thirty-day review period
expires at 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on November 9, 2011.
We cannot assure you that an antitrust, CFIUS or other
regulatory challenge to the merger will not be made.
Agreements
to Use Reasonable Best Efforts
Each of Global Industries, Technip and Merger Sub has agreed to
use its reasonable best efforts to take, or cause to be taken,
all actions and to do, or cause to be done, all things
necessary, proper or advisable to consummate the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement as promptly as practicable.
In furtherance of the foregoing, upon the terms and subject to
the conditions of the merger agreement, each of Global
Industries, Technip and Merger Sub agreed to make all filings
under the HSR Act as promptly as reasonably practicable but in
no later than 10 business days following the execution of the
merger agreement, and as promptly as practicable, but no later
than 20 business days (unless an earlier filing is required by
applicable law), following the execution of the merger
agreement, to make all filings under the analogous laws existing
in Mexico and Brazil. Technip and Global Industries both filed
Premerger Notification and Report Forms under the HSR Act on
September 23, 2011 with the FTC and the Antitrust Division
in connection with the merger, made the required filing with the
Mexican FCC on September 26, 2011 and with the Brazilian
competition authorities on September 28, 2011.
Global Industries and Technip have also agreed to (i) each
use its reasonable best efforts to respond to and comply with
any request for information from any governmental authority
charged with enforcing, applying, administering, or
investigating any antitrust law, including the FTC, the
Antitrust Division, any attorney general of a state of the
United States or any other competition authority of any
jurisdiction (each, an Antitrust Authority),
(ii) keep each other apprised of the status of any
communications with, and any inquiries or requests for
additional information from any Antitrust Authority,
(iii) cooperate in any proceedings or negotiations with any
Antitrust Authority or other person relating to any of the
foregoing, and (iv) not take any action that could
reasonably be expected to materially hinder or delay the
obtaining of clearance or the expiration of any required waiting
period under any applicable antitrust law.
Technip is required under the merger agreement to take (and
commit to take) with respect to itself and Global Industries
such actions as may be necessary or advisable to avoid or
eliminate impediments under any antitrust law or Exon-Florio
that may be asserted by any Antitrust Authority, CFIUS or any
other governmental authority with respect to the merger;
provided, however, that any such action shall not
constitute a burdensome condition. A
burdensome condition, as defined under the merger
agreement, means any action that, individually or in the
aggregate, has an impact that is material and adverse on the
benefits or value that Technip expects to receive in connection
with the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement or
requires Technip to agree to hold separate or to divest any of
the material businesses, services, properties or assets of
either Technip, on the one hand, or Global Industries and our
subsidiaries, on the other hand; provided, however, that
each of our Global 1200 and Global 1201 vessels shall be
material properties.
70
Employee
Matters
Technip has agreed that for one year following the effective
time of the merger, Technip shall provide to each employee of
Global Industries and our subsidiaries as of the effective time
of the merger (i) the same or greater base salary or base
rate of pay and target bonus opportunities as in effect
immediately prior to the effective time of the merger,
(ii) severance benefits (including, if applicable,
post-termination health and welfare benefits) that are no less
favorable than the severance benefits such employee was eligible
for immediately prior to the effective time of the merger and
(iii) such other compensation and employee benefits that,
with respect to such employee, are substantially comparable in
the aggregate to the compensation and benefits provided by us or
our subsidiaries, as applicable, to such employee immediately
prior to the effective time of the merger.
In addition, from and after the effective time of the merger,
Technip shall, and shall cause us to, honor all obligations
under all of our employee benefit plans in accordance with their
respective terms as in effect immediately prior to the effective
time of the merger. With respect to any employee benefit plan
maintained by Technip or any of its subsidiaries in which any of
our or our subsidiaries employees at the effective time of
the merger or any dependent thereof is eligible or participates
after the effective time of the merger, each such employee shall
receive full credit for service with us and any of our
subsidiaries (or predecessor employers to the extent the we or
our subsidiaries currently provides such past service credit)
for all purposes (including benefit accrual), to the same extent
that such service was recognized as of the effective time of the
merger under a comparable plan of Global Industries /or its
subsidiaries in which such employee participated; provided,
however, that such service need not be recognized to the
extent that such recognition would result in any duplication of
benefits. Technip has agreed to waive, or cause to be waived,
any pre-existing condition limitations, exclusions,
actively-at-work requirements and waiting periods under any
welfare benefit plan maintained by Technip or any of its
subsidiaries (other than us or any of our subsidiaries) in which
any such employee or any dependent thereof participates from and
after the effective time of the merger, except to the extent
that such pre-existing condition limitations, exclusions,
actively-at-work requirements and waiting periods would not have
been satisfied or waived under the comparable Global Industries
welfare benefit plan immediately prior to the effective time of
the merger, and will recognize the dollar amount of all expenses
incurred by each such employee (and his or her eligible
dependents) during the calendar year in which the effective time
of the merger occurs for purposes of satisfying such years
deductible and co-payment limitations under the relevant welfare
benefit plans in which such employee or dependent participates
from and after the effective time of the merger.
Financing
Cooperation
At the request of Technip, we have agreed to reasonably
cooperate with Technip in good faith in connection with
negotiating and consummating any financing that Technip or any
of its affiliates may desire to enter into in order to finance
or refinance payment of amounts owed pursuant to the merger, the
other transactions contemplated by the merger agreement and/or
to refinance our or our subsidiaries existing debt;
provided, however, that we shall not be required to produce any
financial statements outside the ordinary course of business. In
addition, at the request of Technip, we shall cooperate with
Technip in discussions with lenders under our credit facility to
terminate as of the effective time of the merger the credit
facility or to seek amendments or waivers thereunder; provided,
however, that prior to the effective time of the merger we shall
not be required to pay any fees that are payable in connection
with any such amendments of waivers.
Title XI
Bonds
We have agreed to use our reasonable best efforts to obtain, and
to deliver to Technip copies of, any required consent, waiver or
approval of the Maritime Administration of the United States
Department of Transportation required in connection with the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by the merger
agreement under and in respect of our United States Government
Guaranteed Export Ship Financing Obligations, 2000 Series to
ensure that no default or event of default occurs thereunder on
terms reasonably satisfactory to Technip. We submitted to the
Maritime Administration our request for such consent on
September 20, 2011.
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Brokers
and Finders
We have represented to Technip that no broker, finder or
investment banker is or will be entitled to any fees or
commissions in connection with the merger other than Simmons
(whose fees and expenses Global Industries will pay).
Directors
and Officers Indemnification
For six years from and after the effective time of the merger,
Technip and Global Industries as the surviving corporation will,
jointly and severally, indemnify and hold harmless our, and our
subsidiaries, present and former officers and directors
and each person who acts or has acted as a fiduciary under any
of our, or our subsidiaries, employee benefit plans in
respect of acts or omissions occurring at or prior to the
effective time of the merger to the fullest extent permitted by
the Louisiana Business Corporation Law or any other applicable
law or provided under our articles of incorporation and bylaws
in effect as of September 11, 2011. Technip is required to
maintain in effect provisions in the surviving
corporations articles of incorporation and bylaws (or in
such documents of any successor to the business of the surviving
corporation) regarding elimination of liability of directors,
indemnification of officers, directors and employees and
advancement of expenses that are no less advantageous to the
intended beneficiaries than the corresponding provisions in
existence on September 11, 2011. Technip is also obligated
to maintain substantially equivalent, and in any event no less
favorable, directors and officers liability
insurance or to purchase tail period coverage for a
period of six years after the completion of the merger; provided
the annual cost is not greater than 200% of our current annual
premium, in which case Technip is obligated to provide as much
insurance as may be purchased at such cost.
Notice
Technip and we have agreed to notify each other of: (i) any
notice or other communication from any person alleging that the
consent of such person is or may be required in connection with
the transactions contemplated by the merger agreement,
(ii) any notice or other communication from any
governmental authority in connection with the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement, (iii) any actions,
suits, claims, investigations or proceedings commenced or, to
its knowledge, threatened against, relating to or involving or
otherwise affecting us or any of our subsidiaries or Technip and
any of its subsidiaries, as the case may be, that, if pending on
the date of the merger agreement, would have been required to
have been disclosed pursuant to any provision of the merger
agreement or that relate to the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by the merger agreement, (iv) any inaccuracy
of any representation or warranty contained in the merger
agreement at any time during the term of the merger agreement
that could reasonably be expected to cause certain conditions to
Technips and our obligations to consummate the
transactions contemplated by the merger agreement not to be
satisfied, and (v) any failure of either party to comply
with or satisfy any covenant, condition or agreement to be
complied with or satisfied by it under the merger agreement. The
delivery of any notice by a party shall not limit or otherwise
affect the remedies available under the merger agreement to the
party receiving such notice.
Public
Announcements
Technip and Global Industries agreed to consult with one another
before issuing, and will provide with each other reasonable
opportunity to review and comment upon, any press release, to
the extent practicable, any other public statements with respect
to the merger agreement or the transactions contemplated thereby
and shall not issue any such press release or, to the extent
practicable, make any other public statement, except to the
extent any public statement or press release may be required by
applicable law or any listing agreement with or rule of any
national securities exchange or association or as permitted by
the provisions of the merger agreement with respect to the
solicitation of transactions (in which case the disclosing party
will, to the extent practicable, promptly inform the other party
in writing in advance of such compelled disclosure).
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Other
Remedies
If the merger agreement is terminated by us
and/or
Technip, then the merger agreement shall be void and of no
effect, and neither Global Industries, on the one hand, nor
Technip and Merger Sub, on the other, shall have any liability
under the merger agreement except in respect of the provisions
of the merger agreement with respect to expenses (including
termination fee); provided, that, if such termination
results from fraud or the intentional failure of a party to
fulfill a condition to the performance of the obligations of the
other party, or to perform a covenant under the merger
agreement, that party shall be fully liable for any and all
liabilities and damages incurred or suffered by the other party
as a result of such failure (including, in the case of Global
Industries, damages based on the consideration that would have
otherwise been payable to the holders of common stock, stock
options, restricted stock and performance units).
The parties to the merger agreement are entitled to an
injunction or injunctions, without the posting of any bond and
without proof of actual damages, to prevent breaches of the
merger agreement and to enforce specifically the performance of
the terms and provisions thereof in any federal or state court
located in the State of New York, in addition to any other
remedy to which they are entitled at law or in equity.
In addition, Global Industries has the right to enforce, on
behalf of the holders of Global Industries common stock, stock
options, restricted stock and performance units, the rights of
such holders to pursue claims for damages and other relief,
including equitable relief, for Technip or Merger Subs
breach or wrongful termination of the merger agreement or fraud.
Amendment
and Waiver
The merger agreement may be amended, or any provision thereof,
waived, by the parties at any time prior to the effective time
of the merger (but only if such amendment or waiver is in
writing or signed, in the case of an amendment, by each party to
the merger agreement or, in the case of a waiver, by each party
against whom the waiver is to be effective), before or after our
shareholders have approved and adopted the merger agreement and
the amended and restated articles of incorporation;
provided, that, after our shareholders approve and adopt
the merger agreement and the amended and restated articles of
incorporation, no amendment or waiver of the merger agreement
may be made that would require the further approval of our
shareholders under the Louisiana Business Corporation Law
without such approval having first been obtained.
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APPROVAL
OF EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION RELATED TO THE MERGER
Section 14A of the Exchange Act, which was enacted as part
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
of 2010, requires that we provide our shareholders with the
opportunity to vote to approve, on an advisory, non-binding
basis, the merger-related compensation arrangements for our
named executive officers, as disclosed in the section of this
proxy statement entitled The Merger Interests
of Global Industries Executive Officers and Directors in
the Merger.
We are asking our shareholders to indicate their approval of the
various change of control payments which our named executive
officers will or may be eligible to receive in connection with
the merger. These payments are set forth in the table entitled
Golden Parachute Compensation: Named Executive
Officers, under the section of this proxy statement
entitled The Merger Interests of Global
Industries Executive Officers and Directors in the
Merger and the accompanying footnotes. The various plans
and arrangements pursuant to which these compensation payments
may be made have previously formed part of Global
Industries overall compensation program for our named
executive officers, which has been disclosed to our shareholders
as part of the Compensation Discussion and Analysis and related
sections of our annual proxy statements. These historical
arrangements were adopted and approved by the compensation
committee of our board of directors, which is comprised solely
of non-management directors, and are believed to be reasonable
and competitive with the arrangements being offered by other
U.S. based, general diversified manufacturing companies
with similar domestic and international sales and industries.
Accordingly, we are seeking approval of the following resolution
at the special meeting:
RESOLVED, that the shareholders of Global Industries
approve, on a non-binding, advisory basis, the agreements or
understandings with and items of compensation which may be
payable to Global Industries named executive officers that
are based on or other wise relate to the merger, as disclosed in
the section of this proxy entitled Golden Parachute
Compensation: Named Executive Officers.
Approval of this proposal is not a condition to completion of
the merger. Shareholders should note that this non-binding
proposal regarding merger-related compensation is merely an
advisory vote that will not be binding on Global Industries or
Technip, their boards of directors or our compensation
committee. Further, the underlying plans and arrangements are
contractual in nature and not, by their terms, subject to
shareholder approval. Accordingly, regardless of the outcome of
the advisory vote, if the merger is consummated our named
executive officers will be eligible to receive the various
change of control payments in accordance with the terms or
conditions applicable to those payments.
Approval of the non-binding proposal regarding certain
merger-related executive compensation arrangements requires an
affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of our common stock
present in person or represented by proxy at the special meeting
and entitled to vote, assuming a quorum is present. For the
non-binding proposal regarding certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements, you may vote FOR,
AGAINST or ABSTAIN.
Abstentions and properly executed broker non-votes, if any, will
be counted as present for the purpose of determining whether a
quorum is present at the special meeting, but will have the same
effect as a vote against the adoption of the non-binding
proposal. The failure to instruct your bank, broker or other
nominee how to vote your shares will not have any effect on the
non-binding proposal regarding certain merger-related executive
compensation arrangements. No proxy that is specifically marked
AGAINST the approval and adoption of the
merger agreement will be voted in favor of the non-binding
proposal, unless it is specifically marked
FOR the non-binding proposal.
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MARKET
PRICE OF OUR COMMON STOCK
Our common stock is currently listed on NASDAQ under the symbol
GLBL. This table shows, for the periods indicated,
the range of high and low sale prices for our common stock as
quoted on the NASDAQ Global Select Market:
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Price per Share
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Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2009
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Low
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High
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First Quarter
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$
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2.74
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$
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4.43
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Second Quarter
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$
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4.00
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$
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7.68
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Third Quarter
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$
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5.11
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$
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10.63
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Fourth Quarter
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$
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5.67
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$
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9.20
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Fiscal Year ended December 31, 2010
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First Quarter
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$
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6.15
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$
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7.96
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
4.49
|
|
|
$
|
7.26
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
4.12
|
|
|
$
|
5.63
|
|
Fourth Quarter
|
|
$
|
5.34
|
|
|
$
|
7.05
|
|
Fiscal Year ending December 31, 2011
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
First Quarter
|
|
$
|
6.74
|
|
|
$
|
9.89
|
|
Second Quarter
|
|
$
|
5.02
|
|
|
$
|
10.11
|
|
Third Quarter
|
|
$
|
3.25
|
|
|
$
|
7.93
|
|
Fourth Quarter (through October 27, 2011)
|
|
$
|
7.91
|
|
|
$
|
7.96
|
|
On September 9, 2011, the last full trading day prior to
the public announcement of the proposed merger, our common stock
closed at $5.15. On October 27, 2011, the last practicable
trading day prior to the date of this proxy statement, our
common stock closed at $7.96.
Following the consummation of the merger, there will be no
further market for our common stock.
75
SECURITY
OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT
Security
Ownership of Directors and Executive Officers
The table below sets forth the ownership of our common stock, as
of October 26, 2011, by (i) each named executive
officer of Global Industries, (ii) each of our directors,
and (iii) all of our directors and named executive officers
as a group. All persons listed below have sole voting power and
investment power over the shares beneficially held by them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Beneficial
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares
|
|
|
401(k)
|
|
|
Restricted
|
|
|
Exercisable
|
|
|
Ownership
|
|
|
|
|
Name(1)
|
|
Owned
|
|
|
Plan(2)
|
|
|
Shares(3)
|
|
|
Options(4)
|
|
|
Total
|
|
|
Percent
|
|
|
John B. Reed
|
|
|
40,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
300,000
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
390,000
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
John A. Clerico
|
|
|
600,551
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
600,551
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
C. Andrew Smith
|
|
|
44,000
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
75,000
|
|
|
|
16,666
|
|
|
|
135,666
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Peter S. Atkinson(5)
|
|
|
112,651
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
225,600
|
|
|
|
338,251
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
James J. Doré(6)
|
|
|
166,981
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
103,000
|
|
|
|
269,981
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Eduardo Borja
|
|
|
95,230
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
50,000
|
|
|
|
23,800
|
|
|
|
169,030
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Ashit Jain
|
|
|
99,377
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
|
|
25,000
|
|
|
|
18,300
|
|
|
|
142,709
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Charles O. Buckner
|
|
|
16,382
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
16,382
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Lawrence R. Dickerson
|
|
|
47,013
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
47,013
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Edward P. Djerejian
|
|
|
86,500
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
86,500
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Charles R. Enze
|
|
|
6,666
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
6,666
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Larry E. Farmer
|
|
|
56,921
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
56,921
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Edgar G. Hotard
|
|
|
71,486
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
71,486
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
Richard A. Pattarozzi
|
|
|
75,477
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
0
|
|
|
|
75,477
|
|
|
|
*
|
|
All directors and executive officers as a group (14 persons)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL
|
|
|
1,519,235
|
|
|
|
32
|
|
|
|
450,000
|
|
|
|
437,366
|
|
|
|
2,406,633
|
|
|
|
2.08
|
%
|
|
|
|
* |
|
Less than 1% |
|
(1) |
|
Except as otherwise noted, the address of the directors and
executive officers is in the care of Global Industries, Ltd.,
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400, Houston, Texas 77077. |
|
(2) |
|
Shares held by the trustee of Global Industries retirement
plan. Each participant in such plan instructs the trustee as to
how the participants shares should be voted. |
|
(3) |
|
Shares issued pursuant to the Global Industries 2005 Stock
Incentive Plan with remaining restrictions. Restricted stock can
be voted, but is subject to forfeiture risks. |
|
|
|
(4) |
|
Shares that the named executive officers have the right to
acquire through stock option exercises within sixty days after
October 26, 2011. |
|
|
|
(5) |
|
The information provided is based on the Form 4 filed by
Mr. Atkinson on December 14, 2010.
Mr. Atkinsons address is 13707 Lakeshore Way
Cove, Houston, Texas 77077. |
|
|
|
(6) |
|
The information provided is based on the Form 4 filed by
Mr. Doré on March 28, 2011 and additionally
includes a net of 23,903 shares awarded to
Mr. Doré upon his retirement.
Mr. Dorés address is 12118 Bellario Lane,
Houston, Texas 77041. |
76
Security
Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners
The following, to our knowledge as of October 26, 2011, are
the only beneficial owners of 5% or more of the outstanding
common stock.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Number of
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shares of
|
|
|
Percent of
|
|
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner
|
|
Common Stock
|
|
|
Class
|
|
|
Wells Fargo & Company
420 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, California 94104
|
|
|
13,282,424
|
(1)
|
|
|
11.48
|
%
|
Franklin Resources, Inc.
One Franklin Parkway
San Mateo, California 94403
|
|
|
5,857,000
|
(2)
|
|
|
5.06
|
%
|
Wellington Management Company, LLP
280 Congress Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02210
|
|
|
8,751,974
|
(3)
|
|
|
7.56
|
%
|
William J. Doré
4823 Ihles Road
Lake Charles, Louisiana 70605
|
|
|
11,777,991
|
(4)
|
|
|
10.18
|
%
|
|
|
|
(1) |
|
The reporting party has sole voting power with respect to
10,414,694 shares of common stock, sole dispositive power
with respect to 11,504,096 shares of common stock and
shared dispositive power with respect to 1,775,818 shares
of common stock, based on information furnished in a
Schedule 13G/A filed with the SEC by Wells
Fargo & Company on January 20, 2011. |
|
|
|
(2) |
|
The reporting party does not have voting or dispositive power
with respect to the shares of common stock. Franklin Advisory
Services, LLC, a subsidiary of Franklin Resources, Inc., has
sole voting power with respect to 5,632,000 shares of
common stock and sole dispositive power with respect to
5,857,000 shares of common stock, based on information
furnished in a Schedule 13G filed with the SEC by Franklin
Resources, Inc. on February 4, 2011. |
|
|
|
(3) |
|
The reporting party has shared voting power with respect to
4,698,570 shares of common stock and shared dispositive
power with respect to 8,751,974 shares of common stock,
based on information furnished in a Schedule 13G filed with
the SEC by Wellington Management Company, LLP on
February 14, 2011. |
|
|
|
(4) |
|
The reporting party has sole voting power and sole dispositive
power over all shares of common stock, based on information
furnished in a Schedule 13G filed with the SEC by
Mr. Doré on June 28, 2011. |
SHAREHOLDER
PROPOSALS
If the merger is completed, we will not hold an annual meeting
of shareholders in 2012 because we will no longer be a publicly
held company. However, if the merger is not terminated or if we
are otherwise required to do so under applicable law, we will
hold our annual meeting of shareholders in 2012. If an annual
meeting of shareholders is held:
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholder proposals to be considered for inclusion in the
proxy statement and form of proxy relating to the 2012 Annual
Meeting of Shareholders must be received no later than
December 7, 2011. All proposals also will need to comply
with
Rule 14a-8
of the Exchange Act, which lists the requirements for the
inclusion of shareholder proposals in company-sponsored proxy
materials. Shareholder proposals must be delivered to our
Corporate Secretary by mail at 11490 Westheimer,
Suite 400, Houston, Texas, 77077 or by facsimile at
(281) 529-7747.
If you intend to present a proposal at our 2012 Annual Meeting
of Shareholders, but you do not intend to have it included in
our 2012 proxy statement, your proposal must be delivered to the
attention of our Corporate Secretary by mail at
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400, Houston, Texas, 77077 or
by facsimile at
(281) 529-7747
no later than the close of business on February 17, 2012.
Your notice of a shareholder proposal not intended to be
included in our 2012 proxy statement must set forth the
information required by our bylaws.
|
77
|
|
|
|
|
Shareholders may recommend potential director candidates for
consideration by the Nominating and Governance Committee by
sending a written request to our Corporate Secretary by mail at
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400, Houston, Texas, 77077 or
by facsimile at
(281) 529-7747.
If you want to nominate an individual for election at our 2012
Annual Meeting of Shareholders, you must deliver your written
request no later than the close of business on February 17,
2012. Your notice relating to the recommendation or nomination
of a director candidate must set forth the information required
by our bylaws.
|
OTHER
MATTERS
As of the date of this proxy statement, our board of directors
knows of no matters that will be presented for consideration at
the special meeting other than as described in this proxy
statement. However, if any other matter is properly presented at
the special meeting, the shares represented by proxies in the
form of the enclosed proxy card will be voted in the discretion
of the named proxy holders.
WHERE YOU
CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION
We file annual, quarterly and special reports, proxy statements
and other information with the SEC. You may read and copy any
reports, statements or other information that we file with the
SEC at the SECs public reference room at the following
location:
Public Reference Room
100 F Street, N.E.
Washington, D.C. 20549
Please call the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0330
for further information on the public reference room. These SEC
filings are also available to the public from commercial
document retrieval services and at the web site maintained by
the SEC at www.sec.gov.
Technip has supplied all information contained in this proxy
statement relating to Technip and Merger Sub, and we have
supplied all such information relating to us and the merger.
Our shareholders should not send in their certificates for our
common stock until they receive the transmittal materials from
the paying agent. Our shareholders of record who have further
questions about their share certificates or the exchange of our
common stock for cash following the completion of the merger
should call the paying agent, whose contact information will be
included in the letter of transmittal.
You should rely only on the information contained in this proxy
statement. We have not authorized anyone to provide you with
information that is different from what is contained in this
proxy statement. This proxy statement is dated October 28,
2011. You should not assume that the information contained in
this proxy statement is accurate as of any date other than that
date. Neither the mailing of this proxy statement to
shareholders nor the issuance of cash in the merger creates any
implication to the contrary.
The SEC allows us to incorporate by reference into this proxy
statement documents we file with the SEC. This means that we can
disclose important information to you by referring you to those
documents. The information incorporated by reference is
considered to be a part of this proxy statement, and later
information that we file with the SEC will update and supersede
that information. We incorporate by reference the documents
listed below and any documents filed by us pursuant to
Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act after
the date of this proxy statement and before the date of the
special meeting. Unless specifically stated to the contrary,
none of the information that we disclose under Items 2.02
or 7.01 of any Current Report on
Form 8-K
that we may from time to time furnish to the SEC will be
incorporated by reference into, or otherwise included in, this
proxy statement.
|
|
|
|
|
Annual Report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010, excluding
Items 7 and 8;
|
|
|
|
Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed
April 5, 2011;
|
78
|
|
|
|
|
Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarterly periods ended March 31, 2011 and
June 30, 2011; and
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed January 4, 2011, February 28, 2011,
March 17, 2011, May 23, 2011, September 12, 2011,
and September 27, 2011.
|
You can obtain any of these documents from the SEC through the
SECs website at the address described above, or Global
Industries will provide you with copies of these documents (not
including exhibits to the information that is incorporated by
reference unless such exhibits are specifically incorporated by
reference into the information that this proxy statement
incorporates), without charge, upon written or oral request to:
Global Industries, Ltd.
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77077
(281) 529-7799
Attn: Investor Relations
THIS PROXY STATEMENT DOES NOT CONSTITUTE THE SOLICITATION OF
A PROXY IN ANY JURISDICTION TO OR FROM ANY PERSON TO WHOM OR
FROM WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH PROXY SOLICITATION IN THAT
JURISDICTION. YOU SHOULD RELY ONLY ON THE INFORMATION CONTAINED
OR INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE IN THIS PROXY STATEMENT TO VOTE
YOUR SHARES OF COMMON STOCK AT THE SPECIAL MEETING. WE HAVE
NOT AUTHORIZED ANYONE TO PROVIDE YOU WITH INFORMATION THAT IS
DIFFERENT FROM WHAT IS CONTAINED IN THIS PROXY STATEMENT. THIS
PROXY STATEMENT IS DATED OCTOBER 28, 2011. YOU SHOULD NOT
ASSUME THAT THE INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS PROXY STATEMENT IS
ACCURATE AS OF ANY DATE OTHER THAN THAT DATE, AND THE MAILING OF
THIS PROXY STATEMENT TO SHAREHOLDERS DOES NOT CREATE ANY
IMPLICATION TO THE CONTRARY.
79
Annex
A
AGREEMENT
AND PLAN OF MERGER
dated
as of
September 11, 2011
among
TECHNIP
S.A.,
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
and
APOLLON MERGER SUB B, INC.
A-i
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page
|
|
Article 1
Definitions
|
|
|
Section 1.01.
|
|
Definitions
|
|
A-1
|
Section 1.02.
|
|
Other Definitional and Interpretative Provisions
|
|
A-6
|
|
|
|
Article 2
The Merger
|
|
|
Section 2.01.
|
|
The Merger
|
|
A-7
|
Section 2.02.
|
|
Conversion of Shares
|
|
A-7
|
Section 2.03.
|
|
Surrender and Payment
|
|
A-8
|
Section 2.04.
|
|
Equity Awards
|
|
A-8
|
Section 2.05.
|
|
Convertible Securities
|
|
A-9
|
Section 2.06.
|
|
Adjustments
|
|
A-9
|
Section 2.07.
|
|
Withholding Rights
|
|
A-10
|
Section 2.08.
|
|
Lost Certificates
|
|
A-10
|
Section 2.09.
|
|
Dissenting Shares
|
|
A-10
|
|
|
|
Article 3
The Surviving Corporation
|
|
|
Section 3.01.
|
|
Articles of Incorporation
|
|
A-10
|
Section 3.02.
|
|
Bylaws
|
|
A-10
|
Section 3.03.
|
|
Directors and Officers
|
|
A-10
|
|
|
|
Article 4
Representations and Warranties of the Company
|
|
|
Section 4.01.
|
|
Corporate Existence and Power
|
|
A-11
|
Section 4.02.
|
|
Corporate Authorization
|
|
A-11
|
Section 4.03.
|
|
Governmental Authorization
|
|
A-11
|
Section 4.04.
|
|
Non-contravention
|
|
A-11
|
Section 4.05.
|
|
Capitalization
|
|
A-12
|
Section 4.06.
|
|
Subsidiaries
|
|
A-12
|
Section 4.07.
|
|
SEC Filings and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
|
|
A-13
|
Section 4.08.
|
|
Financial Statements
|
|
A-14
|
Section 4.09.
|
|
Disclosure Documents
|
|
A-14
|
Section 4.10.
|
|
Absence of Certain Changes
|
|
A-15
|
Section 4.11.
|
|
No Undisclosed Material Liabilities
|
|
A-15
|
Section 4.12.
|
|
Compliance With Laws and Court Orders
|
|
A-15
|
Section 4.13.
|
|
Litigation
|
|
A-15
|
Section 4.14.
|
|
Properties
|
|
A-15
|
Section 4.15.
|
|
Vessels
|
|
A-16
|
Section 4.16.
|
|
Intellectual Property
|
|
A-16
|
Section 4.17.
|
|
Taxes
|
|
A-17
|
Section 4.18.
|
|
Employees
|
|
A-18
|
Section 4.19.
|
|
Employee Benefit Plans
|
|
A-18
|
A-ii
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page
|
|
Section 4.20.
|
|
Labor Matters
|
|
A-19
|
Section 4.21.
|
|
Environmental Matters
|
|
A-20
|
Section 4.22.
|
|
Material Contracts
|
|
A-20
|
Section 4.23.
|
|
Finders Fees
|
|
A-20
|
Section 4.24.
|
|
Opinion of Financial Advisor
|
|
A-21
|
Section 4.25.
|
|
Antitakeover Statutes
|
|
A-21
|
Section 4.26.
|
|
Foreign Corrupt Practices and International Trade Sanctions
|
|
A-21
|
Section 4.27.
|
|
Shareholder Rights Plan
|
|
A-21
|
|
|
|
Article 5
Representations and Warranties of Parent
|
|
|
Section 5.01.
|
|
Corporate Existence and Power
|
|
A-21
|
Section 5.02.
|
|
Corporate Authorization
|
|
A-21
|
Section 5.03.
|
|
Governmental Authorization
|
|
A-21
|
Section 5.04.
|
|
Non-contravention
|
|
A-22
|
Section 5.05.
|
|
Disclosure Documents
|
|
A-22
|
Section 5.06.
|
|
Sufficient Funds
|
|
A-22
|
|
|
|
Article 6
Covenants of the Company
|
|
|
Section 6.01.
|
|
Conduct of the Company
|
|
A-22
|
Section 6.02.
|
|
Company Stockholder Meeting
|
|
A-24
|
Section 6.03.
|
|
No Solicitation; Other Offers
|
|
A-24
|
Section 6.04.
|
|
Access to Information
|
|
A-27
|
Section 6.05.
|
|
Tax Matters
|
|
A-27
|
|
|
|
Article 7
Covenants of Parent
|
|
|
Section 7.01.
|
|
Obligations of Merger Subsidiary
|
|
A-28
|
Section 7.02.
|
|
Voting of Shares
|
|
A-28
|
Section 7.03.
|
|
Director and Officer Liability
|
|
A-28
|
Section 7.04.
|
|
Post-Closing Employee and Employment Benefit Matters
|
|
A-29
|
Section 7.05.
|
|
No Other Representations or Warranties
|
|
A-30
|
|
|
|
Article 8
Covenants of Parent and the Company
|
|
|
Section 8.01.
|
|
Reasonable Best Efforts; Regulatory Filings
|
|
A-30
|
Section 8.02.
|
|
Proxy Filing
|
|
A-32
|
Section 8.03.
|
|
Public Announcements
|
|
A-32
|
Section 8.04.
|
|
Further Assurances
|
|
A-32
|
Section 8.05.
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Notices of Certain Events
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A-33
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Section 8.06.
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Stock Exchange De-listing; 1934 Act Deregistration
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A-33
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Section 8.07.
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Financing Cooperation
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Section 8.08.
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Title XI Bonds
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A-33
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Section 8.09.
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Foreign Ownership Restrictions
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A-33
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Section 8.10.
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Section 16 Matters
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A-iii
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Page
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Article 9
Conditions to the Merger
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Section 9.01.
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Conditions to the Obligations of Each Party
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A-34
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Section 9.02.
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Conditions to the Obligations of Parent and Merger Subsidiary
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A-34
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Section 9.03.
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Conditions to the Obligations of the Company
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A-35
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Article 10
Termination
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Section 10.01.
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Termination
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A-35
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Section 10.02.
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Effect of Termination
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A-36
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Article 11
Miscellaneous
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Section 11.01.
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Notices
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A-36
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Section 11.02.
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Survival of Representations and Warranties
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A-37
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Section 11.03.
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Amendments and Waivers
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A-37
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Section 11.04.
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Expenses
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A-37
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Section 11.05.
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Disclosure Schedule
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A-38
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Section 11.06.
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Binding Effect; Benefit; Assignment
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A-38
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Section 11.07.
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Governing Law
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A-39
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Section 11.08.
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Jurisdiction
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A-39
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Section 11.09.
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Waiver of Jury Trial
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A-39
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Section 11.10.
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Counterparts; Effectiveness
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A-39
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Section 11.11.
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Entire Agreement
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A-39
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Section 11.12.
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Severability
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A-39
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Section 11.13.
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Specific Performance
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A-40
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Exhibit A Form of Amended and Restated Company
Charter
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A-iv
AGREEMENT
AND PLAN OF MERGER
AGREEMENT AND PLAN OF MERGER (this Agreement)
dated as of September 11, 2011 among Global Industries,
Ltd., a Louisiana corporation (the Company),
Technip S.A., a société anonyme organized under
the laws of France (Parent), and Apollon
Merger Sub B, Inc., a Louisiana corporation and an indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary of Parent (Merger
Subsidiary).
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, the respective Boards of Directors of the Company,
Parent and Merger Subsidiary have (i) approved and declared
advisable this Agreement and the transactions contemplated
hereby in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction under
which it was organized and (ii) with respect to the Company
and Merger Subsidiary, have declared it advisable that their
respective stockholders approve and adopt this Agreement
pursuant to which, among other things, Parent would acquire the
Company by means of a merger of Merger Subsidiary with and into
the Company on the terms and subject to the conditions set forth
in this Agreement;
WHEREAS, Parent, as the sole stockholder of Merger Subsidiary,
has approved and adopted this Agreement and the transactions
contemplated hereby;
WHEREAS, in connection with the Merger (as defined below), the
Board of Directors of the Company has approved and deemed it
advisable that the shareholders of the Company adopt the Amended
and Restated Company Charter (as defined below) to remove
certain restrictions on ownership of Company Stock (as defined
below) by non-US Persons;
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and the
representations, warranties, covenants and agreements contained
herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:
ARTICLE 1
Definitions
Section 1.01. Definitions. (a) As
used herein, the following terms have the following meanings:
Acquisition Proposal means, other than the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement, any Third Party
offer or proposal relating to, or any Third Party indication of
interest in, (i) any acquisition or purchase, directly or
indirectly, of 15% or more of the consolidated assets of the
Company or 15% or more of any class of equity or voting
securities of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries whose
assets, individually or in the aggregate, constitute 15% or more
of the consolidated assets of the Company, (ii) any tender
offer (including a self-tender offer) or exchange offer that, if
consummated, would result in such Third Party beneficially
owning 15% or more of any class of equity or voting securities
of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries whose assets,
individually or in the aggregate, constitute 15% or more of the
consolidated assets of the Company, or (iii) a merger,
consolidation, share exchange, business combination,
reorganization, recapitalization, liquidation, dissolution or
other similar transaction involving the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries whose assets, individually or in the aggregate,
constitute 15% or more of the consolidated assets of the Company.
Affiliate means, with respect to any Person,
any other Person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with such Person.
Amended and Restated Company Charter means
the amended and restated articles of incorporation of the
Company to be adopted by the Company simultaneously with the
consummation of the Merger, substantially in the form attached
hereto as Exhibit A.
Applicable Law means, with respect to any
Person, any foreign, supranational, federal, provincial, state
or local law (statutory or common), constitution, treaty,
convention, ordinance, code, rule, regulation,
A-1
Order or other similar requirement enacted, adopted, promulgated
or applied by a Governmental Authority that is binding upon or
applicable to such Person, as amended unless expressly specified
otherwise.
Board means the Board of Directors of the
Company.
Business Day means a day, other than
Saturday, Sunday or any other day on which commercial banks in
New York, New York, Houston, Texas or Paris, France are
authorized or required by Applicable Law to close.
CFIUS means the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States.
Code means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as amended.
Company Balance Sheet means the consolidated
balance sheet of the Company as of the Company Balance Sheet
Date and the footnotes thereto set forth in the Companys
Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the quarterly period ended June 30, 2011.
Company Balance Sheet Date means
June 30, 2011.
Company Disclosure Schedule means the
disclosure schedule dated the date hereof regarding this
Agreement that has been provided by the Company to Parent and
Merger Subsidiary.
Company Stock means the common stock,
$0.01 par value, of the Company.
Credit Facility means the Companys
credit facility under that certain Third Amended and Restated
Credit Agreement dated as of June 30, 2006, as amended.
Employee Plan means any employee
benefit plan, as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA,
each employment, consulting, severance, change in control,
transaction bonus, retention, or similar contract, plan,
arrangement, policy or practice and each other plan or
arrangement (written or oral) providing for compensation,
bonuses, profit-sharing, stock option or other stock related
rights or other forms of incentive or deferred compensation,
vacation benefits, insurance (including any self-insured
arrangements), health or welfare benefits, employee assistance
program, disability or sick leave benefits, workers
compensation, supplemental unemployment benefits, severance
benefits and post-employment or retirement benefits (including
compensation, pension, health, medical or life insurance
benefits) which is maintained, administered or contributed to by
the Company, Subsidiary or any ERISA Affiliate and covers any
employee or former employee of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries located in the United States or with respect to
which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries has any liability
to a Person located in the United States.
Environmental Laws means any Applicable Laws
or any agreement with any Governmental Authority, relating to
the effect of the environment on human health and safety, the
environment, or any pollutant, contaminant, waste or any toxic,
radioactive, ignitable, corrosive, reactive or otherwise
hazardous substance, waste or material, including workplace
exposure to such substances.
Environmental Permits means all permits,
licenses, franchises, certificates, approvals and other similar
authorizations of Governmental Authorities relating to or
required by Environmental Laws and affecting, or relating to,
the business of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries as
currently conducted.
ERISA means the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974, as amended, and the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder.
ERISA Affiliate of any entity means any other
entity that, together with such entity, would be treated as a
single employer under Section 414(b), (c), (m) or
(o) of the Code.
Exon-Florio means Sec. 721 of Title VII
of the Defense Production Act of 1950 (50 U.S.C. App.
2170), as amended by the Foreign Investment and National
Security Act of 2007, P.L.
110-49, 121
Stat. 246, 259 and regulations thereto 31 C.F.R.
Part 800, et. seq.
GAAP means generally accepted accounting
principles of the United States.
A-2
Governmental Authority means any
transnational, domestic or foreign federal, provincial, state or
local governmental, regulatory or administrative authority,
department, court, agency or official, including any political
subdivision thereof.
Hazardous Substance means any pollutant,
contaminant or waste or any toxic, radioactive, ignitable,
corrosive, reactive or otherwise hazardous substance, waste,
chemical or material, or any substance, waste or material having
any constituent elements displaying any of the foregoing
characteristics, including any substance, waste or material
regulated under any Environmental Law.
HSR Act means the
Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976.
Intellectual Property means
(i) trademarks, service marks, brand names, certification
marks, trade dress, domain names and other indications of
origin, registrations in any jurisdiction of, and applications
in any jurisdiction to register, the foregoing, including any
extension, modification or renewal of any such registration or
application, (ii) inventions and discoveries, whether
patentable or not, in any jurisdiction, patents, applications
for patents (including divisionals, continuations,
continuations-in-part,
reexaminations and renewal applications), and any renewals,
extensions, supplementary protection certificates and reissues
thereof, in any jurisdiction, (iii) Trade Secrets,
(iv) any and all copyright rights, whether registered or
not, and registrations or applications for registration of
copyrights in any jurisdiction, and any renewals or extensions
thereof, (v) moral rights, database rights, design rights,
industrial property rights, publicity rights and privacy rights,
and (vi) any similar intellectual property or proprietary
rights.
International Plan means any employment,
severance or similar contract or arrangement (whether or not
written) or any plan, policy, fund, program or arrangement or
contract providing for severance, insurance coverage (including
any self-insured arrangements), workers compensation,
disability benefits, supplemental unemployment benefits,
vacation benefits, pension or retirement benefits or for
deferred compensation, profit-sharing, bonuses, stock options,
stock appreciation rights or other forms of incentive
compensation or post-retirement insurance, compensation or
benefits that (i) is not an Employee Plan, (ii) is
entered into, maintained, administered or, other than as
mandated by Applicable Law, contributed to by the Company or any
of its Affiliates and (iii) covers any employee or former
employee of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries located
outside the United States.
IT Assets means computers, computer software,
firmware, middleware, servers, workstations, routers, hubs,
switches, data communications lines and all other information
technology equipment, and all associated documentation owned by
the Company or its Subsidiaries or licensed or leased by the
Company or its Subsidiaries pursuant to written agreement
(excluding any public networks).
Key Employees means the individuals set forth
on Section 1.01(a) of the Company Disclosure Schedule.
knowledge or known means
(a) with respect to the Company, the knowledge of one or
more of the officers or key employees of the Company, in each
case as set forth on Section 1.01(b) of the Company
Disclosure Schedule, after reasonable inquiry and (b) with
respect to Parent, the knowledge of one or more of the officers
of Parent after reasonable inquiry.
Lien means, with respect to any property or
asset, any mortgage, lien, pledge, charge, security interest,
encumbrance or other adverse claim of any kind in respect of
such property or asset. For purposes of this Agreement, a Person
shall be deemed to own subject to a Lien any property or asset
that it has acquired or holds subject to the interest of a
vendor or lessor under any conditional sale agreement, capital
lease or other title retention agreement relating to such
property or asset.
Louisiana Law means the Business Corporation
Law of the State of Louisiana.
Maritime Administration means the Maritime
Administration of the United States Department of Transportation.
Material Adverse Effect means, with respect
to any Person, a material adverse effect on (i) the
condition (financial or otherwise), business, assets or results
of operations of such Person and its
A-3
Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, excluding any effect resulting
from (A) changes in the financial or securities markets or
general economic or political conditions, (B) changes or
conditions generally affecting the industry in which such Person
and its Subsidiaries operate, (C) acts of war, sabotage,
terrorism, insurrection, or piracy, or natural disasters,
(D) any changes, or prospective changes, in Applicable Law,
GAAP or other applicable accounting standards after the date of
this Agreement, (E) the execution or compliance with this
Agreement or the announcement or consummation of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement (provided
that this subclause (E) shall not qualify any
representation or warranty or related condition requiring
disclosure based on the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement), (F) any change in the
trading prices or trading volume of such Persons capital
stock or its debt (but not any change or effect underlying such
change in prices or volume unless otherwise excluded pursuant to
this paragraph) or any fluctuations in interest or exchange
rates, (G) the failure of such Person to meet internal or
analysts expectations or projections (but not any change
or effect underlying or giving rise to such failure unless
otherwise excluded pursuant to this paragraph); and
(H) with respect to the Company, any action taken by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries upon the express written
request of Parent or Merger Subsidiary; provided that any
occurrence, condition, change, event or effect referred to in
clauses (A) through (D) above may be taken into
account in determining whether or not there has been a Material
Adverse Effect to the extent such occurrence, condition, change,
event or effect has a materially disproportionate adverse effect
on such Person and its Subsidiaries, taken as a whole, as
compared to other participants in the industries and geographic
regions in which such Person and its Subsidiaries operate, in
which case the incremental materially disproportionate impact or
impacts may be taken into account in determining whether or not
there has been or may be a Material Adverse Effect or
(ii) such Persons ability to consummate the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement.
NASDAQ means the NASDAQ Stock Market LLC.
1933 Act means the Securities Act of
1933.
1934 Act means the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934.
Order means any order, writ, assessment,
decision, injunction, decree, ruling, judgment or similar
action, whether temporary, preliminary or permanent, of a
Governmental Authority.
Parent Disclosure Schedule means the
disclosure schedule dated the date hereof regarding this
Agreement that has been provided by Parent to the Company.
Permitted Lien means
(i) mechanics, carriers, workmens,
repairmens, warehousemens or other like liens
arising or incurred in the ordinary course of business relating
to obligations that are not delinquent or that are being
contested in good faith by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries; (ii) Liens for Taxes, assessments and other
governmental charges that are not yet due and payable, that may
thereafter be paid without interest or penalty, that have been
adequately provided for in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles or for amounts being contested in good
faith; (iii) Liens on cash collateralization of letters of
credit under the Credit Facility; (iv) mortgages, or deeds
of trust, security interests or other encumbrances on title
related to indebtedness reflected in the Company SEC Documents,
including any encumbrances in respect of the Credit Facility and
the Title XI Bonds); (v) Liens imposed or promulgated
by zoning, building and other similar codes and regulations;
(vi) restrictions under leases, subleases, licenses or
occupancy agreements and liens or other encumbrances that have
been placed by any developer, landlord or other similar third
party on any real property in which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries has a leasehold interest and subordination or
similar agreements relating thereto, to the extent disclosed to
Purchaser prior to the date hereof; and (vii) any other
Liens that, in the aggregate, do not materially impair the value
or the continued use and operation of the assets or properties
to which they relate.
Person means an individual, corporation,
partnership, limited liability company, association, trust or
other entity or organization, including any Governmental
Authority.
A-4
Representatives means, in respect of any
Person, such Persons officers, directors, employees,
consultants, agents, advisors, and controlled Affiliates.
Sarbanes-Oxley Act means the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002.
SEC means the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Subsidiary means, with respect to any Person,
any entity of which (a) securities or other ownership
interests having ordinary voting power to elect a majority of
the board of directors or other persons performing similar
functions are directly or indirectly owned by such Person, and
(b) such Person or any subsidiary of such Person is a
general partner.
Termination Fee means a cash amount equal to
$30,000,000.
Third Party means any Person, including as
defined in Section 13(d) of the 1934 Act, other than
Parent or any of its Affiliates.
Title XI Bonds means the Companys
United States Government Guaranteed Export Ship Financing
Obligations, 2000 Series.
Title XI Consent means any required
consent, waiver or approval of the Maritime Administration
required in connection with the consummation of the transactions
contemplated by this Agreement under and in respect of the
Title XI Bonds to ensure that no default or event of
default occurs thereunder.
Trade Secrets means trade secrets and
confidential information and rights in any jurisdiction to limit
the use or disclosure thereof by any Person.
(c) Each of the following terms is defined in the Section
set forth opposite such term:
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Term
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Section
|
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Adverse Recommendation Change
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|
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6.03
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Agreement
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Preamble
|
|
Antitrust Authority
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|
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8.01
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Antitrust Laws
|
|
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8.01
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Burdensome Condition
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8.01
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Certificate of Merger
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2.01
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Certificates
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2.03
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Chartered Vessels
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4.15
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Closing
|
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2.01
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Common Stock
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4.05
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Company
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Preamble
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Company Board Recommendation
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4.02
|
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Company Equity Awards
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2.04
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Company Performance Unit
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2.04
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Company Restricted Share
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2.04
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Company SEC Documents
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4.07
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Company Securities
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4.05
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Company Stock Option
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2.04
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Company Stock Plan
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2.04
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Company Stockholder Approval
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4.02
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Company Stockholder Meeting
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6.02
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Company Subsidiary Securities
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4.06
|
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Confidentiality Agreement
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6.03
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Current Employees
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7.04
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A-5
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Term
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Section
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D&O Insurance
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7.03
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Debentures
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2.05
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Effective Time
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2.01
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e-mail
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11.01
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End Date
|
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10.01
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Equity Award Consideration
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2.04
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Exchange Agent
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2.03
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Exon-Florio Filing
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8.01
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Indemnified Person
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7.03
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Lease
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4.14
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Leased Vessels
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4.15
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Material Contract
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4.22
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Merger
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2.01
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Merger Consideration
|
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2.02
|
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Merger Subsidiary
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Preamble
|
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Multiemployer Plan
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4.19
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Notice Period
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6.03
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Option Consideration
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2.04
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Owned Vessels
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4.15
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Parent
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Preamble
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Parent Employee Plan
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7.04
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Performance Unit Consideration
|
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2.04
|
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Post-Closing Period
|
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7.04
|
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Preferred Stock
|
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4.05
|
|
Premerger Notification Rules
|
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|
8.01
|
|
Proxy Statement
|
|
|
4.09
|
|
Superior Proposal
|
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6.03
|
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Superior Proposal Notice
|
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6.03
|
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Surviving Corporation
|
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2.01
|
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Tax
|
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4.17
|
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Tax Action
|
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6.05
|
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Tax Return
|
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4.17
|
|
Tax Sharing Agreements
|
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4.17
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Taxing Authority
|
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4.17
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Time Chartered Vessels
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4.15
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Uncertificated Shares
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2.03
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Vessel
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4.15
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Vessel Equipment
|
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4.15
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Section 1.02. Other
Definitional and Interpretative Provisions. The
words hereof, herein and
hereunder and words of like import used in this
Agreement shall refer to this Agreement as a whole and not to
any particular provision of this Agreement. The captions herein
are included for convenience of reference only and shall be
ignored in the construction or interpretation hereof. References
to Articles, Sections, Exhibits and Schedules are to Articles,
Sections, Exhibits and Schedules of this Agreement unless
otherwise specified. All Exhibits and Schedules annexed hereto
or referred to herein are hereby incorporated in and made a part
of this Agreement as if set forth in full herein. Any
capitalized terms used in any Exhibit or Schedule but not
A-6
otherwise defined therein, shall have the meaning as defined in
this Agreement. Any singular term in this Agreement shall be
deemed to include the plural, and any plural term the singular.
Whenever the words include, includes or
including are used in this Agreement, they shall be
deemed to be followed by the words without
limitation, whether or not they are in fact followed by
those words or words of like import. Writing,
written and comparable terms refer to printing,
typing and other means of reproducing words (including
electronic media) in a visible form. References to any statute
shall be deemed to refer to such statute as amended from time to
time and to any rules or regulations promulgated thereunder.
References to any agreement or contract are to that agreement or
contract as amended, modified or supplemented from time to time
in accordance with the terms hereof and thereof; provided
that with respect to any agreement or contract listed on any
schedules hereto, all such amendments, modifications or
supplements existing as of the date hereof must also be listed
in the appropriate schedule. References to any Person include
the successors and permitted assigns of that Person. References
from or through any date mean, unless otherwise specified, from
and including or through and including, respectively.
ARTICLE 2
The
Merger
Section 2.01. The
Merger. (a) At the Effective Time, Merger
Subsidiary shall be merged (the Merger) with
and into the Company in accordance with Louisiana Law, whereupon
the separate existence of Merger Subsidiary shall cease, and the
Company shall be the surviving corporation (the
Surviving Corporation) with those
characteristics set out in Article 3.
(b) Subject to the provisions of Article 9, the
closing of the Merger (the Closing) shall
take place in New York City at the offices of Davis
Polk & Wardwell LLP, 450 Lexington Avenue, New York,
New York, 10017 as soon as possible, but in any event no later
than two Business Days, after the date the conditions set forth
in Article 9 (other than conditions that by their nature
are to be satisfied at the Closing, but subject to the
satisfaction or, to the extent permissible, waiver of those
conditions at the Closing) have been satisfied or, to the extent
permissible, waived by the party or parties entitled to the
benefit of such conditions, or at such other place, at such
other time or on such other date as Parent and the Company may
mutually agree.
(c) At the Closing, the Company and Merger Subsidiary shall
(i) file a certificate of merger and the Amended and
Restated Company Charter with the Louisiana Secretary of State
and (ii) make all other filings or recordings required by
Louisiana Law necessary to effect the Merger (such certificates
and other filings set forth in clauses (i) through (ii),
the Certificate of Merger). The Merger shall
become effective at such time (the Effective
Time) as the Certificate of Merger is duly filed (or
at such later time as may be specified in the Certificate of
Merger).
(d) From and after the Effective Time, the Surviving
Corporation shall possess all the rights, powers, privileges and
franchises and be subject to all of the obligations,
liabilities, restrictions and disabilities of the Company and
Merger Subsidiary, all as provided under Louisiana Law.
Section 2.02. Conversion
of Shares. At the Effective Time:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in Section 2.02(b) or
Section 2.09, each share of Company Stock outstanding
immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be converted into
the right to receive $8.00 in cash, without interest (the
Merger Consideration). As of the Effective
Time, all such shares of Company Stock shall no longer be
outstanding and shall automatically be canceled and retired and
shall cease to exist, and shall thereafter represent only the
right to receive the Merger Consideration to be paid in
accordance with Section 2.03, without interest.
(b) Each share of Company Stock held by the Company as
treasury stock or owned by Parent, Merger Subsidiary, or any of
their Affiliates immediately prior to the Effective Time shall
be canceled, and no payment shall be made with respect thereto.
(c) Each share of common stock of Merger Subsidiary
outstanding immediately prior to the Effective Time shall be
converted into and become one share of common stock of the
Surviving Corporation with
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the same rights, powers and privileges as the shares so
converted and shall constitute the only outstanding shares of
capital stock of the Surviving Corporation.
Section 2.03. Surrender
and Payment. (a) Prior to the Effective
Time, Parent shall appoint an agent (the Exchange
Agent) for the purpose of exchanging for the Merger
Consideration (i) certificates representing shares of
Company Stock (the Certificates) or
(ii) uncertificated shares of Company Stock (the
Uncertificated Shares). Parent shall make
available to the Exchange Agent the Merger Consideration to be
paid in respect of the Certificates and the Uncertificated
Shares. Promptly after the Effective Time, Parent shall send, or
shall cause the Exchange Agent to send, to each holder of shares
of Company Stock at the Effective Time a letter of transmittal
and instructions (which shall specify that the delivery shall be
effected, and risk of loss and title shall pass, only upon
proper delivery of the Certificates or transfer of the
Uncertificated Shares to the Exchange Agent) for use in such
exchange.
(b) Each holder of shares of Company Stock that have been
converted into the right to receive the Merger Consideration
shall be entitled to receive, upon (i) surrender to the
Exchange Agent of a Certificate, together with a properly
completed letter of transmittal, or (ii) receipt of an
agents message by the Exchange Agent (or such
other evidence, if any, of transfer as the Exchange Agent may
reasonably request) in the case of a book-entry transfer of
Uncertificated Shares, the Merger Consideration in respect of
the Company Stock represented by a Certificate or Uncertificated
Share. Until so surrendered or transferred, as the case may be,
each such Certificate or Uncertificated Share shall represent
after the Effective Time for all purposes only the right to
receive such Merger Consideration.
(c) If any portion of the Merger Consideration is to be
paid to a Person other than the Person in whose name the
surrendered Certificate or the transferred Uncertificated Share
is registered, it shall be a condition to such payment that
(i) either such Certificate shall be properly endorsed or
shall otherwise be in proper form for transfer or such
Uncertificated Share shall be properly transferred and
(ii) the Person requesting such payment shall pay to the
Exchange Agent any transfer or other taxes required as a result
of such payment to a Person other than the registered holder of
such Certificate or Uncertificated Share or establish to the
satisfaction of the Exchange Agent that such tax has been paid
or is not payable.
(d) After the Effective Time, there shall be no further
registration of transfers of shares of Company Stock. If, after
the Effective Time, Certificates or Uncertificated Shares are
presented to the Surviving Corporation or the Exchange Agent,
they shall be canceled and exchanged for the Merger
Consideration provided for, and in accordance with the
procedures set forth, in this Article 2.
(e) Any portion of the Merger Consideration made available
to the Exchange Agent pursuant to Section 2.03(a) that
remains unclaimed by the holders of shares of Company Stock six
months after the Effective Time shall be returned to Parent,
upon demand, and any such holder who has not exchanged shares of
Company Stock for the Merger Consideration in accordance with
this Section 2.03 prior to that time shall thereafter look
only to Parent for payment of the Merger Consideration in
respect of such shares without any interest thereon.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Parent shall not be liable to any
holder of shares of Company Stock for any amounts paid to a
public official pursuant to applicable abandoned property,
escheat or similar laws. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Parent
shall not be liable to any holder of shares of Company Stock for
any amounts paid to a public official pursuant to applicable
abandoned property, escheat or similar laws. Any amounts
remaining unclaimed by holders of shares of Company Stock
eighteen months after the Effective Time (or such earlier date,
immediately prior to such time when the amounts would otherwise
escheat to or become property of any Governmental Authority)
shall become, to the extent permitted by Applicable Law, the
property of Parent free and clear of any claims or interest of
any Person previously entitled thereto.
(f) Any portion of the Merger Consideration made available
to the Exchange Agent pursuant to Section 2.03(a) to pay
for shares of Company Stock for which rights to receive payment
of the fair value of such shares have been perfected shall be
returned to Parent upon demand of Parent.
Section 2.04. Equity
Awards. (a) At or immediately prior to the
Effective Time, each outstanding option to purchase shares of
Company Stock granted under the Companys 1998 Equity
Incentive Plan, as amended, or the Companys 2005 Stock
Incentive Plan, as amended, (each, a Company Stock
Plan and
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each such option, a Company Stock Option),
whether or not exercisable or vested, shall be canceled, and the
Company shall pay each such holder at or promptly after the
Effective Time for each such cancelled Company Stock Option an
amount, less any applicable withholding for Taxes (the
Option Consideration), in cash determined by
multiplying (i) the excess, if any, of the Merger
Consideration over the applicable exercise price per share of
Company Stock subject to the Company Stock Option by
(ii) the number of shares of Company Stock such holder
could have purchased (assuming full vesting of the Company Stock
Option) had such holder exercised such option in full
immediately prior to the Effective Time.
(b) At or immediately prior to the Effective Time, each
restricted share of Company Stock (whether subject to
service-based or performance-based vesting conditions) (each, a
Company Restricted Share) granted under any
Company Stock Plan that is outstanding shall become fully
vested, and shall be treated as a share of Company Stock for all
purposes of this Agreement (including the right to receive the
Merger Consideration in accordance with Section 2.02).
(c) At or immediately prior to the Effective Time, each
performance unit with respect to Company Stock granted under any
Company Stock Plan (each, a Company Performance
Unit and, together with the Company Stock Options and
Company Restricted Shares, Company Equity
Awards), shall be canceled, and the Company shall pay
each such holder at or promptly after the Effective Time for
each such Company Performance Unit, an amount in cash, less any
applicable withholding for Taxes (the Performance Unit
Consideration and, together with the Option
Consideration and the Merger Consideration payable to holders of
Company Restricted Shares, the Equity Award
Consideration), equal to (i) the Merger
Consideration multiplied by (ii) the number of shares of
Company Stock issuable pursuant to such Company Performance Unit
assuming attainment of the target level of performance
applicable to such Company Performance Unit (or such other level
of performance if provided for in the award agreement underlying
such Company Performance Unit.
(d) Prior to the Effective Time, each of Parent and the
Company shall use its reasonable best efforts to take all
actions necessary such that, effective as of the Effective Time,
each outstanding Company Equity Award shall be canceled in
exchange for the applicable Equity Award Consideration (if any),
including (i) obtaining any consents from holders of
Company Equity Awards that are required under the terms of the
applicable Company Stock Plan and (ii) amending, to the
extent necessary and to the extent such amendment is permitted
by the terms of such Company Equity Award or Company Stock Plan,
the terms of such Company Equity Awards or Company Stock Plan to
give effect to the transactions contemplated by this
Section 2.04. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
Section 2.04, payment may be withheld in respect of any
Company Stock Options or Company Performance Units until any
required consents of the holder of such Company Stock Options or
Company Performance Units, as applicable, are obtained. For the
avoidance of doubt, any Company Equity Awards with an intrinsic
value of zero or less immediately preceding the Effective Time
shall be canceled without any payment or other consideration
therefor and the holder of such Company Equity Award shall have
no rights whatsoever with respect to such cancelled Company
Equity Award.
Section 2.05. Convertible
Securities. At the Effective Time, Companys
2.75% Senior Convertible Debentures due 2027 (the
Debentures) shall remain outstanding and
shall be treated in accordance with their terms. Notwithstanding
the foregoing, each of Parent and Merger Subsidiary acknowledges
that the Merger will constitute a Fundamental Change
as defined in the indenture governing the Debentures and that
the holders of such Debentures shall have the rights related
thereto under such indenture. The Company will provide prior
notice of such Fundamental Change in accordance with the terms
of the Debentures.
Section 2.06. Adjustments. If,
during the period between the date of this Agreement and the
Effective Time, and without prejudice to Section 6.01, any
change in the outstanding shares of capital stock of the Company
shall occur, including by reason of any reclassification,
recapitalization, stock split or combination, exchange or
readjustment of shares, or any stock dividend thereon with a
record date during such period, but excluding any change that
results from any exercise or cancellation of any Company Stock
Options or settlement or cancellation of any Company Performance
Units outstanding as of the date hereof, the Merger
Consideration and any other amounts payable pursuant to this
Agreement shall be appropriately adjusted.
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Section 2.07. Withholding
Rights. Notwithstanding any provision contained
herein to the contrary, each of the Exchange Agent, the
Surviving Corporation and Parent shall be entitled to deduct and
withhold from the consideration otherwise payable to any Person
pursuant to this Article 2 such amounts as it is required
to deduct and withhold with respect to the making of such
payment under any provision of federal, state, local or foreign
tax law. If the Exchange Agent, the Surviving Corporation or
Parent, as the case may be, so withholds amounts, such amounts
shall be treated for all purposes of this Agreement as having
been paid to the holder of the shares of Company Stock in
respect of which the Exchange Agent, the Surviving Corporation
or Parent, as the case may be, made such deduction and
withholding.
Section 2.08. Lost
Certificates. If any Certificate shall have been
lost, stolen or destroyed, upon the making of an affidavit of
that fact by the Person claiming such Certificate to be lost,
stolen or destroyed and, if required by the Surviving
Corporation, the posting by such Person of a bond, in such
reasonable amount as the Surviving Corporation may direct, as
indemnity against any claim that may be made against it with
respect to such Certificate, the Exchange Agent will issue, in
exchange for such lost, stolen or destroyed Certificate, the
Merger Consideration to be paid in respect of the shares of
Company Stock represented by such Certificate, as contemplated
by this Article 2.
Section 2.09. Dissenting
Shares. Notwithstanding Section 2.02, shares
of Company Stock outstanding immediately prior to the Effective
Time and held by a holder who has voted against the Merger and
who has properly exercised dissenters rights with respect
thereto in accordance with Section 12:131 of the Louisiana
Law shall not be converted into the right to receive the Merger
Consideration, and holders of such shares shall instead be
entitled to receive payment of the fair value of such shares in
accordance with Section 12:131 of the Louisiana Law, unless
such holder fails to perfect, withdraws or otherwise loses the
right to payment of the fair value of such shares under the
Louisiana Law. If, after the Effective Time, such holder fails
to perfect, withdraws or otherwise loses the right to payment of
the fair value of such shares under the Louisiana Law, such
shares shall be treated as if they had been converted as of the
Effective Time into the right to receive the Merger
Consideration. The Company shall give Parent prompt notice of
any demands received by the Company pursuant to
Section 12:131 of the Louisiana Law, and Parent, at
Parents expense, shall have the right to direct all
negotiations and proceedings with respect to such demands so
long as Parent does not create any obligations for the Company
effective prior to the Effective Time. Except with the prior
written consent of Parent, the Company shall not make any
payment with respect to, or offer to settle or settle, any such
demands.
ARTICLE 3
The
Surviving Corporation
Section 3.01. Articles
of Incorporation. The articles of incorporation
of the Company in effect at the Effective Time shall be the
articles of incorporation of the Surviving Corporation until
amended in accordance with Applicable Law; provided that,
at the Effective Time, such articles of incorporation shall be
amended in their entirety to read in full as set forth in the
Amended and Restated Company Charter.
Section 3.02. Bylaws. The
bylaws of the Company in effect at the Effective Time shall be
the bylaws of the Surviving Corporation until amended in
accordance with Applicable Law.
Section 3.03. Directors
and Officers. From and after the Effective Time,
until successors are duly elected or appointed and qualified in
accordance with Applicable Law, (i) the directors of Merger
Subsidiary at the Effective Time shall be the directors of the
Surviving Corporation and (ii) the officers of the Company
at the Effective Time shall be the officers of the Surviving
Corporation.
ARTICLE 4
Representations
and Warranties of the Company
Subject to Section 11.05, except as disclosed in (a)(i) the
Companys annual report on
Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2010, (ii) the
Companys Quarterly Report on
Form 10-Q
for the fiscal quarter
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ended June 30, 2011 or (iii) in any Current Report on
Form 8-K
filed by the Company with the SEC after the date of the filing
of such
Form 10-K
and prior to the date hereof, in each case other than
(A) any information that is contained in the Risk
Factors section of such reports and (B) any
forward-looking statements, or other statements that are
similarly predictive or forward-looking in nature, contained in
such reports, if the relevance of such disclosure as an
exception to one or more of the following representations and
warranties is reasonably apparent, or (b) the Company
Disclosure Schedule, the Company represents and warrants to
Parent as of the date hereof and as of the Effective Time that:
Section 4.01. Corporate
Existence and Power. The Company is a corporation
duly incorporated, validly existing and in good standing under
the laws of the State of Louisiana and has all corporate powers
and all governmental licenses, authorizations, permits, consents
and approvals required to carry on its business as now
conducted, except for those licenses, authorizations, permits,
consents and approvals the absence of which would not have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company. The Company is duly qualified to do business as a
foreign corporation and is in good standing in each jurisdiction
where such qualification is necessary, except for those
jurisdictions where failure to be so qualified would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company. The Company
has heretofore made available to Parent true and complete copies
of the articles of incorporation and bylaws of the Company as in
effect on the date of this Agreement.
Section 4.02. Corporate
Authorization. (a) The execution, delivery
and performance by the Company of this Agreement and the
consummation by the Company of the transactions contemplated
hereby are within the Companys corporate powers and,
except for the required approval of the Companys
stockholders in connection with the consummation of the Merger
and adoption of the Amended and Restated Company Charter, have
been duly authorized by all necessary corporate action on the
part of the Company. The affirmative vote of the holders of two
thirds of the shares of Company Stock represented at the Company
Stockholder Meeting is the only vote of the holders of any of
the Companys capital stock necessary in connection with
the consummation of the Merger and adoption of the Amended and
Restated Company Charter (the Company Stockholder
Approval). This Agreement constitutes a valid and
binding agreement of the Company enforceable against the Company
in accordance with its terms (subject to applicable bankruptcy,
insolvency, fraudulent transfer, reorganization, moratorium and
other laws affecting creditors rights generally and
general principles of equity).
(b) At a meeting duly called and held, the Companys
Board of Directors has (i) unanimously determined that this
Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby are in the
best interests of the Companys stockholders;
(ii) unanimously approved, adopted and declared advisable
this Agreement and the transactions contemplated hereby;
(iii) unanimously approved, adopted and declared advisable
the adoption of the Amended and Restated Company Charter; and
(iv) unanimously resolved, subject to Section 6.03(b),
to recommend approval and adoption of this Agreement and the
adoption of the Amended Restated Company Charter by its
stockholders (such recommendation, the Company Board
Recommendation).
Section 4.03. Governmental
Authorization. The execution, delivery and
performance by the Company of this Agreement and the
consummation by the Company of the transactions contemplated
hereby require no action by or in respect of, or filing with,
any Governmental Authority other than (a) the filing of the
Certificate of Merger; (b) compliance with any applicable
requirements of the HSR Act and any analogous laws existing in
foreign jurisdictions; (c) compliance with any applicable
requirements of the 1933 Act, the 1934 Act, and any
other applicable state or federal securities law;
(d) consent of the Maritime Administration in connection
with the Companys Title XI Bonds; (e) compliance
with any applicable requirements of the rules and regulations of
NASDAQ; and (f) any actions or filings the absence of which
would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
Section 4.04. Non-contravention. The
execution, delivery and performance by the Company of this
Agreement and the consummation of the transactions contemplated
hereby do not and will not (a) contravene, conflict with,
or result in any violation or breach of any provision of the
articles of incorporation (in respect of the performance and
consummation of the transactions contemplated hereby, assuming
the adoption of the Amended and Restated Company Charter), the
Amended and Restated Company Charter or bylaws of the
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Company, (b) assuming compliance with the matters referred
to in Section 4.03, contravene, conflict with or result in
a violation or breach of any provision of any Applicable Law,
(c) assuming compliance with the matters referred to in
Section 4.03, require any consent or other action by any
Person under, constitute a default, or an event that, with or
without notice or lapse of time or both, would constitute a
default, under, or cause or permit the termination,
cancellation, acceleration or other change of any right or
obligation or the loss of any benefit to which the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries is entitled under any provision of any
agreement or other instrument binding upon the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries or any license, franchise, permit, certificate,
approval or other similar authorization affecting, or relating
in any way to, the assets or business of the Company and its
Subsidiaries; or (d) result in the creation or imposition
of any Lien (other than Permitted Liens) on any asset of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries, with only such exceptions,
in the case of each of clauses (b) through (d), as would
not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
Section 4.05. Capitalization. (a) The
authorized capital stock of the Company consists of
250,000,000 shares of Common Stock of $0.01 par value
per share (Common Stock) and
30,000,000 shares of Preferred Stock of $0.01 par
value per share (Preferred Stock). As of
August 31, 2011, there were
(i) 115,981,036 shares of Common Stock outstanding,
including 1,582,350 Company Restricted Shares, (ii) Company
Stock Options to purchase an aggregate of 1,436,293 shares
of Company Stock (of which Company Stock Options to purchase an
aggregate of 1,257,291 shares of Company Stock were vested
or exercisable), (iii) Company Performance Units in respect
of 1,139,338 shares of Common Stock (assuming attainment of
the applicable target level of performance), and
(iv) $325,000,000 aggregate principal amount of Debentures,
which are convertible into shares of Company Stock. There are no
shares of Preferred Stock outstanding. All outstanding shares of
capital stock of the Company have been, and all shares that may
be issued pursuant to any Company Stock Option, Company
Performance Unit or other compensation plan or arrangement or
the Debentures will be, when issued in accordance with the
respective terms thereof, duly authorized and validly issued,
fully paid and nonassessable and free of preemptive rights.
Section 4.05(a) of the Company Disclosure Schedule contains
a complete and correct list of outstanding Company Stock
Options, Company Performance Units and Company Restricted
Shares, including the holder, date of grant, exercise price (if
applicable), vesting schedule and number of shares of Company
Stock subject thereto (in the case of Company Performance Units,
assuming attainment of the target level of performance).
(b) Except as set forth in this Section 4.05,
including any shares of Common Stock obtained through exercise
of Company Stock Options or settlement of Company Performance
Units described herein, there are no outstanding bonds,
debentures, notes or other indebtedness of the Company having
the right to vote (or convertible into, or exchangeable for,
securities having the right to vote) on any matters on which
stockholders of the Company may vote. Except as set forth in
this Section 4.05, there are no issued, reserved for
issuance or outstanding (i) shares of capital stock or
other voting securities of or ownership interests in the
Company, (ii) securities of the Company convertible into or
exchangeable for shares of capital stock or other voting
securities of or ownership interests in the Company,
(iii) warrants, calls, options or other rights to acquire
from the Company, or other obligation of the Company to issue,
any capital stock, voting securities or securities convertible
into or exchangeable for capital stock or voting securities of
the Company, or (iv) restricted shares, stock appreciation
rights, performance units, contingent value rights,
phantom stock or similar securities or rights that
are derivative of, or provide economic benefits based, directly
or indirectly, on the value or price of, any capital stock of or
voting securities of the Company (the items in clauses (i)
through (iv) being referred to collectively as the
Company Securities). There are no
outstanding obligations of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or otherwise acquire any of
the Company Securities. Neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries is a party to any voting agreement with respect to
the voting of any Company Securities.
(c) Except as set forth in this Section 4.05, none of
(i) the shares of capital stock of the Company or
(ii) Company Securities are owned by any Subsidiary of the
Company.
Section 4.06. Subsidiaries. (a) Each
Subsidiary of the Company has been duly organized, is validly
existing and (where applicable) in good standing under the laws
of its jurisdiction of organization, has all organizational
powers and all governmental licenses, authorizations, permits,
consents and approvals required
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to carry on its business as now conducted, except as would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company. Each such
Subsidiary is duly qualified to do business as a foreign entity
and is in good standing in each jurisdiction where such
qualification is necessary, except for those jurisdictions where
failure to be so qualified would not reasonably be expected to
have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on the Company. All Subsidiaries of the Company and their
respective jurisdictions of organization are as set forth in
Section 4.06(a) of the Company Disclosure Schedule.
(b) All of the outstanding capital stock of or other voting
securities of, or ownership interests in, each Subsidiary of the
Company, is owned by the Company, directly or indirectly, free
and clear of any Lien other than Permitted Liens and free of any
other limitation or restriction (including any restriction on
the right to vote, sell or otherwise dispose of such capital
stock or other voting securities or ownership interests). There
are no issued, reserved for issuance or outstanding
(i) securities of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
convertible into, or exchangeable for, shares of capital stock
or other voting securities of, or ownership interests in, any
Subsidiary of the Company, (ii) warrants, calls, options or
other rights to acquire from the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, or other obligations of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries to issue, any capital stock or other voting
securities of, or ownership interests in, or any securities
convertible into, or exchangeable for, any capital stock or
other voting securities of, or ownership interests in, any
Subsidiary of the Company, or (iii) restricted shares,
stock appreciation rights, performance units, contingent value
rights, phantom stock or similar securities or
rights that are derivative of, or provide economic benefits
based, directly or indirectly, on the value or price of, any
capital stock or other voting securities of, or ownership
interests in, any Subsidiary of the Company (the items in
clauses (i) through (iii) being referred to
collectively as the Company Subsidiary
Securities). There are no outstanding obligations of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to repurchase, redeem or
otherwise acquire any of the Company Subsidiary Securities.
Except for the capital stock or other voting securities of, or
ownership interests in, its Subsidiaries, the Company does not
own, directly or indirectly, any capital stock or other voting
securities of, or ownership interests in, any Person.
Section 4.07. SEC
Filings and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. (a) The
Company has filed with or furnished to the SEC all reports,
schedules, forms, statements, prospectuses, registration
statements and other documents required to be filed or furnished
by the Company since January 1, 2009 (collectively,
together with any exhibits and schedules thereto and other
information incorporated therein, the Company SEC
Documents).
(b) As of its filing date (and as of the date of any
amendment), each Company SEC Document complied, and each
document of the type included in the definition of Company SEC
Document filed subsequent to the date hereof will comply, as to
form in all material respects with the applicable requirements
of the 1933 Act and the 1934 Act, as the case may be.
(c) As of its filing date (or, if amended or superseded by
a filing prior to the date hereof, on the date of such filing),
each Company SEC Document filed pursuant to the 1934 Act
did not, and each Company SEC Document filed subsequent to the
date hereof will not, contain any untrue statement of a material
fact or omit to state any material fact necessary in order to
make the statements made therein, in the light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.
(d) Each Company SEC Document that is a registration
statement, as amended or supplemented, if applicable, filed
pursuant to the 1933 Act, as of the date such registration
statement or amendment became effective, did not contain any
untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any
material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make
the statements therein not misleading.
(e) The Company has established and maintains disclosure
controls and procedures (as defined in
Rule 13a-15
under the 1934 Act). Such disclosure controls and
procedures are designed to ensure that material information
relating to the Company, including its consolidated
Subsidiaries, is made known to the Companys principal
executive officer and its principal financial officer by others
within those entities, particularly during the periods in which
the periodic reports required under the 1934 Act are being
prepared. Such disclosure controls and procedures are designed
to timely alert the Companys principal executive officer
and principal financial officer to material information required
to be included in the Companys periodic and current
reports
A-13
required under the 1934 Act. For purposes of this
Agreement, principal executive officer and
principal financial officer shall have the meanings
given to such terms in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
(f) Since January 1, 2009, the Company and its
Subsidiaries have established and maintained a system of
internal controls over financial reporting (as defined in
Rule 13a-15
under the 1934 Act) designed to provide reasonable
assurance regarding the reliability of the Companys
financial reporting and the preparation of Company financial
statements for external purposes in accordance with GAAP. The
Company has disclosed, based on its most recent evaluation of
internal controls prior to the date hereof, to the
Companys auditors and audit committee (i) any
significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design
or operation of internal controls which are reasonably expected
to adversely affect the Companys ability to record,
process, summarize and report financial information and
(ii) any fraud, whether or not material, that involves
management or other employees who have a significant role in
internal controls. The Company has made available to Parent a
summary of any such disclosure made by management to the
Companys auditors and audit committee since
January 1, 2009.
(g) There are no outstanding loans or other extensions of
credit made by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries to any
executive officer (as defined in
Rule 3b-7
under the 1934 Act) or director of the Company. The Company
has not, since January 1, 2009, taken any action prohibited
by Section 402 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
(h) Since January 1, 2009, the Company has complied in
all material respects with the applicable listing and corporate
governance rules and regulations of NASDAQ.
(i) Since January 1, 2009, each of the principal
executive officer and principal financial officer of the Company
(or each former principal executive officer and principal
financial officer of the Company, as applicable) have made all
certifications required by
Rule 13a-14
and 15d-14
under the 1934 Act and Sections 302 and 906 of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act and any related rules and regulations
promulgated by the SEC and the NASDAQ.
(j) Section 4.07(j) of the Company Disclosure Schedule
describes, and the Company has made available to Parent copies
of the documentation creating or governing, all securitization
transactions and other off-balance sheet arrangements (as
defined in Item 303 of
Regulation S-K
of the SEC) that existed or were effected by the Company or its
Subsidiaries since January 1, 2009.
(k) Since January 1, 2009, there has been no
transaction, or series of similar transactions, agreements,
arrangements or understandings, nor is there any proposed
transaction as of the date of this Agreement, or series of
similar transactions, agreements, arrangements or understandings
to which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries was or is to be
a party, that would be required to be disclosed under
Item 404 of
Regulation S-K
promulgated under the 1933 Act.
Section 4.08. Financial
Statements. The audited consolidated financial
statements and unaudited consolidated interim financial
statements of the Company included or incorporated by reference
in the Company SEC Documents fairly present in all material
respects, in conformity with GAAP applied on a consistent basis
(except as may be indicated in the notes thereto), the
consolidated financial position of the Company and its
consolidated Subsidiaries as of the dates thereof and their
consolidated results of operations and cash flows for the
periods then ended (subject to normal year-end audit adjustments
in the case of any unaudited interim financial statements).
Section 4.09. Disclosure
Documents. The proxy statement of the Company to
be filed with the SEC in connection with the Merger and the
adoption of the Amended and Restated Company Charter (the
Proxy Statement) will, when filed, comply as
to form in all material respects with the applicable
requirements of the 1934 Act. At the time the Proxy
Statement and any amendments or supplements thereto is first
mailed to the stockholders of the Company and at the time of the
Company Stockholder Approval, the Proxy Statement, as
supplemented or amended, if applicable, will not contain any
untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state any
material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in
order to make the statements therein, in light of the
circumstances under which they were made, not misleading. The
representations and warranties contained in this
Section 4.09 will not apply to statements or omissions
included or incorporated by reference
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in the Proxy Statement to the extent based upon information
supplied by Parent, Merger Subsidiary or any of their respective
Representatives specifically for use or incorporation by
reference therein.
Section 4.10. Absence
of Certain Changes. (a) Since the Company
Balance Sheet Date through the date hereof, the business of the
Company and its Subsidiaries has been conducted in the ordinary
course consistent with past practice, and there has not been any
event, occurrence, development or state of circumstances or
facts that has had or would reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company.
(b) From the Company Balance Sheet Date through the date
hereof, there has not been any action taken by the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries that, if taken during the period from
the date of this Agreement through the Effective Time without
Parents consent, would constitute a breach of
Section 6.01(a) through (m).
Section 4.11. No
Undisclosed Material Liabilities. There are no
liabilities or obligations of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries of any kind whatsoever, whether accrued,
contingent, absolute, determined, determinable or otherwise,
and, other than liabilities or obligations (a) disclosed
and provided for in the Company Balance Sheet or in the notes
thereto, (b) incurred in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice since the Company Balance Sheet
Date, (c) incurred under this Agreement or in connection
with the transactions contemplated hereby and (d) that
would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
Section 4.12. Compliance
With Laws and Court Orders. The Company and each
of its Subsidiaries is, and since January 1, 2009 has been,
in compliance with, and to the knowledge of the Company is not
under investigation with respect to, and has not been threatened
to be charged with or given notice of any violation of, any
Applicable Law, except for failures to comply or violations or
investigations that have not had and would not reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material
Adverse Effect on the Company. There is no Order outstanding
against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries that has had or
would reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company or that in
any manner seeks to prevent, enjoin, alter or materially delay
the Merger or any of the other transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 4.13. Litigation. There
is no action, suit, investigation or proceeding (or any basis
therefor) pending against, or, to the knowledge of the Company,
threatened against or affecting, the Company, any of its
Subsidiaries, any present or former officer, director or
employee of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any Person
for whom the Company or any of its Subsidiaries may be liable or
any of their respective properties before (or, in the case of
threatened actions, suits, investigations or proceedings, would
be before) or by any Governmental Authority or arbitrator, that,
if determined or resolved adversely in accordance with the
plaintiffs demands, would reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company.
Section 4.14. Properties. (a) Except
as would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in
the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company, the
Company and its Subsidiaries have good title to, or valid
leasehold interests in, all property and assets reflected on the
Company Balance Sheet or acquired after the Balance Sheet Date,
except as have been disposed of since the Company Balance Sheet
Date in the ordinary course of business consistent with past
practice.
(b) Except as would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company, (i) each lease, sublease or license (each, a
Lease) under which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries leases, subleases or licenses any real property is
valid and in full force and effect, (ii) neither the
Company nor any of its Subsidiaries, nor to the Companys
knowledge any other party to a Lease, has violated any provision
of, or taken or failed to take any act which, with or without
notice, lapse of time, or both, would constitute a default under
the provisions of such Lease, and (iii) neither the Company
nor any of its Subsidiaries has received notice that it has
breached, violated or defaulted under any Lease.
(c) Section 4.14(c) of the Company Disclosure Schedule
sets forth a complete and correct list of all owned and leased
real property.
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Section 4.15. Vessels. (a) Section 4.15(a)
of the Company Disclosure Schedule sets forth each of the
vessels and attendant plant (each a Vessel
and collectively the Vessels) used by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries in its business and, as to
each of the Vessels, distinguishes among: (i) those Vessels
that are owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries (the
Owned Vessels); (ii) those Vessels that
are chartered by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries under
charter or use arrangements that are designated bareboat
or demise charters, other than Owned Vessels (the
Bareboat Chartered Vessels); (iii) those
Vessels that are chartered by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries for a time period in excess of six months under
charter or use arrangements not designated bareboat or
demise charters (the Time Chartered
Vessels and, together with the Bareboat Chartered
Vessels and the Leased Vessels (defined below), collectively the
Chartered Vessels); and (iv) those
Vessels that are leased by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries for a time period in excess of six months and not
described in clause (i), (ii) or (iii) above (the
Leased Vessels).
(b) The Company or its Subsidiaries are the registered
owners of and have valid and marketable title to the Owned
Vessels, free and clear of all Liens other than Permitted Liens.
The Company or its Subsidiaries have valid and enforceable
charters, use arrangements or similar rights with respect to the
Chartered Vessels, except as would not reasonably be expected to
have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on the Company. Each of the Owned Vessels is validly
registered under the laws of its flag state.
(c) Except as would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company, the Owned Vessels:
(i) have current flag state certificates, including
(A) in the case of Owned Vessels under U.S. flag,
certificates of inspection and documentation, and (B) in
the case of the other Owned Vessels, certificates of registry,
in effect with the applicable Governmental Authority, in each
case free of reportable exceptions or notations of record;
(ii) are afloat and are substantially seaworthy;
(iii) hold in full force all material permits, licenses,
certificates, approvals, consents, notices, waivers, franchises,
registrations, filings, accreditations or other similar
authorizations required by any Applicable Law required for the
lawful operation in the manner vessels of their kind are being
operated in the trade in which the Owned Vessels are
operated; and
(iv) have valid and unextended class certificates without
condition or recommendation, and the class of the Owned Vessels
are maintained without condition or recommendation.
(d) Except as would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company, all tangible personal property owned or utilized by
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, including boats, barges,
vessels and Vessel Equipment, are in good operating condition
and are maintained substantially consistent with the standards
generally followed in the industry. Vessel
Equipment means boilers, generators, machinery, pipe
reels, pipe laying
and/or
handling equipment, boats, lifeboats, masts, towers, cranes,
engines, instruments, anchors and anchor handling equipment,
chains, cables, apparel, accessories, tackle, rigging,
electronic, radar, communication, radio installation and
navigational equipment, and all other associated equipment,
furnishings, appliances and consumables.
Section 4.16. Intellectual
Property. Section 4.16 of the Company
Disclosure Schedule sets forth a complete and correct list of
all material registrations and applications for registration of
any Intellectual Property owned by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries. Except as would not reasonably be expected to
have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on the Company: (a) the Company and each of its
Subsidiaries owns, or is licensed to use (in each case, free and
clear of any Liens other than Permitted Liens), all material
Intellectual Property used in the conduct of its business as
currently conducted; (b) to the knowledge of the Company,
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has infringed,
misappropriated or otherwise violated any Intellectual Property
rights of any Person; (c) to the knowledge of the Company,
no Person has infringed, misappropriated or otherwise violated
any Intellectual Property right owned by the Company or any of
its Subsidiaries; (d) neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has received any written notice from a Third Party
of any pending claim, action, suit, order or proceeding by such
Third Party against the Company or any of its Subsidiaries with
respect to any Intellectual Property used by the Company
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or any of its Subsidiaries or alleging that the any services
provided, processes used or products manufactured, used,
imported, offered for sale or sold by the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries infringes, misappropriates or otherwise violates
any Intellectual Property of any Person; (e) the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement
will not alter, encumber, impair or extinguish any Intellectual
Property rights owned by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries;
(f) the Company and its Subsidiaries have taken reasonable
steps substantially in accordance with normal industry practice
to maintain the confidentiality of all Trade Secrets owned, used
or held for use by the Company or any of its Subsidiaries;
(g) the IT Assets operate and perform in a manner that
permits the Company and its Subsidiaries to conduct their
respective businesses as currently conducted, and to the
knowledge of the Company, no Person has gained unauthorized
access to the IT Assets; and (h) the Company and its
Subsidiaries have implemented reasonable backup and disaster
recovery technology for material IT Assets substantially
consistent with industry practices.
Section 4.17. Taxes. (a) All
Tax Returns required by Applicable Law to be filed with any
Taxing Authority by, or on behalf of, the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries have been filed when due in accordance with all
Applicable Law, and all such Tax Returns are, or shall be at the
time of filing, true and complete in all material respects.
(b) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries has paid (or
has had paid on its behalf) or has withheld and remitted to the
appropriate Taxing Authority all material Taxes due and payable,
or, where payment is not yet due, has established (or has had
established on its behalf and for its sole benefit and recourse)
in accordance with GAAP an adequate accrual for all material
Taxes through the end of the last period for which the Company
and its Subsidiaries ordinarily record items on their respective
books.
(c) The income and franchise Tax Returns of the Company and
its Subsidiaries through the Tax year ended December 31,
2010 have been examined and closed or are Returns with respect
to which the applicable period for assessment under Applicable
Law, after giving effect to extensions or waivers, has expired.
(d) There is no claim, audit, action, suit, proceeding or
investigation now pending or, to the Companys knowledge,
threatened against or with respect to the Company or its
Subsidiaries in respect of any Tax or Tax asset.
(e) During the five-year period ending on the date hereof,
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries was a
distributing corporation or a controlled corporation in a
transaction intended to be governed by Section 355 of the
Code.
(f) Neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries owns an
interest in real property in any jurisdiction in which a Tax is
imposed on the deemed transfer of an interest in real property
as a result of the Merger.
(g) Schedule 4.17(g) contains a list of all
jurisdictions (whether foreign or domestic) in which the Company
or any of its Subsidiaries currently files Tax Returns.
(h) Tax means (i) any tax,
governmental fee or other like assessment or charge of any kind
whatsoever (including withholding on amounts paid to or by any
Person), together with any interest, penalty, addition to tax or
additional amount imposed by any Governmental Authority (a
Taxing Authority) responsible for the
imposition of any such tax (domestic or foreign), and any
liability for any of the foregoing as transferee, (ii) in
the case of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries, liability
for the payment of any amount of the type described in
clause (i) as a result of being or having been before the
Effective Time a member of an affiliated, consolidated, combined
or unitary group, or a party to any agreement or arrangement, as
a result of which liability of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries to a Taxing Authority is determined or taken into
account with reference to the activities of any other Person,
and (iii) liability of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries for the payment of any amount as a result of being
party to any Tax Sharing Agreement or with respect to the
payment of any amount imposed on any Person of the type
described in (i) or (ii) as a result of any existing
express or implied agreement or arrangement (including an
indemnification agreement or arrangement). Tax
Return means any report, return, document, declaration
or other information or filing required to be supplied to any
Taxing Authority with respect to Taxes, including information
returns, any documents with respect to or accompanying payments
of estimated Taxes, or with respect to or accompanying requests
for the extension of time in which to file any such report,
return, document, declaration or other information. Tax
Sharing
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Agreements means all existing agreements or
arrangements (whether or not written) binding the Company or any
of its Subsidiaries that provide for the allocation,
apportionment, sharing or assignment of any Tax liability or
benefit, or the transfer or assignment of income, revenues,
receipts, or gains for the purpose of determining any
Persons Tax liability excluding any indemnification
agreement or arrangement pertaining to the sale or lease of
assets or subsidiaries).
Section 4.18. Employees. Except
as set forth in Section 4.18(a) of the Company Disclosure
Schedule, as of the date hereof, all material commissions,
bonuses and other incentive-based compensation payable to
employees, consultants or contractors for services performed on
or prior to the date hereof have been paid in full or fully
accrued for. Except as set forth in Section 4.18(b) of the
Company Disclosure Schedule, the Company is not aware of any Key
Employee that intends to resign or retire as a result of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement or otherwise within
one year after the Closing Date, and no Key Employee has any
agreements as to length of notice or severance payment required
to terminate his or her employment. To the knowledge of the
Company, each individual characterized and treated by the
Company or any Subsidiary as an independent contractor is
properly treated as an independent contractor under all
Applicable Law.
Section 4.19. Employee
Benefit Plans. (a) Section 4.19 of the
Company Disclosure Schedule contains a correct and complete list
identifying each material Employee Plan. Copies of such plans
(and, if applicable, related trust or funding agreements or
insurance policies) or, if applicable, forms thereof, and all
amendments thereto and written interpretations thereof have been
furnished to Parent together with the most recent annual report
(Form 5500 including, if applicable, Schedule B
thereto) and tax return (Form 990), if any, prepared in
connection with any such plan or trust.
(b) None of the Company, any Subsidiary, nor any ERISA
Affiliate nor any predecessor thereof sponsors, maintains or
contributes to, is obligated to contribute to, or has in the
past sponsored, maintained or contributed to or been obligated
to contribute to, any Employee Plan subject to Title IV of
ERISA, a defined benefit plan, a multiple employer plan or a
multiemployer plan, as defined in Section 3(37) of ERISA (a
Multiemployer Plan).
(c) Each Employee Plan that is intended to be qualified
under Section 401(a) of the Code has received a favorable
determination letter, or has pending or has time remaining in
which to file, an application for such determination from the
Internal Revenue Service, and to the knowledge of the Company,
there is no reason why any such determination letter should be
revoked or not be reissued, except in each case as would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company. The Company
has made available to Parent copies of the most recent Internal
Revenue Service determination letters with respect to each such
Employee Plan. Each Employee Plan has been maintained in
compliance with its terms and with the requirements prescribed
by Applicable Law, including ERISA and the Code, and has been
maintained in good standing with applicable Governmental
Authorities. No material events have occurred with respect to
any Employee Plan that could result in payment or assessment by
or against the Company of any excise taxes under
Sections 4972, 4975, 4976, 4977, 4979, 4980B, 4980D, 4980E
or 5000 of the Code, except in each case as would not reasonably
be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a
Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
(d) The consummation of the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement will not (either alone or together with any other
event) entitle any current or former employee, director, or
independent contractor of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
to any payment of money or other property, including any bonus,
severance, retirement, job security or other benefit or
accelerate the time of payment or vesting or trigger any payment
of funding (through a grantor trust or otherwise) of
compensation or benefits under, increase the amount payable or
trigger any other material obligation pursuant to, any Employee
Plan. There is no contract, plan or arrangement (written or
otherwise) covering any employee or former employee, director or
independent contractor of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
that, individually or collectively, could give rise to the
payment of any amount to any current or former employee,
director or independent contractor that would not be deductible
pursuant to the terms of Section 280G of the Code (without
regard to subsection (b)(4) thereof) or 162(m) of the Code or
that would be subject to the excise tax of Section 4999 of
the Code. Section 4.19(d)
A-18
of the Company Disclosure Schedule lists (i) all the
agreements, arrangements and other instruments which give rise
to an obligation to make or set aside amounts payable to or on
behalf of the officers of the Company and its Subsidiaries as a
result of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement
and/or any
subsequent employment termination (whether by the Company or the
officer), true and complete copies of which have been previously
provided to Parent and (ii) a reasonable, good faith
estimate of the maximum aggregate amounts so payable to each
such individual as a result of the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement
and/or any
subsequent employment termination (whether by the Company or the
officer).
(e) (i) Neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries has any current or projected liability in respect
of post-retirement health, medical or life insurance benefits
for retired, former or current employees, directors or
independent contractors of the Company or its Subsidiaries
except as required to avoid excise tax under Section 4980B
of the Code or similar non-US law, and (ii) no condition
exists that would prevent the Company or any Subsidiary from
amending or terminating without material liability to the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries any Employee Plan providing
health or medical benefits in respect of any current or former
employee of the Company or any Subsidiary.
(f) There has been no amendment to, written interpretation
of or announcement (whether or not written) by the Company or
any of its Affiliates relating to, or change in employee
participation or coverage under, any Employee Plan or
International Plan which would increase the expense of
maintaining such Employee Plan or International Plan above the
level of the expense incurred in respect thereof for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 2010, except in each case, as would
not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
(g) All contributions and payments accrued under each
Employee Plan, determined in accordance with prior funding and
accrual practices, as adjusted to include proportional accruals
for the period ending as of the date hereof, have been
discharged and paid on or prior to the date hereof except
(i) to the extent reflected as a liability on the Company
Balance Sheet or (ii) as would not reasonably be expected
to have, individually as in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on the Company.
(h) There is no action, suit, investigation, audit or
proceeding pending against or involving or, to the knowledge of
the Company, threatened against or involving, any Employee Plan
or International Plan before any arbitrator or any Governmental
Authority, except in each case as would not reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material
Adverse Effect on the Company.
(i) The Company has provided Parent with a list and copies
of each material International Plan. Each International Plan has
been maintained in compliance with its terms and with the
requirements prescribed by Applicable Law (including any special
provisions relating to qualified plans where such Plan was
intended so to qualify and any requirements relating to the
funding of such plans) and has been maintained in good standing
with applicable regulatory authorities, except in each case as
would not reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
Section 4.20. Labor
Matters. The Company and its Subsidiaries are in
with compliances with all Applicable Laws relating to employment
and employment practices, including those relating to terms and
conditions of employment, wages and hours, collective
bargaining, unemployment compensation, equal employment
opportunity, employment discrimination, workers
compensation, employee classification, information privacy and
security, payment and withholding of Taxes, continuation of
coverage with respect to group health plans and immigration,
except as would not reasonably be expected to have a Material
Adverse Effect on the Company. Neither the Company nor any
Subsidiary is a party to any collective bargaining or similar
agreement with any labor union or organization and no works
council exists or has been appointed at the Company or any
Subsidiary. There is no unfair labor practice complaint, or
union organizing effort, pending or, to the knowledge of the
Company, threatened against the Company or any Subsidiary. There
are no labor controversies, including strikes, disputes,
slowdowns or work stoppages, pending or, to the knowledge of the
Company, threatened against the Company or any Subsidiary. There
are no employment-related claims, including wrongful
termination, discrimination and sexual harassment claims,
pending or, to the knowledge of the Company, threatened against
the Company or any Subsidiary that would reasonably be expected
to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on the Company.
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Section 4.21. Environmental
Matters. (a) Except as would not reasonably
be expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a
Material Adverse Effect on the Company: (i) no notice,
notification, demand, request for information, citation, summons
or order has been received, no complaint has been filed, no
penalty has been assessed, and no action, claim, suit or
proceeding or, to the knowledge of the Company, investigation or
review (or any basis therefor) is pending or, to the knowledge
of the Company, is threatened, by any Governmental Authority or
other Person relating to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
and relating to or arising out of any Environmental Law;
(ii) the Company and its Subsidiaries are and, during the
relevant time periods specified under all applicable statutes of
limitation, have been in compliance with all Environmental Laws
and all Environmental Permits; and (iii) to the knowledge
of the Company, except as disclosed or provided for in the
Company Balance Sheet or in the notes thereto, there are no
liabilities or obligations of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries of any kind whatsoever, whether accrued,
contingent, absolute, determined, determinable or otherwise
arising under any Environmental Law with respect to either the
release into or through the environment of, or the exposure to,
any Hazardous Substance.
(b) To the knowledge of the Company, all reports,
correspondence and other documentations addressing material
environmental matters in relation to the current or prior
business of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or any
property or facility now or previously owned or leased by the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries have been delivered to or
made available for review by Parent at least five Business Days
prior to the date hereof.
(c) For purposes of this Section 4.21, the terms
Company and Subsidiaries
shall include any entity that is, in whole or in part, a
predecessor of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries.
Section 4.22. Material
Contracts. The Company has made available to
Parent a true and complete copy of each (a) material
contract (as such term is defined in Item 601(b)(10)
of
Regulation S-K
of the SEC) to which the Company or any of its Subsidiaries is
party as of the date hereof and (b) other contract
currently being performed to which the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries is a party as of the date hereof pursuant to which
the Company and its Subsidiaries spent or received or are
reasonably expected to spend or receive, in the aggregate, in
excess of $15,000,000 over the term of such contract (each such
contract, a Material Contract). Except for
breaches, violations or defaults which would not reasonably be
expected to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material
Adverse Effect on the Company, (i) each of the Material
Contracts, and any contract entered into between the date hereof
and the Effective Time that would be a Material Contract if
entered prior to the date hereof, is valid and in full force and
effect, and (ii) neither the Company nor any of its
Subsidiaries, nor to the Companys knowledge any other
party to a Material Contract, or any contract entered into
between the date hereof and the Effective Time that would be a
Material Contract if entered prior to the date hereof, has
violated any provision of, or taken or failed to take any act
which, with or without notice, lapse of time, or both, would
constitute a default under the provisions of such contract, and
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries has received
notice that it has breached, violated or defaulted under any
Material Contract or any contract entered into between the date
hereof and the Effective Time that would be a Material Contract
if entered prior to the date hereof. Neither the Company nor any
of its Subsidiaries is party to any contract, agreement,
arrangement or understanding containing any provision or
covenant limiting in any material respect the ability of the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries (or, after the consummation
of the Merger, Parent, the Surviving Corporation or any of their
respective Subsidiaries) to (A) sell any products or
services of or to any other Person or in any geographic region,
(B) engage in any line of business or (C) compete with
or to obtain products or services from any Person or limiting
the ability of any Person to provide products or services to the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries (or, after the consummation
of the Merger, Parent, the Surviving Corporation or any of their
respective Subsidiaries).
Section 4.23. Finders
Fees. Except for Simmons & Company
International, a copy of whose engagement agreement has been
provided to Parent, there is no investment banker, broker,
finder or other intermediary that has been retained by or is
authorized to act on behalf of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries who might be entitled to any fee or commission from
the Company or any of its Affiliates or Parent or any of its
Affiliates in connection with the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement.
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Section 4.24. Opinion
of Financial Advisor. The Company has received
the opinion of Simmons & Company International,
financial advisor to the Company, to the effect that, as of the
date of this Agreement, the Merger Consideration is fair to the
Companys stockholders, from a financial point of view.
Section 4.25. Antitakeover
Statutes. The Company has taken all action
necessary to exempt the Merger, this Agreement and the
transactions contemplated hereby from
Sections 132 134 and
Sections 135 140.2 of the Louisiana Business
Corporation Law, and, accordingly, no antitakeover or similar
statute or regulation applies or purports to apply to any such
transactions. No other control share acquisition,
fair price, moratorium or other
antitakeover laws enacted under U.S. state or federal laws
apply to this Agreement or any of the transactions contemplated
hereby.
Section 4.26. Foreign
Corrupt Practices and International Trade
Sanctions. To the knowledge of the Company,
neither the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries or any of their
respective directors, officers, agents or employees is aware of
any action, or any allegation of any action, or has taken any
action that would constitute a violation in any material respect
by such Persons of (a) the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act or
(b) any export restrictions, anti-boycott regulations or
embargo regulations applicable to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries.
Section 4.27. Shareholder
Rights Plan. The Company is not a party to a
shareholder rights plan with respect to the Company Stock.
ARTICLE 5
Representations
and Warranties of Parent
Subject to Section 11.05, except as set forth in the Parent
Disclosure Schedule, Parent represents and warrants to the
Company as of the date hereof and as of the Effective Time that:
Section 5.01. Corporate
Existence and Power. Each of Parent and Merger
Subsidiary is a corporation duly incorporated, validly existing
and (where applicable) in good standing under the laws of its
jurisdiction of incorporation and has all corporate powers and
all governmental licenses, authorizations, permits, consents and
approvals required to carry on its business as now conducted,
except for those licenses, authorizations, permits, consents and
approvals the absence of which would not reasonably be expected
to have, individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse
Effect on Parent. Since the date of its incorporation, Merger
Subsidiary has not engaged in any activities other than in
connection with the Merger or the other transactions
contemplated by this Agreement.
Section 5.02. Corporate
Authorization. The execution, delivery and
performance by Parent and Merger Subsidiary of this Agreement
and the consummation by Parent and Merger Subsidiary of the
transactions contemplated hereby are within the corporate powers
of Parent and Merger Subsidiary and have been duly authorized by
all necessary corporate action. This Agreement constitutes a
valid and binding agreement of each of Parent and Merger
Subsidiary, enforceable against Parent and Merger Subsidiary in
accordance with its terms (subject to applicable bankruptcy,
insolvency, fraudulent transfer, reorganization, moratorium and
other laws affecting creditors rights generally and
general principles of equity). Parent, as the sole stockholder
of Merger Subsidiary, has adopted and approved this Agreement
and the transactions contemplated hereby, and no vote or
approval of the stockholders of Parent is required.
Section 5.03. Governmental
Authorization. The execution, delivery and
performance by Parent and Merger Subsidiary of this Agreement
and the consummation by Parent and Merger Subsidiary of the
transactions contemplated hereby require no action by or in
respect of, or filing with, any Governmental Authority other
than (a) the filing of the Certificate of Merger;
(b) compliance with any applicable requirements of the HSR
Act and any analogous laws existing in foreign jurisdictions;
(c) compliance with any applicable requirements of the
1933 Act, the 1934 Act, and any other applicable state
or federal securities law; (d) consent of the Maritime
Administration in connection with the Companys
Title XI Bonds; and (e) any actions or filings the
absence of which would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
Parent or Merger Subsidiary.
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Section 5.04. Non-contravention. The
execution, delivery and performance by Parent and Merger
Subsidiary of this Agreement and the consummation by Parent and
Merger Subsidiary of the transactions contemplated hereby do not
and will not (a) contravene, conflict with, or result in
any violation or breach of any provision of the certificate of
incorporation, bylaws or similar organizational document of
Parent or Merger Subsidiary, (b) assuming compliance with
the matters referred to in Section 5.03, contravene,
conflict with or result in a violation or breach of any
provision of any Applicable Law, or (c) assuming compliance
with the matters referred to in Section 5.03, require any
consent or other action by any Person under, constitute a
default, or an event that, with or without notice or lapse of
time or both, would constitute a default, under, or cause or
permit the termination, cancellation, acceleration or other
change of any right or obligation or the loss of any benefit to
which Parent or any of its Subsidiaries is entitled under any
provision of any agreement or other instrument binding upon
Parent or any of its Subsidiaries or any license, franchise,
permit, certificate, approval or other similar authorization
affecting, or relating in any way to, the assets or business of
the Parent and its Subsidiaries, with only such exceptions, in
the case of each of clauses (b) and (c), as would not
reasonably be expected to have, individually or in the
aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on Parent or Merger
Subsidiary.
Section 5.05. Disclosure
Documents. The information supplied by Parent for
inclusion in the Proxy Statement, and any amendment or
supplement thereto, will not, at the time the Proxy Statement,
and any amendments or supplements thereto, is first mailed to
the stockholders of the Company and at the time of the Company
Stockholder Approval, contain any untrue statement of a material
fact or omit to state any material fact required to be stated
therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in
light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading.
Section 5.06. Sufficient
Funds. Parent has sufficient cash or cash
equivalents available, directly or through one or more
Affiliates, to pay the aggregate Merger Consideration and the
aggregate Equity Award Consideration on the terms and conditions
contained in this Agreement and any repayment or refinancing of
debt of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries required to be
repaid or refinanced as a result of the Merger, and there is no
restriction on the use of such cash or cash equivalents for such
purpose.
ARTICLE 6
Covenants
of the Company
The Company agrees that:
Section 6.01. Conduct
of the Company. Except as set forth in
Section 6.01 of the Company Disclosure Schedule, and except
for any actions substantially consistent with the terms of any
bids tendered to any potential customer prior to the date of
this Agreement, expressly required or permitted by this
Agreement, required by Applicable Law or consented to in writing
by Parent (such consent not to be unreasonably withheld,
conditioned or delayed), from the date of this Agreement until
the Effective Time, the Company shall, and shall cause each of
its Subsidiaries to, conduct its business in all material
respects in the ordinary course consistent with past practice
and use its reasonable best efforts to (i) preserve intact
its present business organization, (ii) maintain in effect
all of its material foreign, federal, state and local licenses,
permits, consents, franchises, approvals and authorizations,
(iii) keep available the services of its directors,
officers and Key Employees (provided, however,
that the Company shall not be required to increase the
compensation of, or make any other payments not otherwise due
to, such persons) and (iv) maintain satisfactory
relationships with its customers, creditors, suppliers and
others having material business relationships with it. Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, except as expressly
required or permitted by this Agreement or set forth in
Section 6.01 of the Company Disclosure Schedule, required
by Applicable Law or consented to by Parent (such consent not to
be unreasonably withheld, conditioned or delayed), the Company
shall not, nor shall it permit any of its Subsidiaries to:
(a) amend its articles of incorporation, bylaws or other
similar organizational documents (whether by merger,
consolidation or otherwise), other than (i) to adopt the
Amended and Restated Company
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Charter at the Effective Time; and (ii) amend any such
organizational document of any Subsidiary of the Company in
accordance with Section 8.09 or in an immaterial respect;
(b) (i) split, combine or reclassify any shares of its
capital stock, (ii) declare, set aside or pay any dividend
or other distribution (whether in cash, stock or property or any
combination thereof) in respect of its capital stock, except for
dividends by any of its wholly-owned Subsidiaries or as set
forth in Section 6.01(b) of the Company Disclosure Schedule
or (iii) redeem, repurchase or otherwise acquire or offer
to redeem, repurchase, or otherwise acquire any Company
Securities or any Company Subsidiary Securities (except pursuant
to the forfeiture of Company Equity Awards or the acquisition by
the Company of shares of Company Stock in settlement of the
exercise price of a Company Stock Option or for purposes of
satisfying Tax withholding obligations with respect to holders
of Company Equity Awards);
(c) (i) issue, deliver or sell, or authorize the
issuance, delivery or sale of, any shares of any Company
Securities or Company Subsidiary Securities, other than the
issuance of (A) any shares of Company Stock upon the
exercise of Company Equity Awards that are outstanding on the
date of this Agreement in accordance with the terms thereof and
(B) any Company Subsidiary Securities to the Company or any
other wholly-owned Subsidiary of the Company or (ii) amend
any term of any Company Security, any Company Subsidiary
Security or the Debentures (in each case, whether by merger,
consolidation or otherwise), except for changes to the terms of
Company Equity Awards in the ordinary course consistent with
past practice or in accordance with Section 2.04 hereof;
(d) incur any capital expenditures or any obligations or
liabilities in respect thereof, except (i) with respect to
the current year, as contemplated by the capital expenditure
budget for the current year, a copy of which the Company has
made available to Parent prior to the date of this Agreement;
(ii) with respect to the year 2012, $5,000,000;
(iii) any unbudgeted capital expenditures not to exceed
$1,000,000 individually or $3,000,000 in the aggregate; and
(iv) to repair damage resulting from insured casualty
events;
(e) other than as permitted by Section 6.01(d) or as
set forth in Section 6.01(e) of the Company Disclosure
Schedule, acquire (by merger, consolidation, acquisition of
stock or assets or otherwise), directly or indirectly, any
assets, securities, properties, interests or businesses, other
than (i) equipment, components, raw materials or supplies
in the ordinary course of business consistent with past practice
and (ii) acquisitions with a purchase price (including
assumed indebtedness) that does not exceed $500,000 individually
or $2,000,000 in the aggregate;
(f) sell, lease, license, abandon, permit to lapse or
otherwise transfer, or create or incur any Lien other than
Permitted Liens on, any of the Companys or its
Subsidiaries assets, properties, rights, interests or
businesses, other than sales of assets, properties, interests or
businesses (i) in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice (other than Owned Vessels not held
for sale on the date hereof) or (ii) with a value
(including any related assumed indebtedness) that does not
exceed $500,000 individually or $2,000,000 in the aggregate;
(g) other than in connection with actions permitted by
Section 6.01(d) or Section 6.01(e), make any loans,
advances or capital contributions to, or investments in, any
other Person, other than (A) in the ordinary course of
business consistent with past practice (including extensions of
payment terms to customers) or (B) intercompany loans,
advances or capital contributions between the Company and its
wholly-owned Subsidiaries or between any of the Companys
wholly-owned Subsidiaries;
(h) create, incur, assume or otherwise become liable with
respect to any indebtedness for borrowed money or guarantees
thereof having an aggregate principal amount (together with all
other indebtedness for borrowed money of the Company and its
Subsidiaries) outstanding at any time greater than $5,000,000;
except for cash-collateralization of letters of credit under the
Credit Facility;
(i) (i) enter into any contract, agreement,
arrangement or understanding of the type referred to in the last
sentence of Section 4.22 or (ii) other than in the
ordinary course of business consistent with past practice
(including to address change orders or any disputes with
customers or vendors), enter into,
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amend or modify in any material respect or terminate any
Material Contract (or any contract entered into after the date
of this Agreement that would have been a Material Contract if
entered into prior to the date of this Agreement) or otherwise
waive, release or assign any material rights, claims or benefits
of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries thereunder;
(j) except to the extent required by the terms of any
Employee Plan or International Plan, (i) with respect to
any director, officer or employee whose annual compensation
exceeds $125,000 of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries,
(A) grant or increase any severance or termination pay or
amend any existing severance pay or termination arrangement;
(B) enter into any employment, consultancy, deferred
compensation, severance or other similar agreement (or amend any
such existing agreement); or (C) increase benefits payable
under any existing severance or termination pay policies or
employment agreements, except in the case of each of
clauses (A) through (C) for the participation in
employee benefits plans generally available to employees and
customary compensation arrangements, in each case for newly
hired non-executive, non-officer employees in the ordinary
course consistent with past practice; (ii) establish, adopt
or materially amend any collective bargaining, bonus,
profit-sharing, thrift, pension, retirement, deferred
compensation, stock option, restricted stock or other benefit
plan or arrangement; or (iii) increase or make any other
favorable change to the compensation, bonus or other benefits
payable to any director, officer, or employee of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries, except, with respect to any
non-executive employee of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries
whose annual compensation does not exceed $125,000, for
increases in the ordinary course of business consistent with
past practice;
(k) change materially the Companys methods of
accounting, except as required by changes in GAAP or in
Regulation S-X
of the 1934 Act, as agreed to by its independent public
accountants;
(l) settle, or offer or propose to settle, (i) any
material litigation, investigation, arbitration, proceeding or
other claim involving or against the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, except (A) in the ordinary course of business
consistent with past practice (including settling change orders
or any disputes with customers or vendors) or (B) any
settlement of the matters disclosed, reflected or reserved
against in the most recent financial statements (or the notes
thereto) of the Company included in the Company SEC Documents
for an amount not materially in excess of the amount so
disclosed, reflected or reserved; (ii) any stockholder
litigation or dispute against the Company or any of its officers
or directors; or (iii) any litigation, arbitration,
proceeding or dispute that relates to the transactions
contemplated hereby; or
(m) agree, resolve or commit to do any of the foregoing.
Section 6.02. Company
Stockholder Meeting. The Company shall cause a
meeting of its stockholders (the Company Stockholder
Meeting) to be duly called and held as soon as
reasonably practicable for the purpose of voting on the approval
and adoption of this Agreement. Subject to Section 6.03,
the Board of Directors of the Company shall (i) unanimously
recommend approval and adoption of this Agreement by the
Companys stockholders, (ii) use its reasonable best
efforts to obtain the Company Stockholder Approval and
(iii) otherwise comply with all legal requirements
applicable to such meeting. Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in this Agreement, the Company may adjourn or
postpone the Company Stockholder Meeting to the extent necessary
to ensure that any supplement or amendment to the Proxy
Statement required by Applicable Law (it being agreed that in
the event the Company provides a notice as required by
Section 6.03(c)(ii) or Section 6.03(d)(i) and the
Company determines to supplement or amend the Proxy Statement in
connection therewith, such supplement or amendment shall be
deemed to be required by Applicable Law) is provided to the
Companys stockholders or, if as of the time for which the
Company Stockholder Meeting is originally scheduled (as set
forth in the Proxy Statement) there are insufficient shares of
Company Stock represented (either in person or by proxy) to
constitute a quorum necessary to conduct business at such
meeting.
Section 6.03. No
Solicitation; Other Offers. (a) General
Prohibitions. The Company and its Subsidiaries shall not,
and each shall use their reasonable best efforts to cause its or
their Representatives not to, directly or indirectly,
(i) solicit, initiate or take any action to knowingly
facilitate or encourage the submission of any Acquisition
Proposal; (ii) enter into or participate in any discussions
or negotiations with, furnish any information relating to the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries or afford access to the
business, properties,
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assets, books or records of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, or otherwise cooperate in any way with, or
knowingly assist, participate in, facilitate or encourage any
effort by, any Third Party to make an Acquisition Proposal;
(iii) fail to make the Company Board Recommendation,
withdraw or modify in a manner adverse to Parent the Company
Board Recommendation, or recommend an Acquisition Proposal or
take any action or make any public statement inconsistent with
the Company Board Recommendation except as permitted by
Section 6.03(b) through 6.03(e) (any of the foregoing in
this clause (iii), an Adverse Recommendation
Change); (iv) grant any waiver or release under
any standstill or similar agreement with respect to any class of
equity securities of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries; or
(v) enter into any agreement in principle, letter of
intent, term sheet, merger agreement, acquisition agreement,
option agreement or other similar instrument relating to an
Acquisition Proposal (other than a confidentiality agreement
with a Third Party permitted under Section 6.03(b)). It is
agreed that any violation of the restrictions on the Company set
forth in this Section by any Representative of the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries shall be deemed a breach of this Section
by the Company.
(b) Exceptions. Notwithstanding
Section 6.03(a), at any time prior to the adoption of this
Agreement by the Companys stockholders:
(i) the Company, directly or indirectly through advisors,
agents or other intermediaries, may (A) engage in
negotiations or discussions with any Third Party (and its
Representatives or financing sources) that has made after the
date of this Agreement a Superior Proposal or Acquisition
Proposal that the Board reasonably believes will lead to a
Superior Proposal; provided that such Superior Proposal
or Acquisition Proposal did not result from a breach by the
Company of Section 6.03(a); (B) furnish to such Third
Party or its Representatives and financing sources non-public
information relating to the Company or any of its Subsidiaries;
and (C) afford access to the business, properties, assets,
books or records of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries or
otherwise cooperate, assist, facilitate and encourage such Third
Party; provided, however, that the Company and its
Subsidiaries shall not take any of the actions described in
clauses (B) and (C) above unless and until the Company
has entered into a confidentiality agreement (a copy of which
shall be provided for informational purposes only to Parent)
with such Third Party with terms (including with respect to the
standstill provisions) no less favorable to the Company than
those contained in the confidentiality agreement dated
July 13, 2011 between the Company and Parent (the
Confidentiality Agreement); provided,
however, that (1) such confidentiality agreement may
contain a less restrictive standstill restriction or no
standstill restriction, in which case the Confidentiality
Agreement shall be deemed to be amended to contain only such
less restrictive provision, or to omit such provision, as
applicable, and (2) all such non-public information (to the
extent that such information has not been previously provided or
made available to Parent) is provided or made available to
Parent, as the case may be, prior to or substantially concurrent
with the time it is provided or made available to such Third
Party); and
(ii) the Board may make an Adverse Recommendation Change if
the Board determines in good faith, after consultation with
outside legal counsel, that (A) an Acquisition Proposal
constitutes a Superior Proposal and the failure to take such
action would be reasonably likely to be inconsistent with its
fiduciary duties under Applicable Law or (B) in the absence
of an Acquisition Proposal, if due to events or changes in
circumstances after the date hereof that were neither known to
nor reasonably foreseeable by the Company as of or prior to the
date hereof, the failure to take such action would be reasonably
likely to be inconsistent with its fiduciary duties under
Applicable Law.
In addition, nothing contained herein shall prevent the Board
from (i) complying with
Rule 14e-2(a),
Item 1012(a) of
Regulation M-A
and
Rule 14d-9
promulgated under the 1934 Act with regard to an
Acquisition Proposal so long as any action taken or statement
made to so comply is consistent with this Section 6.03;
provided, that any such action taken or statement made
that relates to an Acquisition Proposal shall be deemed to be an
Adverse Recommendation Change unless the Board reaffirms the
Company Board Recommendation in such statement or in connection
with such action, (ii) issuing a stop, look and
listen disclosure or similar communication of the type
contemplated by
Rule 14d-9(f)
under the 1934 Act (which it is agreed shall not constitute
an Adverse Recommendation Change), or (iii) causing the
Company to make any factually accurate public statement that
describes the Companys receipt of an Acquisition Proposal
and the
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operation of this Agreement with respect thereto;
provided, however, that, with respect to this
clause (iii), the Company shall, to the extent practicable,
provide Parent with a reasonable opportunity to comment on and
review any such statement, if such statement is to be made and
released in a writing.
(c) Required Notices.
(i) The Company shall notify Parent promptly (but in no
event later than by 5:00 p.m., Houston time, on the next
calendar day) after receipt by the Company (or any of its
Representatives) of any Acquisition Proposal, including of the
material terms and conditions thereof and for the avoidance of
doubt the identity of the party making the Acquisition Proposal,
and shall keep Parent reasonably informed as to the status
(including changes to the material terms) of such Acquisition
Proposal. The Company shall also notify Parent promptly (but in
no event later than by 5:00 p.m., Houston time, on the next
Business Day) after receipt by the Company of any request for
non-public information relating to the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries or for access to the business, properties, assets,
books or records of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries in
each case by any Third Party that has informed the Company that
it is considering making, or has made, an Acquisition Proposal.
(ii) The Board shall not make an Adverse Recommendation
Change pursuant to Section 6.03(b)(ii)(B) unless the
Company has notified Parent that the Board intends to make such
an Adverse Recommendation Change, which notice shall specify in
reasonable detail the facts and information constituting the
basis for such contemplated determination, and until a period
commencing on the date that such notice is deemed received by
Parent in accordance with Section 11.01 and ending at 5:00
pm, Houston time, on the fifth Business Day thereafter has
elapsed.
(d) Last Look.
The Board shall not make an Adverse
Recommendation Change pursuant to Section 6.03(b)(ii)(A)
unless:
(i) the Company has notified Parent that the Board has
determined that an Acquisition Proposal is a Superior Proposal
and that, subject to compliance with the provisions hereof, the
Company intends to terminate this Agreement pursuant to
Section 10.01(d)(i) in order to enter into a binding
agreement with respect to such Superior Proposal (such notice,
the Superior Proposal Notice);
(ii) the Superior Proposal Notice is accompanied by
the agreement referred to in clause (i) of this
Section 6.03(d) and all other documentation to be entered
into by the Company or, to the extent known and available to the
Company, by any of the Companys Representatives in
connection with such Superior Proposal; and
(iii) a period commencing on the date that the Superior
Proposal Notice is deemed to be received by Parent in
accordance with Section 11.01 and ending at 5:00 p.m.,
Houston time, on the fifth Business Day thereafter (such
five-Business Day period, the Notice Period)
has elapsed and the Company has not received from Parent a
written proposal to amend the terms of this Agreement that the
Board determines in good faith, after consultation with its
financial advisor and outside legal counsel, to be at least as
favorable, from a financial point of view, to the Companys
stockholders as the transactions described in the Superior
Proposal Notice.
It is understood and agreed that, upon the expiration of a
Notice Period, if the Company has not received from Parent a
written proposal to amend the terms of this Agreement that the
Board determines in good faith, after consultation with its
financial advisor and outside legal counsel, to be at least as
favorable, from a financial point of view, to the Companys
stockholders as the transactions described in the Superior
Proposal Notice, the Company shall have the right to
terminate this Agreement pursuant to Section 10.01(d)(i) at
any time thereafter. It is also understood and agreed that any
amendment to the financial terms or other material terms of a
Superior Proposal after delivery of a Superior
Proposal Notice in respect of such Superior Proposal shall
require delivery of another Superior Proposal Notice and
another Notice Period in respect of such Superior Proposal
pursuant to Section 6.03(d)(iii), except that, assuming
Parent has been afforded at least one Notice Period of at least
five Business Days in respect of a Superior Proposal from such
Third Party, any and each such subsequent Notice Period shall
expire at 5:00 p.m., Houston time, on the second Business
Day
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after the date that such subsequent Superior
Proposal Notice is deemed received by Parent in accordance
with Section 11.01.
(e) Definition of Superior
Proposal. For purposes of this Agreement,
Superior Proposal means a bona fide, written
Acquisition Proposal for all of the outstanding shares of
Company Stock or all or substantially all of the consolidated
assets of the Company and its Subsidiaries on terms that the
Board of Directors of the Company determines in good faith by a
majority vote, after considering the advice of a financial
advisor and outside legal counsel and taking into account all
relevant factors, (i) if accepted, is reasonably expected
to be consummated on the terms and conditions proposed,
including any
break-up
fees, expense reimbursement provisions and conditions to
consummation, and (ii) if consummated, would result in a
transaction more favorable, from a financial point of view to
the Companys stockholders than provided hereunder (taking
into account any proposal by Parent to amend the terms of this
Agreement pursuant to Section 6.03(d)).
(f) Obligation to Terminate Existing
Discussions. The Company shall, and shall
cause its Subsidiaries and its and their Representatives to,
cease immediately and cause to be terminated any and all
existing activities, discussions or negotiations, if any, with
any Third Party and its Representatives conducted prior to the
date hereof with respect to any Acquisition Proposal. To the
extent it has the contractual authority to do so, the Company
shall promptly request that each Third Party, if any, that has
executed a confidentiality agreement within the
24-month
period prior to the date hereof in connection with its
consideration of any Acquisition Proposal return or destroy all
confidential information heretofore furnished to such Person by
or on behalf of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries (and all
analyses and other materials prepared by or on behalf of such
Person that contains, reflects or analyzes that information),
and the Company shall certify to Parent that the Company has
received all certifications of such return or destruction from
such other Persons as promptly as practicable after receipt
thereof. The Company shall use its reasonable best efforts to
secure all such certifications as promptly as practicable. If
any such Person fails to provide any required certification
within the time period allotted in the relevant confidentiality
agreement (or if no such period is specified, then within a
reasonable time period after the date hereof), then the Company
shall take all actions that may be reasonably necessary to
secure its rights and ensure the performance of such other
partys obligations thereunder as promptly as practicable.
Section 6.04. Access
to Information. From the date hereof until the
Effective Time and subject to Applicable Law and the
Confidentiality Agreement, the Company shall (i) give to
Parent, its counsel, financial advisors, auditors and other
authorized representatives reasonable access to the offices,
properties, books and records of the Company and its
Subsidiaries, (ii) furnish to Parent, its counsel,
financial advisors, auditors and other authorized
representatives such financial and operating data and other
information as such Persons may reasonably request and
(iii) instruct its employees, counsel, financial advisors,
auditors and other authorized representatives to cooperate with
Parent in its investigation of the Company and its Subsidiaries.
Any access, information request and investigation pursuant to
this Section 6.04 shall be conducted in such manner as not
to interfere unreasonably with the conduct of the business of
the Company and its Subsidiaries. Nothing in this
Section 6.04 shall require the Company to provide any
access, or to disclose any information (A) if providing
such access or disclosing such information could violate any
Applicable Law (including United States or foreign antitrust and
privacy laws) or (B) if such information is protected by
attorney-client privilege to the extent such privilege cannot be
protected by the Company through exercise of reasonable efforts.
No information or knowledge obtained in any investigation
pursuant to this Section 6.04 shall affect or be deemed to
modify any representation or warranty made by any party
hereunder.
Section 6.05. Tax
Matters. (a) From the date hereof until the
Effective Time, except as required by Applicable Law, neither
the Company nor any of its Subsidiaries shall make or change any
Tax election, change any annual tax accounting period, adopt or
change any method of tax accounting or file any amended Tax
Returns or claims for Tax refunds, enter into any closing
agreement, surrender any Tax claim, audit or assessment,
surrender any right to claim a Tax refund, offset or other
reduction in Tax liability, consent to any extension or waiver
of the limitations period applicable to any Tax claim or
assessment or take or omit to take any other action (each such
action or omission, a Tax Action) if, in each
case, any such Tax Action would have the effect of increasing
the Tax liability or reducing any Tax asset of the Company or
any of its
A-27
Subsidiaries by an amount in excess of $5,000,000. Any Tax
Action increasing the Tax liability or reducing any Tax asset of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries in excess of $5,000,000
shall not be undertaken without the consent of Parent, which
consent will not be unreasonably withheld.
(b) The Company and each of its Subsidiaries shall
establish or cause to be established in accordance with GAAP on
or before the Effective Time an adequate accrual for all Taxes
due with respect to any period or portion thereof ending prior
to or as of the Effective Time.
(c) All transfer, documentary, sales, use, stamp,
registration, value added and other such Taxes and fees
(including any penalties and interest) incurred in connection
with the Merger (including any real property transfer tax and
any similar Tax) shall be paid by the Company when due, and the
Company shall, at its own expense, file all necessary Tax
returns and other documentation with respect to all such Taxes
and fees, and, if required by Applicable Law, the Company shall,
and shall cause its Affiliates to, join in the execution of any
such Tax returns and other documentation.
ARTICLE 7
Covenants
of Parent
Parent agrees that:
Section 7.01. Obligations
of Merger Subsidiary. Parent shall take all
action necessary to cause Merger Subsidiary to perform its
obligations under this Agreement and to consummate the Merger on
the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement.
Section 7.02. Voting
of Shares. Parent shall vote all shares of
Company Stock beneficially owned by it or any of its
Subsidiaries in favor of the Company Stockholder Approval.
Section 7.03. Director
and Officer Liability.
(a) For six years from and after the Effective Time, Parent
and the Surviving Corporation shall, jointly and severally,
indemnify and hold harmless the present and former officers and
directors of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries and each
person who acts or has acted as a fiduciary under any Employee
Plan of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries (each, an
Indemnified Person) in respect of acts or
omissions occurring at or prior to the Effective Time to the
fullest extent permitted by Louisiana Law or any other
Applicable Law or provided under the Companys articles of
incorporation and bylaws in effect on the date hereof;
provided that such indemnification shall be subject to
any limitation imposed from time to time under Applicable Law.
Parent and the Surviving Corporation shall advance reasonable
expenses (including reasonable legal fees and expenses) incurred
in the defense of any claims, action, suit, proceeding or
investigation with respect to the matters subject to
indemnification pursuant to this Section 7.03(a) in
accordance with the procedures set forth in the Company articles
of incorporation and bylaws in effect on the date hereof;
provided, however, that the director or officer of
the Company to whom expenses are advanced undertakes to repay
such advanced expenses to Parent and the Surviving Corporation
if it is ultimately determined that such director or officer is
not entitled to indemnification pursuant to this
Section 7.03(a).
(b) For six years from and after the Effective Time, Parent
shall cause to be maintained in effect provisions in the
Surviving Corporations articles of incorporation and
bylaws (or in such documents of any successor to the business of
the Surviving Corporation) regarding elimination of liability of
directors, indemnification of officers, directors and employees
and advancement of expenses that are no less advantageous to the
intended beneficiaries than the corresponding provisions in
existence on the date of this Agreement.
(c) Prior to the Effective Time, the Company shall or, if
the Company is unable to, Parent shall cause the Surviving
Corporation as of the Effective Time to, obtain and fully pay
the premium for the non-cancellable extension of the
directors and officers liability coverage of the
Companys existing directors and officers
insurance policies and the Companys existing fiduciary
liability insurance policies (collectively, D&O
Insurance), in each case for a claims reporting or
discovery period of at least six years from and after the
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Effective Time with respect to any claim related to any period
or time at or prior to the Effective Time with terms,
conditions, retentions and limits of liability that are
substantially equivalent to and in any event no less favorable
than the coverage provided under the Companys existing
policies with respect to any actual or alleged error,
misstatement, misleading statement, act, omission, neglect,
breach of duty or any matter claimed against a director or
officer of the Company or any of its Subsidiaries by reason of
him or her serving in such capacity that existed or occurred at
or prior to the Effective Time (including in connection with
this Agreement or the transactions or actions contemplated
hereby); provided that the Company shall give Parent a
reasonable opportunity to participate in the selection of such
tail policy and the Company shall give reasonable and good faith
consideration to any comments made by Parent with respect
thereto. If the Company or the Surviving Corporation for any
reason fail to obtain such tail insurance policies
as of the Effective Time, Parent and the Surviving Corporation
shall continue to maintain in effect, for a period of at least
six years from and after the Effective Time, the D&O
Insurance in place as of the date hereof with terms, conditions,
retentions and limits of liability that are substantially
equivalent to and in any event no less favorable than the
coverage provided under the Companys existing policies as
of the date hereof, or Parent and the Surviving Corporation
shall purchase comparable D&O Insurance for such six-year
period with terms, conditions, retentions and limits of
liability that are no less favorable than as provided in the
Companys existing policies as of the date hereof;
provided that in no event shall Parent or the Surviving
Corporation be required to expend for such policies pursuant to
this sentence an annual premium amount in excess of 200% of the
amount per annum the Company paid in its last full fiscal year,
which amount is set forth in Section 7.03(c) of the Company
Disclosure Schedule.
(d) If Parent, the Surviving Corporation or any of its
successors or assigns (i) consolidates with or merges into
any other Person and shall not be the continuing or surviving
corporation or entity of such consolidation or merger, or
(ii) transfers or conveys all or substantially all of its
properties and assets to any Person, then, and in each such
case, proper provision shall be made so that the successors and
assigns of Parent or the Surviving Corporation, as the case may
be, shall assume the obligations set forth in this
Section 7.03.
(e) The rights of each Indemnified Person under this
Section 7.03 shall be in addition to any rights such Person
may have under the articles of incorporation, bylaws or other
organizational documents of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries, or under Louisiana Law or any other Applicable Law
or under any agreement of any Indemnified Person with the
Company or any of its Subsidiaries. These rights under this
Section 7.03 shall survive consummation of the Merger and
are intended to benefit, and shall be enforceable by, each
Indemnified Person and his heirs and representatives.
Section 7.04. Post-Closing
Employee and Employment Benefit Matters.
(a) For the one year period following the Closing Date (the
Post-Closing Period), with respect to each
employee of the Company or any Subsidiary as of the Effective
Time (the Current Employees), Parent shall,
or shall cause the Company or a Subsidiary to, as applicable,
provide to each such Current Employee (i) the same or
greater base salary or base rate of pay and target bonus
opportunities as in effect immediately prior to the Effective
Time, (ii) severance benefits (including, if applicable,
post-termination health and welfare benefits) that are no less
favorable than the severance benefits such Current Employee was
eligible for immediately prior to the Effective Time and
(iii) such other compensation and employee benefits that,
with respect to such Current Employee, are substantially
comparable in the aggregate to the compensation and benefits
provided by the Company or Subsidiary, as applicable, to such
Current Employee immediately prior to the Effective Time.
(b) From and after the Effective Time, Parent shall, and
shall cause the Company to, honor all obligations under the
Employee Plans and International Plans in accordance with their
respective terms as in effect immediately prior to the Effective
Time. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, Parent
shall assume and honor all obligations under the Key Management
Change-In-Control
Agreements set forth in Section 4.19(d) of the Company
Disclosure Schedule. For the avoidance of doubt and
notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein or in any
Employee Plan or International Plan, for purposes of any
Employee Plan or International Plan containing a definition of
change in control or change of control,
the Merger shall be deemed to constitute a change in
control or change of control.
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(c) With respect to any employee benefit plan maintained by
Parent or any of its Subsidiaries (each a Parent
Employee Plan) in which any Current Employee or any
dependent thereof is eligible or participates after the
Effective Time, such Current Employee shall receive full credit
for service with the Company and any of its Subsidiaries (or
predecessor employers to the extent the Company or a Subsidiary
currently provides such past service credit) for all purposes
(including benefit accrual), to the same extent that such
service was recognized as of the Effective Time under a
comparable plan of the Company
and/or its
Subsidiaries in which such Current Employee participated;
provided, however, that such service need not be
recognized to the extent that such recognition would result in
any duplication of benefits.
(d) Parent shall waive, or cause to be waived, any
pre-existing condition limitations, exclusions, actively-at-work
requirements and waiting periods under any welfare benefit plan
maintained by Parent or any of its Subsidiaries (other than the
Company and any of its Subsidiaries) in which any Current
Employee or any dependent thereof participates from and after
the Effective Time, except to the extent that such pre-existing
condition limitations, exclusions, actively-at-work requirements
and waiting periods would not have been satisfied or waived
under the comparable Company welfare benefit plan immediately
prior to the Effective Time. Parent shall recognize, or cause to
be recognized, the dollar amount of all expenses incurred by
each Current Employee (and his or her eligible dependents)
during the calendar year in which the Effective Time occurs for
purposes of satisfying such years deductible and
co-payment limitations under the relevant welfare benefit plans
in which such Current Employee or dependent participates from
and after the Effective Time.
(e) The provisions contained in this Section 7.04 with
respect to Current Employees are included for the sole benefit
of the respective parties hereto and shall not create any right
in any other person, including any employee, former employee, or
any participant in any Employee Plan or International Plan (or
beneficiary of any of the foregoing), including any right to
continued (or resumed) employment with Parent, the Company, or
any of their respective Subsidiaries, and no provision of this
Section 7.04 shall constitute an amendment of, or an
undertaking to amend, any Employee Plan.
Section 7.05. No
Other Representations or Warranties. Each of
Parent and Merger Subsidiary agrees that, except for the
representations and warranties made by the Company that are
expressly set forth in Article 4, the Company has not made
and shall not be deemed to have made any representation or
warranty of any kind. Without limiting the generality of the
foregoing, except for the representations and warranties made by
the Company that are expressly set forth in Article 4, each
of Parent and Merger Subsidiary agrees that neither the Company,
nor any of their respective Representatives, makes or has made
any representation or warranty to Parent, Merger Subsidiary or
any of their respective Representatives with respect to:
(a) any projections, forecasts or other estimates, plans or
budgets of future revenues, expenses or expenditures, future
results of operations (or any component thereof), future cash
flows (or any component thereof) or future financial condition
(or any component thereof) of the Company or any of its
Subsidiaries or the future business, operations or affairs of
the Company or any of its Subsidiaries heretofore or hereafter
delivered to or made available to Parent, Merger Subsidiary or
their respective Representatives; or
(b) any other information, statement or documents
heretofore or hereafter delivered to or made available to
Parent, Merger Subsidiary or their respective Representatives.
ARTICLE 8
Covenants
of Parent and the Company
The parties hereto agree that:
Section 8.01. Reasonable
Best Efforts; Regulatory
Filings. (a) Subject to the terms and
conditions of this Agreement, each of the Company, Parent and
Merger Subsidiary shall use its reasonable best efforts to take,
or cause to be taken, all actions and to do, or cause to be
done, all things necessary, proper or advisable to consummate
the transactions contemplated by this Agreement as promptly as
practicable, including (i) preparing and filing as promptly
as practicable (and, in any event, within any specifically
provided time
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period set forth in this Agreement) with any Governmental
Authority or other Third Party all documentation to effect all
necessary filings, notices, petitions, statements,
registrations, submissions of information, applications and
other documents; (ii) obtaining and maintaining all
approvals, consents, registrations, permits, authorizations and
other confirmations required to be obtained from any
Governmental Authority or other Third Party;
(iii) avoiding, resisting and resolving all objections of
any Governmental Authority or other Third Party; and
(iv) contesting any action, suit, investigation or
proceeding of any Governmental Authority or other Third Party
seeking to permanently or preliminarily enjoin, delay, prevent
or make unlawful consummation of the Merger or any other
transaction contemplated by this Agreement. For the avoidance of
doubt, the obligations set forth in this Section 8.01(a)
shall not be deemed breached as a result of actions by the
Company, its Subsidiaries or its Representatives that are
permitted by Section 6.03.
(b) In furtherance of Section 8.01(a), (i) as
promptly as reasonably practicable, but no later than 10
Business Days, following the execution of this Agreement, the
parties shall make all filings under the HSR Act, and
(ii) as promptly as practicable, but no later than 20
Business Days (unless an earlier filing is required by
Applicable Law), following the execution of this Agreement, the
parties shall make all filings under the analogous laws existing
in foreign jurisdictions set forth in
Section 8.01(b) of the Company Disclosure Schedule
(collectively with the HSR Act, the Premerger
Notification Rules). Each of Parent and the Company
shall cooperate fully with each other and shall furnish to the
other such necessary information and reasonable assistance as
the other may reasonably request in connection with its
preparation of any filings under any Premerger Notification
Rules. Unless otherwise agreed, Parent and the Company shall
each use its reasonable best efforts to ensure the prompt
expiration of any applicable waiting period under any Premerger
Notification Rules. Parent and the Company shall each use its
reasonable best efforts to respond to and comply with any
request for information from any Governmental Authority charged
with enforcing, applying, administering, or investigating any
Applicable Law designed to prohibit, restrict or regulate
actions for the purpose or effect of monopolization, restraining
trade or abusing a dominant position (collectively,
Antitrust Laws), including the United States
Federal Trade Commission, the Antitrust Division of the United
States Department of Justice, any attorney general of a state of
the United States or any other competition authority of any
jurisdiction (Antitrust Authority). Parent
and the Company shall keep each other apprised of the status of
any communications with, and any inquiries or requests for
additional information from any Antitrust Authority. Parent and
the Company shall cooperate in any proceedings or negotiations
with any Antitrust Authority or other Person relating to any of
the foregoing, and each party shall afford the other party a
reasonable opportunity to participate in any discussion with any
Antitrust Authority relating to the foregoing. Parent and Merger
Subsidiary shall not take any action that could reasonably be
expected to materially hinder or delay the obtaining of
clearance or the expiration of any required waiting period under
the Premerger Notification Rules or any other applicable
Antitrust Law.
(c) In furtherance of and not in limitation of
Section 8.01(a), Parent and the Company shall prepare and
submit a final joint voluntary notice in accordance with
Exon-Florio (the Exon-Florio Filing) to CFIUS
as promptly as practicable after the date hereof (but in any
event within 20 Business Days). Parent and the Company shall use
their reasonable best efforts to avoid possible rejection or
deferred acceptance of the Exon-Florio Filing under
31 C.F.R. Section 800.403, respond to any inquiries
from CFIUS or any other Governmental Authority involved in the
Exon-Florio review and, if applicable, investigation within the
time frame set forth in 31 C.F.R.
Section 800.403(a)(3), and make any other submissions under
Exon-Florio that are required to be made or that the parties
agree should be made. Parent and Company shall use their
reasonable best efforts to obtain a notification from CFIUS or,
if applicable, the President of the United States that the
review or investigation under Exon-Florio has been concluded.
(d) For the avoidance of doubt, this Article 8 shall
require Parent to take (and commit to take) with respect to
itself and the Company such actions as may be necessary or
advisable to avoid or eliminate impediments under any Antitrust
Law or Exon-Florio that may be asserted by any Antitrust
Authority, CFIUS or any other Governmental Authority with
respect to the Merger; provided, however, that any
such action shall not constitute a Burdensome Condition. A
Burdensome Condition means any action that,
individually or in the aggregate, has an impact that is material
and adverse on the benefits or value that Parent expects to
receive in connection with the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement or requires Parent to agree to hold
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separate or to divest any of the material businesses, services,
properties or assets of either Parent, on the one hand, or the
Company and its Subsidiaries, on the other hand;
provided, however, that for purposes of this
Section 8.01(d), each of the Global 1200 and Global 1201
shall be material properties.
Section 8.02. Proxy
Filing. (a) As promptly as reasonably
practicable following the date of this Agreement, the Company
shall prepare and file with the SEC (i) a
Form 8-K
containing this Agreement and (ii) the preliminary Proxy
Statement; provided, however, that Parent and its
counsel shall be given a reasonable opportunity to review and
comment on the preliminary Proxy Statement before it is filed.
Subject to Section 6.03, the Proxy Statement shall include
the Company Board Recommendation. Subject to Section 6.02,
the Company and Parent shall cooperate with one another in
setting a mutually acceptable date for the Company Stockholder
Meeting. The Company and Parent shall cooperate with one another
in connection with the preparation of the Proxy Statement.
Parent and its counsel shall be given a reasonable opportunity
to review and comment on any amendment to the Proxy Statement
each time before it is filed with the SEC. The Company shall
provide Parent and its counsel with (1) any comments or
other communications, whether written or oral, that the Company
or its counsel may receive from time to time from the SEC or its
staff with respect to the Proxy Statement promptly after receipt
of those comments or other communications and (2) a
reasonable opportunity to participate in the Companys
response to those comments and to provide comments on that
response, including by participating with the Company or its
counsel in any discussions or meetings with the SEC. Each of the
Company and Parent shall use its reasonable best efforts to
respond as promptly as practicable to any comments of the SEC
with respect to the Proxy Statement, and the Company shall use
its reasonable best efforts to cause the definitive Proxy
Statement to be mailed to the Companys stockholders as
promptly as practicable after the SEC indicates that it has no
further comments on the Proxy Statement. Except as contemplated
by Section 6.03(b), no amendment or supplement to the Proxy
Statement shall be filed without the approval of both the
Company and Parent, which approval shall not be unreasonably
withheld, conditioned or delayed. If, at any time prior to the
Effective Time, any information relating to the Company or
Parent, or any of their respective Affiliates, officers or
directors is discovered by the Company or Parent that should be
set forth in an amendment or supplement to the Proxy Statement
so that such documents would not include any misstatement of a
material fact or omit to state any material fact necessary to
make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under
which they were made, not misleading, the party hereto that
discovers such information shall promptly notify the other
parties hereto and an appropriate amendment or supplement
describing such information shall be promptly filed with the SEC
and, to the extent required by Applicable Law, disseminated to
the stockholders of the Company.
(b) The Company shall make all necessary filings with
respect to the Merger and the transactions contemplated hereby
under the 1933 Act and the 1934 Act and applicable
state blue sky laws and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
Section 8.03. Public
Announcements. Parent and the Company shall
consult with each other before issuing, and will provide with
each other reasonable opportunity to review and comment upon,
any press release, to the extent practicable, any other public
statements with respect to this Agreement or the transactions
contemplated hereby and shall not issue any such press release
or, to the extent practicable, make any other public statement,
except to the extent any public statement or press release may
be required by Applicable Law or any listing agreement with or
rule of any national securities exchange or association or as
permitted by Section 6.03 (in which case the disclosing
party will, to the extent practicable, promptly inform the other
party in writing in advance of such compelled disclosure).
Section 8.04. Further
Assurances. At and after the Effective Time, the
officers and directors of the Surviving Corporation shall be
authorized to execute and deliver, in the name and on behalf of
the Company or Merger Subsidiary, any deeds, bills of sale,
assignments or assurances and to take and do, in the name and on
behalf of the Company or Merger Subsidiary, any other actions
and things to vest, perfect or confirm of record or otherwise in
the Surviving Corporation any and all right, title and interest
in, to and under any of the rights, properties or assets of the
Company acquired or to be acquired by the Surviving Corporation
as a result of, or in connection with, the Merger.
A-32
Section 8.05. Notices
of Certain Events. Each of the Company and Parent
shall promptly notify the other of:
(a) any notice or other communication from any Person
alleging that the consent of such Person is or may be required
in connection with the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement;
(b) any notice or other communication from any Governmental
Authority in connection with the transactions contemplated by
this Agreement;
(c) any actions, suits, claims, investigations or
proceedings commenced or, to its knowledge, threatened against,
relating to or involving or otherwise affecting the Company or
any of its Subsidiaries or Parent and any of its Subsidiaries,
as the case may be, that, if pending on the date of this
Agreement, would have been required to have been disclosed
pursuant to any Section of this Agreement or that relate to the
consummation of the transactions contemplated by this Agreement;
(d) any inaccuracy of any representation or warranty
contained in this Agreement at any time during the term hereof
that could reasonably be expected to cause the conditions set
forth in Section 9.02(a), 9.02(b), 9.03(a) or 9.03(b) not
to be satisfied; and
(e) any failure of that party to comply with or satisfy any
covenant, condition or agreement to be complied with or
satisfied by it hereunder;
provided that the delivery of any notice pursuant to this
Section 8.05 shall not limit or otherwise affect the
remedies available hereunder to the party receiving such notice.
Section 8.06. Stock
Exchange De-listing; 1934 Act
Deregistration. Prior to the Effective Time, the
Company shall cooperate with Parent and use its reasonable best
efforts to take, or cause to be taken, all actions, and do or
cause to be done all things, reasonably necessary, proper or
advisable on its part under Applicable Laws and rules and
policies of NASDAQ to enable the de-listing by the Surviving
Corporation of the Company Stock from NASDAQ and the
deregistration of the Company Stock under the 1934 Act as
promptly as practicable after the Effective Time, and in any
event no more than 10 days after the Closing Date.
Section 8.07. Financing
Cooperation. At the request of Parent, the
Company agrees to reasonably cooperate with Parent in good faith
in connection with negotiating and consummating any financing
that Parent or any of its Affiliates may desire to enter into in
order to finance or refinance payment of amounts owed pursuant
to the Merger, the other transactions contemplated hereby
and/or to
refinance existing debt of the Company and its Subsidiaries;
provided, however, that the Company shall not be required to
produce any financial statements outside the ordinary course of
business. In addition, at the request of Parent, the Company
shall cooperate with Parent in discussions with lenders under
the Credit Facility to terminate as of the Effective Time the
Credit Facility or to seek amendments or waivers thereunder;
provided, however, that prior to the Effective Time the Company
shall not be required to pay any fees that are payable in
connection with any such amendments of waivers.
Section 8.08. Title XI
Bonds. Promptly following the date hereof, the
Company shall use its reasonable best efforts to obtain, and to
deliver to Parent copies of, the Title XI Consent on terms
reasonably satisfactory to Parent. The Company agrees to submit
to the Maritime Administration its request for the Title XI
Consent within 10 Business Days of the date hereof. Parent
agrees to cooperate with the Company in the preparation and
submission of such request and in obtaining the Title XI
Consent. Parent and its counsel shall be given a reasonable
opportunity to review and comment on such request before it is
submitted. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
herein, the parties hereto understand and agree that the
reasonable best efforts of the Company under this
Section 8.08 shall not be deemed to include any payment of
a fee in connection with the Title XI Consent unless Parent
shall reimburse the Company for such payment within three
Business Days.
Section 8.09. Foreign
Ownership Restrictions. The Company shall take
all actions necessary to eliminate as of immediately prior to
the Effective Time any restrictions on foreign ownership
included in any of its U.S. Subsidiaries
organizational documents.
A-33
Section 8.10. Section 16
Matters. Prior to the Effective Time, the Company
may take such actions as may be necessary to cause dispositions
of equity securities of the Company (including derivative
securities) pursuant to the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement by any officer or director of the Company who is
subject to Section 16 of the 1934 Act to be exempt
under
Rule 16b-3
promulgated under the 1934 Act in accordance with the
procedures set forth in such
Rule 16b-3
and the Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP SEC
No-Action Letter (January 12, 1999).
ARTICLE 9
Conditions
to the Merger
Section 9.01. Conditions
to the Obligations of Each Party. The obligations
of the Company, Parent and Merger Subsidiary to consummate the
Merger are subject to the satisfaction of the following
conditions:
(a) the Company Stockholder Approval shall have been
obtained, in accordance with Louisiana Law;
(b) no Applicable Law shall prohibit the consummation of
the Merger; and
(c) the waiting periods applicable to the consummation of
the Merger pursuant to the HSR Act and the other Premerger
Notification Rules of the jurisdictions set forth in
Section 9.01(c) of the Company Disclosure Schedule shall
have expired or been terminated.
Section 9.02. Conditions
to the Obligations of Parent and Merger
Subsidiary. The obligations of Parent and Merger
Subsidiary to consummate the Merger are subject to the
satisfaction of the following further conditions:
(a) (i) the Company shall have performed in all
material respects all of its obligations hereunder required to
be performed by it at or prior to the Effective Time; (ii)(A)
the representations and warranties of the Company contained in
Sections 4.01 and 4.02 and each sentence of
Section 4.05(a) (other than the first sentence thereof) and
the first and second sentences of Section 4.05(b) shall be
true and correct in all respects at and as of the Effective Time
as if made at and as of such time (other than such
representations and warranties that by their terms address
matters only as of another specified time, which shall be true
and correct in all respects only as of such time) except in
respect of the aforementioned sentences of Section 4.05,
inaccuracies that would result in payment of $1,000,000 or less
of additional Merger Consideration and Equity Award
Consideration, in the aggregate; and (B) the other
representations and warranties of the Company contained in this
Agreement (disregarding all materiality and Material Adverse
Effect qualifications contained therein) shall be true and
correct at and as of the Effective Time as if made at and as of
such time (other than representations and warranties that by
their terms address matters only as of another specified time,
which shall be true and correct only as of such time), with, in
the case of this clause (B) only, such exceptions as have
not had and would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
the Company; and (iii) Parent shall have received a
certificate signed by an executive officer of the Company to the
foregoing effect;
(b) there shall not have been instituted or pending (or
overtly threatened) any action or proceeding by any Governmental
Authority challenging or seeking to make illegal, to delay
materially or otherwise directly or indirectly to restrain or
prohibit the consummation of the Merger;
(c) there shall not have occurred after the date of this
Agreement any event, occurrence, revelation or development of a
state of circumstances or facts which, individually or in the
aggregate, has had or would reasonably be expected to have a
Material Adverse Effect on the Company; and
(d) CFIUS shall have notified Parent that it has determined
not to investigate the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement (including the Merger) or, in the event that CFIUS has
undertaken such an investigation, CFIUS has terminated such
investigation or the President of the United States has
determined not to take any action.
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Section 9.03. Conditions
to the Obligations of the Company. The
obligations of the Company to consummate the Merger are subject
to the satisfaction of the condition that: (a) each of
Parent and Merger Subsidiary shall have performed in all
material respects all of its obligations hereunder required to
be performed by it at or prior to the Effective Time; (b)
(i) the representations and warranties of Parent contained
in Sections 5.01 and 5.02 shall be true and correct in all
respects at and as of the Effective Time as if made at and as of
such time (other than such representations and warranties that
by their terms address matters only as of another specified
time, which shall be true and correct in all respects only as of
such time) and (ii) the other representations and
warranties of Parent and Merger Subsidiary contained in this
Agreement (disregarding all materiality and Material Adverse
Effect qualifications contained therein) shall be true and
correct at and as of the Effective Time as if made at and as of
such time (other than representations and warranties that by
their terms address matters only as of another specified time,
which shall be true and correct only as of such time), with, in
the case of this clause (ii) only, such exceptions as have
not had and would not reasonably be expected to have,
individually or in the aggregate, a Material Adverse Effect on
Parent; and (c) the Company shall have received a
certificate signed by an executive officer of Parent to the
foregoing effect.
ARTICLE 10
Termination
Section 10.01. Termination. This
Agreement may be terminated and the Merger may be abandoned at
any time prior to the Effective Time (notwithstanding any
approval of this Agreement by the stockholders of the Company)
by notice from the terminating party given to the other party:
(a) by mutual written agreement of the Company and Parent;
(b) by either the Company or Parent, if:
(i) the Merger has not been consummated on or before the
date that is the 225th day following the date of this Agreement
(the End Date); provided that the
right to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 10.01(b)(i) shall not be available to any party
whose breach of any provision of this Agreement results in the
failure of the Merger to be consummated by such time; or
(ii) there shall be any Applicable Law that (A) makes
consummation of the Merger illegal or otherwise prohibited or
(B) enjoins the Company or Parent from consummating the
Merger and such Order shall have become final and nonappealable;
provided, however, that the foregoing right to
terminate this Agreement shall not be available to a party whose
breach of any provision of this Agreement has resulted in such
action or event; or
(iii) at the Company Stockholder Meeting (including any
adjournment or postponement thereof), the Company Stockholder
Approval shall not have been obtained; or
(c) by Parent, if:
(i) an Adverse Recommendation Change shall have occurred,
or after public announcement of an Acquisition Proposal, the
Board shall have failed to reaffirm the Company Board
Recommendation within 10 Business Days after such public
announcement; provided, however, that the right to
terminate this Agreement pursuant to this termination right as a
result of such action must be exercised by Parent within 10
Business Days following the event giving rise to such right to
terminate or, if sooner, immediately prior to the Company
Stockholder Meeting; or
(ii) a breach of any representation or warranty or failure
to perform any covenant or agreement on the part of the Company
set forth in this Agreement (other than Section 6.03) shall
have occurred that would cause the condition set forth in
Section 9.02(a) not to be satisfied, and such condition is
incapable of being satisfied by the End Date; provided,
however, that Parent shall have given 10 Business Days
notice prior to such termination; or
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(iii) prior to the Company Stockholder Meeting, there shall
have been an intentional and material breach by the Company of
Section 6.03; provided, however, that Parent shall
have given 10 Business Days notice prior to such
termination; or
(d) by the Company, if
(i) prior to the Company Stockholder Meeting, the Board
shall have made an Adverse Recommendation Change in accordance
with Section 6.03(b)(ii)(A) in order to enter into a
definitive, written agreement concerning a Superior Proposal;
provided, however, that the Company shall have
paid any amounts due pursuant to Section 11.04(b) in
accordance with the terms, and at the times, specified
therein; or
(ii) a breach of any representation or warranty or failure
to perform any covenant or agreement on the part of the Parent
or Merger Subsidiary set forth in this Agreement shall have
occurred that would cause the condition set forth in
Section 9.03 not to be satisfied, and such condition is
incapable of being satisfied by the End Date; provided,
however, that the Company shall have given Parent 10
Business Days notice prior to such termination.
The party desiring to terminate this Agreement pursuant to this
Section 10.01 (other than pursuant to
Section 10.01(a)) shall give notice of such termination to
the other party.
Section 10.02. Effect
of Termination. If this Agreement is terminated
pursuant to Section 10.01, this Agreement shall become void
and of no effect without liability of any party (or any
stockholder, director, officer, employee, agent, consultant or
representative of such party) to the other party hereto;
provided that, if such termination shall result from
(i) fraud or (ii) the intentional failure of any party
to (A) fulfill a condition to the performance of the
obligations of the other party or (B) perform a covenant
hereof, such party shall be fully liable for any and all
liabilities and damages incurred or suffered by the other party
as a result of such failure (including, in the case of the
Company, damages based on the consideration that would have
otherwise been payable to the holders of Company Stock and
Company Equity Awards). The provisions of this
Section 10.02 (Effect of Termination) and
Sections 11.04 (Expenses), 11.07 (Governing Law), 11.08
(Jurisdiction) and 11.09 (Waiver of Jury Trial) shall survive
any termination hereof pursuant to Section 10.01.
ARTICLE 11
Miscellaneous
Section 11.01. Notices. All
notices, requests and other communications to any party
hereunder shall be in writing (including facsimile transmission
and electronic mail
(e-mail)
transmission, so long as a receipt of such
e-mail is
requested and received) and shall be given,
if to Parent or Merger Subsidiary, to:
Technip S.A.
89 avenue de la Grande Armée
75116 Paris
France
Attention: John Harrison
E-mail:
jharrison@technip.com
with a copy to (which shall not constitute notice for any
purpose):
Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP
450 Lexington Avenue
New York, New York 10017
Attention: William Aaronson
Facsimile No.:
(212) 701-5800
E-mail:
william.aaronson@davispolk.com
A-36
if to the Company, to:
Global Industries, Ltd.
11490 Westheimer
Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77077
Attention: Russell Robicheaux
Facsimile No.:
(281) 529-7980
E-mail:
russr@globalind.com
with a copy to (which shall not constitute notice for any
purpose):
Vinson & Elkins LLP
1001 Fannin Street, Suite 2500
Houston, Texas 77002
Attention: Jeffery B. Floyd and Stephen M. Gill
Facsimile No.:
(713) 615-5956
E-mail:
jfloyd@velaw.com and sgill@velaw.com
or to such other address or facsimile number as such party may
hereafter specify for the purpose by notice to the other parties
hereto. All such notices, requests and other communications
shall be deemed received (a) on the date of receipt by the
recipient thereof when delivered or sent if delivered in person
or sent by facsimile transmission (provided confirmation
of facsimile transmission is obtained) prior to 5:00 p.m.
on a Business Day in the place of receipt (otherwise, any such
notice, request or communication shall be deemed to have been
received on the next succeeding Business Day in the place of
receipt) or (b) on the next Business Day if transmitted by
national overnight courier.
Section 11.02. Survival
of Representations and Warranties. The
representations and warranties contained herein and in any
certificate or other writing delivered pursuant hereto shall not
survive the Effective Time.
Section 11.03. Amendments
and Waivers. (a) Any provision of this
Agreement may be amended or waived prior to the Effective Time
if, but only if, such amendment or waiver is in writing and is
signed, in the case of an amendment, by each party to this
Agreement or, in the case of a waiver, by each party against
whom the waiver is to be effective; provided that after
the Company Stockholder Approval has been obtained there shall
be no amendment or waiver that would require the further
approval of the stockholders of the Company under Louisiana Law
without such approval having first been obtained.
(b) No failure or delay by any party in exercising any
right, power or privilege hereunder shall operate as a waiver
thereof nor shall any single or partial exercise thereof
preclude any other or further exercise thereof or the exercise
of any other right, power or privilege. The rights and remedies
herein provided shall be cumulative and not exclusive of any
rights or remedies provided by Applicable Law.
Section 11.04. Expenses. (a)
General. Except as otherwise provided herein, all costs
and expenses incurred in connection with this Agreement shall be
paid by the party incurring such cost or expense.
(b) Termination Fee.
(i) If this Agreement is terminated by Parent pursuant to
Section 10.01(c)(i), Section 10.01(c)(ii) (but only if
the failure to satisfy the condition specified therein results
from an intentional breach by the Company of any of its
representations and warranties or the intentional failure of the
Company to perform a covenant or obligation contained herein) or
Section 10.01(c)(iii), then the Company shall pay Parent in
immediately available funds, the Termination Fee, which shall be
payable within three Business Days of such termination.
(ii) If this Agreement is terminated by the Company
pursuant to Section 10.01(d)(i), then the Company shall pay
to Parent in immediately available funds the Termination Fee,
which shall be payable at the time of such termination.
A-37
(iii) If (A) this Agreement is terminated by Parent or
the Company pursuant to Section 10.01(b)(iii),
(B) after the date of this Agreement and prior to such
termination, an Acquisition Proposal shall have been publicly
announced or otherwise been communicated to the stockholders of
the Company and such Acquisition Proposal is not publicly
withdrawn prior the Company Stockholder Meeting, and
(C) within nine months following the date of such
termination, the Company shall have entered into a definitive
agreement with respect to or recommended to its stockholders an
Acquisition Proposal or an Acquisition Proposal shall have been
consummated (provided, however, that for purposes of this
clause (C), each reference to 15% in the definition
of Acquisition Proposal shall be deemed to be a reference to
50%), then the Company shall pay to Parent in
immediately available funds, concurrently with the consummation
of the applicable Acquisition Proposal, the Termination Fee.
(c) Other Provisions Related to Termination
Fee.
(i) In no event shall Parent be entitled to receive more
than one Termination Fee.
(ii) The Company acknowledges that the agreements contained
in this Section 11.04 are an integral part of the
transactions contemplated by this Agreement and that, without
these agreements, Parent and Merger Subsidiary would not enter
into this Agreement. Accordingly, if the Company fails promptly
to pay any amount due to Parent pursuant to this
Section 11.04, it shall also pay any costs and expenses
incurred by Parent or Merger Subsidiary in connection with a
legal action to enforce this Agreement that results in a
judgment against the Company for such amount, together with
interest on the amount of any unpaid fee, cost or expense at the
Prime Rate published in the Wall Street Journal, Eastern
Edition, on the date that such payment was due from the date
such fee, cost or expense was required to be paid to (but
excluding) the payment date.
(iii) Parent and Merger Subsidiary agree that,
notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, upon any
termination of this Agreement under circumstances where the
Termination Fee is payable by the Company pursuant to
Section 11.04(b) and such Termination Fee is paid in full,
Parent and Merger Subsidiary shall be precluded from any other
remedy against the Company, at law or in equity or otherwise,
and neither Parent nor Merger Subsidiary shall seek to obtain
any recovery, judgment, or damages of any kind, including
consequential, indirect or punitive damages, against the Company
or any of the Companys Subsidiaries or any of their
respective partners, managers, members, stockholders or their
respective Representatives in connection with this Agreement or
the transactions contemplated hereby.
Section 11.05. Disclosure
Schedule. The parties hereto agree that any
reference in a particular Section of the Company Disclosure
Schedule shall be deemed to be an exception to (or, as
applicable, a disclosure for purposes of) the representations
and warranties (or covenants, as applicable) of the Company that
are contained in the corresponding Section of this Agreement and
any other representations and warranties of the Company that is
contained in this Agreement to which the relevance of such item
thereto is reasonably apparent. The inclusion of an item in the
Company Disclosure Schedule as an exception to (or, as
applicable, a disclosure for purposes of) a representation or
warranty shall not be deemed an admission that such item
represents a material exception or material fact, event or
circumstance or that such item has had or would reasonably be
expected to have a Material Adverse Effect on the Company.
Section 11.06. Binding
Effect; Benefit; Assignment. (a) The
provisions of this Agreement shall be binding upon, shall inure
to the benefit of the parties hereto and their respective
successors and assigns, and no provision of this Agreement is
intended to confer any rights, benefits, remedies, obligations
or liabilities hereunder upon any Person other than the parties
hereto and their respective successors and, except (a) as
provided in Section 7.03 (which shall be to the benefit of
the Persons referred to in such Sections), (b) the rights
of holders of Company Stock and Company Equity Awards to pursue
claims for damages and other relief, including equitable relief,
for Parents or Merger Subsidiaries breach or
wrongful termination of this Agreement or fraud, and
(c) following the Effective Time, the rights of holders of
shares of Company Stock and Company Equity Awards to receive the
Merger Consideration or Equity Award Consideration, as
applicable; provided, however, that the rights
granted pursuant to clause (b) shall be enforceable only by
the Company, on behalf of the holders of Company Stock and
Company Equity Awards, in the Companys sole discretion, it
being understood and agreed such rights shall attach to such
shares of Company Stock and
A-38
Company Equity Awards and subsequently trade and transfer
therewith and, consequently, any damages, settlements, or other
amounts recovered or received by the Company with respect to
such rights may, in the Companys sole discretion, be
(i) distributed, in whole or in part, by the Company to the
holders of shares of Company Stock of record as of any date
determined by the Company or (ii) retained by the Company
for the use and benefit of the Company on behalf of its
stockholders in any manner the Company deems fit.
(b) No party may assign, delegate or otherwise transfer any
of its rights or obligations under this Agreement without the
consent of each other party hereto, except that Parent or Merger
Subsidiary may transfer or assign its rights and obligations
under this Agreement, in whole or from time to time in part, to
(i) one or more of their Affiliates at any time and
(ii) after the Effective Time, to any Person; provided
that such transfer or assignment shall not relieve Parent or
Merger Subsidiary of its obligations hereunder or enlarge, alter
or change any obligation of any other party hereto or due to
Parent or Merger Subsidiary.
Section 11.07. Governing
Law. This Agreement shall be governed by and
construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York
without regard to the conflicts of law rules of such state.
Section 11.08. Jurisdiction. The
parties hereto agree that any suit, action or proceeding seeking
to enforce any provision of, or based on any matter arising out
of or in connection with, this Agreement or the transactions
contemplated hereby (whether brought by any party or any of its
Affiliates or against any party or any of its Affiliates) shall
be brought exclusively in any federal court located in the State
of New York or New York state court, and each of the parties
hereby irrevocably consents to the exclusive jurisdiction of
such courts (and of the appropriate appellate courts therefrom)
in any such suit, action or proceeding and irrevocably waives,
to the fullest extent permitted by law, any objection that it
may now or hereafter have to the laying of the venue of any such
suit, action or proceeding in any such court or that any such
suit, action or proceeding brought in any such court has been
brought in an inconvenient forum. Process in any such suit,
action or proceeding may be served on any party anywhere in the
world, whether within or without the jurisdiction of any such
court. Each of the parties hereto agrees that a final
nonappealable judgment in any such suit, action or proceeding
shall be conclusive and may be enforced in other jurisdictions
by suit on the judgment or in any other manner provided by
Applicable Law. Without limiting the foregoing, each party
agrees that service of process on such party as provided in
Section 11.01 shall be deemed effective service of process
on such party.
Section 11.09. WAIVER
OF JURY TRIAL. EACH OF THE PARTIES HERETO HEREBY
IRREVOCABLY WAIVES ANY AND ALL RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY
LEGAL PROCEEDING ARISING OUT OF OR RELATED TO THIS AGREEMENT OR
THE TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED HEREBY.
Section 11.10. Counterparts;
Effectiveness. This Agreement may be signed in
any number of counterparts, each of which shall be an original,
with the same effect as if the signatures thereto and hereto
were upon the same instrument. This Agreement shall become
effective when each party hereto shall have received a
counterpart hereof signed by all of the other parties hereto.
Delivery of an executed signature page of this Agreement by
facsimile or other customary means of electronic transmission
(e.g., pdf) shall be effective as delivery of a
manually executed counterpart hereof. Until and unless each
party has received a counterpart hereof signed by the other
party hereto, this Agreement shall have no effect and no party
shall have any right or obligation hereunder (whether by virtue
of any other oral or written agreement or other communication).
Section 11.11. Entire
Agreement. This Agreement (together with the
Exhibits, the Company Disclosure Schedule, the Parent Disclosure
Schedule, and the other documents delivered pursuant hereto) and
the Confidentiality Agreement constitute the entire agreement
between the parties with respect to the subject matter of this
Agreement and supersede all prior agreements and understandings,
both oral and written, between the parties with respect to the
subject matter of this Agreement.
Section 11.12. Severability. If
any term, provision, covenant or restriction of this Agreement
is held by a court of competent jurisdiction or other
Governmental Authority to be invalid, void or unenforceable, the
remainder of the terms, provisions, covenants and restrictions
of this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect and
shall in no way be affected, impaired or invalidated so long as
the economic or legal substance of the transactions contemplated
hereby is not affected in any manner materially adverse to any
party. Upon such
A-39
a determination, the parties shall negotiate in good faith to
modify this Agreement so as to effect the original intent of the
parties as closely as possible in an acceptable manner in order
that the transactions contemplated hereby be consummated as
originally contemplated to the fullest extent possible.
Section 11.13. Specific
Performance. The parties hereto agree that
irreparable damage would occur if any provision of this
Agreement were not performed in accordance with the terms hereof
or were otherwise breached, and that the parties shall be
entitled to an injunction or injunctions, without the posting of
any bond and without proof of actual damages, to prevent
breaches of this Agreement and to enforce specifically the
performance of the terms and provisions hereof in any federal
court located in the State of New York or any New York state
court, this being in addition to any other remedy to which they
are entitled at law or in equity.
[The
remainder of this page has been intentionally left blank; the
next
page is the signature page.]
A-40
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this
Agreement to be duly executed by their respective authorized
officers as of the date set forth on the cover page of this
Agreement.
TECHNIP S.A.
Name: Thierry Pilenko
|
|
|
|
Title:
|
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
|
[Signature
page Merger Agreement]
A-41
APOLLON MERGER SUB B, INC.
Name: John Harrison
[Signature
page Merger Agreement]
A-42
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
Name: John B. Reed
|
|
|
|
Title:
|
Chief Executive Officer
|
[Signature
page Merger Agreement]
A-43
Annex B
AMENDED
AND RESTATED
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
OF
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
Global Industries, Ltd., a Louisiana corporation (the
Corporation), acting through its undersigned Senior
Vice President, Chief Administrative Officer, General Counsel
and Secretary, Russell Robicheaux, and by authority of its Board
of Directors, does hereby certify that:
FIRST: The Amended and Restated Articles of
Incorporation set forth in paragraph Fifth below accurately
copy the Articles of Incorporation of the Corporation and all
amendments thereto in effect on the date hereof without
substantive change except changes made by the amendments
described in Paragraph Fourth below.
SECOND: All such amendments have been effected
in conformity with law.
THIRD: The date of incorporation of the
Corporation was May 1, 1990, and the date of these Amended
and Restated Articles of Incorporation is
[ ].
FOURTH: On
[ ],
the Board of Directors of the Corporation, at a duly-convened
meeting, recommended an amendment to, and, subject to approval
of such amendment by the Corporations shareholders,
authorized this restatement of, the Corporations Articles
of Incorporation. On
[ ],
the shareholders of the Corporation, at a duly-convened meeting
of the shareholders at which there were present or duly
represented holders of a quorum of the Corporations common
stock, par value $0.01 per share, which is the only class of
shares of capital stock of the Corporation outstanding, approved
the Amendment by casting
[ ]
affirmative votes,
[ ]
negative votes, and
[ ]
abstentions. These amendments (i) deleted from the Articles
of Incorporation Article 8, which placed limitations on
ownership of capital stock of the Corporation by
non-U.S. citizens
and (ii) renumbered Articles 9 and 10 as
Articles 8 and 9.
FIFTH: The Amended and Restated Articles of
Incorporation of the Corporation are as follows:
ARTICLE 1
Name
The name of the Corporation is GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
ARTICLE 2
Purpose
The Corporations purpose is to engage in any lawful
activity for which corporations may be formed under the Business
Corporation Law of the State of Louisiana.
ARTICLE 3
Capital
(a) The total authorized capital stock of the Corporation
is Two Hundred Fifty Million (250,000,000) shares of Common
Stock of $0.01 par value per share and Thirty Million
(30,000,000) shares of Preferred Stock of $0.01 par value
per share.
(b) Shares of Preferred Stock may be divided into and
issued from time to time in one or more series. Authority is
hereby vested in the Board of Directors of the Corporation to
amend these Articles of Incorporation from time to time to fix
the preferences, limitations and relative rights of the
Preferred Stock of
B-1
each series. The Board of Directors is hereby authorized to fix
and determine such variations in the designations, preferences,
and relative, participating, optional or other special rights
(including, without limitation, special voting rights,
preferential rights to receive dividends or assets upon
liquidation, rights of conversion into Common Stock or other
securities, redemption provisions or sinking fund provisions) as
between series and as between the Preferred Stock or any series
thereof and the Common Stock, and the qualifications,
limitations or restrictions of such rights, and the shares of
Preferred Stock or any series thereof may have full or limited
voting powers. Any of the series terms, including voting rights,
of any series may be made dependent upon facts ascertainable
outside the Articles of Incorporation, provided that the manner
in which such facts shall operate upon such series terms is
clearly and expressly set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.
(c) Except in respect of characteristics of a particular
series fixed by the Board of Directors, all shares of Preferred
Stock shall be of equal rank and shall be identical. All shares
of any one series of Preferred Stock so designated by the Board
of Directors shall be alike in every particular, except that
shares of any one series issued at different times may differ as
to the dates from which dividends thereon shall be cumulative.
(d) Subject to the preferences of any series of Preferred
Stock, the Board of Directors may, in its discretion, out of
funds legally available for the payment of dividends and at such
times and in such manner as determined by the Board of
Directors, declare and pay dividends on the Common Stock of the
Corporation. No dividend (other than a dividend in capital stock
ranking on a parity with the Common Stock or cash in lieu of
fractional shares with respect to such stock dividend) shall be
declared or paid on any share or shares of any class of stock or
series thereof ranking on a parity with the Common Stock in
respect of payment of dividends for any dividend period unless
there shall have been declared, for the same dividend period,
like proportionate dividends on all shares of Common Stock then
outstanding.
(e) In the event of any liquidation, dissolution or winding
up of the Corporation, whether voluntary or involuntary, after
payment or provision for payment of the debts and other
liabilities of the Corporation and payment or setting aside for
payment of any preferential amount due to the holders of any
other class or series of stock, the holders of the Common Stock
shall be entitled to receive ratably any or all assets remaining
to be paid or distributed.
(f) The holders of the Common Stock of the Corporation
shall be entitled to one vote for each share of such stock held
by them.
(g) Whenever reference is made in this Article 3 to
shares ranking prior to another class of stock or
on a parity with another class of stock, such
reference shall mean and include all other shares of the
Corporation in respect of which the rights of the holders
thereof as to the payment of dividends or as to distributions in
the event of a voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution
or winding up of the affairs of the Corporation are given
preference over, or rank on an equal basis with, as the case may
be, the rights of the holders of such other class of stock.
Whenever reference is made to shares ranking junior
to another class of stock, such reference shall mean and
include all shares of the Corporation in respect of which the
rights of the holders thereof as to the payment of dividends and
as to distributions in the event of a voluntary or involuntary
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the affairs of the
Corporation are junior and subordinate to the rights of the
holders of such class of stock. Except as otherwise provided in
these Articles of Incorporation, each series of Preferred Stock
ranks on a parity with each other and each ranks prior to the
Common Stock. Common Stock ranks junior to Preferred Stock.
(h) The Corporation shall at all times reserve and keep
available, out of its authorized but unissued shares of Common
Stock or out of shares of Common Stock held in its treasury, the
full number of shares of Common Stock into which all shares of
any series of Preferred Stock having conversion privileges from
time to time outstanding are convertible. Unless otherwise
provided in these Articles of Incorporation with respect to a
particular series of Preferred Stock, all shares of Preferred
Stock redeemed or acquired (as a result of conversion or
otherwise) shall be retired and restored to the status of
authorized but unissued shares.
(i) No holder of shares of stock of the Corporation shall
have any preemptive or other rights, except as such rights are
expressly provided by contract, to purchase or subscribe for or
receive any shares of any class,
B-2
or series thereof, of stock of the Corporation, whether now or
hereafter authorized, or any warrants, options, bonds,
debentures or other securities convertible into, exchangeable
for or carrying any right to purchase any shares of any class,
or series thereof, of stock; but such additional shares of stock
and such warrants, options, bonds, debentures or other
securities convertible into, exchangeable for or carrying any
right to purchase any shares of any class, or series thereof, of
stock may be issued or disposed of by the Board of Directors to
such persons, and on such terms and for such lawful
consideration, as in its discretion it shall deem advisable or
as to which the Corporation shall have by binding contract
agreed.
ARTICLE 4
Directors
(a) The number of directors of the Corporation shall be
fixed as specified or provided for in the by-laws of the
Corporation. Election of directors need not be by written ballot
unless the by-laws shall so provide. No holders of Preferred
Stock or Common Stock of the Corporation shall have any right to
cumulate votes in the election of directors.
(b) Any director absent from a meeting of the Board of
Directors or any committee thereof may be represented by any
other director, who may cast the vote of the absent director
according to the written instructions, general or special, of
the absent director.
(c) The Board of Directors, when evaluating a tender offer
or an offer to make a tender or exchange offer or to effect a
merger, consolidation or share exchange may, in exercising its
judgment in determining what is in the best interests of the
Corporation and its shareholders, consider the following factors
and any other factors that it deems relevant: (1) not only
the consideration being offered in the proposed transaction, in
relation to the then current market price for the outstanding
capital stock of the Corporation, but also the market price for
the capital stock of the Corporation over a period of years, the
estimated price that might be achieved in a negotiated sale of
the Corporation as a whole or in part or through orderly
liquidation, the premiums over market price for the securities
of other corporations in similar transactions, current
political, economic and other factors bearing on securities
prices and the Corporations financial condition and future
prospects; (2) the social and economic effects of such
transaction on the Corporation, its subsidiaries, or their
employees, customers, creditors and the communities in which the
Corporation and its subsidiaries do business; (3) the
business and financial condition and earnings prospects of the
acquiring party or parties; including, but not limited to, debt
service and other existing or likely financial obligations of
the acquiring party or parties, and the possible effect of such
condition upon the Corporation and its subsidiaries and the
communities in which the Corporation and its subsidiaries do
business; and (4) the competence, experience, and integrity
of the acquiring party or parties and its or their management.
Notwithstanding and provision of this Article 4(c), this
Article is not intended to confer any rights on any subsidiary
of the Corporation, or any of the Corporations or its
subsidiaries employees, customers, creditors or other
members of the communities in which it or they do business.
ARTICLE 5
By-laws
In furtherance of, and not in limitation of, the powers
conferred by statute, the Board of Directors is expressly
authorized to adopt, amend or repeal the by-laws of the
Corporation or adopt new by-laws, without any action on the part
of the shareholders; provided, however, that no
such adoption, amendment or repeal shall be valid with respect
to by-law provisions which have been adopted, amended, or
repealed by the shareholders; and further provided, that
by-laws adopted or amended by the Directors and any powers
thereby conferred may be amended, altered, or repealed by the
shareholders.
B-3
ARTICLE 6
Limitation
of Liability and Indemnification
A director of the Corporation shall not be personally liable to
the Corporation or its shareholders for monetary damages for
breach of fiduciary duty as a director, except for such
liability as is expressly not subject to limitation under the
Business Corporation Law of the State of Louisiana, as the same
exists or may hereafter be amended to further limit or eliminate
such liability. Moreover, the Corporation shall, to the fullest
extent permitted by law, indemnify any and all officers and
directors of the Corporation, and may to the fullest extent
permitted by law or to such lesser extent as is determined in
the discretion of the Board of Directors, indemnify any and all
other persons whom it shall have power to indemnify, from and
against all expenses, liabilities or other matters arising out
of their status as such or their acts, omissions or services
rendered in such capacities. The Corporation shall have the
powers set forth in Section 83F of the Business Corporation
Law of the State of Louisiana to purchase and maintain insurance
on behalf of any person who is or was a director, officer,
employee or agent of the Corporation, or is or was serving at
the request of the Corporation as a director, officer, employee
or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture,
trust or other enterprise against any liability asserted against
him and incurred by him in any such capacity, or arising out of
his status as such, whether or not the Corporation would have
the power to indemnify him against such liability.
ARTICLE 7
Amendment
The Corporation shall have the right, subject to any express
provisions or restrictions contained in the Articles of
Incorporation or by-laws of the Corporation, from time to time,
to amend the Articles of Incorporation or any provision thereof
in any manner now or hereafter provided by law, and all rights
and powers of any kind conferred upon a director or shareholder
of the Corporation by the Articles of Incorporation or any
amendment thereof are conferred subject to such right.
ARTICLE 8
Reversion
Cash, property or share dividends, shares issuable to
shareholders in connection with a reclassification of stock, and
the redemption price of redeemed shares, which are not claimed
by the shareholders entitled thereto within one year after the
dividend or redemption price became payable or the shares became
issuable, despite reasonable efforts by the Corporation to pay
the dividend or redemption price or deliver the certificates for
the shares to such shareholders within such time, shall, at the
expiration of such time, revert in full ownership to the
Corporation, and the Corporations obligation to pay such
dividend or redemption price or issue such shares, as the case
may be, shall thereupon cease; provided that the Board of
Directors may, at any time, for any reason satisfactory to it,
but need not, authorize (A) payment or the amount of any
cash or property dividend or redemption price or
(B) issuance of any shares, ownership of which has reverted
to the Corporation pursuant to this Article 9, to the
persons or entity who or which would be entitled thereto had
such reversion not occurred.
ARTICLE 9
Fair
Price Protection and Control Share Acquisition
(a) The Corporation disclaims and shall not have the
benefits of and elects not to be governed by Section 132
through 134 of the Business Corporation Law of the State of
Louisiana.
(b) The Corporation disclaims and shall not have the
benefits of and elects not to be governed by Sections 135
through 140.2 of the Business Corporation Law of the State of
Louisiana, and the provisions thereof shall not apply to control
share acquisitions (as defined in Section 135) of
shares of the Corporation.
B-4
These Amended and Restated Articles of Incorporation are dated
the date set forth in paragraph Third above.
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
Russell Robicheaux
Senior Vice President, Chief Administrative
Officer, General Counsel and Secretary
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
STATE OF TEXAS
COUNTY OF HARRIS
BEFORE ME, the undersigned authority, personally came and
appeared Russell Robicheaux, to me known to be the person who
signed the foregoing instrument as Senior Vice President, Chief
Administrative Officer, General Counsel and Secretary, and who,
having been duly sworn, acknowledged and declared, in the
presence of the two witnesses whose names are subscribed below,
that he signed such instrument as his free act and deed for the
purposes mentioned therein.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the appearer, witnesses and I have hereunto
affixed our hands on this
[ ] day
of
[ ],
[ ],
at Houston, Texas.
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WITNESSES:
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GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
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By:
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Russell Robicheaux
Senior Vice President, Chief Administrative
Officer, General Counsel and Secretary
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[Notarial Seal]
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B-5
Annex C
September 10, 2011
The Board of Directors of
Global Industries, Ltd.
11490 Westheimer, Suite 400
Houston, Texas 77077
Dear Sirs:
You have asked Simmons & Company International
(we, our or
us) to advise you with respect to the
fairness, from a financial point of view, to the shareholders of
Global Industries, Ltd. (the Company),
of the Merger Consideration (as defined below) to be received by
such shareholders pursuant to a proposed Agreement and Plan of
Merger (the Merger Agreement), to be entered
into by and among Technip SA (Parent), MERGER
SUB (Merger Subsidiary), an indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary of Parent, and the Company.
Pursuant to the Merger Agreement, Merger Subsidiary will be
merged with and into the Company, with the Company surviving as
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Parent (the
Merger). Pursuant to the Merger,
(i) each outstanding share of common stock, par value $0.01
per share, of the Company will be converted into the right to
receive $8.00 per share in cash and (ii) each outstanding
option to purchase any such shares granted under certain of the
Companys equity incentive plans shall be canceled, and the
Company shall pay the holder thereof an amount in cash
determined by multiplying (x) the excess, if any, of the
consideration described in clause (i) above over the
applicable exercise price of such option by (y) the number
of shares of common stock of the Company that otherwise could
have been purchased by such holder pursuant to such option (the
consideration described in clauses (i) and (ii) above,
collectively, the Merger Consideration).
In arriving at our opinion, we have reviewed and analyzed, among
other things, the following:
(i) the draft Merger Agreement dated as of
September 8, 2011;
(ii) the financial statements and other information
concerning the Company, including the Companys
(a) Annual Reports on
Form 10-K
for each of the years in the three-year period ended
December 31, 2010; (b) Quarterly Reports on
Form 10-Q
for the quarters ended June 30, 2011 and March 31,
2011; (c) Current Reports on
Form 8-K
filed on August 4, 2011, May 23, 2011, May 5,
2011, March 17, 2011, February 28, 2011,
February 25, 2011 and February 24, 2011; and
(d) Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A filed on
April 5, 2011;
(iii) certain other internal information, primarily
financial in nature, relating to the Company, which was provided
to us by the management of the Company, including internal
financial forecasts and other estimates of the future operating
and financial performance of the Company, in each case developed
by the management of the Company;
(iv) certain publicly available information concerning the
trading of, and the trading market for, the common stock of the
Company;
(v) certain publicly available information with respect to
certain other companies we believe to be comparable to the
Company and the trading markets for certain of such
companies securities;
(vi) certain publicly available information concerning the
estimates of the future operating and financial performance of
the Company and the comparable companies prepared by industry
experts unaffiliated with the Company;
(vii) certain publicly available information concerning the
markets in which the Company operates prepared by industry
experts unaffiliated with the Company;
C-1
(viii) certain publicly available information concerning
the nature and terms of certain other transactions considered
relevant to our analysis; and
(ix) such other analyses and examinations as we have deemed
necessary and appropriate.
In addition, we have also met with certain officers and
employees of the Company to discuss the foregoing, as well as
other matters believed relevant to our analysis and have
considered such other information, financial studies, analyses
and investigations, and financial, economic and market criteria
which we deemed relevant.
In connection with our review, we have not independently
verified any of the foregoing information and have relied on it
being complete and accurate in all material respects. With
respect to the financial forecasts, we have assumed that they
have been reasonably prepared on bases reflecting the best
currently available estimates and judgments of the
Companys management as to the future financial performance
of the Company. We have assumed that the final/execution version
of the Merger Agreement will be substantially the same as the
draft dated September 8, 2011 and that the Merger will be
consummated in accordance with the terms set forth in the Merger
Agreement without any waiver, amendment or delay of any material
terms or conditions. We have assumed that in connection with the
receipt of all necessary governmental, regulatory or other
approvals and consents required for the Merger, no delays,
limitations, conditions or restrictions will be imposed that
would have a material adverse effect on the receipt of the
Merger Consideration by the shareholders of the Company. We are
not legal, tax or regulatory advisors and have relied upon,
without independent verification, the assessment of the Company
and its legal, tax and regulatory advisors with respect to such
matters. We have not performed any tax analysis, nor have we
been furnished with any such analysis. In addition, we have not
made an independent evaluation or appraisal of the assets of the
Company. While we were asked to analyze certain third parties as
potential transaction parties, we were not requested to, and did
not, solicit third party indications of interest in acquiring
all or any part of the Company.
In conducting our analysis and arriving at our opinion as
expressed herein, we have considered such financial and other
factors as we deemed appropriate under the circumstances
including, among others, the following: (i) the historical
and current financial position and results of operations of the
Company; (ii) the business prospects of the Company;
(iii) the historical and current market for the common
stock of the Company and for the equity securities of certain
other companies believed to be comparable to the Company;
(iv) the value of the discounted cash flows of the Company
under several scenarios and related sensitivities; and
(v) the nature and terms of certain other acquisition
transactions that we believe to be relevant. We have also taken
into account our assessment of general economic, market and
financial conditions and our experience in connection with
similar transactions and securities valuation generally. Our
opinion necessarily is based upon conditions as they exist and
can be evaluated on, and on the information made available at,
the date hereof. Events occurring after the date hereof may
affect this opinion and the assumptions used in preparing it,
and we do not assume any obligation to update, revise or
reaffirm this opinion.
We are an internationally recognized investment banking firm
that specializes in the energy industry. We are continually
engaged in the valuation of businesses and their securities in
connection with mergers and acquisitions, leveraged buyouts,
negotiated underwritings, secondary distributions of listed and
unlisted securities and private placements.
We have acted as financial advisor to the Company in connection
with the Merger and will receive a fee for our services, a
significant portion of which is contingent upon the consummation
of the Merger. We will also receive a fee for rendering this
opinion. In addition, the Company has agreed to indemnify us for
certain liabilities that may arise out of our engagement. In the
past, we have acted as financial advisor to the Company.
In the ordinary course of our business, we actively trade the
debt and equity securities of both the Company and Parent for
our own account and for the accounts of customers and,
accordingly, may at any time hold a long or short position in
such securities.
It is understood that this opinion is for the information and
assistance of the Companys Board of Directors in
connection with its consideration of the Merger and is not to be
quoted or referred to, in whole or
C-2
in part, in any registration statement, prospectus, or proxy
statement, or in any other written document used in connection
with the offering or sale of securities, nor shall this letter
be used for any other purposes, without our prior written
consent; provided, however, that (i) this opinion
may be reproduced in its entirety and referred to in a proxy
statement used to solicit approval of the Merger and
(ii) the existence of this opinion may be disclosed by the
Company in a press release issued in connection with the public
announcement of the Merger. Our opinion does not address the
Companys underlying business decision to pursue the Merger
or the relative merits of the Merger as compared to any
alternative business strategies that might exist for the
Company. This opinion does not address the fairness of the
amount or nature of the compensation to any of the
Companys officers, directors or employees, or class of
such persons, relative to the compensation to the public
shareholders of the Company. Our opinion does not constitute a
recommendation to any shareholder as to how such shareholder
should vote on the Merger.
The review and analysis of the Merger as it relates to the
rendering of this fairness opinion was presented to our Fairness
Committee on September 9, 2011.
Based upon and subject to the foregoing, including the various
assumptions and limitations set forth herein, it is our opinion
that, as of the date hereof, the Merger Consideration to be
received by the shareholders of the Company pursuant to the
terms of the Merger Agreement is fair, from a financial point of
view, to such shareholders
Very truly yours,
SIMMONS & COMPANY INTERNATIONAL
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By:
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/s/ Frederick
W. Charlton
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Managing Director
C-3
Annex D
§
131. Rights of a shareholder dissenting from certain corporate
actions
A. Except as provided in subsection B of this section, if a
corporation has, by vote of its shareholders, authorized a sale,
lease or exchange of all of its assets, or has, by vote of its
shareholders, become a party to a merger or consolidation, then,
unless such authorization or action shall have been given or
approved by at least eighty per cent of the total voting power,
a shareholder who voted against such corporate action shall have
the right to dissent. If a corporation has become a party to a
merger pursuant to R.S. 12:112(G), the shareholders of any
subsidiaries party to the merger shall have the right to dissent
without regard to the proportion of the voting power which
approved the merger and despite the fact that the merger was not
approved by vote of the shareholders of any of the corporations
involved.
B. The right to dissent provided by this Section shall not exist
in the case of:
(1) A sale pursuant to an order of a court having
jurisdiction in the premises.
(2) A sale for cash on terms requiring distribution of all
or substantially all of the net proceeds to the shareholders in
accordance with their respective interests within one year after
the date of the sale.
(3) Shareholders holding shares of any class of stock
which, at the record date fixed to determine shareholders
entitled to receive notice of and to vote at the meeting of
shareholders at which a merger or consolidation was acted on,
were listed on a national securities exchange, or were
designated as a national market system security on an
inter-dealer quotation system by the Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority, unless the articles of the corporation
issuing such stock provide otherwise or, except in the case of
shareholders of a corporation surviving the merger or
consolidation in which each share of such corporation
outstanding immediately prior to the effective date of the
merger or consolidation is an identical outstanding or treasury
share of such corporation after the effective date of the merger
or consolidation, the shares of such shareholders were not
converted by the merger or consolidation solely into shares of
the surviving or new corporation.
C. (1)(a) Except as provided in Paragraph (4) of this
Subsection, any shareholder electing to exercise such right of
dissent shall file with the corporation, prior to or at the
meeting of shareholders at which such proposed corporate action
is submitted to a vote, a written objection to such proposed
corporate action, and shall vote his shares against such action.
If such proposed corporate action be taken by the required vote,
but by less than eighty percent of the total voting power, and
the merger, consolidation or sale, lease or exchange of assets
authorized thereby be effected, the corporation shall promptly
thereafter give written notice thereof to each shareholder who
filed such written objection to, and voted his shares against,
such action, at such shareholders last address on the
corporations records.
(b) An affidavit of the secretary or assistant secretary or of
the transfer agent of the corporation that such notice has been
given shall, in the absence of fraud, be prima facie evidence of
the facts stated therein.
(2) Each such shareholder may, within twenty days after the
mailing of such notice to him, but not thereafter, file with the
corporation a demand in writing for the fair cash value of his
shares as of the day before such vote was taken; provided that
he state in such demand the value demanded, and a post office
address to which the reply of the corporation may be sent, and
at the same time deposit in escrow in a chartered bank or trust
company located in the parish of the registered office of the
corporation, the certificates representing his shares, duly
endorsed and transferred to the corporation upon the sole
condition that said certificates shall be delivered to the
corporation upon payment of the value of the shares determined
in accordance with the provisions of this Section. With his
demand the shareholder shall deliver to the corporation, the
written acknowledgment of such bank or trust company that it so
holds his certificates of stock.
(3) Unless the objection, demand, and acknowledgment are
made and delivered by the shareholder within the period limited
in Paragraph (1) and (2), he shall conclusively be presumed
to have acquiesced in the corporate action proposed or taken.
(4) In the case of a merger pursuant to R.S. 12:112(G), the
dissenting shareholder need not file an objection with the
corporation nor vote against the merger, but need only file with
the corporation within
D-1
twenty days after a copy of the merger certificate was mailed to
him, a demand in writing for the cash value of his shares as of
the day before the certificate was filed with the secretary of
state, state in such demand the value demanded and a post office
address to which the corporations reply may be sent,
deposit the certificates representing his shares in escrow as
provided in Paragraph (2), and deliver to the corporation with
his demand the acknowledgment of the escrow bank or trust
company as prescribed in Paragraph (2).
D. If the corporation does not agree to the value so stated and
demanded, or does not agree that a payment is due, it shall,
within twenty days after receipt of such demand and
acknowledgment, notify in writing the shareholder, at the
designated post office address, of its disagreement, and shall
state in such notice the value it will agree to pay if any
payment should be held to be due; otherwise it shall be liable
for, and shall pay to the dissatisfied shareholder, the value
demanded by him for his shares.
E. In case of disagreement as to such fair cash value, or as to
whether any payment is due, after compliance by the parties with
the provisions of subsections C and D of this section, the
dissatisfied shareholder, within sixty days after receipt of
notice in writing of the corporations disagreement, but
not thereafter, may file suit against the corporation, or the
merged or consolidated corporation, as the case may be, in the
district court of the parish in which the corporation or the
merged or consolidated corporation, as the case may be, has its
registered office, praying the court to fix and decree the fair
cash value of the dissatisfied shareholders shares as of
the day before such corporate action complained of was taken,
and the court shall, on such evidence as may be adduced in
relation thereto, determine summarily whether any payment is
due, and, if so, such cash value, and render judgment
accordingly. Any shareholder entitled to file such suit may,
within such
sixty-day
period but not thereafter, intervene as a plaintiff in such suit
filed by another shareholder, and recover therein judgment
against the corporation for the fair cash value of his shares.
No order or decree shall be made by the court staying the
proposed corporate action, and any such corporate action may be
carried to completion notwithstanding any such suit. Failure of
the shareholder to bring suit, or to intervene in such a suit,
within sixty days after receipt of notice of disagreement by the
corporation shall conclusively bind the shareholder (1) by
the corporations statement that no payment is due, or
(2) if the corporation does not contend that no payment is
due, to accept the value of his shares as fixed by the
corporation in its notice of disagreement.
F. When the fair value of the shares has been agreed upon
between the shareholder and the corporation, or when the
corporation has become liable for the value demanded by the
shareholder because of failure to give notice of disagreement
and of the value it will pay, or when the shareholder has become
bound to accept the value the corporation agrees is due because
of his failure to bring suit within sixty days after receipt of
notice of the corporations disagreement, the action of the
shareholder to recover such value must be brought within five
years from the date the value was agreed upon, or the liability
of the corporation became fixed.
G. If the corporation or the merged or consolidated corporation,
as the case may be, shall, in its notice of disagreement, have
offered to pay to the dissatisfied shareholder on demand an
amount in cash deemed by it to be the fair cash value of his
shares, and if, on the institution of a suit by the dissatisfied
shareholder claiming an amount in excess of the amount so
offered, the corporation, or the merged or consolidated
corporation, as the case may be, shall deposit in the registry
of the court, there to remain until the final determination of
the cause, the amount so offered, then, if the amount finally
awarded such shareholder, exclusive of interest and costs, be
more than the amount offered and deposited as aforesaid, the
costs of the proceeding shall be taxed against the corporation,
or the merged or consolidated corporation, as the case may be;
otherwise the costs of the proceeding shall be taxed against
such shareholder.
H. Upon filing a demand for the value of his shares, the
shareholder shall cease to have any of the rights of a
shareholder except the rights accorded by this section. Such a
demand may be withdrawn by the shareholder at any time before
the corporation gives notice of disagreement, as provided in
subsection D of this section. After such notice of disagreement
is given, withdrawal of a notice of election shall require the
written consent of the corporation. If a notice of election is
withdrawn, or the proposed corporate action is abandoned or
rescinded, or a court shall determine that the shareholder is
not entitled to receive payment for his shares, or the
shareholder shall otherwise lose his dissenters rights, he
shall not have the right to receive payment for his shares, his
share certificates shall be returned to him (and, on his
request, new certificates shall be issued to him in exchange for
the old ones endorsed to the corporation), and he shall be
reinstated to all his rights as a shareholder as of the filing
of his demand for value, including any intervening preemptive
D-2
rights, and the right to payment of any intervening dividend or
other distribution, or, if any such rights have expired or any
such dividend or distribution other than in cash has been
completed, in lieu thereof, at the election of the corporation,
the fair value thereof in cash as determined by the board as of
the time of such expiration or completion, but without prejudice
otherwise to any corporate proceedings that may have been taken
in the interim.
D-3
VOTE BY INTERNET www.proxyvote.com
Use the Internet to transmit your voting instructions and for electronic
delivery of information up until 11:59 P.M. Eastern Time the day before
the cut-off date or meeting date. Have your proxy card in hand when you access
the web site and GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD. follow the on-screen instructions to obtain
your records and to create an 11490 WESTHEIMER, SUITE 400 electronic voting instruction form.
HOUSTON, TEXAS 77077 VOTE BY PHONE 1-800-690-6903
Use any touch-tone telephone to transmit your voting instructions up until 11:59
P.M. Eastern Time the day before the cut-off date or meeting date. Have your proxy
card in hand when you call and then follow the instructions.
VOTE BY MAIL
Mark, sign and date your proxy card and return it as soon as possible in the
postage-paid envelope we have provided or return it to Vote Processing, c/o
Broadridge, 51 Mercedes Way, Edgewood, NY 11717.
VOTE IN PERSON
You may vote the shares in person by attending the Special Meeting.
TO VOTE, MARK BLOCKS BELOW IN BLUE OR BLACK INK AS FOLLOWS:
M39127-S86542 KEEP THIS PORTION FOR YOUR RECORDS DETACH AND RETURN THIS PORTION ONLY
THIS PROXY CARD IS VALID ONLY WHEN SIGNED AND DATED.
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD.
The Board of Directors recommends you vote FOR proposals 1, 2 and 3.
For Against Abstain
1. Proposal to approve and adopt the Agreement and Plan of Merger,
dated as of September 11, 2011, among Global Industries, Ltd.
(Global Industries), Technip S.A. (Technip), and Apollon Merger
Sub B, Inc., an indirect, wholly owned subsidiary of Technip, as
such may be 0 0 0 amended from time to time (the Merger Agreement).
2. Proposal to approve and adopt amended and restated articles of
incorporation to remove the limitation on non-U.S. ownership of
Global Industries 0 0 0 common stock contained in the existing articles of
incorporation of Global Industries.
3. Non-binding, advisory proposal to approve certain compensation arrangements
for Global Industries named executive officers in connection with 0 0 0
the merger contemplated by the Merger Agreement.
NOTE: In their discretion, the proxies are authorized to vote upon such other
matter or matters which may properly come before the meeting or
any postponements or adjournments thereof.
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR THE PROPOSAL TO
APPROVE AND ADOPT THE MERGER AGREEMENT, FOR THE PROPOSAL TO
APPROVE AND ADOPT THE AMENDED AND RESTATED ARTICLES OF I
NCORPORATION AND FOR THE APPROVAL OF CERTAIN COMPENSATION
ARRANGEMENTS FOR GLOBAL INDUSTRIES NAMED EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
IN CONNECTION WITH THE MERGER CONTEMPLATED BY THE MERGER AGREEMENT.
For address changes/comments, mark here. 0 (see reverse for instructions)
Please indicate if you plan to attend this meeting. 0 0
Yes No
Please sign exactly as your name(s) appear(s) hereon. When signing as
attorney, executor, administrator, or other fiduciary, please give
full title as such. Joint owners should each sign personally.
All holders must sign. If a corporation or partnership, please
sign in full corporate or partnership name by authorized officer.
Signature [PLEASE SIGN WITHIN BOX] Date Signature (Joint Owners) Date |
Important Notice Regarding the Availability of Proxy Materials for the Special Meeting:
The Notice and Proxy Statement is available at www.proxyvote.com.
M39128-S86542
GLOBAL INDUSTRIES, LTD. Special Meeting of Shareholders November 30, 2011 10:00 AM
This proxy is solicited by the Board of Directors
The undersigned, a shareholder of Global Industries, Ltd., a Louisiana corporation
(Global Industries), acknowledge receipt of a copy of the Notice of Special Meeting of
Shareholders and the accompanying proxy statement, and revoking any proxy previously
given, hereby constitutes and appoints John B. Reed and C. Andrew Smith and each of them,
with or without the other, his or her true and lawful agents and proxies with full power
of substitution in each to vote the shares of common stock of Global Industries standing
in the name of the undersigned for purposes identified on this proxy and with discretionary
authority as to any other matters that may properly be raised at the Special Meeting of
Shareholders of Global Industries to be held at the Houston Marriott Westchase, 2900 Briarpark
Dr., Houston, TX 77042.
THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED WILL BE VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED HEREBY BY THE
UNDERSIGNED SHAREHOLDER. IF YOU SIGN YOUR PROXY CARD WITHOUT INDICATING YOUR VOTE,
THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR PROPOSALS 1, 2, AND 3 AND IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE
RECOMMENDATIONS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS ON ANY OTHER MATTERS PROPERLY BROUGHT BEFORE
THE SPECIAL MEETING, OR AT ANY ADJOURNMENT OR POSTPONEMENT THEREOF. YOU MAY REVOKE THIS
PROXY AT ANY TIME PRIOR TO THE VOTE AT THE SPECIAL MEETING.
Address Changes/Comments: (If you noted any Address Changes and/or Comments above,
please mark corresponding box on the reverse side.)
Continued and to be signed on reverse side |