In re PLX Technology Inc. Stockholders Litigation ( 2018 )


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  •      IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN RE PLX TECHNOLOGY INC.                ) CONSOLIDATED
    STOCKHOLDERS LITIGATION                  ) C.A. No. 9880-VCL
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: July 18, 2018
    Date Decided: October 16, 2018
    R. Bruce McNew, COOCH AND TAYLOR, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Randall J.
    Baron, David A. Knotts, Maxwell R. Huffman, ROBBINS GELLER RUDMAN & DOWD
    LLP, San Diego, California; Kent Bronson, MILBERG TADLER PHILLIPS
    GROSSMAN LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Plaintiffs.
    Patricia L. Enerio, Jamie L. Brown, HEYMAN ENERIO GATTUSO & HIRZEL LLP,
    Wilmington, Delaware; Lori Marks-Esterman, Renee M. Zaytsev, OLSHAN FROME
    WOLOSKY LLP, New York, New York; Attorneys for Defendant.
    LASTER, V.C.
    In January 2013, defendant Potomac Capital Partners II, L.P. (“Potomac”) launched
    an activist campaign to pressure PLX Technology Inc. (“PLX” or the “Company”) into a
    sale. Eric Singer, Potomac’s co-managing member, led the activist campaign. Singer’s
    investment thesis was simple. PLX had agreed to sell itself to Integrated Device
    Technology, Inc. (“IDT”), but PLX and IDT terminated their deal in December 2012 after
    the Federal Trade Commission challenged it on antitrust grounds. During the go-shop
    period, another bidder had expressed interest in buying PLX. After the IDT deal failed,
    PLX’s stock plummeted. Singer bought shares at depressed prices, believing that Potomac
    could achieve short-term profits if PLX was sold to the other bidder.
    Singer issued a series of highly critical public letters in which he demanded that the
    Company’s board of directors (the “Board”) conduct a sale process. During meetings with
    members of the Board and PLX management, he insisted that they sell PLX. In March
    2013, Potomac nominated five candidates, including Singer, to replace a majority of the
    Board. In November 2013, Potomac conducted a proxy contest but sought to replace only
    three of the incumbent directors. At PLX’s annual meeting in December 2013, Potomac’s
    nominees prevailed. At Singer’s request, the Board made him chair of the Strategic
    Alternatives Special Committee, which was charged with exploring strategic alternatives
    for the Company.
    Shortly after the annual meeting, a senior executive from Avago Technologies
    Wireless (U.S.A.) Manufacturing Inc. (“Avago”) contacted Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.,
    who was serving as PLX’s financial advisor. Conveniently, Deutsche Bank was also
    advising Avago on its acquisition of LSI Corporation, one of PLX’s competitors.
    1
    Avago had been the other bidder who had approached PLX during the go-shop
    period for the IDT deal. Subsequently, in February 2013, Avago had proposed to acquire
    PLX for $6.00 per share. The Board had rejected Avago’s offer, telling Avago that the
    price needed to “start with a 7.” Since then, PLX’s business had grown stronger.
    The Avago executive told Deutsche Bank that he “saw the PLX BoD transition” but
    that because of the LSI acquisition, Avago would be in the “penalty box” until that deal
    closed. He said that once the LSI transaction was complete, Avago would be “open for
    business on all topics,” including an acquisition of PLX, which he described as a “$300M
    deal.” With 45.9 million shares outstanding, this figure equated to $6.53 per share.
    Deutsche Bank shared the information with Singer. Deutsche Bank and Singer did
    not share the information with PLX’s management team or with the other members of the
    Board. As a result of the tip from Avago, Singer and Deutsche Bank knew when Avago
    was likely to bid (after the LSI acquisition closed) and how much Avago wanted to pay
    ($300 million).
    Over the next four months, Singer bided his time. In May 2014, Avago closed the
    LSI transaction and approached PLX, just as it said it would. The same senior executive
    from Avago asked to meet personally with Singer. The two discussed the pricing for a sale
    of PLX. The next day, Avago proposed to acquire PLX for $6.25 per share. Nine days later,
    PLX had agreed in principle to a deal at $6.50 per share—just what Avago said it wanted
    to pay when it approached Deutsche Bank in December 2013.
    During those nine days, as Chair of the Special Committee, Singer worked with
    Deutsche Bank to manage the process and lead the Board to a deal at $6.50. One major
    2
    problem was management’s business plan, which had been prepared in December 2013,
    approved by the Board, and used by the Board when making decisions in the ordinary
    course of business. A discounted cash flow analysis based on the five-year projections in
    that plan (the “December 2013 Projections”) generated a valuation range well above the
    Avago deal price. The Special Committee and Deutsche Bank had management prepare a
    new and materially lower set of projections, which management described as a “sensitivity
    case” (the “June 2014 Projections”). After presenting the two sets of projections to the
    Board, the directors asked for an explanation of the changes. Without ever receiving it, the
    Board signed off on Deutsche Bank’s use of the June 2014 Projections for its valuation
    work. Deutsche Bank called the June 2014 Projections its “Base Case” and the December
    2013 Projections its “Upside Case.” When Avago received the June 2014 Projections, it
    correctly labeled them as a “downside case” and continued to treat the December 2013
    Projections as its base case.
    On June 23, 2014, Avago and PLX formally announced their transaction, which was
    structured as a medium-form merger under Section 251(h) of the Delaware General
    Corporation Law (the “Merger”). In the recommendation statement that the Board sent to
    stockholders, the Board did not disclose Avago’s December 2013 contact with Deutsche
    Bank and claimed that the June 2014 Projections had been prepared in the ordinary course
    of business. On August 12, the Merger closed. Each publicly held share of PLX common
    stock was converted into the right to receive $6.50 in cash.
    The plaintiffs sued the directors, contending that they breached their fiduciary duties
    when approving the Merger. They also argued that the directors breached their duty of
    3
    disclosure when recommending the Merger to stockholders. The plaintiffs sued Potomac,
    Deutsche Bank, and Avago for aiding and abetting the directors’ breaches of duty.
    The claims against Avago and two of the directors were dismissed at the pleading
    stage. After discovery, the remaining directors and Deutsche Bank settled. The plaintiffs
    proceeded to trial against Potomac.
    This post-trial decision finds that the plaintiffs proved all but one of the elements of
    their claim against Potomac. The plaintiffs proved that the directors breached their
    fiduciary duties by engaging in a sale process without knowing critical information about
    Avago’s communications with Deutsche Bank in December 2013. The directors other than
    Singer should not be blamed for this oversight in any morally culpable sense; Singer and
    Deutsche Bank withheld the information from them. In terms of fulfilling their fiduciary
    duties to stockholders, however, the directors fell short. The plaintiffs also proved that the
    directors breached their duty of disclosure when recommending that stockholders tender,
    both by failing to disclose Avago’s communications with Deutsche Bank in December
    2013 and by depicting the June 2014 Projections as having been prepared in the ordinary
    course of business.
    The plaintiffs proved that Potomac, through Singer, knowingly participated in the
    directors’ breaches of duty. Singer knew about the tip from Avago in December 2013 and
    failed to disclose the information to his fellow directors. Once Avago engaged, he worked
    to engineer the sale that Potomac had sought to achieve from the outset. Singer was the co-
    managing member of Potomac and directed the activist campaign on its behalf. His
    4
    knowledge and actions are therefore imputed to Potomac for purposes of the knowing
    participation element of a claim for aiding and abetting.
    The plaintiffs did not prove any causally related damages. The plaintiffs theorized
    that the Company should have remained a standalone entity and maintained that its value
    in that configuration was $9.86 per share. The plaintiffs failed to prove that valuation,
    which was more than 50% higher than the Merger consideration. Instead, the record shows
    that the Merger consideration exceeded the standalone value of the Company. Judgment is
    therefore entered in favor of Potomac.
    I.   FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Trial took place over three days. The parties submitted 505 exhibits and lodged
    fourteen depositions. Only one fact witness—Singer—testified live. Two expert witnesses
    testified at trial on damages issues. The parties proved the following facts by a
    preponderance of the evidence.
    A.     PLX
    PLX was a Delaware corporation that developed and sold specialized integrated
    circuits used in connectivity applications.1 The Company went public in 1999, and its
    shares traded on the NASDAQ Stock Market.2
    1
    PTO ¶ 21. Citations in this format refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order.
    Dkt. 370. Citations in the form “[Name] Tr.” refer to witness testimony from the trial
    transcript. Citations in the form “[Name] Dep.” refer to witness testimony from a
    deposition transcript. Citations in the form “JX ––– at –––” refer to trial exhibits using the
    JX-based page numbers generated for trial.
    2
    PTO ¶ 36.
    5
    In 2008, PLX suffered major losses.3 In an attempt to gain scale, management made
    two significant acquisitions, one in 2009 and the other in 2010.4 Both were disasters.5
    By 2011, PLX faced an uncertain future.6 To turn things around, the Company began
    developing a new product called ExpressFabric.7 The Board also began considering
    strategic alternatives.8
    B.     IDT, Avago, And Balch Hill
    In April 2011, PLX discussed a potential transaction with IDT. 9 On June 17, 2011,
    IDT proposed to acquire PLX for $5 per share, payable 50% in cash and 50% in IDT
    stock.10 The Board rejected the offer, stating that it “wanted to continue to execute on its
    long-term business plan.”11 When IDT followed up, PLX told IDT that any proposal
    “would have to be at a significantly higher price.”12
    3
    JX 35 at 2–3.
    4
    PTO ¶¶ 40–41; see also JX 2 at 4; JX 4 at 8; Raun Dep. 337–38; Salameh Dep.
    169–71; Schmitt Dep. 85–87.
    5
    PTO ¶¶ 42–43; see also Singer Tr. 5–6, 332–40; Riordan Dep. 126, 140.
    6
    JX 35 at 4.
    7
    
    Id. at 4.
           8
    See JX 6 at 5.
    9
    PTO ¶ 44; JX 33 at 15.
    10
    PTO ¶ 45; JX 33 at 15.
    11
    JX 33 at 16.
    12
    
    Id. 6 In
    October 2011, PLX engaged in discussions with Avago about a potential
    transaction. On October 31, 2011, the parties entered into a non-disclosure agreement.13
    In February 2012, an activist hedge fund called Balch Hill Partners L.P. disclosed a
    9.7% stake in the Company’s equity.14 Balch Hill asserted that “management should seek
    a buyer . . . to take advantage of the tremendous market interest in . . . PCI Express
    switches.”15 The Board disagreed and announced publicly that the Company’s stockholders
    “would be best served by continuing to pursue the strategic projects underway” rather than
    “affirmatively pursu[ing] a sale.”16
    On March 7, 2012, Balch Hill submitted a slate of nominees to run against the
    incumbent directors.17 Facing a proxy contest, the Board began consulting with Deutsche
    Bank about strategic alternatives.18
    13
    PTO ¶ 47; see also JX 551 at 18.
    14
    JX 9 at 2; see also PTO ¶ 48; JX 33 at 16.
    15
    JX 9 at 6; see also JX 33 at 16; Schmitt Dep. 98–100. Cf. JX 2 at 27. “PCI
    Express” is a connectivity standard for integrated circuits. “PCI” stands for “Peripheral
    Component Interconnect.” See PTO ¶¶ 38-39; JX 35 at 2. The plaintiffs objected to JX 35
    as containing hearsay and lacking a proper foundation. During their depositions, Schmitt
    and Raun authenticated the document and confirmed the accuracy of the statements it
    contained. See Schmitt Dep. 89–98; Raun Dep. 321–29.
    16
    JX 11 at 1; see also JX 33 at 16.
    17
    JX 14 (Balch Hill letter to stockholders); see also JX 15 (first amendment to
    Schedule 13D); JX 16 (Schedule 14A); JX 17 (PLX Form 10-K Annual Report); JX 33 at
    17.
    18
    JX 33 at 18–19.
    7
    C.     The Failed IDT Merger
    In March 2012, IDT indicated that it could increase its proposal to between $6.75
    and $7.00 per share.19 The Board thought the range was attractive, but wanted IDT to
    commit to a specific figure and a meaningful post-signing market check.20
    On March 31, 2012, IDT offered to acquire PLX for $7.00 per share, payable 50%
    in cash and 50% in stock, and agreed to a post-signing go-shop period.21 The Board
    accepted the proposal, and the parties began due diligence.22 The parties signed a formal
    merger agreement on April 30, 2012.23
    During the next thirty days, Deutsche Bank contacted thirty-seven parties.24 Avago
    and three others expressed interest.25 Only Avago submitted a proposal: an all-cash deal at
    $5.75 per share.26 The Board declined to pursue it.27 As IDT and PLX moved towards
    19
    See PTO ¶ 50; JX 33 at 18.
    20
    See PTO ¶ 51; JX 33 at 18.
    21
    See PTO ¶ 53; JX 33 at 20.
    22
    JX 23 at 1; JX 33 at 20.
    23
    PTO ¶ 56; JX 30 at 1; JX 33 at 22.
    24
    PTO ¶ 58; JX 551 at 19; see JX 32 at 1.
    25
    PTO ¶ 58; JX 551 at 19.
    26
    PTO ¶ 59–60; JX 36 at 2–3; JX 40 at 1; JX 551 at 20; see JX 41 at 2; Krause Dep.
    83. Cf. JX 37 (Avago’s analysis of the proposal prepared by Barclays).
    27
    PTO ¶ 59; JX 551 at 20.
    8
    closing, Avago made two more attempts to submit a competing bid. Each time, the Board
    declined to engage.28
    In May 2012, Balch Hill announced that it supported the IDT transaction and had
    sold much of its position. The firm waited until October to withdraw its nominees.29
    D.     The IDT-PLX Deal Falls Through.
    On December 18, 2012, the Federal Trade Commission moved to block the IDT-
    PLX merger on antitrust grounds.30 The parties abandoned the deal the next day.31
    After the termination of the IDT deal, PLX’s stock price “declined precipitously.”32
    The Board decided that PLX needed a couple of quarters to stabilize before restarting a
    sale process in the second half of 2013.33
    To lead the recovery, the Board hired David Raun as the Company’s CEO.34
    Management told the markets that “[d]espite the turmoil of the last nine months, we are
    now a stronger and more resilient company.”35 Management noted that PLX had made a
    28
    JX 551 at 20.
    29
    JX 33 at 22; JX 551 at 20.
    30
    PTO ¶ 62; JX 55.
    31
    See PTO ¶ 63; JX 56 at 1; JX 57 at 1.
    32
    Singer Dep. 40.
    33
    Salameh Dep. 15-16; see also JX 59 (“the current plan is for the company to
    ‘recover’ from the long process of the IDT acquisition”).
    34
    JX 58 at 1–2.
    35
    JX 1006 at 1.
    9
    significant, well-received divestiture and was starting 2013 with its “highest-ever PCI
    Express market share” of nearly 70%.36
    E.    Singer Becomes Interested In PLX.
    The Company’s floundering stock price after the failed IDT transaction caught the
    attention of Eric Singer, who managed Potomac. His investment thesis was simple: “When
    the IDT deal fell apart, the stock declined precipitously, and in the company’s [proxy], it
    indicated there was a competitive bidder for PLX.”37 Because “the Board already made a
    decision to sell the company,” he felt that “they should go back to the other party in the
    bidding process” and follow through on a transaction.38
    On January 25, 2013, Potomac disclosed its ownership of 5.1% of the Company’s
    common stock.39 Potomac had acquired its position at prices ranging from $3.46 to $4.55
    per share.40 If Potomac could convince PLX to sell in the near term at something close to
    what IDT had offered, then Potomac would generate a healthy rate of return.41
    36
    
    Id. at 2.
          37
    Singer Dep. 40.
    38
    
    Id. at 41.
          39
    PTO ¶ 64.
    40
    See JX 65 at 10–11.
    41
    Cf. Riordan Dep. 80 (testifying that Singer only cared about getting “whatever
    premium he could get based on whatever he bought the stock at and whatever he could
    currently sell it at”).
    10
    To induce PLX to sell, Potomac sent a strongly worded letter to the Board that it
    also released publicly. Potomac “d[id] not believe that PLX should remain an
    independent public company” and called on PLX to “immediately commence a process
    of a thorough review of all strategic alternatives available to the Company.”42 Potomac
    urged that “action must be taken urgently and decisively” and that “[i]t is imperative that
    the Board and management translate this interest into a value-maximizing transaction.”43
    Singer made clear that he wanted PLX to talk to the other bidder who had come
    forward during the go-shop process: “One interested party submitted a formal
    competing offer to the Company proposing a potential all-cash acquisition of PLX.”44
    Potomac insisted that “it is time for the Board and management of the Company to give
    this competing proposal some serious consideration.”45 He added that “it is imperative
    and urgent that the Board and management immediately engage a nationally
    recognized investment bank and commence a robust process of exploration and
    evaluation of all available strategic options and value-maximizing opportunities.”46
    42
    JX 63 at 1; see also Schmitt Dep. 37–39.
    43
    JX 63 at 1.
    44
    JX 63 at 2.
    45
    
    Id. 46 Id.
    11
    Singer followed up this letter by leaving Raun a voice message and sending him an
    email requesting a call.47 Raun and Singer eventually spoke over the phone on January 30,
    2013, and Singer reiterated the views expressed in Potomac’s letter.48
    The Board correctly perceived that Singer wanted PLX sold. As the directors saw
    it, “Eric Singer’s position was that we should sell the company, and that was . . . his one
    and only agenda.”49 But the directors did not agree that an immediate sale was in the
    Company’s best interest.50
    On February 13, 2013, Potomac sent another public letter to the Board.51 Potomac
    again demanded that the Board “immediately commence a process of thorough review of
    all strategic alternatives available to PLX,” stressing that “[a]ction must be taken decisively
    and urgently.”52 Potomac argued that “shareholder value can best be created by capitalizing
    on the historic interest in PLX from potential acquirers, while leveraging the improved
    47
    JX 70 at 1.
    48
    
    Id. 49 Riordan
    Dep. 53; see also 
    id. at 76
    (Singer’s “clear intentions, what he told us,
    was that . . . we should sell the company”); Raun Dep. 217 (“I believe most of the time
    [Singer] was only interested in the sale of PLX in 2013”); Whipple Dep. 22 (describing
    Singer as the type of activist “who think they can achieve shareholder value by forcing the
    sale of the company” rather than the type who “join the board because they think they can
    make the operations better”).
    50
    See JX 74 at 2.
    51
    PTO ¶ 64; JX 77.
    52
    JX 77 at 2.
    12
    operating model of the Company.”53 Potomac added that “the Company’s strong
    fundamentals make it an attractive target of strategic interest.”54 Potomac concluded by
    calling for new directors who would “break the current Board’s historic complacency and
    reactive practices and ensure objective analysis of value enhancing opportunities.”55
    After Potomac’s second letter, PLX arranged a meeting.56 On February 26, 2013,
    Singer met with Company’s two senior executives, Raun and Art Whipple, the Company’s
    Chief Financial Officer, and two of its outside directors, co-founder Michael Salameh, who
    had served as CEO until 2008, and Tom Riordan.57 Singer took affront, expressing
    disappointment that PLX did not also send James Guzy, the Chairman of the Board, and
    Ralph Schmitt, Raun’s predecessor as CEO.58
    The PLX attendees did not have a good impression of Singer. Riordan reported that
    it was “not possible to have a constructive conversation with [Singer] because he doesn’t
    care one whit about the company or its employees or its contribution.”59 Whipple described
    53
    
    Id. 54 Id.
    at 3.
    55
    
    Id. 56 See
    JX 74; see also JX 70 at 1–2; JX 71 at 1; JX 73 at 1.
    57
    See JX 81 at 1; JX 89 at 1; Riordan Dep. 50, 52.
    58
    JX 82 at 1; JX 86 at 1.
    59
    JX 88 at 1; see also Riordan Dep. 47–55; 
    id. at 63
    (“Q. So did Singer make any
    operational suggestions about what the company could do differently? A. Other than for
    all the board to resign, no.”).
    13
    Singer’s “apparent knowledge of PLX [as] broad but shallow. We asked him several times
    what he thought we could do differently that would deliver shareholder value. He was
    blank.”60
    F.     Avago Reappears.
    Like Singer, Avago saw the failed IDT deal as an opportunity and began
    accumulating PLX shares. By January 22, 2013, Avago had accumulated a 3.1% stake.61
    With the assistance of Barclays Capital, Inc.,62 Avago examined strategies for completing
    an acquisition, including via hostile bid.63
    60
    JX 89 at 1; accord Riordan Dep. at 17; JX 102 at 2. At trial, Singer disagreed with
    the directors’ accounts. See Singer Tr. 81–83, 85–88. On this issue and on others, Singer
    was not a credible witness. Compare, e.g., Whipple Dep. at 53 (testifying that Singer
    “routinely threatened management and board members that he was going to sue them
    individually . . . if they didn’t do what he wanted them to do”), and Riordan Dep. 68–69
    (“Q. But he threatened to sue you? A. Yeah, he did that all the time, right. That was his
    standard.”), and Schmitt Dep. 30 (testifying that Singer “threatened . . . lawsuits all the
    time. That was his mode of operation at that point.”), with Singer Tr. 79–80, 83 (“Q. But
    they were right that you were planning to threaten people and be a bully. Right? A. I don’t
    believe so.”; “I don’t believe Mr. Whipple—look, this is a sound bite of 30 seconds. I never
    threatened a director if they were not doing what I wanted them to do. . . . For him to make
    a statement that I routinely threatened people if they didn’t do what I wanted, I believe
    that’s a categorically false statement”; “I don’t believe that that’s an accurate statement”;
    “I think that’s completely . . . incorrect.”)
    61
    See JX 61 at 2.
    62
    See JX 60–61; Krause Dep. 36–37.
    63
    JX 61 at 13.
    14
    On February 25, 2013, the night before the PLX representatives met with Singer,
    Guzy and Raun had dinner with Avago’s CEO, Hock Tan.64 The next day, Avago proposed
    to acquire PLX for $6.00 per share in cash.65
    During a meeting on February 27, 2013, the Board received updates on Avago and
    Potomac. The directors decided to seek an improved offer from Avago.66 They instructed
    Whipple “to provide a three-year business plan for review by the Board and to approach
    one or more investment bankers for valuation estimates on a no-fee basis.”67 Anticipating
    that Singer would launch a proxy contest, they retained MacKenzie Partners, Inc. as their
    proxy advisor.68
    On March 1, 2013, Schmitt spoke with Tan. Tan said that Avago could “go higher”
    but that PLX would need “to make the case.”69 After some back and forth, they agreed that
    “$6 is a good starting point and $7 may be too high.” 70 Tan argued that his board “would
    64
    JX 75.
    65
    JX 87 at 1; see also Krause Dep. 88–89.
    66
    JX 92 at 1.
    67
    
    Id. 68 PTO
    ¶ 67.
    69
    JX 94 at 1.
    70
    
    Id. 15 not
    understand” if he offered the same price as IDT, because IDT had to propose “a higher
    premium due to structure and need to keep their position in the market.”71
    G.    Potomac Nominates A Slate of Directors.
    On March 6, 2013, Potomac nominated its slate of candidates.72 In addition to
    Singer, the nominees were:
     Martin Colombatto, “a director of ClariPhy Communications, Inc., a
    leading developer of highly integrated single chip optical transceivers . .
    . , and Luxtera Corp., a world leader in silicon photonics solutions.”73
     Stephen Domenik, “a general partner with Sevin Rosen Funds, a venture
    capital firm.”74
     Mark Schwartz, “a director of Pepex Biomedical, Inc., a medical device
    company,” and “PurchasePoint Design, a company specializing in point
    of purchase display and product design.”75
     Arthur Swift, the CEO “of CUPP Computing AS, a supplier of security
    solutions for mobile devices.”76
    Colombatto and Schwartz had served as nominees for Balch Hill.77
    The Board met that same day . It reviewed the revised three-year plan that Whipple
    had prepared and instructed Deutsche Bank to “prepare an analysis of the Company based
    71
    
    Id. 72 JX
    98.
    73
    
    Id. at 3.
          74
    Id.
    75
    
    Id. at 4.
          76
    
    Id. 77 Compare
    JX 14 at 3–4, with JX 98 at 3–4.
    16
    on the updated plan and current market conditions.”78 The Board directed Raun to tell
    Avago that PLX’s value was “substantially above” $6.00 per share. On Potomac, the Board
    directed management “to take no action at this time” other than to “determine whether the
    nomination letter . . . was in good form.”79
    The next day, Raun told Singer that “publicly threatening us with a proxy contest”
    was not a productive step.80 Raun also expressed his disappointment that Singer still had
    not provided any suggestions for operational improvements or strategic initiatives.81 Singer
    stayed on message, responding that “the Company should open up discussions again with
    the competing bidders . . . from last year’s sales process.”82
    On March 15, 2013, the Board met again.83 Using management’s projections as a
    base case, Deutsche Bank presented a valuation range for the Company of $5.25 to $7.78
    per share, with a midpoint of $6.41.84 The downside case ranged from $4.06 to $5.89, with
    78
    JX 99 at 2.
    79
    
    Id. 80 JX
    100.
    81
    
    Id. 82 JX
    101 at 1.
    83
    JX 111 at 1.
    84
    JX 108 at 3; see Raun Dep. 222–24.
    17
    a midpoint of $4.91.85 Deutsche Bank reported that it had received four “unsolicited
    inquiries” about the Company.86
    On March 19, 2013, Raun met with Singer at a conference and offered to provide
    additional information subject to a non-disclosure agreement. Singer declined.87
    On March 20, 2013, Singer offered to settle the proxy contest for two board seats,
    to be filled by Domenik and himself.88 He also wanted the Board to “form[] a strategic
    committee of five members to explore all strategic alternatives and appoint[] Eric Singer
    and Steven Domenik to this committee.”89 After the Board rejected his proposal,90 Singer
    told Raun that “Potomac will not hesitate to take all necessary action to protect its
    investment, including to take our ideas directly to our fellow stockholders and ask them to
    support the election of our nominees.”91
    85
    JX 108 at 3.
    86
    
    Id. at 13.
    In April 2013, Cowen and Company provided Whipple with its thoughts
    on the Company’s value. Cowen’s base case valued PLX at $4.92 to $6.51 per share, with
    a midpoint of $5.66; its upside case valued PLX at $6.66 to $9.01 per share, with a midpoint
    of $7.75. JX 136 at 9, 14–15.
    87
    JX 120 at 1. Cf. Singer Tr. 60–61, 92–94; Whipple Dep. 67 (“He was offered, in
    many cases, the opportunity to come in and be an observer on the board, and he declined
    any participation to do that.”).
    88
    JX 117.
    89
    
    Id. 90 See
    JX 120 at 1; JX 121 at 1–2.
    91
    JX 126.
    18
    By April 19, 2013, Potomac had increased its stake to 7.0% of the Company.92
    During a call on April 19, Singer told Salameh that he might “take it upon himself to contact
    prospective acquirers to solicit their interest in PLX and may also seek to involve an
    investment banker.”93
    H.     Further Discussions With Avago
    While Potomac pushed for a sale, PLX engaged in further discussions with Avago.94
    On April 25, 2013, the Board decided to formally reject Avago’s $6.00 offer, concluding
    that the proposal “did not adequately reflect full and fair value to the Company’s
    shareholders.”95 In a letter dated April 29, 2013, PLX informed Avago of this decision and
    asked Avago for its best and final offer.96 Instead of offering a higher price, Avago
    “inquir[ed] about next steps to advance discussions between the companies” and
    “confirmed . . . that they had a stock position” in PLX.97
    92
    PTO ¶ 70.
    93
    JX 245 at 15. At trial, Singer could not recall his threats to put the Company in
    play. See Singer Tr. 89-92 (“I don’t recall that.” “I don’t recall it . . . .” “There’s no record
    of that conversation.” “Just to clarify, I have no recollection of saying this.”).
    94
    See JX 139 at 2; JX 146 at 2–3.
    95
    JX 150 at 2; see also Riordan Dep. 87–90 (testifying that his view “was based on
    the potential for PCI-Express to significantly increase in revenue based on it being
    successful in one of the two businesses, either the ExpressFabric business or the solid state
    disk business”).
    96
    JX 153 at 2; see also JX 150 at 2; JX 152 at 1.
    97
    JX 158 at 1.
    19
    On May 3, 2013, the Board decided to break off discussions with Avago.98 The
    Board instructed Salameh to inform Avago “that the $6.00/share proposal does not reflect
    full value for the Company and that ‘the price should start with a 7.’”99 That afternoon,
    Salameh conveyed the message to Thomas Krause, Avago’s Vice President for Corporate
    Development.100 Krause responded that “$6 is the right price” and that Avago could not go
    higher.101 He also indicated that Avago was prepared to launch a hostile tender offer if PLX
    did not agree to a deal.”102 Salameh reiterated “that an offer should start with a 7.”103
    On May 9, 2013, Avago’s bankers at Barclays followed up with Salameh, noted that
    there was an “activist shareholder in the background,” and again mentioned “the potential
    of a tender offer or a public letter from Avago.”104 Salameh reiterated that the price “should
    start with a 7.”105 Avago went silent.106
    98
    
    Id. at 2.
           99
    
    Id. 100 JX
    161 at 1.
    101
    Id.
    102
    
    Id. at 2.
           103
    
    Id. 104 JX
    165.
    105
    
    Id. 106 See
    JX 181 at 2; Krause Dep. 97–98.
    20
    I.     Potomac Continues To Apply Pressure.
    By June 27, 2013, Potomac had increased its stake to 9.4% of the Company’s
    shares.107 Singer wanted “the board to be reconstituted” and suggested that the directors
    agree to a “graceful transition.”108 That same day, Potomac served a demand for books and
    records on the Company. In the demand, Potomac asserted that the directors had “a
    fiduciary duty to stockholders to explore all strategic alternatives for the Company.”109 The
    demand sought books and records regarding:
    (i) “any alternative acquisition proposal presented or considered by the Board
    during the Company’s ‘go-shop’ period”;
    (ii) “any potential acquisition, sale, merger or business combination
    including, but not limited to, indications of interest or rejected offers”;
    (iii) “any strategic alternatives being considered by the Company including
    advice, reports or recommendations from the Company’s investment
    bankers”; and
    (iv) “any communications with third-parties, including potential acquirors or
    acquirees, regarding any potential acquisition, sale, merger or business
    combination.”110
    On July 5, the Company rejected the demand as resting on “bare accusations” and seeking
    documents that were not “essential and sufficient to discharge the stated purposes.”111
    107
    PTO ¶ 73; JX 176 at 16.
    108
    JX 177 at 1.
    109
    JX 178 at 2.
    110
    
    Id. at 3.
           111
    JX 179 at 1.
    21
    On July 25, 2013, Salameh and Riordan met with Singer.112 Singer accused the
    directors of being “incompetent” and said they “had run the company into the ground.”113
    “[H]e threatened to hold [Riordan] personally liable for the failures of the company.”114 He
    asserted that the directors “should all be replaced and they should just sell the company.”115
    After the meeting, Singer sent Riordan an antagonistic letter.116 Singer reiterated
    that his “primary interest is to encourage management and the Board to take immediate
    steps to enhance stockholder value.”117 He concluded by threatening that “[w]e will not
    112
    JX 184 at 1.
    113
    JX 185 at 1; see also Riordan Dep. 82 (testifying Singer made this accusation
    “every time [PLX directors] talked to him”); Whipple Dep. 52 (according to Singer
    “[e]verything that anybody does is horrible or wonderful; and as far as he’s concerned,
    nothing that PLX had managed to do was wonderful”).
    114
    JX 185 at 1; see also Riordan Dep. 68-69 (“Q. But he threatened to sue you? A.
    Yeah, he did that all the time, right. That was his standard.”); Schmitt Dep. 30 (testifying
    that Singer “threatened . . . lawsuits all the time. That was his mode of operation at that
    point.”); Whipple Dep. 53 (testifying Singer “routinely threatened management and board
    members that he was going to sue them individually . . . if they didn’t do what he wanted
    them to do”).
    115
    Riordan Dep. 53; see also 
    id. at 80
    (testifying Singer only cared about getting
    “whatever premium he could get based on whatever he bought the stock at and whatever
    he could currently sell it at”); 
    id. at 47
    (“You don’t have to be a mind reader. As we’ve
    talked about for hours now, that’s what he said he wanted done. He wanted the company
    sold. He made no—he made no [a]llusions to anything other than that. [‘]I want you to sell
    the company.[’]”).
    116
    JX 187.
    117
    
    Id. 22 hesitate
    to hold you and the rest of the Board personally liable for any failure to fully and
    faithfully discharge such obligations.”118
    Salameh responded and expressed “strong[] disagree[ment]” with Singer’s
    position.119 He noted that “[w]hile we can appreciate that, as an activist hedge fund with a
    relatively short-term horizon, you would like to be able to force an event that would allow
    you to profitably liquidate the position you have been accumulating,” the Board had a
    fiduciary obligation to “consider the interests of the holders of PLX stock that you do not
    represent, particularly the holders that may have a longer time horizon than Potomac
    Capital.”120
    J.     The Fall 2013 Market Check
    During a meeting on August 6, 2013, the Board discussed what other action to take
    in response to Potomac’s campaign.121 Deutsche Bank advised that nearly 60% of activist
    campaigns in the semiconductor sector had resulted in sales, with another 35% still
    ongoing.122 Deutsche Bank saw three options: engage in a proxy fight, settle with Potomac,
    118
    
    Id. 119 JX
    189 at 1.
    120
    
    Id. at 2;
    see also Salameh Dep. 32–35.
    121
    PTO ¶ 74.
    122
    JX 190 at 9.
    23
    or sell the company.123 Deutsche Bank believed that selling in the near term could “leave[]
    value on the table.”124
    After excusing Deutsch Bank, the directors revisited their desire to wait for “a few
    quarters” after the failed IDT merger before re-starting a sale process so that the Company
    could “realize the improved value of . . . structural changes [and the] PCIe Gen3
    designs.”125 Despite this plan, the directors concluded that the Company had done enough
    and that “the timing seemed optimal” for “pursuing . . . an affirmative process.”126 The
    Board made this decision to head off Potomac’s proxy contest; without Potomac’s
    presence, the Board would not have been so quick to start a process.127
    123
    JX 190 at 20–21; see also Schmitt Dep. 47–52.
    124
    JX 190 at 16.
    125
    JX 195 at 1.
    126
    
    Id. at 2.
           127
    See Schmitt Dep at 52 (“In a normal business environment, we did not believe it
    was best to sell the company. Given the situation, that may have caused us to look at things
    a little differently.”); Raun Dep. 339–43 (recalling the Company reinitiated a market check
    because “we had some ongoing interest in the company at different points in time and it
    made sense to maybe formalize a process and do a market check to see if there was a party
    that was in the best interest of the company” and suggesting a price of $7 at that time “was
    obtainable”); Riordan Dep. 188–89 (“[T]his is putting ourselves in the shoes of the activist
    shareholder an saying, you know, what does the activist shareholder want us to do,
    therefore we should get out in front of that and see what . . . the market says and not be
    driven by the activist shareholder.”).
    24
    On August 15, 2013, the Board resolved to create a Special Committee “to select
    advisors and run an affirmative process to consider the sale of the Company.”128 On August
    17, the Board gave the Special Committee the following more detailed charge:
    (i) solicit and evaluate strategic alternatives available to the Company for
    maximizing stockholder value; (ii) evaluate and make recommendations to
    the Board with respect to any strategic alternatives, solicited or unsolicited,
    that may be proposed by parties interested in entering into a strategic
    transaction with the Company; (iii) take all necessary action, as the Special
    Committee shall determine necessary or appropriate to defend the Company
    with respect to any proxy contest or other activist campaign initiated or
    threatened by any person or entity against the Company; and (iv) report all
    conclusions and recommendations to the Board for its information and
    consideration of any binding action.129
    The members of the committee were Salameh, Schmitt, John Hart, and Robert Smith.130
    With Deutsche Bank’s help, the Special Committee decided to approach a list of
    potential bidders without making a public announcement.131 By September 5, 2013,
    Deutsche Bank had arranged three meetings, including one with Avago, and identified six
    to eight interested prospects.132
    128
    JX 201 at 1; see also PTO ¶ 75; JX 203 at 2.
    129
    JX 203 at 2; see also 
    id. at 4;
    PTO ¶ 76; Hart Dep. 19-24 (describing the Special
    Committee’s charge as considering “should we go it alone or should we . . . continue to . .
    . pursue getting purchased, and are there any good buyers out there”); Riordan Dep. 106–
    07 (agreeing “that the authorization of the Special Committee was prompted by Potomac’s
    interaction”).
    130
    JX 201 at 1; JX 203 at 1; Raun Dep. 67–70.
    131
    JX 205 at 1–2.
    132
    JX 208 at 1.
    25
    Management presentations began in mid-September. The presentation materials
    cited the Company’s strengths, including its status as a “leading provider of PCI express
    connectivity products with more than 70% market share,”133 the potential for
    ExpressFabric to “double [the] served market,”134 and the Company’s projected year-over-
    year growth of 33.9% by 2017, resulting in gross profit of $156 million.135 During the
    presentations, management explained that PLX would “grow at least 25% per year based
    on conservative assumptions, and pointed out many realistic opportunities for substantial
    upside.”136
    On September 25, 2013, Deutsche Bank reported to the Special Committee that it
    had contacted fifteen potential bidders, and nine had executed non-disclosure
    agreements.137 All nine expressed significant interest, and Avago expressed a willingness
    to “increase [its] offer above $6/share.”138 Other bidders expressed “concern with the
    current stock market valuation of the Company.”139
    133
    JX 206 at 7.
    134
    
    Id. 135 Id.
    at 9.
    136
    JX 211 at 1.
    137
    PTO ¶ 78; JX 215 at 5–6; JX 217 at 1; Cho Dep. 195–96.
    138
    JX 215 at 5; see also JX 217 at 1 (suggesting “that Avago appears to remain
    interested in exploring a transaction with the Company but is not willing to participate in a
    competitive sales process”).
    139
    JX 217 at 1.
    26
    Deutsche Bank also presented the Special Committee with an updated valuation.140
    Using a discounted cash flow methodology, Deutsche Bank’s base case valued the
    company at between $8.31 and $11.06 per share, with a midpoint of $9.59.141 Its downside
    case valued the Company at between $4.83 and $6.27 per share, with a midpoint of
    $5.50.142
    On October 1, 2013, Cypress Semiconductor Corporation submitted an indication
    of interest in a cash deal at a “price per share in the range of $6.50 to $7.50” and requested
    two weeks of exclusivity.143 Deutsche Bank thought there were three other bidders who
    had serious interest—Inphi Corporation, LSI Corporation, and Avago—and advised
    against exclusivity.144 The Special Committee agreed.145 All four parties ultimately
    declined to bid.146
    140
    
    Id. 141 JX
    215 at 16.
    142
    
    Id. 143 JX
    219 at 1; see also PTO ¶ 79; Cho Dep. 197–99.
    144
    JX 220 at 1–2.
    145
    JX 221 at 1.
    146
    PTO ¶¶ 79, 82; see also JX 225 at 1; JX 236 at 1; JX 239 at 1; JX 243; JX 253 at
    1; Raun Dep. 344–52.
    27
    K.     The Proxy Contest
    On November 8, 2013, Potomac filed a definitive proxy statement that sought to
    elect Singer, Domenik, and Colombatto as replacements for Riordan, Smith, and Guzy. 147
    During the ensuing proxy contest, Potomac criticized the incumbent directors for their long
    tenure and lack of significant stock ownership. Potomac stressed that the Board should
    “immediately commence a thorough review of all strategic alternatives available to the
    Company.”148 Although Potomac acknowledged recent improvements, Potomac argued
    that these successes should be “translated into a value-maximizing transaction.”149 As
    Potomac’s campaign mounted, other activist investors bought shares and voiced their
    support for Potomac’s slate.150
    The directors’ proxy materials stressed that they were “open to selling the
    company.”151 They argued that stockholders would be best served “by the current Board
    and our program to strengthen the company while remaining open to value-maximizing
    transactions.”152 They criticized Potomac for having “consistently expressed its desire to
    147
    PTO ¶ 85; JX 255 at 19–20; see also JX 270 at 45–48. Cf. JX 2018 at 2; Singer
    Tr. 84, 309–12, 321.
    148
    JX 245 at 4; see also JX 241 at 1.
    149
    JX 245 at 11; see also JX 260 at 1-2 (Potomac asserting that its slate would
    “maximize stockholder value for all”); PTO ¶ 86.
    150
    See JX 258 at 1; JX 262 at 1.
    151
    JX 246 at 1. Cf. JX 257; JX 259; JX 282.
    152
    JX 246 at 1.
    28
    have the Company sold immediately.”153 They described Potomac’s agenda as “self-
    serving and transparent – its primary goal is to force a quick sale of the Company in order
    to realize a short-term gain on its investment, to fulfill the demands of its own investors,
    and to transition capital to its next target, without regard for the best interests of all PLX
    Technology stockholders.”154
    The directors maintained that the Company was “executing well.”155 They cited its
    market share of “70 percent . . . and growing,” “three consecutive profitable quarters,” “the
    highest year-to-date profits in the Company’s 27-year history,” and the Company’s plan
    “to quadruple the size of the addressable market by 2017.”156
    As in many proxy contests, the outcome turned on the recommendation of
    Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. (“ISS”), and both sides worked on presentations that
    would convince ISS to support their nominees. Potomac’s internal communications show
    that Singer had no meaningful ideas other than selling the Company. Potomac struggled to
    come up with “specific ideas on what we will do differently” because “the company is
    taking all the right steps.”157 Singer personally could not come up with anything, so his
    153
    JX 257 at 3.
    154
    JX 282 at 3; see also 
    id. at 33,
    36; accord Whipple Dep. 73–75; Raun Dep. 284–
    85; Hart Dep. 24–29.
    155
    JX 257 at 3.
    156
    
    Id. at 3–4
    (emphasis omitted); see also JX 259 at 5. Cf. PTO ¶ 86; Schmitt Dep.
    55–60; Riordan Dep. 13–21; Salameh Dep. 279–81.
    157
    JX 265 at 1.
    29
    proxy advisor offered some generic ideas that “[h]istorically . . . have worked” at other
    companies.158 Potomac’s presentation ultimately focused on the Company’s historical
    losses, its failed acquisitions in 2009 and 2010, and its failure to meet revenue forecasts in
    2012, 2013, and 2014.159 As its “plan,” Potomac incorporated nearly verbatim its proxy
    advisor’s generic list of ideas.160
    PLX’s presentation was detailed and substantive.161 It emphasized the incumbent
    directors’ willingness to sell the Company if warranted, as evidenced by the IDT
    transaction.162 It also emphasized the Company’s improving product pipeline163 and rapidly
    growing market share.164 PLX described Potomac as “a self-interested activist investor that
    is focused on short-term gains at the expense of other PLX Technology stockholders.”165
    158
    JX 266 at 2.
    159
    JX 270 at 29–30.
    160
    Compare 
    id. at 40,
    with JX 266 at 2; see Singer Tr. 122–24; see also JX 282 at
    65 (describing Potomac’s plan as “a summary of the same plan PLX ha[d] been executing
    under the current Board for a year, and ha[d] been described by PLX in investor
    presentations throughout the year”). At trial, Singer testified that Potomac presented
    numerous ways to improve PLX’s operations. Singer Tr. 114–19. That testimony was not
    accurate.
    161
    Cf. JX 276.
    162
    JX 276 at 7; see also JX 282 at 58.
    163
    See JX 282 at 19 (explaining that the “[d]esign activity pipe (which measures our
    future potential annual revenue)” had more than tripled since 2009).
    164
    JX 282 at 20 (noting the “improved competitive landscape”).
    165
    JX 277 at 55 (emphasis omitted); see also JX 282 at 36 (“Potomac has not
    engaged constructively and has been disruptive to the business of PLX as your Board
    continues to enhance shareholder value.”); 
    id. at 3
    (“Potomac Capital’s agenda appears
    30
    On December 6, 2013, ISS endorsed Potomac’s slate. ISS noted that PLX’s share
    price had outperformed its peers, but posited that the stock had been “bid up by the prospect
    of a future transaction, and large positional swings of the dissident and other large
    shareholders, rather than shareholder’s belief in core improvement in operating
    fundamentals.”166 ISS also expressed concern about the incumbent directors’ long
    tenure.167
    After ISS issued its endorsement, PLX management began preparing for a Potomac
    victory and the arrival of three new directors.168 Riordan felt that once the Potomac
    nominees joined the Board, selling the Company was “a done deal” and a “fait
    accompli.”169
    self-serving and transparent—its primary goal is to force a quick sale of the Company in
    order to realize a short-term gain on its investment, to fulfill the demands of its own
    investors, and to transition capital to its next target, without regard for the best interests of
    all PLX Technology stockholders.”); Hart Dep. 24–29; Raun Dep. 284–85.
    166
    JX 288 at 15.
    167
    
    Id. at 16–17.
           168
    See JX 308 (preparing for onboarding of three new directors); JX 322 at 1
    (reorganizing committees immediately prior to annual stockholder meeting in light of
    anticipated arrival of new directors).
    169
    Riordan Dep. 110–12 (emphasis added); accord Whipple Dep. 76 (explaining
    that after ISS endorsed Potomac’s nominees, he believed a sale of the Company was
    “virtually assured”).
    31
    L.     The December 2013 Projections
    In late November and early December 2013, Whipple began the process of
    preparing the next update of the Company’s business plan.170 The Company historically
    prepared a three-year plan and treated the first year as its annual operating plan. 171 For
    2013, Raun directed Whipple and his financial team to prepare a five year plan.172
    Consistent with its standard practice, the team obtained information about year-one
    revenue from the sales organization.173 For subsequent years, the team generated revenue
    estimates based on their internal views about PLX’s products and pipeline as well as
    external industry reports about market trends.174 Once the revenue targets were established,
    the individual business units developed spending plans to support those targets. 175 Senior
    management debated the resulting figures and made adjustments “to get what . . . the
    company believes is the right number.”176
    170
    See JX 285 at 1; see also JX 286 at 1.
    Whipple Dep. 94–95 (“[E]very year around Thanksgiving, we sat down as a
    171
    group and we did a three—typically a three-year plan, which—the first year of which
    became our budget for the following year.”).
    172
    JX 285 at 1; see JX 286 at 1; Whipple Dep. 96.
    173
    Whipple Dep. 94–95.
    174
    See JX 307; Quintero Tr. 593–95; Whipple Dep. 95.
    175
    Whipple Dep. 95; see also JX 296.
    176
    Whipple Dep. 106; see also JX 295.
    32
    On December 10, 2013, management provided the directors with its proposed five-
    year plan.177 In small print, at the bottom of a summary page, management described the
    assumptions on which the plan was based:
    5 year plan summary updated December 2013 for 2014 BOD AOP Meeting.
    Assumes continued investments in R&D and SG&A to support growth past
    2018 unlike plan for market check where projected expense growth was to
    support products in plan but not products beyond plan. Headcount is end of
    year headcount with many positions filled in 2nd half and dependent on
    financial performance up to that point in time. 2014 and future require
    higher PCIe growth than seen recently. Although this is an aggressive plan
    compared to the past couple years performance and where we stand today
    in a market with soft demand, management believes we should drive
    internally for this number as the plan. The key will be getting our strong Gen
    3 design pipeline into production, a stable economy and a return of federal
    spending with our end customers.178
    This language has the look and feel of a customary disclaimer paragraph, yet the six-word
    introductory phrase that begins the penultimate sentence—“[a]lthough this is an aggressive
    plan”—took on disproportionate importance later in the sale process when it became clear
    that the projections supported standalone valuations for the Company that exceeded
    Avago’s bid. During this litigation, the concept of an “aggressive plan” became a mantra
    for the defense witnesses, most of whom were named defendants who had not yet settled
    when they testified by deposition. They repeated those words frequently and volunteered
    them gratuitously as if they had been instructed to mention them as often as possible. Their
    177
    PTO ¶ 91.
    178
    JX 293 at 8. Cf. JX 298 at 7.
    33
    coordinated, redundant, and excessively emphatic performances undermined their
    credibility.
    During a Board meeting on December 12, 2013, management discussed the plan
    with the Board.179 The directors suggested minor changes, but otherwise endorsed the
    projections.180 The next day, Raun distributed an updated plan “based on the conversation
    yesterday at the Board meeting and further review with the management team.” 181 The
    revised plan included minor reductions to 2014 revenue and spending and “slight”
    reductions to revenues in the projected years.182 At a meeting on December 13, the Board
    approved the plan.183 This decision refers to the resulting plan as the “December 2013
    Projections.”
    During subsequent months, the Company used the plan in the ordinary course of
    business as if the Board and management believed it represented the Company’s best
    estimates of its future performance. In April 2014, the Board signed off on a proposal for
    D&O insurance based on the December 2013 Projections.184 The Board also signed off on
    179
    See PTO ¶ 92; JX 298; JX 303; Raun Dep. 137–44.
    180
    See Raun Dep. 137–42.
    181
    JX 304 at 1; see also JX 305 at 1; JX 307 at 1; Raun Dep. 372–78; Whipple
    Dep. 126–30.
    182
    JX 304 at 1.
    183
    JX 306 at 2; see PTO ¶ 93. Cf. JX 309.
    184
    See JX 383 at 32; JX 398 at 1; see also JX 396 at 4–5.
    34
    an executive compensation program based on the December 2013 Projections.185 It was
    only after Avago’s bid that PLX began backing away from these figures, and only during
    this litigation that its witnesses derided the numbers as unreliably aggressive.
    M.     The Potomac Nominees Join The Board.
    On December 18, 2013, PLX held its regular annual stockholder meeting. 186 The
    stockholders elected Colombatto, Domenik, and Singer.187 Led by Salameh, the incumbent
    directors made a genuine effort to welcome the new directors to the Board.188
    185
    See JX 385 at 20, 61; JX 398 at 2.
    186
    PTO ¶ 94.
    187
    Id.; JX 328.
    188
    See, e.g., JX 317 at 1 (Salameh welcoming the new directors to the Board); JX
    321 at 1 (Salameh telling Singer that “[i]n the discussion we had this morning, I got a much
    better idea of the experience, contacts and perspective the three of you have. It[’]s going to
    help our efforts to maximize shareholder value immensely. Marty [Colambatto’s]
    background at Broadcom and LSI I am sure is going to be a huge asset.”); JX 333 at 1
    (Salameh emailing Colambatto, “Marty, thanks for diving in. Your questions point to the
    key strategic decisions for PLX and provide a good structure for a follow-up session. Your
    background in building the Ethernet business at Broadcom is extremely relevant and will
    add a fresh perspective. It[’]s important for all the new board members to understand the
    business in some depth before we make any big decisions, and these informal sessions are
    a good way to build that knowledge.”); JX 335 at 1 (Schmitt observing that Singer had
    “commented on how impressed he is with [Raun] and how dedicated [he is] to getting a
    good result. That it could be [through] a transaction or not.”); JX 354 at 1 (Raun emailing
    Schmitt and Salameh that he “had a good discussion with Eric [Singer] last night in New
    York.”); Salameh Dep. 220 (“I was pleased by all three directors . . . . I was very impressed
    with . . . Marty Colombatto’s knowledge and his attitude. Steve Domenik was also a very
    experienced executive who had a very balanced view. Eric [Singer] was approaching it in
    a very professional manner. So I was very happy with how things changed after the annual
    meeting.”); Schmitt Dep. 158 (“My perception of how he looked at [the Company] was, he
    was more impressed with the company than he was . . . from an overall perspective,
    people[,] process, than he was being on the outside, looking in, having now seen . . . all the
    detail work . . . and things that have been going on.”).
    35
    Immediately after the annual meeting, Salameh met with Singer and Domenik and
    briefed them about the Company and its sale process. 189 In a private email to Singer,
    Domenik expressed his view that “the strategic effort needs more energy.” 190 Singer
    responded that the Board was “crazy for turning down $6+ from [A]vago [a] few months
    ago.”191 After the meeting with Salameh, management sent Singer the materials that the
    Company was using with potential buyers.192 PLX also set up a meeting with Deutsche
    Bank so the new directors could get their views on the Company’s prospects.193
    On December 19, 2013, a development occurred that mitigated any need for Singer
    to push hard for a near-term sale: Krause contacted Adam Howell, a managing director at
    Deutsche Bank who was advising PLX. A few days earlier, Avago had announced an
    agreement to acquire LSI, one of PLX’s competitors that had shown interest in the
    Company during its earlier quiet shopping process. A different team from Deutsche Bank
    had represented Avago on its acquisition of LSI.194
    189
    JX 317.
    190
    JX 315 at 1.
    191
    
    Id. 192 See
    JX 319.
    193
    See JX 317 at 1.
    194
    See JX 311.
    36
    Krause explained to Howell that he “saw the PLX BoD transition” but that because
    of the LSI acquisition, Avago would be in the “penalty box” until that deal closed.195 Once
    the LSI transaction was complete, Avago would be “open for business on all topics,”
    including an acquisition of PLX.196 Krause described buying PLX as “an interesting little
    deal but only at the right price.”197 He also called the PLX acquisition a “$300M deal.”198
    With 45.9 million shares outstanding, this figure equated to $6.53 per share.199
    Singer spoke with Deutsche Bank later that day. Singer asked about Avago, and
    Deutsche Bank “gave him the color” on the conversation with Krause. 200 Based on this
    195
    JX 1032 at 2.
    196
    
    Id. 197 Id.
           198
    
    Id. Potomac objected
    to the admission of JX 1026–32 as untimely. The plaintiffs
    introduced these exhibits to impeach Singer’s trial testimony about his interactions with
    Deutsche Bank and its interactions with Avago. The pre-trial order permitted the parties
    “in good faith to supplement the Joint Exhibit List with additional documents through the
    end of trial.” PTO ¶ 150. Both sides submitted additional evidence during trial. The
    challenged documents were produced during discovery and fairly responded to Singer’s
    testimony. Furthermore, the plaintiffs sought to recall Singer to question him about the
    documents, which would have enabled him to explain them, but Potomac objected, and I
    sustained the objection. See Tr. 571-74. The documents are properly admitted. Potomac
    could have had Singer address them but chose not to subject him to further examination.
    199
    See JX 551 at 4.
    200
    See JX 1031 at 1 (“[Singer] asked if I thought Avago would do anything now
    and I gave him the color from my Krause email.”). That evening, Singer e-mailed Howell
    and his colleague, Thomas Cho, to introduce them to Domenik. Singer suggested that “all
    of you should get to together when schedules permit to bring Steve [Domenik] up to speed
    in person” and indicated that Domenik’s “deep involvement is essential for a successful
    outcome at PLX.” JX 325. It seems likely that Deutsche Bank also shared Krause’s tip
    with Domenik and that he was part of the conspiracy of silence. Based on the allegations
    in the complaint, I dismissed the claims against Domenik at the pleadings stage. The
    37
    call, Singer knew about (i) Avago’s interest in a deal for PLX at $300 million and (ii)
    Avago’s temporary inability to engage because of the LSI acquisition. Singer already knew
    that Avago was the most likely bidder for PLX. As a result of Krause’s conversation with
    Deutsche Bank, Singer knew when Avago would be able to bid and how much Avago
    wanted to pay.
    On December 20, 2013, PLX held an informal meeting to bring Singer and his
    fellow new directors up to speed on the Company and its sale process.201 When reporting
    on the status of various contacts in its “Process Summary,” Deutsche Bank provided the
    following information about Avago:
         Interested and potentially willing to increase offer above $6/share
     Not willing to discuss price until confirmation of being able to move
    quickly and likely in exclusivity
     Willing to wait until process is finished at which point they can decide if
    price is right.202
    plaintiffs have not sought to modify that interlocutory ruling, and they focused their attacks
    at trial on Singer, not on Domenik. This decision therefore speaks in terms of Singer having
    known about the tip and not sharing it with the other directors, even though that charge
    likely could be leveled at Domenik as well.
    201
    See JX 329; see also JX 323 (Deutsche Bank presentation); JX 1000
    (management presentations).
    202
    See JX 323 at 4.
    38
    There is no evidence that Singer or Deutsche Bank reported on Krause’s call, shared
    Avago’s plan to return to PLX after completing the LSI acquisition, or mentioned the
    valuation of $300 million that Avago was contemplating.203
    N.     The Four-Month Quiet Period
    From January until April 2014, knowing that Avago was digesting the LSI
    acquisition, Singer did not push hard for a sale. He could afford to be more subtle.
    On January 23, 2014, the Board held its first formal meeting with the new
    directors.204 Management reported on the Company’s disappointing fourth quarter.205
    Although the Company met its public guidance for both net revenues and gross margins,
    the results fell below the annual operating plan.206 Despite the soft quarter, 2013 had not
    been bad overall. Revenues came in 3.3% below the annual operating plan, and gross
    margins were just 0.7% below it.207
    During the meeting, the Board assigned the new directors to committees. 208 Before
    the meeting, Singer asked to chair the Compensation, Nominating, and Special
    203
    Deutsche Bank did reach out to Raun, Schmidt, and Salameh to tell them about
    Avago’s agreement to acquire LSI, but that call occurred before Krause contacted Deutsche
    Bank. See JX 311.
    204
    See JX 360 at 1.
    205
    See 
    id. 206 JX
    355 at 4–6, 11.
    207
    
    Id. at 6.
           208
    See JX 360 at 2–3.
    39
    Committees, noting that he was “most interested in the Special Committee and
    Comp[ensation] [C]omittee.”209 The Board made him chair of the Special Committee and
    the Nominating Committee and a member of the Compensation Committee.210 Colombatto
    also joined the Compensation Committee, and Domenik joined the Audit Committee. 211
    The Board reconstituted the Special Committee as the “Strategic Alternatives Special
    Committee.”212 In addition to Singer, Salameh and Schmitt rounded out its members.213
    The reconstituted Special Committee held its first meeting on February 7, 2014.214
    Raun reported on a meeting with Cypress, which said it was “too leveraged” to complete a
    transaction at the Company’s current valuation.215 The committee instructed management
    to “proactively reach out to” other prospects but decided “not to take any action with
    respect to Avago at this time.”216 Singer did not mention the information he had received
    from Deutsche Bank about Avago’s interest, and Raun’s update on strategic alternatives
    suggests no knowledge of Avago’s situation.217 After the meeting, Raun engaged with
    209
    JX 330 at 1.
    210
    JX 360 at 2–3.
    211
    
    Id. at 2.
          212
    
    Id. at 3.
          213
    See PTO ¶ 96; JX 360 at 3.
    214
    PTO ¶ 97.
    215
    JX 374 at 1; see also JX 372 at 2; JX 395 at 14.
    216
    JX 374 at 1–2.
    217
    See JX 372 at 3; see also JX 388 at 2.
    40
    Cypress, Inphi, Exar Corporation, and Semtech Corporation.218 Avago remained silent, as
    Singer and Deutsche Bank knew it would.219
    For the next three months, Singer did not agitate for a sale, but it remained on his
    mind. He expressed concern to Schmitt that there was a “closing window” in which to sell
    PLX because of larger economic trends that would negatively affect valuations.220 He
    instructed Raun that whatever the “prior policy” might have been at PLX, it was “essential
    [that] the Board and or [sic] Strategic Committee is immediately informed of any indication
    of interest in any piece of PLX regardless of valuation.”221 As a member of the
    Compensation Committee, he became a vocal advocate for more equity compensation that
    would align management’s interests with stockholders.222 While this is certainly a
    legitimate concept, from Singer’s standpoint it would help ensure that management would
    not resist a sale. Not coincidentally, Singer and Colombotto analyzed the Company’s
    218
    JX 380 at 2–3.
    219
    
    Id. 220 See
    JX 335 at 1.
    221
    JX 362; see also JX 361 at 2 (Singer instructing Salameh that he required “full
    access to all such information [about PLX’s earlier sale process] to fulfill my fiduciary
    duties and best contribute to maximizing stockholder value.”).
    222
    See, e.g., JX 330; JX 338. Singer also weighed in on other compensation issues,
    such as his desire to make cash bonuses harder to achieve. See JX 359 at 1 (“[I]t is unheard
    of for e-staff (certainly the ceo) to receive nearly 100% target amount when you miss the
    revenue and gross margin numbers. Maybe getting to [annual operating plan] gets you 50%
    but to get 100% you need to exceed by demonstrable margins. Not get nearly 100% for just
    doing your job.”); JX 367 at 2 (“I do not think any exec should receive nearly 90% of bonus
    for missing 2 important measuring points.”).
    41
    change-in-control agreements.223 Singer also resisted new hires and suggested other steps
    that made Salameh think the Company was “perhaps operating too far in a short term dress
    the company up for sale mode.”224
    In April 2014, Singer revealed his true focus when Salameh suggested that there
    might no longer be any need for the Special Committee. The Company was preparing its
    Form 10-K for FY 2013, and Singer submitted a proposed description of the Special
    Committee’s role that made it sound to Salameh “like the special committee is very active
    and acting independently to shop the company or actively communicating with
    shareholders.”225 Salameh felt the description was “not accurate and could lead to
    misperceptions by shareholders, potential acquirers, employees and customers.”226
    Salameh toned down the language and proposed (i) not mentioning the committee at all,
    (ii) terminating the committee because “the board works well together on these issues and
    we get good input and contributions from other board members,” or (iii) terminating the
    committee with the understanding that it would be re-formed as needed.227 Singer accepted
    Salameh’s edits but rejected the alternatives.228 He viewed it as “essential” that the
    223
    See JX 389; JX 390.
    224
    JX 400 at 1.
    225
    JX 406 at 1.
    226
    
    Id. 227 Id.
          228
    JX 405 at 1.
    42
    committee was both “maintained and mentioned.”229 Two days later, PLX filed its Form
    10-K and publicly disclosed, for the first time, the Special Committee’s existence and
    Singer’s role as Chairman.230
    O.     Avago Re-engages.
    On May 9, 2014, Thomas Cho of Deutsche Bank emailed Singer about a call he
    received from Barclays.231 The Barclays banker told Cho that they were advising Avago
    on a potential bid for PLX and would meet with Krause the following week to discuss next
    steps. Cho understood that Avago was “starting to put this in motion.” 232 Cho also
    perceived that Barclays was “very motivated to get this through” and would “play a role in
    pushing” Krause.233 Deutsche Bank also reported on these calls to Raun, who updated the
    other directors.234
    229
    Id.; see also Salameh Dep. 157–59.
    230
    JX 408 at 7, 9.
    231
    JX 413 at 1; see also PTO ¶ 102.
    232
    JX 413 at 1.
    233
    
    Id. 234 See
    JX 414 at 2.
    43
    From May 9–17, 2013, Deutsche Bank had a number of calls with Barclays and
    Avago.235 Through these calls, Deutsche Bank learned that Krause wanted to move forward
    with a bid for PLX and submit an offer “by the 23rd [of May].”236
    Singer responded enthusiastically. On Saturday, May 10, 2014, he told Raun that it
    was “essential we move on legal in the most expeditious time frame possible since the
    Avago download may result in near-term activity.”237 On Sunday, Singer followed up with
    Raun to confirm that he received the email.238 When Raun had not formally engaged a legal
    team by Sunday evening, Singer told Raun that he would “take care of it from a board
    level.”239
    On May 17, 2014, the Special Committee convened.240 Deutsche Bank reported that
    Avago had asked “to meet with Mr. Singer and to receive an update from Mr. Raun
    regarding the status of the business.”241 The Special Committee “directed [Deutsche Bank]
    to continue to engage Avago to explore its interest in the Company.”242
    See id.; see also JX 422 (Salameh reporting that “[Deutsche Bank] had a number
    235
    of conversations with Avago and Barclay’s over the last 8 or 9 days”).
    236
    JX 416 at 1; see also Krause Dep. 100–03.
    237
    JX 418.
    238
    
    Id. 239 JX
    419 at 1; see also Schmitt Dep. 79–82.
    240
    PTO ¶ 103.
    241
    JX 423 at 1.
    242
    Id.; see also Salameh Dep. 241–51; Schmitt Dep. 169–70.
    44
    P.     The May 21 Meetings
    The bankers set up a meeting between the PLX and Avago management teams for
    8:00 a.m. on the morning of May 21, 2014, followed by a dinner that evening between
    Singer and Krause.243 During the management meeting, Raun gave Avago an updated
    presentation about PLX’s business that included the December 2013 Projections.244
    Whipple confirmed that PLX presented these figures because they represented
    management’s “best view of what the future held.”245 They were “attainable” and “the basis
    for the performance and the variable compensation that was awarded to the executive
    officers.”246
    Between the management meeting and dinner, the Special Committee received an
    update from Raun and Whipple.247 According to the minutes, Raun “noted that he had
    indicated to Avago that the plan was aggressive, needed to be updated and might need
    further changes.”248 The minutes also claimed that Singer “provided the Committee an
    243
    See JX 424–25; Krause Dep. 64.
    244
    JX 427 at 7–9; see also JX 430 (Raun forwarding Singer follow-up email sent to
    Avago management following meeting).
    245
    Whipple Dep. 88.
    246
    
    Id. at 89–95.
    PLX also provided the December 2013 Projections to Semtech in
    a due diligence presentation on May 6, 2014. See JX 1002 at 7–9.
    247
    JX 431 at 1.
    248
    Id.; see also Raun Dep. 158, 398.
    45
    update on his discussions with a representative of Avago the prior evening.”249 According
    to the minutes, Singer “noted that the representative indicated, among other things, that
    Avago believed the then-current PLX stock price already included a takeover premium as
    a result of Potomac Capital’s actions.”250 Singer also reported that if Avago submitted a
    proposal, “the representative of Avago with whom he had met would want to have further
    discussions with him.”251 The Special Committee directed Singer “to meet, or have further
    discussions, with such person to discuss a possible acquisition of the Company by
    Avago.”252
    The minutes’ description of Singer’s meeting with an unidentified Avago
    “representative” contradicts other evidence in the record. The definitive proxy statement
    for the Merger did not identify any conversation between Singer and Avago that took place
    on May 20, 2014.253 The defendants argued initially that the minutes referred to the dinner
    that had been scheduled between Singer and Krause, but all of the remaining documentary
    evidence establishes that the dinner took place on May 21, after the Special Committee
    meeting.254 Accepting that the dinner occurred on May 21, the Special Committee’s
    249
    JX 431 at 1.
    250
    Id.; see also Cho Dep. 58–61.
    251
    JX 431 at 1.
    252
    
    Id. 253 See
    JX 551 at 26.
    254
    See, e.g., JX 424–25; JX 551 at 26; JX 1026 at 1; JX 1028.
    46
    mandate for Singer to have further discussions with Avago becomes odd, because it fails
    to take into account that he was already scheduled to have dinner with Krause just a few
    hours later.
    The parties devoted significant resources at trial and in their briefing to attempting
    to resolve these discrepancies.255 Based on the record evidence, I think this is an example
    of lawyers drafting minutes after the fact in an effort to paper a good process, but not getting
    the details right.
    The minutes of the May 21 meeting also mark the first appearance in the record of
    the theme that the December 2013 Projections were “aggressive.” No one provided any
    credible reason why Raun would have said this gratuitously to Avago or why he
    subsequently went out of this way to mention his comment to the Special Committee.
    Further calling into question the credibility of the supposed comment, the presentation to
    Avago retained much of the small-print disclaimer language on the executive summary
    slide, but omitted the phrase describing the projections as “aggressive.”256 I suspect the
    triggering event for characterizing the December 2013 Projections as “aggressive” was
    Deutsche Bank’s preparation of a “PLX Valuation Update” on May 16, 2014. 257 Unlike
    Deutsche Bank’s prior and subsequent valuation presentations, this version did not contain
    255
    See, e.g., Singer Tr. 219–21, 236–38, 247–53, 463, 468–74, 519–25.
    256
    Compare 427 at 8, with JX 293 at 8, and JX 298 at 7.
    257
    See JX 420.
    47
    a discounted cash flow analysis; it only looked at trading multiples and premiums.258 It
    seems likely that Deutsche Bank knew from its earlier valuation work that a valuation
    based on the December 2013 Projections would exceed the $300 million bid that Avago
    was contemplating. As a sophisticated M&A player, Deutsche Bank would not have
    wanted to create incremental deal or litigation risk by injecting that type of analysis into
    the record unless necessary. The safer course would have been to flag the issue to confirm
    whether or not those projections were still the ones that the bankers should use. Flagging
    the issue likely led in turn to an off-the-record decision to walk back the projections, using
    their ostensible aggressiveness as the justification. When the lawyers documented the deal
    process, they started building the case for the subsequently lowered projections in the
    minutes for the May 21 meeting.
    That evening, Singer and Krause had dinner in Palo Alto. Krause told Singer that
    he had been “very frustrated” by the Company’s valuation demands during prior
    negotiations.259 Krause told Singer that there was a “window in time” for Avago to acquire
    PLX before moving on to “other initiatives,” but that Avago had “no interest in acquiring
    the company at any valuation near th[e] level” of $7.00 per share.260 At trial, it became
    258
    See 
    id. 259 Krause
    Dep. 105; see Singer Dep. 107.
    260
    Singer Dep. 107–08.
    48
    apparent that Krause signaled to Singer that Avago would propose acquiring PLX for
    approximately $6.25 per share.261
    Q.     A Very Busy Nine Days: May 22-31, 2014
    Over the next nine days, Avago and PLX engaged in a brief back and forth that
    resulted in a transaction at $6.50 per share, roughly the same valuation of $300 million that
    Krause mentioned to Deutsche Bank in December 2013.
    1.          Day 1: May 22, 2014
    On the afternoon of May 22, 2014, Barclays told Deutsche Bank that a bid from
    Avago was coming and that Avago “want[ed] to move quickly and efficiently.” 262 When
    Deutsche Bank reported the information to Singer, Salameh, Schmitt, and Raun, Singer
    emailed back privately, asking “do u htink [sic] they come in initial 6.20 ish?” Deutsch
    Bank replied: “feels like 6.25. said [Krause] relayed to you last night.”263 Singer
    subsequently set up a private call with Deutsch Bank to discuss the proposal.264
    261
    See Singer Tr. 236–44; see also JX 433 at 1; JX 1026 at 1.
    262
    JX 433 at 1.
    263
    
    Id. 264 See
    JX 1026 (e-mail from Singer to Cho stating “k i land in 20 mnts talk later”);
    JX 1029 (e-mail from Singer to Howell and Cho, stating: “lets try for a call at 6 pm ET if
    i can break from this board meeting”). At trial, Singer maintained that he never had “off-
    line conversations” with Deutsche Bank. Singer Tr. 526. The contemporaneous record
    demonstrates otherwise. See, e.g., JX 413; JX 433; JX 1026; JX 1029–31.
    49
    Shortly thereafter, Krause sent Raun and Singer a proposal to acquire PLX “at a
    price of $6.25 per share.”265 The proposal contemplated “enter[ing] into a definitive
    agreement with PLX on substantially the same terms” as the IDT merger agreement, but
    without “the ‘go shop’ provisions.”266
    Either Raun or Singer sent the proposal to Salameh, who circulated it to the full
    Board. He also reported that the Special Committee was discussing the offer with Deutsche
    Bank.267 No minutes exist for that meeting. There is a set of minutes from a meeting of the
    Special Committee on May 22, 2014, but it occurred before Avago submitted its proposal,
    and the only topic of discussion was the engagement of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman
    LLP as transaction counsel.268
    That evening, Deutsche Bank prepared a draft response to Avago that countered at
    $6.75 per share.269 Deutsche Bank also spoke with Barclays and “gave them a heads up
    that [PLX] would be coming back with a written counter either tomorrow or Saturday.”270
    265
    JX 432 at 2.
    266
    
    Id. 267 JX
    437 at 1; see JX 436 at 2 (update to directors from Raun dated Friday, May
    23, 2014, referring to “Thursday: PLX received proposal. Mike forwarded to Board.
    Special committee discussing response.”).
    268
    See JX 438.
    269
    JX 434 at 2–3; Cho Dep. 61–63.
    270
    JX 434 at 1.
    50
    The Barclays banker said that Avago expected PLX “to do a quick market check with a
    few parties,” to be followed by “an exclusivity period to start in the next week or so.”271
    My impression is that Deutsche Bank took these steps after having the private call
    with Singer.272 During the call, Singer also asked Deutsche Bank to prepare some pages of
    valuation analysis to support a counteroffer at $6.75 per share.273
    2.          Day 2: May 23, 2014
    At 10:30 a.m. on May 23, 2014, the Special Committee met to discuss Avago’s
    offer.274 At 10:40 a.m., Deutsche Bank circulated the market-based analysis that Singer had
    requested, which highlighted a price of $6.75 per share.275
    The Special Committee began by formally approving the engagement of Pillsbury
    Winthrop as transaction counsel.276 Deutsche Bank then presented the market-based
    analysis that Singer had requested.277 Deutsche Bank noted that the Company’s stock had
    outperformed “similar large and small cap companies” and advised that the performance
    271
    
    Id. 272 See
    JX 1026 at 1.
    273
    See JX 1030 at 1 (email from Cho to Deutsche Bank colleague at 7:58 AM on
    May 23, 2014: “Eric [Singer] wants us to pull together a couple of pages to show how 6.75
    compares against comps, etc”).
    274
    PTO ¶ 106; JX 459 at 1.
    275
    JX 443 at 3–9.
    276
    JX 459 at 1; see also JX 448 at 3.
    277
    JX 459 at 1–3. Cf. JX 443.
    51
    reflected “the takeover premium built into the Company’s share price following Potomac
    Capital’s proxy contest.”278
    The Special Committee asked Deutsche Bank to prepare a revised valuation
    presentation that included a discounted cash flow analysis.279 According to the minutes,
    the committee members debated what projections to use and discussed that the December
    2013 Projections “reflected aggressive revenue goals set by the Company’s management
    team.”280 According to the minutes, the committee members asked for a discounted cash
    flow analysis based on the December 2013 Projections “as well as a separate DCF Analysis
    based on revised and more updated revenue projections, reflecting management’s current
    thinking about what would be a reasonable forecast.”281 The minutes do not discuss, and
    the Special Committee’s materials do not identify, any new information that would have
    necessitated adjustments to the December 2013 Projections.
    Deutsche Bank then reviewed “the market checks done in the last two years,”
    including the go-shop during the IDT transaction, the market check during the fall of 2013,
    and an additional market check that the Special Committee had asked Deutsche Bank to
    conduct in light of Avago’s interest.282 Deutsche Bank reported that it had contacted three
    278
    JX 459 at 2.
    279
    
    Id. at 3.
           280
    
    Id. 281 Id.;
    see also Schmitt Dep. 177–79.
    282
    JX 459 at 3.
    52
    companies: Inphi, Semtech, and Cypress.283 Inphi and Semtech declined to proceed.284
    Cypress had “indicated possible interest,” but was “concerned about price” and “had not
    taken any further steps to pursue a transaction.”285 The Special Committee decided that this
    limited market check process “appeared sufficient” since “the two prior market checks had
    only resulted in an offer from Avago and that the terminated IDT transaction had already
    put potential buyers on alert.”286
    Towards the end of the meeting, the Special Committee discussed how to respond
    to Avago. The members decided that achieving a possible transaction “would require a
    counter offer of less than $7.00 per share and that such a counter offer would be in the best
    interest of the Company’s stockholders.”287 According to the minutes, it was only then that
    the Special Committee “agreed to recommend to the Board that the Company prepare a
    counter proposal of $6.75 per share.”288 This was the same price that Deutsche Bank had
    283
    See 
    id. Although the
    minutes use pseudonyms for the participants, other
    documents suggest Cypress was the remaining interested party. See JX 436 at 2; JX 448 at
    2. Cf. Cho Dep. 47, 56–57 (identifying pseudonyms of companies within the
    Recommendation Statement); Raun Dep. 57 (identifying pseudonym of Cypress within the
    Recommendation Statement).
    284
    See JX 459 at 3.
    285
    
    Id. The minutes
    recite that the Special Committee instructed Deutsche Bank to
    continue to engage with Cypress. In an email sent the day before, however, Raun instructed
    a colleague not to purse Cypress further, saying: “They can contact us if interested. We
    should not contact them anymore.” JX 457.
    286
    JX 459 at 4.
    287
    
    Id. 288 Id.
    53
    included in the draft response it had prepared the night before and highlighted in the
    valuation materials that Singer had requested.289 Schmitt testified that the counteroffer of
    $6.75 per share “came from guidance from Eric.”290
    When it made the decision to counter at $6.75, the Special Committee had not
    received any valuation of the Company on a standalone basis. According to Schmitt, by
    selecting $6.75, the Special Committee was engaging in the “art of the possible.”291 Singer
    testified that the Special Committee was focused on maintaining “deal momentum.”292
    While the Special Committee was meeting, Raun learned that Broadcom wanted to
    meet with management.293 Recognizing that he had to move quickly, he “offered up
    Monday, Tuesday morning and Thursday.”294 The parties were unable to schedule a
    meeting in that time frame.295
    After the meeting, Deutsche Bank signaled to Barclays that a deal was likely.296
    Deutsche Bank framed its message by saying that PLX was working on a response with “a
    289
    Cf. JX 434 at 2–3; JX 443; 1026 at 1.
    290
    Schmitt Dep. 172.
    291
    
    Id. 292 Singer
    Tr. 254–55.
    293
    JX 449 at 1.
    294
    
    Id. 295 See
    JX 470; JX 473 at 1.
    296
    JX 447 at 1.
    54
    more constructive tone” and reporting Singer had “found his dinner with [Krause] to be
    positive and [Avago’s] letter in keeping with that positive tone.”297
    Deutsche Bank also contacted Raun and Whipple after the meeting to develop a
    revised set of projections.298 In tension with the minutes of the Special Committee meeting,
    which had already characterized the December 2013 Projections as “aggressive,” Deutsche
    Bank asked Raun and Whipple, “How would [you] classify [the December 2013] plan
    (aggressive, conservative)?”299 Raun and Whipple responded in writing that the December
    2013 Projections were “positioned as aggressive at the [Board] meeting when presented in
    December 2013” and “stated as aggressive when presented to Avago.”300
    Deutsche Bank also inquired if there had been “[a]ny major changes to the business
    model in the out years that are different than what we have discussed in the past?”301
    Management responded: “No. Still includes similar assumptions like a system level
    product component, continued use of PCIe, [and] success with the ExpressFabric
    297
    
    Id. 298 PTO
    ¶ 107; JX 445 at 1; JX 453 at 1.
    299
    JX 441.
    300
    JX 446 at 2; see also Whipple Dep. 143–45.
    301
    JX 446 at 2.
    55
    devices.”302 Whipple subsequently sent Deutsche Bank the worksheets underlying the
    December 2013 Projections.303
    Also on May 23, 2018, Singer agreed to amend Deutsche Bank’s engagement letter.
    The new terms increased Deutsche Bank’s base fee from 1% of transaction value to 1.35%
    and remove a 1.5% cap on Deutsche Bank’s total compensation.304 Singer executed the
    amendment as Chair of the Special Committee.305
    3.          Day 3: May 24, 2014
    On the morning of May 24, 2014, the Board met to consider Avago’s proposal.306
    Deutsche Bank circulated a revised presentation that summarized the Company’s three
    market checks. The materials noted that each time, Avago was the only party who bid. The
    materials also noted that Avago’s offers had slowly increased from $5.75 during the IDT
    go-shop, to $6.00 during the fall 2013 market check, and now to $6.25.307 Deutsche Bank
    302
    
    Id. 303 See
    JX 451.
    304
    JX 439 at 1; see JX 440 at 1 (Raun informing Schmitt that the revised engagement
    letter was “something that the Special Committee agreed to not me.”); see also Raun Dep.
    110–19.
    305
    JX 439 at 3; see also JX 440; JX 444; JX 450 at 1.
    306
    PTO ¶ 108; JX 465 at 1; see JX 462 at 1.
    307
    JX 462 at 5.
    56
    noted that after receiving Avago’s offer, the Company had contacted Inphi, Cypress, and
    Semtech.308 Deutsch Bank opined that the market check “had been thorough.”309
    Deutsche Bank’s presentation next provided the discounted cash flow analyses that
    the Special Committee had requested.310 Using the December 2013 Projections, Deutsche
    Bank’s model yielded a range of $6.90 to $9.78 per share, with $8.27 at the midpoint. 311
    This was the first time that Deutsche Bank had provided the directors with a valuation
    based on the December 2013 Projections. The low-end of the range exceeded Avago’s bid
    and the Special Committee’s recommended counteroffer.
    In describing Deutsche Bank’s valuation analyses, the minutes went out of their way
    to characterize the December 2013 Projections as “aggressive.”312
    In particular, management noted that the December 2013 Plan forecast
    growth rates and profit margins far in excess of what the Company and the
    majority of similar semiconductor companies had experienced in the past and
    entailed creating a sizeable systems business in which the Company had no
    market experience, and was therefore characterized as aggressive.313
    The minutes also recited that “members of the Board and management commented on
    various events and trends since the projections in the December 2013 Plan were prepared
    308
    See JX 465 at 2. Cf. JX 459 at 2.
    309
    JX 465 at 2.
    310
    
    Id. at 2–3.
          311
    JX 462 at 13.
    312
    JX 465 at 4.
    313
    
    Id. 57 that
    had already affected or might in the future affect the achievement of the projections
    contained therein, particularly those for fiscal years after 2014.”314
    Deutsche Bank’s materials included a second discounted cash flow valuation that
    used what Deutsche Bank had labeled the “Preliminary Management sensitivity case” (the
    “Preliminary Sensitivity Case”).315 According to the minutes, Deutsche Bank reported that
    the Preliminary Sensitivity Case was “intended to reflect events and trends since the
    December 2013 Plan was prepared” and “reflected lower spending in response to the
    projected reduction in revenue during these periods.”316 In reality, this case decreased all
    of the revenue projections in the December 2013 Projections by 10% and cut the annual
    increase in operating expense by half.317 Using the resulting numbers, Deutsche Bank’s
    model yielded a range of $5.48 to $7.67 per share, with $6.52 at the midpoint.318 The new
    projections generated a valuation result that perfectly framed the anticipated transaction
    value of $300 million.
    According to the minutes, “management stated that the revenue and operating
    expense projections were reasonable based on the current thinking of the Company’s
    314
    
    Id. 315 JX
    462 at 14; see JX 465 at 4; Cho Dep. 67–73.
    316
    JX 465 at 4.
    317
    JX 462 at 14.
    318
    
    Id. 58 management
    but a more detailed analysis needed to be completed.”319 The record does not
    support this description. Raun testified that the “10 percent, as I recall, was just a quick,
    you know, kind of what if 10 percent. Oh, yeah, looks good.”320
    At this point, the Special Committee recommended that the Company counter at
    $6.75 per share.321 The Board unanimously agreed and gave the Special Committee
    authority to accept any price of $6.50 or higher.322 The Board also signed off on not asking
    for a reverse break-up fee or a go-shop period.323
    Deutsche Bank and the Special Committee promptly finalized a response.324 Raun
    sent it that evening.325
    319
    JX 465 at 4; see also Raun Dep. 146–57; Schmitt Dep. 180–82; Whipple Dep.
    110–14.
    320
    Raun Dep. 408.
    321
    JX 465 at 5.
    322
    
    Id. 323 Id.
           324
    JX 466–67.
    325
    PTO ¶ 109.
    59
    4.        Days Six through Nine: May 27-30, 2014
    On May 27, 2014, Deutsche Bank reported that Avago was willing to increase its
    bid to $6.50 per share.326 The Special Committee instructed Singer to speak with Krause
    and agree to proceed with due diligence on those terms.327
    On May 28, 2014, Singer spoke with Krause.328 That evening, Avago sent over its
    “best and final proposal” of $6.50 per share.329
    On May 29, 2014, the Special Committee convened to consider the proposal.330
    Deutsche Bank provided an update on its current market check, advised that Cypress and
    Broadcom had declined to bid, and reported that although Semtech had not formally
    declined to bid, they did not seem genuinely interested.331 The Special Committee reviewed
    and approved draft confidentiality and exclusivity agreements and resolved to recommend
    that the Board authorize the Company to enter into them.332
    On May 30, 2018, the full Board met, received an update from the Special
    Committee, and adopted the Special Committee’s recommendation. 333 The Board did not
    326
    JX 472 at 1; see also PTO ¶ 110.
    327
    JX 472 at 1.
    328
    JX 475 at 1; see also Singer Tr. 502–03; Krause Dep. 65.
    329
    JX 476 at 1–2; see also PTO ¶ 111.
    330
    PTO ¶ 112.
    331
    JX 480 at 1–2.
    332
    
    Id. at 2–3.
           333
    JX 482 at 1–2.
    60
    receive any additional financial analysis or further input from management on the
    Company’s projections.
    On June 2, 2014, PLX and Avago formally executed an exclusivity agreement
    lasting twenty-one days.334 The agreement precluded PLX from soliciting additional offers,
    furnishing information to other parties, engaging in negotiations, or otherwise cooperating
    with a potential competitive bidder.335 The exclusivity agreement did not contain any outs.
    R.     The June 2014 Projections
    After the parties had agreed on price and entered into exclusive negotiations, Raun
    and Whipple began preparing the “new haircut 5 year plan for [Deutsche Bank]” that the
    Special Committee and Board had requested.336 On June 7, 2014, Gene Schaeffer, PLX’s
    Vice President for Sales, circulated the raw data underlying the December 2013 Projections
    to the sales managers for “a deeper dive into our funnel and revenue projections.” 337 He
    noted that “[w]e clearly have enough wins and momentum to drive the 2014-2018 numbers
    in the 5 year plan” but nonetheless asked for revised “inputs . . . no later than Tuesday
    6/10.”338
    334
    See JX 484; JX 485 at 1.
    335
    JX 484 at 1–2.
    336
    JX 486 at 1; see also JX 487 (coordinating due diligence meetings); JX 490
    (summarizing diligence as of June 6, 2014); JX 493 (due diligence questions).
    337
    JX 491 at 1.
    338
    Id.; see also Singer Tr. 278–80; Raun Dep. 177–78 (confirming that “the June
    five-year analysis [was] very similar” to the analysis in December 2013 “for the outlying
    years”); Salameh Dep. 164, 273 (testifying management “did a detailed, bottoms-up . . . ,
    customer, product by product” review for 2014–2016 and also a “top-down, just a reality
    61
    On June 9, 2014, Whipple circulated a single page PDF reflecting an “[u]pdated
    plan” to Deutsche Bank.339 This decision refers to these figures as the “Initial June
    Projections.”
    The Initial June Projections reflected nominally increased sales compared to the
    Preliminary Sensitivity Case that Deutsche Bank had used on May 24, 2013. 340 The
    Preliminary Sensitivity Case had projected revenue growing to $244.3 million by 2018.341
    The Initial June Projections forecasted that revenue would reach $248.6 million by 2018.342
    On the morning of June 11, 2014, Whipple and Deutsche Bank spoke about the
    Initial June Projections.343 The next day, Whipple sent Deutsche Bank a revised set of
    projections—again as a single page PDF. These were the final projections that Deutsche
    Bank used in its fairness opinion, so this decision calls them the “June 2014 Projections.”344
    check”); Whipple Dep. 149 (discussing preparation of “the revenue forecast by product, by
    year” as well as development of “the expense forecast by year and . . . the out year balance
    sheets and statements of cash flow”).
    339
    JX 492.
    340
    Compare JX 492 at 2, with JX 464 at 14.
    341
    JX 464 at 14.
    342
    JX 492 at 2.
    343
    JX 494.
    344
    JX 503.
    62
    The June 2014 Projections slashed PLX revenue to $208.4 million in 2018. 345 The
    primary driver for the reductions was significantly decreased sales during the out years for
    the Company’s system-level products.346 The following chart shows the differences
    between the December 2013 Projections and the June 2014 Projections:
    2014       2015      2016       2017     2018
    347
    December 2013 Projections                 $117.5     $139.4     $166.9    $211.5   $271.5
    June 2014 Projections348                  $114.7     $130.1     $149.4    $174.9   $208.4
    Change                                     ($2.8)     ($9.3)   ($17.5)   ($36.6)   ($63.1)
    As soon as Deutsche Bank received the June 2014 Projections, the bankers ran them
    through their discounted cash flow model. The result made the Avago deal look more
    attractive: “With these numbers the new range is $4.81-$6.79, as opposed to $5.16-$7.40
    using [the Initial June Projections].”349 The Deutsche Bank analysts who ran the model
    noted that they had “not been provided with updated CAPEX, working capital or
    depreciation figures” to support the June 2014 Projections.350
    345
    
    Id. at 2.
           346
    Raun Dep. 445–46; Beaton Dep. 38–39; see also JX 521A (showing customer-
    by-customer, product-by-product revenue estimates for 2014–2016).
    347
    JX 429 at 8 (in millions).
    348
    JX 529 at 19 (in millions).
    349
    JX 499 at 1.
    350
    
    Id. 63 On
    the morning of June 13, 2014, Whipple had a call with Deutsche Bank to discuss
    what he described as the “sensitivity case.”351 Whipple then circulated the final June 2014
    Projections to the Deutsche Bank team, labeling it the “5 year sensitivity case.” 352 Deutsche
    Bank sent the figures on to Barclays, who immediately labeled them the “Management
    Downside Case.”353 Barclays referred to the December 2013 Projections as the
    “Management Case.”354
    Deutsche Bank took a different view on what to call the June 2014 Projections. In
    internal communications, one banker noted that Deutsche Bank had been referring to the
    December 2013 Projections as “the Base case.”355 He wondered if the December 2013
    Projections should now be “upside case.”356 Alternatively, he suggested calling the June
    2013 Projections the “downside case.”357 Cho instructed the team to “re-label as Upside
    Case (original) and Base Case (new #s).”358
    351
    JX 502 at 1.
    352
    JX 510 at 1; see also PTO ¶ 114.
    353
    JX 532 at 20; see also JX 511 at 1.
    354
    JX 532 at 19.
    355
    JX 514 at 2.
    356
    
    Id. 357 Id.
           358
    
    Id. at 1.
    64
    The parties have debated at length about the amount of work that went into the June
    2013 Projections, the extent and reliability of the data that supported them, and the
    legitimacy of the process. My impression is that both sides have made exaggerated claims.
    Significant work went into preparing the June 2014 Projections, but the bulk of it took
    place over six calendar days from June 7–12, 2014. The June 2014 Projections were not a
    slapdash effort, but they also did not result from the same rigorous process used to develop
    the December 2013 Projections. They were prepared for purposes of Deutsche Bank’s
    valuation analysis in the shadow of the pending deal.
    S.     Singer Continues To Lead The Process.
    From June 15–19, 2014, the Special Committee met almost daily to finalize details
    in anticipation of a signing on June 20. During this process, Singer took a leading role and
    discussed various issues directly with Avago’s management.359 During a meeting on June
    19, Deutsche Bank asked the Special Committee to sign off on the firm’s conflicts.360 The
    bankers mentioned their work for Avago on the LSI acquisition, but represented that the
    team advising Avago had been walled off from the team advising PLX.361 Deutsche Bank
    359
    See, e.g., JX 512 at 1 (Singer to Krause: “Let me know if you have 5 minutes to
    talk this afternoon or over next few days.”); JX 518 at 2 (Singer reporting that Avago
    wanted tender and support agreements as a condition to the transaction); JX 524 at 2 (“It
    was agreed that Mr. Singer would reach out to the representative of Avago to discuss the
    overall transaction, and then meet again the following day to discuss transaction status at
    that time.”); Singer Tr. 288–89; Krause Dep. 65–68.
    360
    See JX 527 at 2. See generally Raun Dep. 120–29.
    361
    JX 527 at 2; see Salameh Dep. 61–79. Avago financed the acquisition with cash
    on hand and did not require any debt financing. Deutsche Bank had a $90 million position
    in Avago’s undrawn revolving credit facility and a $159 million position in a term loan
    65
    stated that it anticipated “generally seek[ing] to continue working with Avago, but that
    there was no specific project that they were currently working on with Avago.”362
    On June 20, 2014, the full Board met to receive a report on the status of the deal.363
    During the meeting, Deutsche Bank gave a presentation that compared the December 2013
    Projections and the June 2014 Projections,364 treating the December 2013 Projections as an
    upside case and the June 2014 Projections as the base case.365 The materials showed that
    the June 2014 Projections resulted in substantial reductions from the December 2013
    Projections.366 Deutsche Bank’s materials stated that PLX’s operating plan “has been
    meaningfully reduced since the IDT transaction.”367 In reality, the plan was meaningfully
    reduced in May 2014 at Deutsche Bank’s request.
    Deutsche Bank’s materials included two discounted cash flow analyses. The
    analysis based on the December 2013 Projections yielded a range of $6.39 to $8.98 per
    share, with $7.62 at the midpoint.368 The analysis based on the June 2014 Projections
    extended to Avago. Deutsche Bank earned just over $30 million for its role in the LSI
    acquisition. See JX 489.
    362
    JX 527 at 2.
    363
    PTO ¶ 116.
    364
    See JX 529 at 9.
    365
    See 
    id. 366 See
    id.
    367
    Id.
    
          368
    
    Id. at 20.
    66
    yielded a range of $5.07 to $6.99 per share, with $5.98 at the midpoint.369 During the
    presentation, an attorney from Pillsbury Winthrop made a point of noting that “the forecast
    prepared in December 2013 contained a legend describing it as an aggressive plan.”370
    After the presentation, Schmitt asked for “an explanation of the assumptions used
    in calculating the June 2014 forecast and the differences between those assumptions and
    the ones used in the December 2013 plan.”371 The Board directed Raun to provide the
    explanation at the next meeting.372 Without having the benefit of the explanation, the Board
    “instructed [Deutsche Bank] to rely on the Base Case as the primary basis of its analysis.373
    The next day, Whipple sent Raun an explanation for the June 2014 Projections:
    While we had detailed operating cost forecasts for 2014, our 2015 through
    2018 forecasts were based on quarterly growth rates. As we calculated the
    out years in the [December 2013 Projections] we initially had relatively low
    growth rates for OPEX that gave what appeared to be unreasonable growth
    in profitability. We increased R&D and to a lesser extent SG&A spending in
    the final aggressive AOP forecast [i.e., the December 2013 Projections].
    Based on the revised revenue growth in the sensitivity plan [i.e., the
    Preliminary Sensitivity Case], I reduced the OPEX in the out years to
    maintain ratios of R&D and SG&A spending to revenue and growth to reflect
    the lower need to support revenue growth. While R&D and SG&A spending
    continue to expand, they decrease slowly as a percentage of revenues. In my
    judgment, PLX management would limit growth in spending to be
    commensurate with revenue growth to continue to expand profitability and
    369
    
    Id. at 19.
           370
    JX 525 at 5.
    371
    
    Id. 372 Id.
           373
    
    Id. 67 to
    take advantage of the leverage we believe is inherent in our business at
    this time.374
    There is no credible evidence that would support a finding that that this explanation was
    ever provided to the other directors.
    T.     The Board Approves The Merger Agreement.
    On June 22, 2014, the full Board met to consider final terms of the transaction with
    Avago.375 According to the minutes, “[p]rior to the meeting, Mr. Raun had circulated to
    the Board a detailed description of the assumptions used in calculating the June 2014
    forecast and the differences between those assumptions and those used in the December
    2013 plan . . . , as requested by the Board at the previous Board meeting.”376 This statement
    appears to be wishful minute drafting. There is no evidence that this actually happened.
    The minutes also recite that Raun “explained the December 2013 plan was intended
    to be an aggressive plan” and that “various events had affected the achievement of the
    projections underlying the December 2013 Plan and that the June 2014 forecast reflected
    management’s current thinking as to what would be a reasonable forecast.”377 According
    to the minutes, “[t]he Board affirmed that Mr. Raun had prepared the June 2014 forecast
    374
    JX 536.
    375
    PTO ¶ 118.
    376
    JX 540 at 2.
    377
    
    Id. 68 at
    the request of the Board and the Strategic Alternatives Special Committee and agreed
    that the assumptions on which it was based were reasonable.”378
    Based on the June 2013 Projections, Deutsche Bank rendered its oral fairness
    opinion.379 The Board adjourned, and the Special Committee met.380 After the Special
    Committee recommended entering into the Avago transaction, the full Board reconvened
    and followed the Special Committee’s recommendation.381 On June 23, 2014, PLX
    formally announced the transaction.
    U.     The Merger Agreement
    The final merger agreement contemplated a medium-form merger effected pursuant
    to Section 251(h) of the Delaware General Corporation Law.382 The merger agreement
    prohibited PLX from soliciting competing offers and required the Board to continue to
    support the transaction, subject to a fiduciary out with matching rights.383 It contemplated
    a termination fee of $10.85 million, representing 3.5% of equity value ($309 million) and
    3.7% of enterprise value ($293 million).384 Holders of approximately 14.7% of PLX’s
    378
    
    Id. 379 Id.
    at 3; see also JX 544–45.
    380
    See PTO ¶ 118; JX 541.
    381
    JX 540 at 3.
    382
    JX 542 § 1.3.
    383
    JX 542 § 5.3.
    384
    See JX 529 at 5; JX 542 § 7.2(b).
    69
    outstanding shares—including Potomac, management, and the entire Board—entered into
    tender and support agreements. PLX’s second largest stockholder—Discovery Group I,
    LLC—publicly announced its support for the transaction.385
    Avago launched the first-step tender offer on July 8, 2014.386 PLX concurrently filed
    its Recommendation Statement.387 The tender offer closed on August 11.388 Holders of
    approximately 80.3% of PLX’s outstanding shares tendered into the offer.389 No competing
    bidders emerged. The Merger closed on August 12.390
    V.     This Litigation
    On July 14, 2014, after the announcement of the Merger, the plaintiffs filed suit
    naming as defendants PLX’s directors, Potomac, Avago, and the acquisition subsidiary that
    Avago used to effectuate the merger.391 The plaintiffs moved for a preliminary injunction
    that would block the merger. On July 22, 2014, I approved an expedited schedule leading
    385
    See JX 543; PLX Technology, Inc., Current Report (Form 8-K) (June 23, 2014).
    386
    JX 555 at 3.
    387
    See JX 551; PLX Technology, Inc., Solicitation/Recommendation Statement
    (Schedule 14 D-9) (July 8, 2014).
    388
    JX 554 at 2.
    389
    PTO ¶ 125.
    390
    PTO ¶ 126.
    391
    Dkt. 1. The separate role of the acquisition subsidiary is not important to this
    decision, so I do not refer to it separately.
    70
    up to a hearing on August 8.392 By letter dated July 31, the plaintiffs withdrew their request
    for an injunction, citing the adequacy of money damages.393
    On September 12, 2014, the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint. 394 After
    the plaintiffs amended their pleading,395 the defendants again moved to dismiss.396 After
    the Delaware Supreme Court issued its opinion in In re Cornerstone Therapeutics, Inc.
    Stockholders Litigation,397 the parties submitted supplemental briefing in light of the
    decision.
    On September 3, 2015, I dismissed the claims against Avago, Domenik, and
    Colombatto.398 On August 17, 2016, the plaintiffs settled with all of the defendants except
    for Potomac.399 On November 18, I approved the settlement.400 On November 21, I granted
    the plaintiffs’ motion for class certification.401
    392
    Dkt. 26.
    393
    Dkt. 42.
    394
    Dkts. 48, 49, 52.
    395
    Dkt. 66, 67.
    396
    Dkts. 77, 78, 80, 81.
    397
    
    115 A.3d 1173
    (Del. 2015).
    398
    See Dkts. 127, 131, 207.
    399
    Dkt. 159.
    400
    Dkts. 192, 204.
    401
    Dkt. 195.
    71
    On June 22, 2017, Potomac moved for summary judgment. 402 By order dated
    February 6, 2018, I denied the motion.403 Trial took place from April 10–12.404
    II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
    The plaintiffs seek damages from Potomac for aiding and abetting breaches of
    fiduciary duty. This claim has four elements: (i) the existence of a fiduciary relationship,
    (ii) a breach of the fiduciary’s duty, (iii) knowing participation in the breach by a non-
    fiduciary defendant, and (iv) damages proximately caused by the breach.405 The plaintiffs
    established all of the elements except for causally related damages.
    A.     The Existence Of A Fiduciary Relationship
    The plaintiffs easily satisfied the first element of their claim. The Company’s
    directors were fiduciaries who owed duties “to the corporation and its shareholders.”406
    “This formulation captures the foundational relationship in which directors owe duties to
    the corporation for the ultimate benefit of the entity’s residual claimants.”407
    402
    Dkt. 214.
    403
    Dkt. 347.
    404
    Dkts. 381–83.
    405
    Malpiede v. Townson, 
    780 A.2d 1075
    , 1096 (Del. 2001).
    406
    N. Am. Catholic Educ. Programming Found., Inc. v. Gheewalla, 
    930 A.2d 92
    ,
    99 (Del. 2007); accord Mills Acq. Co. v. Macmillan, Inc., 
    559 A.2d 1261
    , 1280 (Del. 1989)
    (“[D]irectors owe fiduciary duties of care and loyalty to the corporation and its
    shareholders . . . .”); Polk v. Good, 
    507 A.2d 531
    , 536 (Del. 1986) (“In performing their
    duties the directors owe fundamental fiduciary duties of loyalty and care to the corporation
    and its shareholders.”).
    407
    In re Trados Inc. S’holder Litig. (Trados II), 
    73 A.3d 17
    , 36–37 (Del. Ch. 2013).
    72
    Directors of a Delaware corporation owe two fiduciary duties: loyalty and care.408
    The duty of loyalty included a requirement to act in good faith, which is “a subsidiary
    element, i.e., a condition, of the fundamental duty of loyalty.”409 To act in good faith means
    to seek subjectively to “promote the value of the corporation for the benefit of its
    stockholders.”410 A failure to act in good faith may be shown where the fiduciary “acts with
    a purpose other than that of advancing the best interests of the corporation.”411
    408
    Stone ex rel. AmSouth Bancorporation v. Ritter, 
    911 A.2d 362
    , 370 (Del. 2006);
    accord Mills 
    Acq., 559 A.2d at 1280
    ; 
    Polk, 507 A.2d at 536
    .
    409
    
    Stone, 911 A.2d at 370
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    410
    eBay Domestic Hldgs., Inc. v. Newmark, 
    16 A.3d 1
    , 34 (Del. Ch. 2010); accord
    
    Gheewalla, 930 A.2d at 101
    (“The directors of Delaware corporations have the legal
    responsibility to manage the business of a corporation for the benefit of its shareholder[ ]
    owners.”); Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co., 
    493 A.2d 946
    , 955 (Del. 1985) (citing
    “the basic principle that corporate directors have a fiduciary duty to act in the best interests
    of the corporation’s stockholders”). See generally Leo E. Strine, Jr., The Soviet
    Constitution Problem in Comparative Corporate Law: Testing the Proposition That
    European Corporate Law Is More Stockholder Focused than U.S. Corporate Law, 89 S.
    Cal. L. Rev. 1239, 1249 (2016); (“[U]nder Delaware law . . . directors are required to focus
    on promoting stockholder welfare.”); Leo E. Strine, Jr., The Dangers of Denial: The Need
    for a Clear-Eyed Understanding of the Power and Accountability Structure Established by
    the Delaware General Corporation Law, 50 Wake Forest L. Rev 761, 771 (2015) (“Revlon
    could not have been more clear that directors of a for-profit corporation must at all times
    pursue the best interests of the corporation’s stockholders . . . .”); Leo E. Strine, Jr. et al.,
    Loyalty’s Core Demand: The Defining Role of Good Faith in Corporation Law, 98 Geo.
    L.J. 629, 634 (2010) (“[I]t is essential that directors take their responsibilities seriously by
    actually trying to manage the corporation in a manner advantageous to the stockholders.”).
    411
    In re Walt Disney Co. Deriv. Litig., 
    906 A.2d 27
    , 67 (Del. 2006) (internal
    quotation marks omitted); accord 
    Stone, 911 A.2d at 369
    ; see Gagliardi v. TriFoods Int’l,
    Inc., 
    683 A.2d 1049
    , 1051 n.2 (Del. Ch. 1996) (Allen, C.) (defining a “bad faith”
    transaction as one “that is authorized for some purpose other than a genuine attempt to
    advance corporate welfare or is known to constitute a violation of applicable positive law”);
    In re RJR Nabisco, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    1989 WL 7036
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Jan. 31, 1989)
    (Allen, C.) (explaining that the business judgment rule would not protect “a fiduciary who
    73
    The fiduciary duties of directors have context-specific manifestations. When
    directors consider selling the corporation, their fiduciary duties obligate them “to seek the
    transaction offering the best value reasonably available to stockholders.” 412 The best
    transaction reasonably available is not always a sale; it may mean remaining independent
    and not engaging in a transaction at all.413
    could be shown to have caused a transaction to be effectuated (even one in which he had
    no financial interest) for a reason unrelated to a pursuit of the corporation’s best interests”);
    see also In re El Paso Corp. S’holder Litig., 
    41 A.3d 432
    , 439 (Del. Ch. 2012) (Strine, C.)
    (“[A] range of human motivations . . . can inspire fiduciaries and their advisors to be less
    than faithful to their contextual duty to pursue the best value for the company’s
    stockholders.”); RJR Nabisco, 
    1989 WL 7036
    , at *15 (“Greed is not the only human
    emotion that can pull one from the path of propriety; so might hatred, lust, envy, revenge,
    . . . shame or pride. Indeed any human emotion may cause a director to place his own
    interests, preferences or appetites before the welfare of the corporation.”).
    412
    Paramount Commc’ns, Inc. v. QVC Network, Inc., 
    637 A.2d 34
    , 43 (Del. 1993);
    see Kahn v. Stern, 
    183 A.3d 715
    , 
    2018 WL 1341719
    , at *1 n.3 (Del. Mar. 15, 2018)
    (TABLE) (describing “Revlon duties” as a “context-specific articulation of the directors’
    duties”).
    413
    See Huff Energy Fund, L.P. v. Gershen, 
    2016 WL 5462958
    , at *13 (Del. Ch.
    Sept. 29, 2016); Chen v. Howard-Anderson, 
    87 A.3d 648
    , 672 (Del. Ch. 2014); Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 37
    . Compare 
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 43
    (holding that it was reasonably probable that
    the directors breached their fiduciary duties by pursuing an ostensibly superior value to be
    created by a long-term strategic combination when, post-transaction, a controller would
    have “the power to alter that vision,” rendering its value highly contingent), and Revlon,
    Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes Hldgs., Inc., 
    506 A.2d 173
    , 182 (Del. 1986) (holding that
    the alternative of maintaining the corporation as a stand-alone entity and the use of
    defensive measures to preserve that alternative “became moot” once the board determined
    that the values achievable through a sale process exceeded the board’s assessment of stand-
    alone value), with Paramount Commc’ns, Inc. v. Time Inc., 
    571 A.2d 1140
    , 1154 (Del.
    1989) (holding that it was not reasonably probable that the directors breached their
    fiduciary duties by pursuing a superior long-term value of strategic, stock-for-stock merger
    without a post-transaction controller), and 
    Unocal, 493 A.2d at 956
    (holding that it was not
    reasonably probable that the directors breached their fiduciary duties by adopting a
    selective exchange offer to defend against a two-tiered tender offer where the blended value
    of the offer was less than $54 per share and the board reasonably believed the stand-alone
    74
    Another situational manifestation is the duty of disclosure.414 When directors ask
    stockholders to take action, whether by approving a transaction (such as a merger, sale of
    assets, or charter amendment) or making an investment decision (such as tendering shares
    or making an appraisal election), directors must disclose truthfully to stockholders “all facts
    that are material to the stockholders’ consideration of the transaction or matter and that are
    or can reasonably be obtained through their position as directors.”415
    When approving the Merger and making the decisions that led to it, the directors
    were acting as fiduciaries for the corporation and its stockholders. When distributing the
    Recommendation Statement and advising stockholders to tender into the first step of the
    medium-form Merger, the directors were again acting as fiduciaries. The plaintiffs
    therefore established the first element of their claim.
    B.     A Breach Of Fiduciary Duty
    The second element of a claim for aiding and abetting requires that the plaintiffs
    prove a predicate breach of fiduciary duty. For purposes of the second element, the
    value of corporation was much greater), and Air Prods. & Chems., Inc. v. Airgas, Inc., 
    16 A.3d 48
    , 112 (Del. Ch. 2011) (holding that the board complied with its fiduciary duties by
    maintaining a rights plan to protect a higher stand-alone value of corporation rather than
    permit an immediate sale).
    414
    Pfeffer v. Redstone, 
    965 A.2d 676
    , 684 (Del. 2009) (explaining that the “duty of
    disclosure is not an independent duty, but derives from the duties of care and loyalty”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    415
    In re Wayport Inc. Litig., 
    76 A.3d 296
    , 314 (Del. Ch. 2013) (internal quotation
    marks omitted); accord Stroud v. Grace, 
    606 A.2d 75
    , 84 (Del. 1992) (“[D]irectors of
    Delaware corporations [have] a fiduciary duty to disclose fully and fairly all material
    information within the board’s control when it seeks shareholder action.”).
    75
    plaintiffs attack both the sale process and the disclosures in the Recommendation
    Statement. Doctrinally, these seemingly separate species of misconduct blend, because the
    selection of the proper standard of review for evaluating the directors’ decisions during the
    sale process depends in the first instance on whether the directors complied with their duty
    of disclosure.
    “When determining whether directors have breached their duties, Delaware
    corporate law distinguishes between the standard of conduct and the standard of review.”416
    “The standard of conduct describes what directors are expected to do and is defined by the
    content of the duties of loyalty and care. The standard of review is the test that a court
    applies when evaluating whether directors have met the standard of conduct.”417
    416
    
    Chen, 87 A.3d at 666
    ; see William T. Allen, Jack B. Jacobs & Leo E. Strine, Jr.,
    Realigning the Standard of Review of Director Due Care with Delaware Public Policy: A
    Critique of Van Gorkom and Its Progeny as a Standard of Review Problem, 96 Nw. U. L.
    Rev. 449, 451–52 (2002); William T. Allen, Jack B. Jacobs & Leo E. Strine, Jr., Function
    Over Form: A Reassessment of the Standards of Review in Delaware Corporation Law, 56
    Bus. Law. 1287, 1295–99 (2001); see also E. Norman Veasey & Christine T. Di
    Guglielmo, What Happened in Delaware Corporate Law and Governance from 1992–
    2004? A Retrospective on Some Key Developments, 153 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1399, 1416–25
    (2005) (distinguishing between the standards of fiduciary conduct and standards of
    review). See generally Julian Velasco, The Role of Aspiration in Corporate Fiduciary
    Duties, 54 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 519, 553–58 (2012); Melvin Aron Eisenberg, The
    Divergence of Standards of Conduct and Standards of Review in Corporate Law, 62
    Fordham L. Rev. 437, 461–67 (1993).
    417
    Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 35
    –36.
    76
    “Delaware has three tiers of review for evaluating director decision-making: the
    business judgment rule, enhanced scrutiny, and entire fairness.”418 Which standard of
    review applies will depend initially on whether the board members:
    (i) were disinterested and independent (the business judgment rule), (ii) faced
    potential conflicts of interest because of the decisional dynamics present in
    particular recurring and recognizable situations (enhanced scrutiny), or (iii)
    confronted actual conflicts of interest such that the directors making the
    decision did not comprise a disinterested and independent board majority
    (entire fairness). The standard of review may change further depending on
    whether the directors took steps to address the potential or actual conflict,
    such as by creating an independent committee, conditioning the transaction
    on approval by disinterested stockholders, or both.419
    Delaware’s default standard of review is the business judgment rule, a principle of
    non-review that “reflects and promotes the role of the board of directors as the proper body
    to manage the business and affairs of the corporation.”420 The rule presumes that “in
    making a business decision the directors of a corporation acted on an informed basis, in
    good faith and in the honest belief that the action taken was in the best interests of the
    418
    Reis v. Hazelett Strip–Casting Corp., 
    28 A.3d 442
    , 457 (Del. Ch. 2011). For
    reasons discussed at length elsewhere, this summary groups together under the heading of
    enhanced scrutiny what were once seemingly separate standards of intermediate review.
    See generally Pell v. Kill, 
    135 A.3d 764
    , 784–85 (Del. Ch. 2016) (explaining how
    “[p]articularly during the 1980s, standards of review seemed to proliferate,” but that
    Delaware courts have subsequently consolidated the various intermediate standards within
    the framework of enhanced scrutiny); 
    Reis, 28 A.3d at 457
    –58 (discussing variants of
    enhanced scrutiny).
    419
    Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 36
    .
    420
    In re Trados Inc. S’holder Litig. (Trados I), 
    2009 WL 2225958
    , at *6 (Del. Ch.
    July 24, 2009).
    77
    company.”421 Unless one of its elements is rebutted, “the court merely looks to see whether
    the business decision made was rational in the sense of being one logical approach to
    advancing the corporation’s objectives.”422 “Only when a decision lacks any rationally
    conceivable basis will a court infer bad faith and a breach of duty.”423
    “Entire fairness, Delaware’s most onerous standard, applies when the board labors
    under actual conflicts of interest.”424 Once entire fairness applies, the defendants must
    establish “to the court’s satisfaction that the transaction was the product of both fair dealing
    and fair price.”425 “Not even an honest belief that the transaction was entirely fair will be
    sufficient to establish entire fairness. Rather, the transaction itself must be objectively fair,
    independent of the board’s beliefs.”426
    In between lies enhanced scrutiny, which is Delaware’s “intermediate standard of
    review.”427 It applies to “specific, recurring, and readily identifiable situations involving
    potential conflicts of interest where the realities of the decisionmaking context can subtly
    421
    Aronson v. Lewis, 
    473 A.2d 805
    , 812 (Del. 1984), overruled on other grounds
    by Brehm v. Eisner, 
    746 A.2d 244
    (Del. 2000).
    422
    In re Dollar Thrifty S’holder Litig., 
    14 A.3d 573
    , 598 (Del. Ch. 2010) (Strine,
    V.C.).
    423
    In re Orchard Enters., Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    88 A.3d 1
    , 34 (Del. Ch. 2014).
    424
    Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 44
    .
    425
    Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., 
    663 A.2d 1156
    , 1163 (Del. 1995) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    426
    Gesoff v. IIC Indus., Inc., 
    902 A.2d 1130
    , 1145 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    427
    Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 43
    .
    78
    undermine the decisions of even independent and disinterested directors.”428 Inherent in
    these situations are subtle structural and situational conflicts that do not rise to a level
    sufficient to trigger entire fairness review, but also do not comfortably permit expansive
    judicial deference.429 Framed generally, enhanced scrutiny requires that the defendant
    fiduciaries “bear the burden of persuasion to show that their motivations were proper and
    not selfish” and that “their actions were reasonable in relation to their legitimate
    objective.”430
    Traditionally, enhanced scrutiny would apply to decisions made in connection with
    a sale of a corporation for cash, as occurred in this case. 431 In Corwin v. KKR Financial
    Id.; accord 
    Reis, 28 A.3d at 457
    –59; see 
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 42
    (“[T]here are rare
    428
    situations which mandate that a court take a more direct and active role in overseeing the
    decisions made and actions taken by directors. In these situations, a court subjects the
    directors’ conduct to enhanced scrutiny to ensure that it is reasonable.”); Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 598
    (“In a situation where heightened scrutiny applies, the predicate question of
    what the board’s true motivation was comes into play. The court must take a nuanced and
    realistic look at the possibility that personal interests short of pure self-dealing have
    influenced the board to block a bid or to steer a deal to one bidder rather than another.”).
    In re Rural Metro Corp., 
    88 A.3d 54
    , 82 (Del. Ch. 2014), aff’d sub nom. RBC
    429
    Capital Markets, LLC v. Jervis, 
    129 A.3d 816
    (Del. 2015); accord Huff Energy Fund, 
    2016 WL 542958
    , at *13; see Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 597
    (“Avoiding a crude bifurcation of
    the world into two starkly divergent categories—business judgment rule review reflecting
    a policy of maximal deference to disinterested board decisionmaking and entire fairness
    review reflecting a policy of extreme skepticism toward self-dealing decisions—the
    Delaware Supreme Court’s Unocal and Revlon decisions adopted a middle ground.”);
    Golden Cycle, LLC v. Allan, 
    1998 WL 892631
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Dec. 10, 1998) (locating
    enhanced scrutiny under Unocal and Revlon between the business judgment rule and the
    entire fairness test).
    430
    Mercier v. Inter-Tel (Del.), Inc., 
    929 A.2d 786
    , 810 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Strine,
    V.C.).
    431
    See 
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 42
    –43, 45; 
    Revlon, 506 A.2d at 182
    .
    79
    Holdings, LLC, the Delaware Supreme Court held that “when a transaction not subject to
    the entire fairness standard is approved by a fully informed, uncoerced vote of the
    disinterested stockholders, the business judgment rule applies.”432 Applying Corwin, this
    court has held that when the holders of a majority of a company’s shares make a fully
    informed, disinterested, and uncoerced decision to tender into a medium-form merger
    under Section 251(h), the business judgment rule applies.433 To determine what standard
    of review applies therefore requires an assessment of whether the stockholder decision was
    fully informed, which in turn requires determining whether the directors breached their
    duty of disclosure. This decision starts with that issue.
    1.       The Disclosure Claim
    When asking stockholders to tender into the first step of the medium-form Merger,
    the members of the Board owed a “fiduciary duty to disclose fully and fairly all material
    information within the board’s control when it seeks shareholder action.” 434 A fact is
    material “if there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable shareholder would consider
    it important in deciding how to vote.”435 The test does not require “a substantial likelihood
    432
    
    125 A.3d 304
    , 309 (Del. 2015).
    In re Volcano Corp. S’holder Litig., 
    143 A.3d 727
    , 747 (Del. Ch. 2016), aff’d,
    433
    
    156 A.3d 697
    (Del. 2017) (TABLE).
    434
    
    Stroud, 606 A.2d at 84
    ; accord Malone v. Brincat, 
    722 A.2d 5
    , 12 (Del. 1998)
    (“The directors of a Delaware corporation are required to disclose fully and fairly all
    material information within the board’s control when it seeks shareholder action.”).
    435
    Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., 
    493 A.2d 929
    , 944 (Del. 1985) (quoting TSC Indus.,
    Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 
    426 U.S. 438
    , 449 (1976)).
    80
    that [the] disclosure . . . would have caused the reasonable investor to change his vote.”436
    The question is rather whether there is “a substantial likelihood that the disclosure of the
    omitted fact would have been viewed by the reasonable investor as having significantly
    altered the ‘total mix’ of information made available.”437
    a.    The December 2013 Tip And Singer’s Role
    The plaintiffs argue that the Recommendation Statement failed to disclose Krause’s
    tip to Deutsche Bank in December 2013, which Deutsche Bank relayed to Singer. In this
    tip, Krause conveyed in substance that after Avago completed the LSI deal, it wanted to
    acquire PLX for approximately $300 million.438 The plaintiffs argue that the
    Recommendation Statement also failed to disclose that Krause and Singer discussed the
    pricing of the deal during their dinner meeting on May 21, 2014. Adding to the mix, the
    plaintiffs have identified other aspects of the Recommendation Statement that misleadingly
    downplay Singer’s involvement in the deal process. The plaintiffs proved that the
    Recommendation Statement’s presentation of these events was materially misleading.
    As a general matter, when “arm’s-length negotiation has resulted in an agreement
    which fully expresses the terms essential to an understanding by shareholders of the impact
    of the merger, it is not necessary to describe all the bends and turns in the road which led
    436
    
    Id. (same). 437
                 
    Id. (same). 438
                 See JX 1032 at 2.
    81
    to that result.”439 Early contacts that do not lead to more formal negotiations or a transaction
    are not required to be disclosed.440
    In this case, Krause’s tip to Deutsche Bank, which Deutsche Bank relayed to Singer,
    was more than just a bend or turn in the road. On December 19, 2013, Krause told Deutsche
    Bank (and Deutsche Bank told Singer) that Avago wanted to buy PLX, when it would bid,
    and how much it wanted to pay. 441 The Recommendation Statement fails to mention the
    tip. It describes the surrounding events as follows:
    On December 18, 2013, the PLX annual meeting of stockholders resulted in
    the election of three new members of PLX’s Board of Directors from the
    slate proposed by Potomac Capital.
    2014 Sales Process
    On December 23, 2013, the PLX Board of Directors updated the new
    directors on PLX’s consideration of strategic transactions over the preceding
    two years, including the 2012 Go-Shop Process and the Fall 2013 Market
    Check. Deutsche Bank also noted that the Fall 2013 Market Check had not
    resulted in any formal proposal to acquire PLX and that several prospective
    bidders had indicated that PLX’s stock price already reflected a significant
    acquisition premium.442
    439
    Van de Walle v. Unimation, Inc., 
    1991 WL 29303
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. Mar. 7, 1991)
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    440
    See Wis. Inv. Bd. v. Bartlett, 
    2000 WL 238026
    , at *8 (Del.Ch. Feb. 24, 2000)
    (“One cannot conclude that a failure to disclose the details of negotiations gone south
    would be either viably practical or material to shareholders in the meaningful way intended
    by our case law.”).
    441
    See JX 1031; JX 1032 at 2.
    442
    JX 551 at 24.
    82
    According to the Recommendation Statement, Avago did not renew its interest in PLX
    until May 2014.443
    A stockholder who knew about the tip could take a very different view of the
    Board’s subsequent efforts to explore alternatives and negotiate with Avago, as well as the
    role Singer played in the process. The early communication undercuts the legitimacy of the
    eventual price negotiations with Avago that Singer led. Rather than appearing like arm’s-
    length negotiations, the quick back-and-forth in May 2014 can be seen as a means of
    arriving at the $300 million valuation that Krause identified in December 2013. Instead of
    Singer and the Board negotiating for the best transaction reasonably available and being
    prepared to remain an independent company, it looks like they engaged in the “art of the
    possible”444 and accepted what Avago had planned to offer all along. The fact that Deutsche
    Bank and Singer did not share Krause’s tip calls into question their motivations on behalf
    of PLX. Rather than actors attempting in good faith to obtain the best outcome possible,
    they look like self-interested agents who were happy with a quick sale that would serve
    their interests. The Recommendation Statement’s failure to mention Krause’s tip was a
    material omission.
    443
    See 
    Id. at 25.
           444
    Schmitt Dep. 172–73.
    83
    Next, the Recommendation Statement failed to mention that Singer and Krause
    discussed pricing when they had dinner on May 21, 2014.445 The Recommendation
    Statement describes the timeline as follows:
    On May 19, 2014, representatives of Avago contacted PLX to directly
    communicate Avago’s interest in renewing its offer to acquire PLX. A
    follow-up meeting was held on May 21, 2014, at which representatives of
    PLX provided Avago an update on PLX’s business. Also on May 21, 2014,
    Mr. Singer met with Mr. Thomas Krause of Avago to discuss Avago’s
    potential offer to acquire PLX. Mr. Krause and Mr. Singer discussed general
    terms for a potential acquisition of PLX by Avago. Mr. Krause noted that
    Avago believed that the then-current PLX stock price already included a
    premium as a result of Potomac Capital’s actions. Following the meeting, the
    Special Committee discussed Avago’s interest.
    On May 22, 2014, Avago sent a non-binding letter of interest to the PLX
    Board of Directors proposing to acquire PLX at a price of $6.25 per share.
    The letter stated Avago’s willingness to enter into a merger agreement with
    PLX on substantially the same terms as the IDT merger agreement, with
    changes to reflect an all-cash transaction and the deletion of the “go-shop”
    provision in the IDT merger agreement.446
    Particularly when viewed against the backdrop of Krause’s early communication with
    Deutsche Bank and Singer’s knowledge of that communication, the fact that Krause and
    Singer discussed pricing on May 21 was material information. A reasonable stockholder
    would want to know that information to evaluate whether Singer and his fellow directors
    actually bargained at arms’ length with Avago, or whether Singer was guiding the Board
    to the figure that Avago was already willing to pay.
    445
    JX 433 at 1; JX 1026.
    446
    JX 551 at 26.
    84
    Given this backdrop, the Recommendation Statement’s discussion of the
    development of PLX’s counteroffer also becomes problematic. The Recommendation
    Statement describes the process as follows:
    Later on May 22, 2014, the Special Committee and Deutsche Bank discussed
    the proposal from Avago and what further steps should be taken to be able
    to respond to the proposal. The Special Committee also discussed the PLX
    valuation issues and directed Deutsche Bank to prepare a valuation
    assessment to present to the Special Committee.
    On May 23, 2014, the Special Committee met with Deutsche Bank . . . .
    Deutsche Bank then provided an update on market conditions and PLX
    valuation issues, and the Special Committee discussed the proposal from
    Avago of $6.25 per share. Deutsche Bank presented and discussed with the
    Special Committee certain valuation analyses, including, among other
    things, Deutsche Bank’s view that the PLX share price was impacted by the
    takeover premium built into the share price following Potomac Capital’s 13D
    filing in January 2013. Deutsche Bank and the Special Committee also
    discussed the market analysts’ 2014 and 2015 projected estimates for PLX
    as compared against management’s projections. The Special Committee
    directed Deutsche Bank to include both in future analyses and discussions.
    ...
    After considering the analyses presented by Deutsche Bank, the prior market
    checks, the other indications of interest received by PLX from time to time
    and the sufficiency of the 2014 Market Check (noting in particular that the
    first two market checks had only resulted in an offer from Avago, and that
    the terminated IDT Merger had already put potential buyers on alert but only
    Avago made a proposal to acquire PLX), the Special Committee
    unanimously agreed to recommend to the PLX Board of Directors that PLX
    prepare a counter proposal at $6.75 per share and a strategy for responding
    to any further counter proposals from Avago.447
    The record in this case calls into question whether there was a meeting of the Special
    Committee and Deutsche Bank on May 22. What seems more likely is that Singer discussed
    447
    
    Id. 85 the
    offer with Deutsche Bank, and they decided on a counter offer of $6.75. After that
    discussion, Deutsche Bank prepared a letter to that effect and circulated it to Raun, Schmitt,
    Singer, and Salameh.448 Singer also asked Deutsche Bank to prepare some market analysis
    to support a $6.75 counter.449
    Viewed in isolation, I would not regard these last details as material. But considered
    in the context of Krause’s tip and Singer’s dinner with Krause, the prominent role that
    Singer played in developing the counteroffer with Deutsche Bank becomes material. A
    stockholder would want to know about Singer’s role when evaluating whether the directors
    were negotiating at arms’ length, or whether Singer was orchestrating a deal at a price that
    Krause set in December 2013.
    Finally, the plaintiffs point out that Singer had undisclosed conversations with “a
    member of Avago’s management” about tender and support agreements. The minutes of a
    meeting of the Special Committee on June 15, 2014 establish that the conversation
    occurred.450 The Recommendation Statement fails to mention it, stating only that the
    Special Committee discussed Avago’s request.451
    Here too, I would resist viewing Singer’s involvement as material in the abstract.
    Taken as a whole, however, the Recommendation Statement appears to have sought to
    448
    See JX 434 at 2–3.
    449
    JX 1030 at 1.
    450
    JX 516 at 1.
    451
    JX 551 at 29.
    86
    minimize Singer’s role. The Recommendation Statement should have described Singer’s
    involvement accurately and candidly by identifying him as the interlocutor.452
    b.    The Reliability Of The June 2014 Projections
    The plaintiffs next contest the Recommendation Statement’s description of the June
    2014 Projections as having been prepared “in the ordinary course of business for operating
    purposes . . . .”453 The plaintiffs proved at trial that this description was misleading.
    The Recommendation Statement discusses the June 2014 Projections at length in a
    section titled “Projected Financial Information,” which states:
    PLX does not, as a matter of course, make detailed or long-term public
    forecasts or projections as to its future financial performance due to the
    unpredictability of the underlying assumptions and estimates. At the
    December 12, 2013 PLX Board of Directors meeting, PLX management
    presented a five year plan covering the period 2014–2018 (the “December
    2013 [Projections]”). A notation to the December 2013 [Projections] stated,
    “Although this is an aggressive plan compared to the past couple years
    performance and where we stand this quarter with soft demand from Storage
    market, management believes we should drive internally for this number as
    the plan. The key will be getting our strong Gen 3 design pipe into
    production, a stable economy and a return of federal spending with our end
    customers.” The December 2013 [Projections] reflected growth rates
    significantly higher than historic levels and was based on certain assumptions
    with respect to investment levels on certain products, timing of production
    and ramp of certain products, stable economic conditions, and return of
    federal spending with the end customers. Between December 2013 and June
    2014, the PLX Board of Directors and PLX management discussed updating
    the five year forecast based on more current information. In June 2014, PLX
    management prepared a revised five year plan to better reflect management’s
    current expectations of future company performance. On June 13, 2014, PLX
    452
    See van der Fluit v. Yates, 
    2017 WL 5953514
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Nov. 30, 2017)
    (holding that plaintiff had stated claim for breach of duty of disclosure where complaint
    failed to identify who the negotiators were who had contact with bidders).
    453
    JX 551 at 55.
    87
    management delivered the revised five year plan (the “June 2014
    [Projections]”) to Deutsche Bank. The June 2014 [Projections] w[ere] based
    on updated assumptions as of June 2014 and reflected downward adjustments
    to revenue due to lower than expected design activity for, anticipated
    production delays on, and reduced market demand for, certain products. . . .
    The December 2013 [Projections] were provided to [Avago] in May 2014
    and did not include PLX’s first quarter actual revenue results. The Upside
    Case projections as presented below are consistent with those presented to
    [Avago] in May 2014 except that they now incorporate PLX’s actual revenue
    results for the first quarter. . . . The December 2013 [Projections] w[ere] later
    updated to include PLX’s actual first quarter results. The December 2013
    [Projections], as updated, and the June 2014 [Projections[ (collectively, the
    “Projections”), which are summarized below, were also furnished to
    Deutsche Bank, which were relied upon by Deutsche Bank in connection
    with their financial analysis and Fairness Opinion as follows, except . . .
    where PLX management and the PLX Board of Directors instructed
    Deutsche Bank to analyze both the Base Case and the Upside Case, Deutsche
    Bank was instructed by PLX management and the PLX Board of Directors
    to rely on the Base Case as the primary basis of its analyses. The June 2014
    [Projections are] referred to as the “Base Case” in Deutsche Bank’s analysis
    (and in the further discussion below), because PLX’s management informed
    Deutsche Bank that the Base Case represented the best currently available
    estimates and judgments by management as to the expected future results of
    operations and financial conditions of PLX, and accordingly are the
    projections which, with PLX’s consent, Deutsche Bank relied upon in
    performing its analysis. The December 2013 [Projections], as updated, [are]
    referred to as the “Upside Case” in Deutsche Bank’s analysis . . . .454
    This paragraph is misleading.
    For starters, PLX prepared detailed and long-term forecasts in the ordinary course
    of business. Although it was accurate to say that the figures were not for public
    consumption, PLX prepared a three-year plan on an annual basis.455 As discussed in the
    454
    
    Id. at 54–55.
          455
    Whipple Dep. 94–95 (“[E]very year around Thanksgiving, we sat down as a
    group and we did a three—typically a three-year plan, which—the first year of which
    became our budget for the following year.”).
    88
    Factual Background, it was also technically true that the December 2013 Projections
    contained the notation described in the Recommendation Statement, but the language in
    context did not approach the prominence it received in the Recommendation Statement.
    Next, contrary to the impression created by the Recommendation Statement, the
    Board and management did not discuss updating the December 2013 Projections
    “[b]etween December 2013 and June 2014 . . . based on more current information.” The
    issue first came up on May 23, 2014 after the Special Committee received Avago’s offer
    of $6.25 per share.456 While it is technically true that May 2014 is “[b]etween December
    2013 and June 2014,” the Recommendation Statement creates the impression of regular
    discussion and review. Instead of updating the plan, the Board used it as late as April 2014
    for decisions in the ordinary course of business involving insurance and compensation.457
    Relatedly, the effort to produce the June 2014 Projections did not actually begin
    until June 7, 2014, after PLX and Avago had agreed on $6.50 per share. 458 The new figures
    did not reflect “more current information,” as the Recommendation Statement suggested.
    456
    JX 459 at 3; see also Cho Dep. 130–37; Raun Dep. 440–42; Salameh Dep. 90–
    91; Schmitt Dep. 177–79; Whipple Dep. 104–05.
    457
    See JX 385 at 20; JX 383 at 32. The plaintiffs’ expert noted that the use of the
    projections for insurance purposes evidences their reliability, because providing false
    information to insurance companies can be pursued as insurance fraud and can result in a
    policy becoming void. Quintero Tr. 602–03. Cf. Del. Open MRI Radiology Assocs. v.
    Kessler, 
    898 A.2d 290
    , 317 n.57 (Del. Ch. 2006) (finding projections credible where they
    had been presented to “federally-regulated financial institutions for financing purposes”
    and “it is a felony to knowingly obtain any funds from a financial institution by false or
    fraudulent pretenses or representations”).
    458
    See JX 491 at 1.
    89
    When PLX’s Vice President of Sales asked his sales managers to revisit their estimates as
    part of this process, he noted that “[w]e clearly have enough wins and momentum to drive
    the 2014–2018 numbers in the 5 year plan.”459 The June 2014 Projections were prepared
    for Deutsche Bank’s valuation analysis. When Deutsche Bank ran the numbers, they
    generated the answer the banker’s wanted: a range of $4.81 to $6.79 per share.460
    In light of the circumstances surrounding their preparation, it was misleading for the
    Recommendation Statement to claim that the June 2014 Projections “were prepared in the
    ordinary course of business for operating purposes.” The June 2014 Projections were
    prepared after Avago made its bid so that Deutsche Bank could use them in its fairness
    opinion.
    c.      The May 24 Analysis
    Finally, the plaintiffs argue that the Recommendation Statement was materially
    misleading because it failed to include a discounted cash flow analysis based on the
    459
    
    Id. There was
    testimony from interested witnesses to the effect that management
    followed the same process to develop the June 2014 Projections that they had followed in
    December 2013. See Raun Dep. 177–78 (confirming that “the June five-year analysis [was]
    very similar” to the analysis in December 2013 “for the outlying years”); Salameh Dep.
    164, 273 (testifying management “did a detailed, bottoms-up . . . , customer by customer,
    product by product” review for 2014–2016 and also a “top-down, just a reality check”).
    Given the circumstances surrounding the preparation of the June 2014 Projections, I am
    unable to credit this testimony, which was given by obviously interested parties. In
    weighing the credibility of this testimony, I have also taken into account the interested
    witnesses’ widespread efforts to reconfigure the record by drafting questionable minutes
    and overemphasizing the “aggressive” nature of the December 2013 Projections.
    460
    JX 499 at 1. During this litigation, the interested witnesses testified that this was
    the proper characterization. See Cho Dep. 191–95; Salameh Dep. 257–58.
    90
    December 2013 Projections. On the facts of this case, failing to disclose that analysis was
    material.
    Under Delaware law, when a board relies on the advice of a financial advisor in
    making a decision that requires stockholder action, the stockholders are entitled to receive
    “a fair summary of the substantive work performed by the investment bankers upon whose
    advice the recommendations of their board as to how to vote on a merger or tender rely.”461
    A fair summary “need not contain all information underlying the financial advisor’s
    opinion contained in its report. . . .The essence of a fair summary is not a cornucopia of
    financial data, but rather an accurate description of the advisor’s methodology and key
    assumptions.”462
    Information in a banker’s analysis also may require disclosure because of the
    directors’ fiduciary obligation “to avoid misleading partial disclosures.”463 “[O]nce
    defendants travel down the road of partial disclosure . . . , they ha[ve] an obligation to
    provide the stockholders with an accurate, full, and fair characterization.”464 “When a
    document ventures into certain subjects, it must do so in a manner that is materially
    461
    In re Pure Res., Inc., S’holders Litig., 
    808 A.2d 421
    , 449 (Del. Ch. 2002) (Strine,
    V.C.).
    462
    In re Trulia, Inc. Stockholder Litig., 
    129 A.3d 884
    , 900–-01 (Del. Ch. 2016)
    (internal citations omitted).
    463
    Zirn v. VLI Corp., 
    681 A.2d 1050
    , 1056 (Del. 1996).
    464
    
    Id. at 1056
    n.1 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    91
    complete and unbiased by the omission of material facts.”465 Even if the additional
    information independently would fall short of the traditional materiality standard, it must
    be disclosed if necessary to prevent other disclosed information from being misleading.466
    When the Special Committee met on May 23, 2014, to discuss Avago’s offer of
    $6.25 per share, the Special Committee asked for a discounted cash flow analysis based on
    the December 2013 Projections.467 The Special Committee also asked for a separate
    discounted cash flow analysis based on new projections, which Deutsche Bank prepared
    using the Preliminary Sensitivity Case.468 During a meeting of the Board on May 24, the
    directors received and reviewed the two discounted cash flow analysis.469 When the Special
    Committee negotiated the price with Avago, the only discounted cash flow analyses it
    possessed were based on the December 2013 Projections and the Preliminary Sensitivity
    Case. For its final fairness opinion, Deutsche Bank replaced the Preliminary Sensitivity
    Case with the June 2014 Projections.470
    When describing the Special Committee meeting on May 23, 2014, the
    Recommendation Statement discusses the Special Committee’s request for two discounted
    465
    Pure 
    Res., 808 A.2d at 448
    .
    466
    Johnson v. Shapiro, 
    2002 WL 31438477
    , at *4 (Del. Ch. Oct. 18, 2002).
    467
    JX 459 at 3.
    468
    Id.; see also Schmitt Dep. 180–83.
    469
    See JX 462 at 13–14; JX 465 at 4.
    470
    Compare JX 462 at 14, with JX 529 at 19.
    92
    cash flow analyses.471 When describing the Board meeting on May 24, the
    Recommendation Statement mentions that the Board received and discussed the two
    discounted cash flow analyses.472 The Recommendation Statement does not, however,
    disclose the results of the May 24 discounted cash flow analysis based on the December
    2013 Projections. The record shows that it yielded a valuation range of $6.90 to $9.78 per
    share, with a midpoint of $8.27 per share.473 The entire range of the analysis exceeded both
    the directors’ counteroffer and the eventual deal price.
    Subsequently, in a section titled “Discounted Cash Flow Analysis,” the
    Recommendation Statement describes two analyses that Deutsche Bank prepared for the
    Board’s meetings on June 20 and 22, when the Board formally approved the Merger. Those
    analyses used the December 2013 Projections and the January 2014 Projections. The June
    analysis that Deutsche Bank prepared using the December 2013 Projections generated a
    range of $6.39 to $8.98 per share, with a midpoint of $7.69. Under the revised analysis, the
    directors’ counteroffer and the final deal price fell within the range.474
    Whether the directors were obligated to disclose the analysis from May 24, 2014
    strikes me as a close call. It was not part of Deutsche Bank’s final analysis, and the
    471
    JX 551 at 26–27.
    472
    
    Id. at 27.
           473
    JX 462 at 13.
    474
    Potomac has argued that the later valuation more accurately accounted for the
    Company’s options and restricted stock units and used a more appropriate tax rate.
    Compare JX 529 at 20 with JX 462 at 13. A description of the two ranges could easily have
    made those points.
    93
    midpoint of the May range was only 7% lower than the midpoint of the June range. Under
    the facts and circumstances of this case, however, I believe that omitting the May valuation
    range constituted a misleading partial disclosure. Even if the information was not
    independently material, once the Recommendation Statement discussed the May 24
    valuation, stockholders were entitled to know the range it produced, particularly when it
    was one of only two valuations that the directors possessed when they negotiated the price
    of the deal and when both the counteroffer and the final deal price fell below the valuation
    range.
    d.     The Predicate Breach Of The Duty Of Disclosure
    The plaintiffs proved that the directors breached their duty of disclosure by
    describing the June 2014 Projections in misleading fashion and by failing to disclose other
    information that would be material to a stockholder’s decision to tender, including Krause’s
    tip to Deutsche Bank. The breaches of the duty of disclosure satisfy the second element of
    the plaintiffs’ claim against Potomac for aiding and abetting. As discussed in the next
    section, the breaches also affect the operative standard of review for purposes of the sale
    process claim.
    2.     The Sale Process Claims
    In addition to asserting disclosure claims, the plaintiffs contend that the directors
    breached their fiduciary duties during the sale process. In substance, the plaintiffs assert
    that the directors breached their fiduciary duties by permitting Singer to lead them into a
    near-term sale when PLX would have been better served by remaining independent,
    building its business, and potentially pursuing a sale at a later date.
    94
    a.    The Standard of Review
    As discussed previously, when determining whether corporate fiduciaries have
    breached their duties, a court applying Delaware law evaluates the directors’ conduct
    through the lens of a standard of review. The Delaware Supreme Court has held that the
    intermediate standard of enhanced scrutiny applies when directors consider selling the
    corporation for cash.475 Subsequent decisions have clarified that enhanced scrutiny applies
    in this context because of the potential conflicts of interest that fiduciaries face when
    considering whether to sell the corporation, to whom, and on what terms.476
    In this case, the Board approved a sale of PLX to Avago for cash, making enhanced
    scrutiny the operative standard of review. Under Corwin, however, the business judgment
    rule would apply if the directors had complied with their duty of disclosure. 477 This
    decision has held that the Recommendation Statement was misleading, so the fact that
    holders of a majority of the Company’s shares tendered into the first step of the medium-
    form Merger does not lower the standard of review.478
    475
    
    Revlon, 506 A.2d at 180
    –82.
    476
    See, e.g., El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 439
    (“[T]he potential sale of a corporation has
    enormous implications for corporate managers and advisors, and a range of human
    motivations, including but by no means limited to greed, can inspire fiduciaries and their
    advisors to be less than faithful . . . .”); Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 597
    (“The heightened
    scrutiny that applies in the Revlon (and Unocal) contexts are, in large measure, rooted in a
    concern that the board might harbor personal motivations in the sale context that differ
    from what is best for the corporation and its stockholders.”).
    477
    See 
    Corwin, 125 A.3d at 309
    ; 
    Volcano, 143 A.3d at 747
    .
    478
    Potomac has also argued that after Corwin, enhanced scrutiny only applies before
    closing, when a plaintiff seeks a preliminary injunction. At least for purposes of an aiding-
    and-abetting claim, the Delaware Supreme Court has rejected this position and held that
    95
    The operative standard of review is therefore enhanced scrutiny. When that standard
    applies, the defendant fiduciaries bear the burden of proving that they “act[ed] reasonably
    to seek the transaction offering the best value reasonably available to the stockholders.”479
    When a plaintiff sues a third party for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary duty, the
    plaintiffs bear the burden of proving that the directors’ conduct fell outside the range of
    reasonableness.480
    enhanced scrutiny remains the operative standard of review in a post-closing damages
    action. RBC 
    Capital, 129 A.3d at 857
    (“[W]e reject RBC’s contention that the trial court
    erred by finding a due care violation without finding gross negligence. RBC argues that
    intermediate scrutiny under Revlon exists to determine whether plaintiff stockholders
    should receive pre-closing injunctive relief, but it cannot be used to establish a breach of
    fiduciary duty that warrants post-closing damages. . . . We agree with the trial court that
    the individual defendants breached their fiduciary duties by engaging in conduct that fell
    outside the range of reasonableness, and that this was a sufficient predicate for its finding
    of aiding and abetting liability against RBC.”). In pre-Corwin decisions, the Delaware
    Supreme Court applied enhanced scrutiny in post-closing damages actions. See, e.g.,
    Citron v. Fairchild Camera & Instrument Corp., 
    569 A.2d 53
    , 64–65 (Del. 1989) (holding
    that enhanced scrutiny was the proper standard of review in a post-closing damages action
    but affirming the trial court’s finding that the directors had carried their burden of proof);
    Barkan v. Amsted Indus., Inc., 
    567 A.2d 1279
    , 1286 (Del. 1989) (holding that enhanced
    scrutiny would have been the proper standard of review in a post-closing damages action,
    if the case had not settled). For lengthier discussions of precedent indicating that the fact
    of closing, standing alone, would not historically have altered the standard of review, see
    
    Chen, 87 A.3d at 668
    –69; see also In re PLX Technology, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2018 WL 747180
    , at *2–3 (Del. Ch. Feb. 6, 2018) (denying summary judgment on this point).
    479
    
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 43
    .
    480
    See, e.g., Allied Capital Corp. v. GC-Sun Hldgs., L.P., 
    910 A.2d 1020
    , 1039 (Del.
    Ch. 2006) (“[T]he test for stating an aiding and abetting claim is a stringent one . . . —a
    plaintiff must prove [its elements]”); Arnold v. Soc’y for Sav. Bancorp, Inc., 
    1995 WL 376919
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. June 15, 1995) (agreeing with the defendants’ contention that
    “[p]laintiff must prove his aider and abettor theory to hold [a third party] liable”), aff’d,
    
    678 A.2d 533
    (Del. 1996).
    96
    Determining whether directors acted reasonably requires that the court consider
    both (i) “the decisionmaking process employed by the directors, including the information
    on which the directors based their decision,” and (ii) “the directors’ action in light of the
    circumstances then existing.”481 “Through this examination, the court seeks to assure itself
    that the board acted reasonably, in the sense of taking a logical and reasoned approach for
    the purpose of advancing a proper objective, and to thereby smoke out mere pretextual
    justifications for improperly motivated decisions.”482
    “The reasonableness standard permits a reviewing court to address inequitable
    action even when directors may have subjectively believed that they were acting
    properly.”483 The objective standard does not, however, permit a reviewing court to freely
    substitute its own judgment for the directors’:
    There are many business and financial considerations implicated in
    investigating and selecting the best value reasonably available. The board of
    directors is the corporate decisionmaking body best equipped to make these
    judgments. Accordingly, a court applying enhanced judicial scrutiny should
    be deciding whether the directors made a reasonable decision, not a perfect
    decision. If a board selected one of several reasonable alternatives, a court
    481
    
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 45
    .
    Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 598
    ; see In re Netsmart Techs., Inc. S’holder Litig.,
    482
    
    924 A.2d 171
    , 192 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Strine, V.C.) (“Although linguistically not obvious,
    this reasonableness review is more searching than rationality review, and there is less
    tolerance for slack by the directors.”); In re Toys “R” Us, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    877 A.2d 975
    , 1000 (Del. Ch. 2005) (Strine, V.C.) (“[T]he Supreme Court held that courts would
    subject directors subject to Revlon . . . to a heightened standard of reasonableness review,
    rather than the laxer standard of rationality review applicable under the business judgment
    rule.”).
    483
    In re Del Monte Foods Co. S’holders Litig., 
    25 A.3d 813
    , 830–31 (Del. Ch.
    2011).
    97
    should not second-guess that choice even though it might have decided
    otherwise or subsequent events may have cast doubt on the board’s
    determination. Thus, courts will not substitute their business judgment for
    that of the directors, but will determine if the directors’ decision was, on
    balance, within a range of reasonableness.484
    Enhanced scrutiny “is not a license for law-trained courts to second-guess reasonable, but
    debatable, tactical choices that directors have made in good faith.”485 “What typically
    drives a finding of unreasonableness is evidence of self-interest, undue favoritism or
    disdain towards a particular bidder, or a similar non-stockholder-motivated influence that
    calls into question the integrity of the process.”486 “[W]hen there is a reason to conclude
    that debatable tactical decisions were motivated not by a principled evaluation of the risks
    and benefits to the company’s stockholders, but by a fiduciary’s consideration of his own
    financial or other personal self-interests, then the core animating principle of Revlon is
    implicated.”487
    b.     Conflicts Of Interest In The Boardroom
    The divergent interest that led to a predicate breach of duty in this case was Singer’s
    interest in achieving a near-term sale. As Potomac’s agent and co-managing member,
    484
    
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 45
    .
    Toys “R” 
    Us, 877 A.2d at 1000
    ; accord Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 595
    –96 (“[A]t
    485
    bottom Revlon is a test of reasonableness; directors are generally free to select the path to
    value maximization, so long as they choose a reasonable route to get there.”).
    486
    Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 831
    .
    487
    El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 439
    .
    98
    Singer faced the dual fiduciary problem identified in Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.488 There,
    the Delaware Supreme Court held that there was “no dilution” of the duty of loyalty when
    a director “holds dual or multiple” fiduciary obligations and “no ‘safe harbor’ for such
    divided loyalties in Delaware.”489 “If the interests of the beneficiaries to whom the dual
    fiduciary owes duties diverge, the fiduciary faces an inherent conflict of interest.”490 “If
    the interests of the beneficiaries are aligned, then there is no conflict.”491
    Ordinarily, the fact that Potomac held a large block of common stock would be
    488
    
    457 A.2d 701
    (Del. 1983).
    489
    
    Id. at 710.
           490
    
    Chen, 87 A.3d at 670
    ; see, e.g., Krasner v. Moffett, 
    826 A.2d 277
    , 283 (Del.
    2003) (“[T]hree of the FSC directors . . . were interested in the MEC transaction because
    they served on the boards . . . of both MOXY and FSC.”); 
    McMullin, 765 A.2d at 923
    (“The
    ARCO officers and designees on Chemical’s board owed Chemical’s minority
    shareholders ‘an uncompromising duty of loyalty.’ There is no dilution of that obligation
    in a parent subsidiary context for the individuals who acted in a dual capacity as officers
    or designees of ARCO and as directors of Chemical.” (footnote omitted)); Rabkin v. Philip
    A. Hunt Chem. Corp., 
    498 A.2d 1099
    , 1106 (Del. 1985) (holding that parent corporation’s
    directors on subsidiary board faced conflict of interest); 
    Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 710
    (holding that officers of parent corporation faced conflict of interest when acting as
    subsidiary directors regarding transaction with parent); see also Rales v. Blasband, 
    634 A.2d 927
    , 933 (Del. 1993) (explaining for purposes of demand futility that “[d]irectorial
    interest exists whenever divided loyalties are present” (internal quotation marks omitted));
    Goldman v. Pogo.com Inc., 
    2002 WL 1358760
    , at *3 (Del. Ch. June 14, 2002) (“Because
    Khosla and Wu were the representatives of shareholders which, in their institutional
    capacities, [were] both alleged to have had a direct financial interest in this transaction, a
    reasonable doubt is raised as to Khosla and Wu’s disinterestedness in having voted to
    approve the . . . [l]oan.”); Sealy Mattress Co. of N.J. v. Sealy, Inc., 
    532 A.2d 1324
    , 1328,
    1336–37 (Del. Ch. 1987) (same).
    491
    
    Chen, 87 A.3d at 670
    ; see, e.g., Van de Walle, 
    1991 WL 29303
    , at *11.
    99
    helpful to Singer and undermine any concern about divergent interest.492 “Delaware law
    presumes that investors act to maximize the value of their own investments.”493 “When a
    large stockholder supports a sales process and receives the same per-share consideration as
    every other stockholder, that is ordinarily evidence of fairness, not of the opposite . . . .”494
    When directors or their affiliates own “material amounts” of common stock, it aligns their
    interests with other stockholders by giving them a “motivation to seek the highest price”
    and the “personal incentive as stockholders to think about the trade off between selling
    now and the risks of not doing so.”495 If the decision is made to sell, “[a] director who is
    also a shareholder of his corporation is more likely to have interests that are aligned with
    the other shareholders of that corporation as it is in his best interest, as a shareholder, to
    negotiate a transaction that will result in the largest return for all shareholders.”496
    492
    This is not a case where a large blockholder owned a security other than common
    stock with a return profile that created divergent incentives. Cf. Frederick Hsu Living Trust
    v. ODN Hldg. Corp., 
    2017 WL 1437308
    , at *28–29 (Del. Ch. Apr. 14, 2017) (finding that
    representatives of venture capital fund who served on board faced the dual fiduciary
    problem where the fund owned preferred stock carrying a redemption right and the
    directors engaged in a de facto liquidation to raise funds to redeem the shares); Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 46
    –47 (finding that three of the directors faced the dual fiduciary problem
    because the merger triggered the preferred stockholders’ liquidation preference, which
    gave those directors “a divergent interest in the [m]erger that conflicted with the interests
    of the common stock”).
    493
    Katell v. Morgan Stanley Gp., Inc., 
    1995 WL 376952
    , at *12 (Del. Ch. June 15,
    1995).
    494
    Iroquois Master Fund Ltd. v. Answers Corp., 
    2014 WL 7010777
    , at *1 n.1 (Del.
    2014) (ORDER).
    495
    Dollar 
    Thrifty, 14 A.3d at 600
    .
    496
    Orman v. Cullman, 
    794 A.2d 5
    , 27 n.56 (Del. Ch. 2002); see In re Mobile
    Commc’ns Corp. of Am., Inc. Consol. Litig., 
    1991 WL 1392
    , at *9 (Del. Ch. Jan. 7, 1991)
    100
    Delaware law recognizes that in some scenarios, circumstances may cause the
    interests of investors who hold common stock to diverge. For example, liquidity is one
    “benefit that may lead directors to breach their fiduciary duties,” and stockholder directors
    may be found to have breached their duty of loyalty if a “desire to gain liquidity . . . caused
    them to manipulate the sales process” and subordinate the best interests of the corporation
    and the stockholders as a whole.497 For similar reasons, particular types of investors may
    espouse short-term investment strategies and structure their affairs to benefit economically
    (Allen, C.) (noting that directors’ substantial stockholdings gave them “powerful economic
    (and psychological) incentives to get the best available deal”), aff’d, 
    608 A.2d 729
    (Del.
    1992).
    497
    In re Answers Corp. S’holder Litig., 
    2012 WL 1253072
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Apr. 11,
    2012); see 
    McMullin, 765 A.2d at 922
    –32 (reversing grant of motion to dismiss where
    complaint alleged that controlling stockholder and its director designees sacrificed value
    in a sale to achieve controlling stockholder’s goal of obtaining near-term liquidity and
    significant component of the transaction consideration in cash); N.J. Carpenters Pension
    Fund v. infoGROUP, Inc., 
    2011 WL 4825888
    , at *4, *9–10 (Del. Ch. Sept. 30, 2011,
    revised Oct. 6, 2011) (denying motion to dismiss where the plaintiff alleged that the
    director who was also a large stockholder sacrificed value in sale because he needed
    liquidity to satisfy personal debts and fund a new venture); In re TeleCorp PCS, Inc.
    S’holders Litig., Cons. C.A. No. 19260-VCS, at 16 (Del. Ch. June 17, 2002)
    (TRANSCRIPT) (“What [these large stockholders] weren’t entitled to do was to use their
    influence as fiduciaries to procure liquidity from AT&T Wireless on the backs of public
    stockholders in an unfair merger.”); see also In re S. Peru Copper Corp. S’holder Deriv.
    Litig., 
    52 A.3d 761
    , 780 (Del. Ch. 2011) (Strine, C.) (considering large stockholder’s desire
    for liquidity when evaluating performance of affiliated special committee member as part
    of assessment of entire fairness of transaction with controller; stating “[a]lthough I am not
    prepared on this record to find that Handelsman consciously agreed to a suboptimal deal
    for Southern Peru simply to achieve liquidity for Cerro from Grupo Mexico, there is little
    doubt in my mind that Cerro’s own predicament as a stockholder dependent on Grupo
    Mexico’s whim as a controller for registration rights influenced how Handelsman
    approached the situation.” (emphasis omitted)), aff’d sub nom. Americas Mining v.
    Theriault, 
    51 A.3d 1213
    (Del. 2012).
    101
    from those strategies, thereby creating a divergent interest in pursuing short-term
    performance at the expense of long-term wealth.498 In particular, “[a]ctivist hedge funds . .
    . are impatient shareholders, who look for value and want it realized in the near or
    intermediate term. They tell managers how to realize the value and challenge publicly those
    who resist the advice, using the proxy contest as a threat.”499
    It is not enough for a plaintiff simply “to argue in the abstract that a particular
    director has a conflict of interest because she is affiliated with a particular type of
    institution” that has particular incentives or pursues a particular strategy. 500 At trial, a
    498
    See Glob. GT LP v. Golden Telecom, Inc., 
    993 A.2d 497
    , 508–09 (Del. Ch. 2010)
    (Strine, V.C.) (“[C]ertain institutional investors may be happy to take a sizeable merger-
    generated gain on a stock for quarterly reporting purposes, or to offset other losses, even if
    that gain is not representative of what the company should have yielded in a genuinely
    competitive process.”), aff’d, 
    11 A.3d 214
    (Del. 2010); Leo E. Strine, Jr., Toward Common
    Sense and Common Ground? Reflections on the Shared Interests of Managers and Labor
    in a More Rational System of Corporate Governance, 33 J. Corp. L. 1, 5 (2007) (explaining
    that “[hedge] funds are under pressure to generate short-term results” and that one
    “standard pressure play[]” is “to see if a public company can be put into play”); Marcel
    Kahan & Edward B. Rock, Hedge Funds in Corporate Governance and Corporate Control,
    155 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1021, 1071 (2007) (“Hedge funds are set up to make money for their
    investors without regard to . . . shareholders generally . . . . Indeed, because hedge funds
    frequently engage in hedges and other sophisticated trading and arbitrage strategies, such
    conflicts of interest are likely to arise more frequently for hedge funds than for other
    institutional investors.”).
    499
    William W. Bratton & Michael L. Wachter, The Case Against Shareholder
    Empowerment, 158 U. Pa. L. Rev. 653, 682 (2010). See generally Leo E. Strine, Jr., Who
    Bleeds When the Wolves Bite? A Flesh-And-Blood Perspective on Hedge Fund Activism
    and Our Strange Corporate Governance System, 126 Yale L.J. 1870, 1892–1910 (2017).
    But see Lucian A. Bebchuk et al., The Long-Term Effects of Hedge Funds Activism, 115
    Colum. L. Rev. 1085, 1093–96 (2015) (disputing “the myopic-activists claim”).
    500
    
    Chen, 87 A.3d at 671
    ; see 
    id. at 672
    (granting summary judgment in favor of two
    directors affiliated with private equity funds where plaintiffs asserted that funds were
    winding down and needed liquidity to make distributions but the evidence showed that one
    102
    plaintiff must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the director harbored a
    divergent interest.501
    The record in this case convinces me that Singer and Potomac had a divergent
    interest in achieving quick profits by orchestrating a near-term sale at PLX. During their
    activist campaign and subsequent proxy contest, Singer and Potomac argued vehemently
    that PLX should be sold quickly.502 Singer’s thesis for investing in PLX depended entirely
    on a short-term sale to the other bidder who emerged during the go-shop period for the IDT
    fund did not have a wind-down issue, the other fund’s life had been extended and could be
    extended further, the underlying shares could be distributed in-kind to investors, and the
    director and fund principal had proposed further investment in the company); In re
    Morton’s Rest. Gp., Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    74 A.3d 656
    , 667 (Del. Ch. 2013) (Strine, C.)
    (dismissing complaint challenging sale that was the product of a lengthy and thorough pre-
    signing market check in which plaintiff conceded that “all logical buyers were made aware
    . . . and that they all had the time and fair opportunity to bid,” and rejecting allegation that
    private equity firm “typically flips companies it invests in every three to five years” and
    favored a sale to achieve liquidity for the investors in one of its funds and to invest in a
    new fund); In re Synthes, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    50 A.3d 1022
    , 1036 (Del. Ch. 2012) (Strine,
    C.) (applying general rule of equal treatment where controlling stockholder received same
    consideration as minority in third party sale to dismiss challenge to transaction; recognizing
    there could be “very narrow circumstances in which a controlling stockholder’s immediate
    need for liquidity could constitute a disabling conflict of interest irrespective of pro rata
    treatment” and rejecting liquidity-based interest given lack of specific allegations in
    complaint).
    501
    See Trados 
    II, 73 A.3d at 54
    (“At trial, the plaintiff could not rely on general
    characterizations of the VC ecosystem. The plaintiff had to prove by a preponderance of
    evidence that Prang was not disinterested or independent in this case.”).
    502
    See JX 63 (Potomac letter asserting that PLX must be sold); JX 77 (same).
    103
    transaction.503 He never prepared any valuation or other analysis of the fundamental value
    of PLX.504 He lacked any ideas for generating value at PLX other than to sell it.505
    After Singer and Potomac surfaced, PLX’s management team and the incumbent
    directors investigated the firm and its tactics, then met with Singer face to face. They
    concluded that Singer wanted PLX sold,506 and they said that in public filings in response
    to Potomac’s activist campaign and in their proxy materials.507 When making statements
    about Potomac and Singer in public filings with the SEC and in communications with
    503
    Singer Dep. 40–41; see JX 65.
    504
    Singer Dep. 42.
    505
    See JX 88 at 1; JX 89 at 1; JX 192 at 2; JX 266 at 2–3; Riordan Dep. 63 (“Q. So
    did Singer make any operational suggestions about what the company could do differently?
    A. Other than for all the board to resign, no.”).
    506
    See, e.g., JX 189 at 2 (Salameh describing Potomac as “an activist hedge fund
    with a relatively short-term horizon”); JX 245 at 11 (Salemeh reporting on Singer’s threat
    to “take it upon himself to contact prospective acquirers to solicit their interest in PLX”);
    Whipple Dep. 22 (describing Singer and Potomac as activist stockholders “who think they
    can achieve shareholder value by forcing the sale of the company”); 
    id. at 13
    (testifying
    that Singer “had one motive in buying stock in PLX. That was to take control and sell it”);
    Riordan Dep. 53 (“Eric Singer’s position was that we should sell the company, and that
    was . . . his one and only agenda.”); 
    id. at 181
    (“You don’t have to be a mind reader. As
    we’ve talked about for hours now, that’s what he said he wanted done. He wanted the
    company sold. He made no . . . [a]llusions to anything other than that. I want you to sell
    the company.”); 
    id. at 76
    (Singer’s “clear intentions, what he told us, was that . . . we should
    sell the company”).
    507
    See, e.g., JX 282 at 3 (PLX characterizing Potomac as “a self-interested activist
    investor that is focused on short-term gains at the expense of other PLX Technology
    stockholders” (emphasis omitted)); Raun Dep. 276–77, 284–85 (confirming accuracy of
    criticisms of Potomac as an activist investor with a short-term focus); Hart Dep. 25–29
    (same).
    104
    stockholders, the federal securities laws obligated the defendant directors and PLX to speak
    truthfully.508 So did Delaware law.509
    Once on the Board, Singer consistently acted with that intent. He initially focused
    on what the Board had done to try to sell the Company, concluding that the Board was
    “crazy for turning down $6+ from avago few months ago.”510 He only backed off when he
    learned that Avago could not re-engage for several months. When Avago did re-engage,
    he got to a deal within days.
    In addition to Singer’s divergent interest, Deutsche Bank also had significant
    reasons to favor a near-term sale to Avago. Because the plaintiffs settled with Deutsche
    Bank, they did not spend significant trial time on Deutsche Bank’s issues, but they appear
    to have influenced the boardroom dynamic and therefore deserve mention..
    One factor was Deutsche Bank’s contingent fee arrangement, which gave Deutsche
    508
    See 15 U.S.C. § 78n (enabling statute); 17 C.F.R. § 240.14a-9 (“No solicitation
    subject to this regulation shall be made by means of any proxy . . . containing any statement
    which . . . is false or misleading with respect to any material fact . . . .”); Virginia
    Bankshares, Inc. v. Sandberg, 
    501 U.S. 1083
    , 1087 (1991) (holding that “knowingly false
    statements of reasons [for recommending certain actions] may be actionable even though
    conclusory in form”).
    509
    See Malone v. Brincat, 
    722 A.2d 5
    , 10 (Del. 1998) (“Whenever directors
    communicate publicly or directly with shareholders about the corporation’s affairs, with or
    without a request for shareholder action, directors have a fiduciary duty to shareholders to
    exercise due care, good faith and loyalty. It follows a fortiori that when directors
    communicate publicly or directly with shareholders about corporate matters the sine qua
    non of directors’ fiduciary duty to shareholders is honesty.”); 
    id. at 10–11
    (“Shareholders
    are entitled to rely upon the truthfulness of all information disseminated to them by the
    directors they elect to manage the corporate enterprise.”).
    510
    JX 315.
    105
    Bank a powerful financial incentive to favor a sale over having PLX remain independent.511
    The other factor was Deutsche Bank’s longstanding and thick relationship with Avago,
    which included advising Avago contemporaneously on its acquisition of LSI. Avago
    announced the LSI deal on December 16, 2013, meaning that Deutsche Bank was
    representing both PLX and Avago during PLX’s market check in fall 2013.512 It also meant
    that Deutsche Bank was representing both PLX and Avago on December 19, 2013, when
    Krause tipped Deutsche Bank about Avago’s plan to acquire PLX for $300 million after it
    completed the LSI acquisition. Deutsche Bank only stopped formally representing Avago
    511
    See In re TIBCO Software Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2015 WL 6155894
    , at *26 (Del.
    Ch. Oct. 20, 2015) (recognizing that a contingent fee can provide a banker with “a powerful
    incentive . . . to refrain from providing information to the Board” that could have
    jeopardized a deal or caused the board to seek a fee reduction); Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 94
    (“Although a contingent compensation arrangement that pays an agent a percentage of deal
    value generally will align the interests of the agent in getting more compensation with the
    principal’s desire to obtain the best value, the interests of the agent and principal diverge
    over whether to take the deal in the first place. The agent only gets paid if the deal happens,
    but for the principal, the best value may be not doing the deal at all.” (footnote omitted));
    El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 442
    (discussing how a $35-million-or-nothing contingent fee made
    “more questionable some of the tactical advice given by Morgan Stanley and some of its
    valuation advice”); In re Atheros Commc’ns, Inc., 
    2011 WL 864928
    , at *8 (Del. Ch. Mar.
    4, 2011) (noting that a “contingent fee can readily be seen as providing an extraordinary
    incentive for [an investment bank] to support the [t]ransaction”); Forgo v. Health Grades,
    Inc., C.A. No. 5716-VCS, at 10 (Del. Ch. Sept. 3, 2010) (TRANSCRIPT) (“[T]he reality
    is if [the investment bank] can get a deal, they get a deal.”); 
    Netsmart, 924 A.2d at 199
    (noting that although investment bank would receive 1.7% of any deal, it had “a strong
    incentive to bring about conditions that would facilitate a deal that would close”); In re
    Tele-Communications, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    2005 WL 3642727
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10,
    2006) (“[T]he contingent compensation of the financial advisor, DLJ, of roughly $40
    million creates a serious issue of material fact, as to whether DLJ (and DLJ’s legal counsel)
    could provide independent advice to the Special Committee.”).
    512
    See JX 311.
    106
    on the LSI deal in May 2014, days before Avago re-engaged with PLX. Deutsche Bank’s
    ongoing relationship with Avago gave it a powerful incentive “to maintain good will and
    not push too hard” during the negotiations.513 From a formalistic standpoint, Deutsche
    Bank narrowly avoided simultaneously representing the buyer and the seller on the same
    deal, but when dealing with an industry that values relationships, and recognizing that
    bankers frequently provide advisory services first and document the engagement letter
    later, a reviewing court cannot ignore the situation that Deutsche Bank created. As with
    Singer’s conflict, Deutsche Bank’s position on both sides of the deal necessarily colors the
    513
    Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 94
    ; see El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 444
    (noting that conflicted
    negotiator has a duty “to squeeze the last drop of the lemon out for . . . stockholders,” but
    that the conflict gave the negotiator “a motive to keep juice in the lemon that he could use
    to make a financial Collins for himself”); 
    id. (“[A] fist
    fight of a negotiation might leave a
    bloodied [adversary] unreceptive to a [future deal] . . . .”); 
    Gesoff, 902 A.2d at 1150
    –51
    (holding that investment bank’s relationship with buy-side controlling stockholder “robs
    [its] fairness opinion of its value as an indicator of fairness”); see also Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 835
    (granting a preliminary injunction postponing the vote on a merger where the
    financial advisor manipulated the sale process to engineer a transaction that would allow it
    to obtain lucrative buy-side financing fees); Toys “R” 
    Us, 877 A.2d at 1005
    (considering
    whether an investment bankers role in providing stapled financing created a conflict of
    interest that merited injunctive relief); Ortsman v. Green, 
    2007 WL 702475
    , at *1–2 (Del.
    Ch. Feb. 28, 2007) (ordering expedited discovery where target’s financial advisor
    participated in the buy-side financing even though company retained a separate financial
    advisor to render a fairness opinion); Khanna v. McMinn, 
    2006 WL 1388744
    , at *25 (Del.
    Ch. May 9, 2006) (finding plaintiffs had raised facts sufficient to “create a reasonable doubt
    that the transaction was the product of a valid exercise of business judgment” where
    investment bank provided a bridge loan to the target and thus had an interest in ensuring
    the closing of the transaction); In re Prime Hospitality, Inc. S’holders Litig., 
    2005 WL 1138738
    , at *12 (Del. Ch. May 4, 2005) (rejecting settlement of Revlon claim and
    questioning “how can the Court attribute weight to the notion that [the allegedly conflicted
    banker] was retained by Prime to shop the company?”). Cf. In re Lear Corp. S’holder Litig.,
    
    926 A.2d 94
    , 116 (Del. Ch. 2007) (Strine, V.C.) (noting that if CEO received equity on the
    buy side post-merger, “the failure to get the [optimal] price for Lear now would not hurt
    him as much as the public stockholders”).
    107
    court’s assessment of the decisions that the directors made.
    c.     The Sale Process In This Case
    Absent divergent interests, the Board’s sale process in this case would fall within a
    range of reasonableness. The Board combined a narrow, pre-signing canvass with a post-
    signing market check. This was a reasonable approach.
    In the C&J Energy decision,514 the Delaware Supreme Court held that a challenge
    to a transaction involving only a passive, post-signing market check could not support a
    reasonable likelihood of a breach of duty, explaining that a board may “pursue the
    transaction it reasonably views as most valuable to stockholders, so long as the transaction
    is subject to an effective market check under circumstances in which any bidder interested
    in paying more has a reasonable opportunity to do so.”515 The high court emphasized that
    “[s]uch a market check does not have to involve an active solicitation, so long as interested
    bidders have a fair opportunity to present a higher-value alternative, and the board has the
    flexibility to eschew the original transaction and accept the higher-value deal.”516
    The Merger Agreement satisfied the C & J Energy standard. The parties announced
    the Merger on June 23, 2014,517 and the Merger Agreement contemplated a first-step tender
    514
    C & J Energy Servs., Inc. v. City of Miami Gen. Empls.’ and Sanitation Empls.’
    Ret. Tr., 
    107 A.3d 1049
    (Del. 2014).
    515
    
    Id. at 1067.
           516
    
    Id. at 1067–68.
           517
    See PLX Technology, Inc., Current Report (Form 8-K) (June 23, 2014).
    108
    offer period that would run from July 8 through August 11.518 From the announcement until
    closing, this structure gave competing suitors forty-nine calendar days to express interest.
    The Merger Agreement contained a no-shop clause subject to a fiduciary out,519 a
    termination fee equal to approximately 3.5% of the equity value and 3.7% of the enterprise
    value of the transaction,520 and a matching right.521 Significant stockholders executed
    tender and support agreements governing 14.7% of the Company’s outstanding shares.522
    These transaction features compare favorably with the passive market checks that this
    court’s precedents have approved.523
    In addition, in this case, the Board conducted a pre-signing outreach. Between
    February and April 2014, Raun was in contact with four potential transaction partners other
    than Avago.524 After Avago engaged, Deutsche Bank quickly touched base with the three
    most likely to have interest.525 Before that, in fall 2013, the Board had engaged in a non-
    518
    See JX 554 at 2; JX 555 at 3.
    519
    JX 542 § 5.3.
    520
    
    Id. § 7.2(b);
    see JX 529 at 5.
    521
    JX 542 § 5.3(f) (providing Avago with four business days after receiving written
    notice of a superior proposal to negotiate in good faith with PLX to adjust the terms and
    conditions of the Merger Agreement).
    522
    See JX 543; PLX Technology, Inc., Current Report (Form 8-K) 3 (June 23,
    2014).
    523
    See Appendix (collecting Delaware decisions approving a passive market check).
    524
    Cf. JX 420 at 1.
    525
    See JX 459 at 3.
    109
    public market check in response to Potomac’s activist campaign and threat of a proxy
    contest.526
    On these facts, there ordinarily would be not be grounds to debate whether the Board
    fulfilled its duties. Where undisclosed conflicts of interest exist, however, even otherwise
    reasonable choices “must be viewed more skeptically.”527 Importantly, the plaintiffs do not
    contend that the Board improperly titled the playing field or steered the company to a
    favored bidder. They argue that PLX should not have been sold at all.
    The record in this case indicates that Potomac and Singer succeeded in influencing
    the directors to favor a sale when they otherwise would have decided to remain
    independent. First, after Potomac launched its proxy contest, the incumbent directors
    decided to form the Special Committee and explore a possible sale.528 Deutsche Bank had
    warned against a sale process, opining that a sale at that point could “leave[] value on the
    table as [PLX] continues to outperform.”529 Management believed that “[g]iven the recent
    changes in PLX, we do not think this is a good time to sell.”530 Schmitt admitted that “[i]n
    a normal business environment, we did not believe it was best to sell the company. Given
    526
    See JX 208.
    527
    El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 434
    ; accord Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 817
    .
    528
    JX 203 at 4.
    529
    JX 194 at 14.
    530
    JX 133 at 33, 75.
    110
    the situation, that may have caused us to look at things a little differently.”531 Riordan
    agreed that the authorization of the Special Committee was prompted by Potomac’s
    intervention.532 This was a Board that was susceptible to activist pressure.
    Second, after Singer and Potomac’s other nominees joined the Board, the incumbent
    directors found within themselves a new willingness to support a sale at prices below the
    values that they had previously rejected. In April 2013, PLX had firmly turned down
    Avago’s approaches and told Krause that any future proposal would have to “start with a
    7.”533 During the ensuing year, PLX’s business grew stronger and its market share
    increased.534 Whipple explained the dynamic as follows:
    We sold PLX to IDT for $7 a share, cash and stock. A year later, we were
    the monopoly in the business. We had killed . . . IDT’s ability to compete in
    the PCI Express business. We had finished our most profitable year. We had
    gotten rid of Teranetics. We had a technology which we believed was going
    to be dramatically more powerful than the Ethernet technologies that existed
    in the data center today. And we sold the company for less than $7. I thought
    that was wrong.535
    531
    Schmitt Dep. 52.
    532
    Riordan Dep. 106.
    533
    JX 158 at 2; JX 161 at 2.
    534
    See JX 282 at 19, 21; Whipple Dep. 71, 89–90.
    535
    Whipple Dep. 60–61; see 
    id. at 62
    (testifying that 2014 was not the time to sell
    PLX); 
    id. (“A few
    years later, after PCI ExpressFabric had developed, we would have been
    worth a lot more money.”); Riordan Dep. 77–78 (testifying that PLX was “at a low point
    in the company’s potential value”); see also JX 189 at 2 (August 4, 2013 letter to Singer
    stating: “While we continue to be open to exploring alternatives to maximize stockholder
    value, our Board does not believe that a commitment to acting in the best interests of all
    stockholders and to maximizing stockholder value means selling PLX at an inopportune
    time and for an inadequate price – even if that price represents a premium to the current
    trading price.”); JX 133 at 33, 75 (April 8, 2013 presentation to PLX’s insurance carriers
    111
    Yet once Singer and Potomac’s other nominees had joined the Board, the directors agreed
    to accept less than what they had rejected when PLX’s business was weaker.
    Third, the incumbent directors deferred to Singer when he sought to position himself
    to best achieve a sale. After being elected to the Board, Singer asked to chair the Special
    Committee.536 The Board agreed.537 Later, when Salameh suggested that that the Special
    Committee was no longer needed, Singer resisted.538 The Special Committee remained in
    place, and its existence and Singer’s status as Chair were disclosed in PLX’s Form 10-K.539
    Fourth, the directors permitted Singer to take control of the sale process when it
    mattered most.540 From January until April 2014, while Avago was busy with the LSI
    transaction, Singer bided his time and was not overly forceful. But when Avago resurfaced,
    Singer asserted himself. He caucused privately with Deutsche Bank,541 and he had one-on-
    stating: “Given the recent changes at PLX, we do not think this is a good time to sell.”);
    Schmitt Dep. 17 (“Q. And you formed [the Special Committee], but, again, there was . . .
    nothing to indicate that you – that you folks believed that this was a good time to sell the
    company, correct? [Objection] A. I’ll say that’s correct.”).
    536
    See JX 330.
    537
    JX 360 at 2–3.
    538
    See JX 405.
    539
    See JX 408 at 7, 9.
    See Whipple Dep. 67 (testifying that Singer “took control of the special
    540
    committee”).
    541
    See JX 413; JX 512 at 1; JX 1026; JX 1029; JX 1030.
    112
    one meetings with Avago.542 During a pivotal meeting on May 23, 2014, Singer guided the
    Special Committee to the counteroffer of $6.75 per share.543 On May 24, he obtained Board
    approval to make the counteroffer and to conclude a deal at a price of $6.50 or higher.544
    Fifth, at the time they approved the counteroffer and granted authority for a deal at
    $6.50, the directors lacked essential information. As in Rural Metro, they had not yet
    received a valuation of the Company on a standalone basis.545 Deutsche Bank had quickly
    pulled together some market information at Singer’s request to support a counteroffer at
    $6.75 per share, but that was it.546
    542
    See JX 423 at 1; JX 424; JX 433 at 1; JX 472 at 1; JX 518 at 2; see Singer Tr.
    236–44.
    543
    Schmitt Dep.172.
    544
    JX 465 at 5.
    545
    See Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 95
    –96 (“Because RBC did not prepare a valuation
    deck until March 27, RBC was not prepared to discuss valuation at critical meetings in
    March 2011. During the final negotiations over price, RBC took advantage of the
    informational vacuum it created to prime the directors to support a deal at $17.25.”); 
    id. at 96
    (“Because the Board’s financial advisors did not provide the directors with valuation
    materials until the final board meeting, just hours before the merger was approved, the
    directors did not have an opportunity to examine those materials critically and understand
    how the value of the merger compared to Rural’s value as a going concern.”). Cf. El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 441
    (citing problems created by conflicted financial advisor “hav[ing] its hands
    in the dough” of the financial analyses of potential alternatives; noting “questionable
    aspects” to the conflicted financial advisor’s valuation “that could be seen as suspicious”);
    
    id. at 444–45
    (citing “odd aspects to some of the financial analyses presented, which seem
    to go some way to making the . . . bid look more favorable . . . than perhaps a more
    consistent approach to valuation would have done”).
    546
    See JX 1030.
    113
    Sixth, Schmitt candidly recognized when the Special Committee decided on its
    counteroffer, it was engaging in the “art of the possible.”547 In contrast to the enhanced
    scrutiny standard, which requires that directors “seek the transaction offering the best value
    reasonably available to the stockholders,”548 the art of the possible refers to “the attainable
    . . . the next best.”549 Singer similarly testified that the Special Committee was focused on
    maintaining “deal momentum.”550 This testimony provides direct evidence of breach.551
    Seventh, consistent with a desire to get to a result, the Special Committee instructed
    management during its meeting on May 23, 2014, to generate a lower set of revenue
    projections, even though there had not been any new developments in PLX’s business to
    547
    Schmitt Dep. 172–173.
    548
    
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 43
    .
    549
    Brent J. Hutton, For the Protection of Investors and the Public: Why Fannie
    Mae’s Mortgage-Backed Securities Should Be Subject to the Disclosure Requirements of
    the Securities Act of 1933, 89 Tul. L. Rev. 125, 127 (2014) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    550
    Singer Tr. 254–55.
    551
    Cf. In re First Boston, Inc. S'holders Litig., 
    1990 WL 78836
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. June
    7, 1990) (Allen, C.) (explaining that directors who serve on a special committee to evaluate
    an interested transaction are expected not simply to assess fairness but rather “to approve
    only a transaction that is in the best interests of the public shareholders, [and] to say no to
    any transaction that is not fair to those shareholders and is not the best transaction
    available”); In re Trans World Airlines, Inc. S'holders Litig., 
    1988 WL 111271
    , at *5
    (1988) (Allen, C.) (observing that special negotiating committee members who believed
    their only obligation was to determine fairness and not to maximize value for the common
    stock had an “imperfect appreciation of the proper scope and purpose of such a special
    committee”), abrogated on other grounds by Kahn v. Lynch Commc'n Sys., Inc., 
    638 A.2d 1110
    (Del. 1994).
    114
    warrant changing the December 2013 Projections.552 The Special Committee also decided
    that Deutsche Bank did not need to engage in any additional pre-signing market check
    activities.553
    Taken as a whole, this evidence suggests that Potomac and Singer undermined the
    Board’s process and led the Board into a deal that it otherwise would not have approved.
    Yet in spite of this evidence, I could not conclude that the Board’s decisions fell outside
    the range of reasonableness without one other critical fact: Krause’s secret tip to Deutsch
    Bank in December 2013 about Avago’s plans for PLX. In my view, by withholding this
    information from the rest of the Board, Singer breached his fiduciary duty and induced the
    other directors to breach theirs. For present purposes, by withholding this information, he
    fatally undermined the sale process.
    No one can tell what would have happened if Singer and Deutsche Bank had been
    candid, but the Board might well have proceeded differently.554 Knowing that Avago
    planned to return to the table once it completed the LSI acquisition, the Board could have
    been more vigorous in its pre-signing market canvas. Had the directors been armed with
    the knowledge that Avago expected to pay $300 million, they could have negotiated more
    552
    JX 459 at 3.
    553
    See 
    id. 554 See
    Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 101
    (“RBC’s self-interested manipulations caused
    the Rural process to unfold differently than it otherwise would have.”); El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 447
    (“No one can tell what would have happened had unconflicted parties negotiated the
    Merger. That is beyond the capacity of humans.”); Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 833
    (“But for
    Barclays' manipulations, the Del Monte process would have played out differently.”).
    115
    effectively for a higher price. Most important, the Board could have taken more time to
    consider the Company’s alternatives in depth, rather than agreeing in principle to a deal at
    Avago’s preferred price after nine busy days in May. Among other things, they could have
    made sure that Deutsche Bank had prepared a current valuation of the Company, and they
    could have addressed any concerns about the December 2013 Projections more thoroughly.
    Viewing the record as a whole, and with particular emphasis on Singer and Deutsche
    Bank’s failure to disclose Krause’s tip, the plaintiffs proved that “the adequacy of the
    decisionmaking process employed by the directors, including the information on which the
    directors based their decision” fell outside the range of reasonableness.555 The plaintiffs
    therefore proved a breach of duty in connection with the sale process.
    C.     Knowing Participation In The Breach
    The third element of a claim for aiding and abetting is the third party’s knowing
    participation in the breach. “The adjective ‘knowing’ modifies the concept of
    ‘participation,’ not breach.”556 The underlying wrong does not have to be knowing or
    intentional; it can be a breach of the duty of care.557
    555
    See 
    QVC, 637 A.2d at 45
    .
    556
    Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 97
    .
    557
    Singh v. Attenborough, 
    137 A.3d 151
    , 152–53 (Del. 2016) (ORDER); see RBC
    
    Capital, 129 A.3d at 862
    (affirming imposition of liability on financial advisor who aided
    and abetted the board’s breach of its duty of care). See generally Restatement (Second) of
    Torts § 876 cmt. d (Am. Law Inst. 1979) (explaining that secondary liability can attach
    where the underlying breach “is merely a negligent act” and “applies whether or not the
    [underlying wrongdoer] knows his act is tortious”).
    116
    Under 876(b) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, knowing participation exists
    when a third party:
    (a) does a tortious act in concert with the other or pursuant to a common
    design with him, or
    (b) knows that the other’s conduct constitutes a breach of duty and gives
    substantial assistance or encouragement to the other so to conduct himself,
    or
    (c) gives substantial assistance to the other in accomplishing a tortious result
    and his own conduct, separately considered, constitutes a breach of duty to
    the third person.558
    For purposes of a board decision, the requirement of participation can be established if the
    third party “participated in the board’s decisions, conspired with [the] board, or otherwise
    caused the board to make the decisions at issue.”559 In particular, a third party can be liable
    for aiding and abetting a breach of the duty of care if the third party “purposely induced
    the breach of the duty of care . . . .”560 The method of facilitating the breach can include
    558
    Restatement (Second) of Torts § 876(b) (Am. Law Inst. 1979); see Anderson v.
    Airco, Inc., 
    2004 WL 2827887
    , *2–3 (Del. Super. Nov. 30, 2004).
    559
    
    Malpiede, 780 A.2d at 1098
    .
    560
    Goodwin v. Live Entm’t, Inc., 
    1999 WL 64265
    , at *28 (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 1999)
    (Strine, V.C.) (granting summary judgment in favor of defendants charged with aiding and
    abetting a breach of the duty of care but suggesting that such a claim could proceed if
    “third-parties, for improper motives of their own, intentionally duped the Live directors
    into breaching their duty of care”); RBC 
    Capital, 129 A.3d at 842
    (upholding finding of
    aiding and abetting where financial advisor inexplicably modified its precedent transaction
    analysis); 
    Wayport, 76 A.3d at 322
    n.3 (“[A] non-fiduciary aider and abettor could face
    different liability exposure than the defendant fiduciaries if, for example, the non-fiduciary
    misled unwitting directors to achieve a desired result.”); see also Mills 
    Acq., 559 A.2d at 1283-84
    , 1284 n.33 (describing management’s knowing silence about a tip as “a fraud on
    the Board”); Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 836
    (holding that investment bank’s knowing silence
    about its buy-side intentions, its involvement with the successful bidder, and its violation
    of a no-teaming provision misled the board). Cf. 
    Singh, 137 A.3d at 152
    (“[A]n advisor
    117
    “creating the informational vacuum” in which the board breaches its duty of care.561
    When the aiding and abetting claim targets an unrelated third party, a court’s
    analysis of whether a secondary actor “knowingly participated” is necessarily fact
    intensive. Illustrative factors include the following:
         The nature of the tortious act that the secondary actor participated in or encouraged,
    including its severity, the clarity of the violation, the extent of the consequences,
    and the secondary actor’s knowledge of these aspects;
         The amount, kind, and duration of assistance given, including how directly involved
    the secondary actor was in the primary actor’s conduct;
         The nature of the relationship between the secondary and primary actors; and
         The secondary actor’s state of mind.562
    When the fiduciary and primary wrongdoer is also a representative of the secondary
    actor who either controls the actor or who occupies a sufficiently high position that his
    whose bad-faith actions cause its board clients to breach their situational fiduciary duties .
    . . is liable for aiding and abetting.”); 
    Technicolor, 663 A.2d at 1170
    n.25 (“[T]he
    manipulation of the disinterested majority by an interested director vitiates the majority’s
    ability to act as a neutral decision-making body.”).
    561
    Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 97
    (holding that a party is liable for aiding and abetting
    when it “participates in the breach by misleading the board or creating the informational
    vacuum”); see Mesirov v. Enbridge Energy Co., Inc., 
    2018 WL 4182204
    , at *15 (Del. Ch.
    Aug. 29, 2018) (sustaining claim for aiding and abetting against financial advisor for
    preparing misleading analyses and creating an informational vacuum); TIBCO Software,
    
    2015 WL 6155894
    , at *25 (same); In re Nine Sys. Corp. S’holders Litig., 
    2014 WL 4383127
    , at *48 (Del. Ch. Sept. 4, 2014) (holding that interested director aided and abetted
    breach of duty by failing to adequately explain valuation, thereby misleading the board and
    creating an informational vacuum), aff’d sub nom. Fuchs v. Wren Holdings, LLC, 
    129 A.3d 882
    (Del. 2015) (TABLE).
    562
    In re Dole Food, Inc. S’holder Litig., 
    2015 WL 5052214
    , at *42 (Del. Ch. Aug.
    27, 2015).
    118
    knowledge is imputed to the secondary actor, then the test is easier to satisfy. For example,
    this court has recognized that the acquisition vehicles that a controlling stockholder uses to
    effectuate an unfair freeze-out merger are liable as aiders and abettors to the same degree
    as the controller, because the controller’s knowledge is imputed to those entities. 563 This
    court also has employed the same reasoning to recognize that an investment fund can be
    liable for aiding and abetting when “the same individuals who have made the Fund’s
    investment decisions” are also the fiduciaries who engaged in misconduct.564
    In this case, Singer was a co-managing member of Potomac and its agent, and his
    knowledge is imputed to Potomac in those capacities.565 Singer led Potomac’s activist
    campaign at PLX. Potomac owned PLX stock, filed Schedule 13Ds, served books and
    records demands, nominated the dissident director slate, filed the proxy materials, and
    stood to collect the short-term gains from a quick sale. Singer directed Potomac’s activities
    and, once elected to the Board, Singer continued to act on Potomac’s behalf. By failing to
    563
    See 
    id. at *39;
    In re Emerging Commc’ns, Inc. Sholders Litig., 
    2004 WL 1305745
    , at *38 (Del. Ch. May 3, 2004).
    564
    Forsythe v. ESC Fund Mgmt. Co., 
    2007 WL 2982247
    , at *13 (Del. Ch. Oct. 9,
    2007) (“These investment decisions form the basis of the plaintiffs’ breach of fiduciary
    duty claims. Therefore, the court may infer CIBC’s knowledge of the Special Limited
    Partner’s and Investment Advisor’s breaches of fiduciary duty.”).
    565
    See Carsanaro v. Bloodhound Techs., Inc., 
    65 A.3d 618
    , 642–43 (Del. Ch. 2013)
    (imputing knowledge of fund principals to investment funds for purposes of “knowing
    participation” element of aiding and abetting claim); see also Metro. Life Ins. Co. v.
    Tremont Gp. Hldgs., Inc., 
    2012 WL 6632681
    , at *19 (Del. Ch. Dec. 20, 2012); Khanna,
    
    2006 WL 1388744
    , at *27; Carlson v. Hallinan, 
    925 A.2d 506
    , 542 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    119
    share Krause’s tip with the Board, Singer created a critical informational gap that
    contributed to the Board’s breach of duty.566
    Because of Singer’s relationship with Potomac and his role in directing and
    implementing Potomac’s strategy, Singer’s knowledge and actions can be attributed to
    Potomac. This holding does not stand for the proposition that the actions of the director-
    representative of a stockholder can always be attributed to a stockholder.567 For example,
    Delaware law does not recognize any basis to attribute the actions of an independent
    director to the control of the stockholder that nominated or appointed him, simply by virtue
    of the fact of the nomination or appointment.568 In this case, the combination of Singer’s
    566
    See Rural 
    Metro, 88 A.3d at 99
    (holding that investment banker knowingly
    participated in board’s breach of duty where “RBC created the unreasonable process and
    informational gaps that led to the Board’s breach of duty.” (emphasis added)); see also
    Mills 
    Acq., 559 A.2d at 1283
    –84, 1284 n.33 (describing management’s knowing silence
    about a tip as “a fraud upon the Board”); Del 
    Monte, 25 A.3d at 836
    (holding that
    investment bank’s knowing silence about its buy-side intentions, its involvement with the
    successful bidder, and its violation of a no-teaming provision misled the board). Cf.
    
    Technicolor, 663 A.2d at 1170
    n.25; El 
    Paso, 41 A.3d at 443
    (“Worst of all was that the
    supposedly well-motivated and expert CEO entrusted with all the key price negotiations
    kept from the Board his interest in pursuing a management buy-out of the Company’s E &
    P business.”).
    567
    Cf. Khanna v. McMinn, 
    2006 WL 1388744
    , at *28 (Del. Ch. May 9, 2006)
    (declining to impute liability to stockholder who appointed director under doctrine of
    respondeat superior”); Emerson Radio Corp. v. International Jensen Inc., 
    1996 WL 483086
    , at *20 n.18 (Del. Ch. Aug. 20, 1996) (declining to impose fiduciary status on fund
    where one of three general partners who controlled the fund also served as a corporate
    director).
    568
    Cf. 
    Aronson, 473 A.2d at 816
    (“[I]t is not enough to charge that a director was
    nominated by or elected at the behest of those controlling the outcome of a corporate
    election. That is the usual way a person becomes a corporate director. It is the care,
    attention and sense of individual responsibility to the performance of one’s duties, not the
    method of election, that generally touches on independence.”); Khanna, 
    2006 WL 120
    position with, ties to, and actions on behalf of Potomac supports a different result and
    warrants a finding that Potomac knowingly participated in the steps Singer took to breach
    his fiduciary duties and induce a breach by the Company’s other directors. The plaintiffs
    thus satisfied the third element of their claim for aiding and abetting a breach of fiduciary
    duty.
    D.      Damages
    The final element of a claim for aiding and abetting is proof of damages that resulted
    from the breach. The plaintiffs failed to carry their burden of proof on this element.
    When seeking post-closing damages for breach of the duty of disclosure, the
    plaintiff must prove quantifiable damages that are “logically and reasonably related to the
    harm or injury for which compensation is being awarded.”569
    The traditional measure of damages is that which is utilized in connection
    with an award of compensatory damages, whose purpose is to compensate a
    plaintiff for its proven, actual loss caused by the defendant's wrongful
    conduct. To achieve that purpose, compensatory damages are measured by
    the plaintiff's “out-of-pocket” actual loss. Thus, where a merger is found to
    have been effected at an unfairly low price, the shareholders are normally
    entitled to out-of-pocket (i.e., compensatory) money damages equal to the
    1388744, at *15 (“Directors must be nominated and elected to the board in one fashion or
    another, and to hold otherwise would unnecessarily subject the independence of many
    corporate directors to doubt.” (footnotes and quotation marks omitted)); In re W. Nat. Corp.
    S'holders Litig., 
    2000 WL 710192
    , at *15 (Del. Ch. May 22, 2000) (“The fact that a
    company's executive chairman or a large shareholder played some role in the nomination
    process should not, without additional evidence, automatically foreclose a director's
    potential independence.”).
    569
    In re J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. S’holder Litig., 
    906 A.2d 766
    , 773 (Del. 2006).
    121
    “fair” or “intrinsic” value of their stock at the time of the merger, less the
    price per share that they actually received.570
    The “fair” or “intrinsic” value of the shares is determined using the same methodologies
    employed in an appraisal.571 Consequently, this form of damages is sometimes colloquially
    called a “quasi-appraisal” remedy.572 The premise for the award is that without the
    disclosure of false or misleading information, or the failure to disclose material
    570
    Strassburger v. Earley, 
    752 A.2d 557
    , 579 (Del. Ch. 2000).
    571
    See, e.g., Weinberger, 
    457 A.2d 701
    , 713–14 (Del. 1983) (equating the fair price
    measure in fiduciary duty action with the fair value standard in appraisal); Sterling v.
    Mayflower Hotel Corp., 
    93 A.2d 107
    , 114 (Del. 1952) (adopting for a breach of fiduciary
    duty case the valuation standard for appraisal announced in Tri–Continental Corp. v.
    Battye, 
    74 A.2d 71
    (Del. Ch. 1950)); see also Bershad v. Curtiss–Wright Corp., 
    535 A.2d 840
    , 845 (Del. 1987) (explaining that fair price measure in a breach of fiduciary duty case
    “flow[s] from the statutory provisions . . . designed to ensure fair value by an appraisal, 
    8 Del. C
    . § 262”); Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., 
    493 A.2d 929
    , 940 (Del. 1985) (following
    Sterling); Poole v. N.V. Deli Maatschappij, 
    243 A.2d 67
    , 69 (Del. 1968) (affirming Court
    of Chancery’s conclusion that when determining the stock's “true value” for purposes of
    compensatory damages, “the stock is to be evaluated on a going-concern basis and not on
    a liquidation basis; that the actual or true [value] of the stock is to be determined by
    considering the various factors of value including earnings, dividends, market price, assets,
    and the other factors deemed relevant in a stock evaluation problem arising under . . . 
    8 Del. C
    . § 262”); 
    Kessler, 898 A.2d at 342
    –44 (determining fair value and using that as a
    basis for damages in breach of fiduciary duty case); Emerging Commc’ns, 
    2004 WL 1305745
    , at *24 (finding that “fair value” was $38.05, stating that “[f]rom that fair value
    finding it further follows that the $10.25 per share merger price was not a ‘fair price’ within
    the meaning of the Delaware fiduciary duty case law beginning with Weinberger,” and
    granting the difference as damages). See generally 
    Reis, 28 A.3d at 461
    –64.
    572
    See 
    Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 714
    (coining the term to describe the measure of
    damages for a breach of fiduciary duty by the controlling stockholder and its
    representatives on subsidiary board). See generally Orchard 
    Enters., 88 A.3d at 42
    –48.
    122
    information, stockholders could have voted down the transaction and retained their
    proportionate share of the equity in the corporation as a going concern.573
    When seeking post-closing damages for a breach of fiduciary duty in a sale process,
    the measure of damages logically depends on what the plaintiffs contend would have
    happened absent the breach. If the plaintiffs prove that the defendants could have sold the
    corporation to the same or to a different acquirer for a higher price, then the measure of
    damages should be based on the lost transaction price.574 In this case, the plaintiffs assert
    that the Company should not have been sold at all and should have continued to operate as
    an independent going concern. The logical measure of damages is therefore the same as
    573
    See Arnold, 
    1995 WL 376919
    , at *6; Wacht v. Continental Hosts, Ltd., 
    1994 WL 525222
    , at *1–2 (Del. Ch. Sept. 16, 1994); see also Turner v. Bernstein, 
    768 A.2d 24
    , 39
    (Del. Ch. 2000) (Strine, V.C.) (recognizing that either a quasi-appraisal or rescissory
    measure of damages could be awarded for a breach the duty of disclosure in a post-closing
    damages action). Cf. In re Ocean Drilling & Exploration Co. S’holders Litig., 
    1991 WL 70028
    , at *7 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 1991) (holding that alleged breaches of fiduciary duty did
    not threaten irreparable harm because the class could be awarded a quasi-appraisal
    remedy); Steiner v. Sizzler Rests. Int’l, Inc., 
    1991 WL 40872
    , at *2 (Del. Ch. Mar. 19, 1991)
    (Allen, C.) (same).
    574
    See Dole, 
    2015 WL 5052214
    , at *46 (awarding damages of $2.74 per share,
    which suggested that “Murdock and Carter's pre-proposal efforts to drive down the market
    price and their fraud during the negotiations reduced the ultimate deal price by 16.9%”);
    HMG/Courtland Properties, Inc. v. Gray, 
    749 A.2d 94
    , 116 (Del. Ch. 1999) (Strine, V.C.)
    (finding that although price fell within lower range of fairness, “The defendants have failed
    to persuade me that HMG would not have gotten a materially higher value for Wallingford
    and the Grossman's Portfolio had Gray and Fieber come clean about Gray's interest. That
    is, they have not convinced me that their misconduct did not taint the price to HMG's
    disadvantage.”); see also Bomarko, Inc. v. Int'l Telecharge Inc., 
    794 A.2d 1161
    , 1184 (Del.
    Ch. 1999) (holding that although the “uncertainty [about] whether or not ITI could secure
    financing and restructure” lowered the value of the plaintiffs' shares, the plaintiffs were
    entitled to a damages award that reflected the possibility that the company might have
    succeeded absent the fiduciary's disloyal acts), aff’d, 
    766 A.2d 437
    (Del. 2000).
    123
    the traditional measure for a breach of the duty of disclosure: quasi-appraisal.
    The plaintiffs sought to prove that the standalone value of the Company was $9.86
    per share. To support this request, the plaintiffs relied on a discounted cash flow analysis
    prepared by their valuation expert, Ronald Quintero.575 Given that the deal price was $6.50
    per share, Quintero’s valuation posited that the Company was worth 52% more than what
    the Board obtained from a third-party acquirer in a synergistic transaction. In a deal
    involving a financial buyer that could be expected to generate few if any combinatorial
    synergies, the Delaware Supreme Court recently emphasized the lack of reliability of a
    discounted cash flow analysis that yielded a result that was 40% over the deal price.576
    “Although widely considered the best tool for valuing companies when there is no
    credible market information and no market check, [discounted cash flow] valuations
    involve many inputs—all subject to disagreement by well-compensated and highly
    credentialed experts—and even slight differences in these inputs can produce large
    valuation gaps.”577 Quintero’s discounted cash flow valuation is not sufficiently persuasive
    to undergird a damages award exceeding half of the deal price.
    575
    JX 570 ¶ 7.
    576
    DFC Glob. Corp. v. Muirfield Value P’rs., 
    172 A.3d 346
    , 362 (Del. 2017). Cf.
    Merion Capital L.P. v. Lender Processing Servs., Inc., 
    2016 WL 7324170
    , at *33 (Del. Ch.
    Dec. 16, 2016) (“The proximity between [the discounted cash flow] outcome and the result
    of the sale process is comforting.”); In re Appraisal of Ancestry.com, Inc., 
    2015 WL 399726
    , at *23 (“The DCF valuation I have described is close to the market, and gives me
    comfort that no undetected factor skewed the sales process.”).
    577
    Dell, Inc. v. Magnetar Glob. Event Driven Master Fund Ltd., 
    177 A.3d 1
    , 37–38
    (Del. 2017).
    124
    The principal inputs in Quintero’s valuation came from the December 2013
    Projections. They were prepared in the ordinary course of business, adopted by the Board,
    and used to structure compensation plans and when applying for D&O insurance. 578
    Potomac accurately observes that a sentence in the midst of a paragraph about the
    assumptions on which they were based described the projections as “aggressive,” the
    defense witnesses’ coordinated testimony placed excessive emphasis on that qualification.
    I believe that management thought the projections were a stretch, but that they were
    attainable. But that does not mean that the December 2013 Projections were sufficiently
    reliable to serve as the basis for a nine-figure damages award.
    To reach the results projected for the later years in the projection period, the
    December 2013 Projections identified three principal layers of revenue.579 The first layer
    contemplated continued growth in PLX’s existing “inside the box” switches, which used a
    technology called PCI Express to facilitate ultra-fast data transfers between components
    “inside the box” of a single computer.580 PLX dominated this market, and I would have no
    difficulty basing a damages award on this aspect of the projections. The second layer
    contemplated updating PLX’s “inside the box” switches to use a new technology called
    PCI ExpressFabric.581 This layer was a variant on PLX’s existing business, and here too I
    578
    See JX 385 at 20; JX 383 at 32.
    579
    See JX 1000 at 5 (depicting three layers of initiatives in varying shades of red).
    580
    Whipple Dep. 91–92.
    581
    
    Id. 125 would
    have no difficulty using these figures for purposes of a damages award. Together,
    these two layers drove compound annual growth rates of 25%, consistent with PLX’s
    historical growth rates.582
    To achieve even higher growth rates, particularly in 2017 and 2018, the December
    2013 Projections contemplated a third layer of future revenue. It depended on PLX
    introducing a new line of “outside the box” products that would use the ExpressFabric
    technology to connect components located in different computers, such as the multiple
    servers in a server rack.583 To succeed with this line of business, PLX would have to enter
    the hardware market and compete with incumbent players like Cisco.584 This layer of
    revenue effectively contemplated a new line of business involving a new set of customers
    with a new set of requirements.585 The evidence at trial did not give me sufficient
    confidence to base a damages award on this element of the projections.586
    Potomac’s expert, Neil Beaton, conducted a discounted cash flow methodology that
    582
    See JX 429 at 6.
    583
    See Whipple Dep. 91–94.
    584
    See 
    Id. at 93,
    101–03.
    585
    See Salameh Dep. 163–64, 175–77.
    586
    See OptimisCorp v. Waite, 
    2015 WL 5147038
    , at *81 (Del. Ch. Aug. 26, 2015)
    (“There is ample support in Delaware precedent for rejecting damages claims based on
    speculative evidence.”) (citing In re Mobilactive Media, LLC, 
    2013 WL 297950
    , at *24
    (Del. Ch. Jan. 25, 2013)); see also Revolution Retail Sys., LLC v. Sentinel Techs., Inc., 
    2015 WL 6611601
    , at *24 (Del. Ch. Oct. 30, 2015) (“Delaware courts have held that ‘measuring
    money damages for an unproven technology’ is a ‘nearly impossible task’ because ‘such
    damages are likely to be merely speculative.’” (quoting Amaysing Techs. Corp. v. Cyberair
    Commc’ns, Inc., 
    2004 WL 1192602
    , at *5 (Del. Ch. May 28, 2004))).
    126
    reduced the extent of the third layer of revenue.587 His valuation did not exceed the deal
    price of $6.50 per share.588 Lacking confidence in the third layer of revenue, I likewise
    cannot award damages that exceed the Merger price.
    A second problem for the plaintiffs is that PLX management had a track record of
    missing its projections.589 The Delaware Supreme Court has cautioned that
    “[m]anagement’s history of missing its forecasts should . . . give[] the Court of Chancery
    pause.”590 PLX management missed its 2012 revenue target by approximately $21.7
    million and its 2013 revenue target by approximately $15.0 million.591 PLX missed its FY
    2014 first quarter target by $1.4 million, then missed its second quarter as well. 592 By the
    second quarter, PLX management had reported lower demand for PCI Express switches.593
    Moreover, PMC-Sierra Inc., a well-funded competitor that had paid $100 million to acquire
    IDT’s PCI Express business, was planning to enter the market for next-generation
    587
    See JX 572 ¶¶ 64–83.
    588
    
    Id. ¶ 3.
           589
    See JX 571 ¶¶ 51–55.
    590
    
    Dell, 177 A.3d at 27
    n.129; see Nine Sys., 
    2014 WL 4383127
    , at *42 (“The Court
    cannot accept that the same people who missed projections three-months out in September
    2001 by a factor of three (where there was no intervening change to the Company’s
    business) would have been able to produce reliable projections in January 2002 for an
    entire year.”).
    591
    JX 571 ¶ 54 (“exclud[ing] ethernet and satellite sales”).
    592
    See JX 319 at 9; Raun Dep. 164.
    593
    See JX 491 at 1.
    127
    circuits.594 The arrival of a new market entrant would make it more difficult for PLX to
    achieve its projections.
    A third problem for the plaintiffs is that bidders do not appear to have fully credited
    the December 2013 Projections, or at least not to have believed that they supported
    valuations in the range that Quintero posited.
    [S]elf-interest concentrates the mind, and people who must back their beliefs
    with their purses are more likely to assess the value of the judgment
    accurately than are people who simply seek to make an argument. Astute
    investors survive in competition; those who do not understand the value of
    assets are pushed aside. There is no similar process of natural selection
    among expert witnesses and . . . judges.595
    During its pre-signing market check in fall 2013, PLX provided an earlier and somewhat
    rosier set of projections to bidders. During the early months of 2014, PLX provided the
    December 2013 Projections to bidders like Cypress, Inphi, and Semtech. The management
    team presented the projections as its best estimate of the Company’s future, without the
    “Upside Case” gloss that Deutsche Bank later put on them. If the projections were
    sufficiently reliable to support a credible valuation of $9.82 per share, then it seems likely
    that another buyer would have competed with Avago. The fact that no other bidder made
    594
    See JX 394; Singer Tr. 64–66.
    595
    Matter of Cent. Ice Cream Co., 
    836 F.2d 1068
    , 1072 n.3 (7th Cir. 1987)
    (Easterbrook, J.); see Union Ill. 1995 Inv. Ltd. v. Union Fin. Gp., 
    847 A.2d 340
    , 359 (Del.
    Ch. 2004) (Strine, V.C.) (“The benefit of the active market for UFG as an entity that the
    sales process generated is that several buyers with a profit motive were able to assess these
    factors for themselves and to use those assessments to make bids with actual money behind
    them. For me (as a law-trained judge) to second-guess the price that resulted from that
    process involves an exercise in hubris and, at best, reasoned guess-work.”).
    128
    a proposal, either before or after the Merger was announced, is strong evidence that the
    December 2013 Projections would not support a valuation in the range that Quintero
    claims.596
    In addition to giving full credit for the third layer of revenue in December 2013
    Projections, Quintero calculated a beta of 0.985 by using daily observations during the one-
    year period preceding June 20, 2014.597 His beta of less than one implied that a small
    technology company operating in the cyclical semiconductor industry exhibited less
    volatility than the market as a whole.598 That was not credible and seems to have resulted
    from two factors.
    First, Quintero selected a period of time when PLX was experiencing relatively low
    volatility because Potomac’s activist campaign had driven its stock price “up pretty much
    to the ceiling.”599 This period of time was not representative of how PLX’s stock would
    perform based on PLX’s fundamentals.
    596
    See 
    Dell, 177 A.3d at 37
    (“When an asset has few, or no, buyers at the price
    selected, that is not a sign that the asset is stronger than believed—it is a sign that it is
    weaker. This fact should give pause to law-trained judges who might attempt to outguess
    all of these interested economic players with an actual stake in a company's future.”).
    597
    JX 570 Ex. 56.
    598
    Quinter Tr. 608–09; see also Shannon P. Pratt & Alina V. Niculita, Valuing a
    Business 194 (5th ed. 2008) (“Many high-tech companies are good examples of stocks with
    high betas. . . . The classic example of a low-beta stock would be a utility that has not
    diversified into riskier activities.”).
    599
    Quintero Tr. 777; see JX 570 Ex. 56.
    129
    Second, Quintero used daily returns, rather than a more standard interval of weekly
    or monthly returns.
    [W]hen the return interval is shortened, the following occurs: Securities with
    a smaller market value than the average of all securities outstanding (the
    market) will generally have a decreasing beta, whereas securities with a
    larger market value than the average of all securities outstanding will
    generally have an increasing beta.600
    This happens because a smaller return interval tends to incorporate instances of nontrading,
    biasing beta estimates towards one.601 Beaton derived a more credible beta of 1.72 through
    a comparable companies analysis.602 When Beaton replicated Quintero’s beta using
    monthly returns, the beta increased to 1.458.603
    Quintero’s math supports his valuation conclusion, but the inputs driving that math
    were not sufficiently convincing. “Although valuation exercises are highly dependent on
    mathematics, the use of math should not obscure the necessarily more subjective exercise
    600
    Gabriel Hawawini, Why Beta Shifts as the Return Interval Changes, Fin.
    Analysts J., May–June 1983, at 73, 73.
    601
    See Thomas H. McInish and Robert A. Wood, Adjusting for Beta Bias: An
    Assessment of Alternative Techniques: A Note, 41 J. Fin. 277, 277 (1986) (citing Myron
    Scholes and Joseph Williams, Estimating Betas from Nonsynchronous Data, 5 J. Fin.
    ECON. 309 (1977)); see also Aswath Damodaran, Estimating Risk Parameters 10 (2002),
    http://pages.stern.nyu.edu/~adamodar/ (unpublished manuscript) (“Betas estimated using
    daily or even weekly returns are likely to have a significant bias due to the non-trading
    problem.”); Robert W. Holthausen & Mark E. Zmijewski, Corporation Valuation Theory,
    Evidence & Practice 300–01 (2014) (“The shorter the periodicity we choose to measure
    each return, the more likely that we will encounter statistical issues when we estimate the
    market model.”).
    602
    Compare JX 570 Ex. 56 with JX 572 ¶ 75.
    603
    JX 571 ¶ 71.
    130
    in judgment that a valuation exercise requires.”604 After considering the components of the
    December 2013 Projections and some of the judgments that Quintero made, I am not
    persuaded that the plaintiffs carried their burden of proof on damages.
    A far more persuasive source of valuation evidence is the deal price that resulted
    from the Company’s sale process. The Delaware Supreme Court has explained that when
    a widely held, publicly traded company has been sold in an arm’s-length transaction, the
    deal price has “heavy, if not overriding, probative value.”605 Although this decision has
    found that the sale process was flawed, largely because of Singer and Deutsche Bank’s
    failure to disclose Avago’s tip to the rest of the Board, I believe the sale process was
    sufficiently reliable to exclude the plaintiffs’ damages contention.
    The Delaware Supreme Court has observed that as a matter of “economic reality . .
    . the sale value resulting from a robust market check will often be the most reliable evidence
    of fair value, and that second-guessing the value arrived upon by the collective views of
    many sophisticated parties with a real stake in the matter is hazardous.”606 The Delaware
    Supreme Court has also commented that a deal price “deserved heavy, if not dispositive
    weight”607 when it resulted from a sale process that involved “fair play, low barriers to
    604
    Agranoff v. Miller, 
    791 A.2d 880
    , 896 (Del. Ch. 2001) (Strine, V.C.).
    605
    
    Dell, 177 A.3d at 30
    .
    606
    
    DFC, 172 A.3d at 366
    (Del. 2017); see 
    id. (“[W]e have
    little quibble with the
    economic argument that the price of a merger that results from a robust market check,
    against the back drop of a rich information base and a welcoming environment for potential
    buyers, is probative of the company’s fair value.”).
    607
    
    Dell, 177 A.3d at 23
    .
    131
    entry, outreach to all logical buyers, and the chance for any topping bidder to have the
    support of [the largest stockholder’s] votes . . . .”608
    In this case, PLX conducted a quiet outreach campaign during the second half of
    2013. By the end of September, Deutsche Bank had contacted fifteen potential bidders,
    executed nine non-disclosure agreements with companies expressing significant interest,
    and arranged three meetings.609 In October, Cypress submitted an indication of interest,
    and Deutsche Bank believed that Inphi, LSI, and Avago were seriously interested.
    Ultimately, none of the companies made a formal bid, but this process provided the Board
    with important information about how potential acquirers regarded PLX.610
    In early 2014, PLX engaged in a quieter market exploration. In February, Raun
    reported to the Special Committee that he met with Cypress, but that they were “too
    leveraged” to complete a transaction.611 The Special Committee instructed Raun to
    continue to reach out to other companies, but “not to take any action with respect to
    608
    
    Id. at 35.
           609
    JX 217 at 1; see JX 208 at 1; PTO ¶ 78; JX 215 at 5–6; JX 217 at 1; Cho Dep.
    195–96.
    610
    In evaluating the sale process, I have not given meaningful weight to the go-shop
    process in 2012 that followed the signing of the IDT transaction. Enough time passed
    between 2012 and the Avago deal in 2014 to regard those contacts as stale.
    611
    JX 374 at 1; see PTO ¶ 97; JX 372 at 2; JX 395 at 14.
    132
    Avago.”612 Raun engaged further with Cypress and also spoke with Inphi, Exar, and
    Semtech.613
    After Avago made its offer of $6.25 per share on May 22, 2014, Deutsche Bank
    spoke again with Inphi, Semtech, and Cypress.614 Broadcom independently expressed
    interest,615 but the Company wanted to move quickly to capitalize on the Avago offer, and
    Broadcom was unable to present a bid within that time frame.616
    Although this pre-signing process was not extensive, the contacts provide some
    support for the reliability of the deal price. In my view, the pre-signing process was not so
    thorough that PLX could have entered into a fully locked-up deal with Avago (or the
    functional equivalent), but it gave the Board some information about the level of third-
    party interest in the Company.
    More important than the pre-signing process was the post-signing market check. As
    this decision has explained, the structure of the Merger Agreement satisfied the Delaware
    Supreme Court’s standard for a passive, post-signing market check. No topping bid
    emerged during that process.
    Another relevant consideration is that the Merger involved a combination between
    612
    JX 374 at 2.
    613
    JX 380 at 2.
    614
    JX 459 at 3.
    615
    See JX 460 at 2.
    616
    See JX 473.
    133
    two companies operating in the same industry. As a result, the price likely included
    synergies.617 The record supports this inference and indicates that Avago anticipated
    achieving significant synergies from combining the businesses of LSI and PLX.618 An
    analysis of the deal that Barclay’s prepared contemplated revenue synergies of $3 million
    and cost synergies of $19.6 million.619 The existence of synergies indicates that the deal
    price likely exceeded the standalone value of the Company.
    Although flawed from a fiduciary standpoint, the details of the sale process that the
    Board conducted and the nature of the synergistic deal with Avago that it generated means
    that the plaintiffs received consideration that exceeded the value of the Company on a
    617
    See 
    DFC, 172 A.3d at 371
    (“[I]t is widely assumed that the sales price in many
    M & A deals includes a portion of the buyer’s expected synergy gains, which is part of the
    premium the winning buyer must pay to prevail and obtain control.”); Lender Processing,
    
    2016 WL 7324170
    , at *11, *26 (noting that evidence supported the view that the merger
    consideration “included a portion of the value that [the acquirers] expected to generate
    from synergies” and that “[t]he existence of combinatorial synergies provides an additional
    reason to think that” the merger consideration “exceeded the fair value of the Company”);
    see also Olson v. Ev3, Inc., 
    2011 WL 704409
    , at *10 (Del. Ch. Feb. 21, 2011) (“In an
    arm’s-length, synergistic transaction, the deal price generally will exceed fair value
    because target fiduciaries bargain for a premium that includes . . . a share of the anticipated
    synergies . . . .”); Union 
    Ill., 847 A.2d at 356
    (“[A]cquirers typically share a portion of
    synergies with sellers in sales transactions and that . . . portion is value that would be left
    wholly in the hands of the selling company’s stockholders, as a price that the buyer was
    willing to pay to capture the selling company and the rest of the synergies.”).
    618
    See JX 1032 at 1–2 (Howell describing a conversation with Krause in which
    Krause indicated “PCI fits in well with LSIs [sic] storage products, so the rationale is at
    least as good for Avago to acquire PLX now, if not slightly improved”); Krause Dep. 28–
    29; (“Q. And were you—were you modeling synergies with LSI at this point? Is that part
    of your—your analysis in this transaction? A. Well, yeah. . . .”).
    619
    See JX 526 at 21.
    134
    stand-alone basis. The real-world market evidence from the sale process provides another
    reason to reject the plaintiffs’ damages case. The plaintiffs failed to show causally related
    damages, and their claim for aiding and abetting therefore fails.
    III. CONCLUSION
    The plaintiffs asserted that Potomac aided and abetting the Board’s breaches of
    fiduciary duty. The plaintiffs proved that the Board breached its duty of disclosure and that
    the directors’ actions during the sale process fell outside the range of reasonableness. The
    plaintiffs also proved that Potomac knowingly participated in those breaches of duty, but
    they were unable to prove that the breaches resulted in damages. Judgment is entered for
    Potomac.
    135
    APPENDIX
    Case                    Time Between       Time from           Total Time     Termination Fee      Other Deal
    Announcement       Commencement        for                                 Protection
    of Deal and        of Tender Offer     Purposes of                         Measures
    Commencement       to Closing          Court
    of Tender Offer                        Decision
    In re Fort Howard       4 business days,   25 business         29 business    $67.8 million;       No-shop
    Corp. S’holders         4 calendar days    days, 38            days, 42       1.9% of equity       permitting
    Litig., 1988 WL                            calendar days       calendar                            target to
    83147 (Del. Ch.                                                days                                provide
    Aug. 8, 1988)                                                                                      information
    (Allen, C.)                                                                                        and
    negotiate
    (i.e., a
    window-
    shop).
    Yanow v. Scientific     4 business days,   19 business         23 business    Expense              Window-
    Leasing, Inc., 1988     4 calendar days    days, 28            days, 32       reimbursement        shop, 16.6%
    WL 8772 (Del. Ch.                          calendar days       calendar                            stock option
    Feb. 5, 1988)                                                  days                                lock-up
    In re KDI S’holders     4 business days,   24 business         28 business    $8 million; 4.3%     Window-
    Litig., 
    1988 WL 6
    calendar days    days, 35            days, 41       of equity            shop
    116448 (Del. Ch.                           calendar days       calendar
    Nov. 1, 1988)                                                  days
    Braunschweiger v.       3 business days,   30 business         33 business    Graduated fee        Strict no-
    American Home           3 calendar days    days, 43            days, 46       capped at 1.9%       shop
    Shield Corp., 1989                         calendar days       calendar       equity
    WL 128571 (Del.                                                days
    Ch. Oct. 26, 1989)
    (Allen, C).
    In re Formica Corp.     Single-step merger. No tender offer. 143 business     4.5% of equity       None
    S’holders Litig.,       days, 205 calendar days, between announcement of
    
    1989 WL 25812
              merger and stockholder vote approving deal.
    (Del. Ch. Mar. 22,
    1989)
    Roberts v. General      5 business days,   25 business         30 business    $33 million; 2% of   Window-
    Instr. Corp., 1990      7 calendar days    days, 35            days, 42       equity               shop
    WL 118356 (Del.                            calendar days       calendar
    Ch. Aug. 13, 1990)                                             days
    (Allen, C.)
    McMillan v.             Single-step merger. No tender offer. 102 business     $3.1 million; 3.5%   Window-
    Intercargo Corp.,       days, 148 calendar days between announcement of       of equity            shop
    
    768 A.2d 492
    (2000)     merger and stockholder vote approving deal.
    (Strine, V.C.)
    In re Pennaco           9 business days,   20 business          29 business   $15 million; 3% of   Window-
    S’holders Litig., 787   17 calendar days   days, 28             days, 45      equity               shop
    A.2d 691 (Del. Ch.                         calendar days        calendar
    2001) (Strine, V.C.)                                            days
    In re Cysive, Inc.      Single-step merger. No tender offer. 45 business      Expenses up to       Window-
    S’holders Litig., 836   days, 63 calendar days between announcement of        $1.65 million; up    shop with
    A.2d 531 (Del. Ch.      merger and stockholder vote approving deal.           to 1.7% of deal      matching
    2003) (Strine, V.C.)                                                          value                rights
    136
    In re MONY Gp.            Single-step merger. No tender offer. 82 business    $50 million; 3.3%     Window-
    Inc. S’holders Litig.,    days, 121 calendar days between announcement of     of equity; 2.4% of    shop
    
    852 A.2d 9
    (Del. Ch.      merger and stockholder vote approving deal.         deal value
    2004)
    In re Dollar Thrifty      Single-step merger. No tender offer. 100 business   $44.6 million with    Window-
    S’holder Litig. 14        days, 144 calendar days between announcement of     up to additional $5   shop with
    A.3d 573 (Del. Ch.        merger and stockholder vote approving deal.         million in            matching
    2010) (Strine, V.C.)                                                          expenses; 4.3% of     rights
    deal value after
    accounting for
    options, RSUs and
    performance units.
    In re Smurfit-Stone       Single-step merger. No tender offer. 89 business    $120 million;3.4%     Window-
    Container Corp.           days, 123 calendar days between announcement of     of equity             shop with
    S’holder Litig., 2011     merger and stockholder vote approving deal.                               matching
    WL 2028076 (Del.                                                                                    rights
    Ch. May 20, 2011)
    In re El Paso Corp.       Single-step merger. No tender offer. 51 business    $650 million;         Window-
    S’holder Litig., 41       days, 75 calendar days between announcement of      3.1% of equity        shop with
    A.3d 432 (Del. Ch.        merger and stockholder vote approving deal.                               matching
    2012) (Strine, C.)                                                                                  rights
    In re Plains Expl. &      Single-step merger. No tender offer. 79 business    $207 million; 3%      Window-
    Prod. Co. S’holder        days, 117 calendar days between announcement of     of deal value         shop with
    Litig., 2013 WL           merger and stockholder vote approving deal.                               matching
    1909124 (Del. Ch.                                                                                   rights
    May 9, 2013)
    C & J Energy              Single-step merger. No tender offer. 130 business   $65 million;          Window-
    Servs., Inc. v. City of   days, 189 calendar days between announcement of     2.27% of deal         shop
    Miami Gen. Empls.’        merger and stockholder vote approving deal.         value
    and Sanitation
    Empls.’ Ret. Tr., 
    107 A.3d 1049
    (Del.
    2014)
    137
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CA 9880-VCL

Judges: Laster V.C.

Filed Date: 10/16/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/16/2018

Authorities (58)

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In Re Netsmart Technologies, Inc. Shareholders Litigation , 2007 Del. Ch. LEXIS 35 ( 2007 )

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