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Navigating international trade and tariffs
Impacts of evolving trade regulations and compliance risks
Canada | Publication | September 9, 2025
The Alberta Securities Commission (ASC) has released written reasons following its order last November to cease trade a shareholder rights plan of Greenfire Resources Ltd. (the Rights Plan). The Rights Plan was adopted two days after the announcement that entities managed by Waterous Energy Fund (the WEF Entities) were acquiring 43 percent of Greenfire’s shares through private transactions. The ASC’s decision offers a cautionary tale regarding when poison pills can and should be adopted.
On September 16, 2024, the WEF Entities signed agreements with certain shareholders of Greenfire (the Selling Shareholders) to buy 43 percent of the outstanding shares of Greenfire (the Transaction). The Selling Shareholders included two companies controlled by Greenfire directors, one of whom was the chair of Greenfire’s board of directors. The Transaction was structured to comply with the private agreement exemption of National Instrument 62-104 – Take-Over Bids and Issuer Bids, which allows a limited control premium to be paid without all target shareholders being involved in certain circumstances.
Prior to the announcement of the Transaction, Greenfire’s board was aware of the WEF Entities’ interest in purchasing shares from some of the Selling Shareholders and that at least one Selling Shareholder had expressed a desire to sell. Greenfire’s board was also in the initial stages of a strategic alternatives process and while it had considered whether to impose a trading blackout, had ultimately decided one was not necessary because there was no material non-public information. Although it had been previously discussed, Greenfire had not adopted a strategic shareholder rights plan, and there were no lock-up agreements preventing any of the Selling Shareholders from selling their Greenfire shares when the Transaction was announced.
On September 18, 2024, after the Transaction was announced but before it was completed, Greenfire’s board approved the Rights Plan with retroactive effect and without shareholder approval. The Rights Plan would be triggered if any party (including the WEF Entities) acquired more than 20 percent of the shares, effectively blocking the Transaction.
The WEF Entities and the Selling Shareholders applied to the ASC for a cease-trade order against the Rights Plan, arguing it was abusive. Greenfire brought a cross-application to restrain the share transfers contemplated by the Transaction and alleged its own selling directors had breached their fiduciary duties.
The ASC granted the WEF Entities and Selling Shareholders’ application and dismissed Greenfire’s cross-application. Both decisions were made under the ASC’s public interest jurisdiction, applying a “clearly abusive standard” – which looks at whether the conduct at issue exploited a loophole in securities law in a way that could harm the public interest or integrity of the markets. Although the clearly abusive standard was applied, the panel noted it would have reached the same conclusions if it had applied the less strict “animating principles” standard.
In its extensive written reasons, the panel held:
The ASC panel was clear in its finding that the Rights Plan's retroactive, targeted effect on the otherwise lawful Transaction was abusive and could not be justified under the business judgment rule. The ASC panel emphasized throughout its reasons that an ad hoc restriction on share transfers, such as the one imposed by the Rights Plan at issue, would undermine market predictability and run contrary to the existing regulatory framework governing take-over bids.
There are often good reasons to have shareholder rights plans in place, which the ASC affirmed in its decision. However, it is typically better for companies to put in place a strategic rights plan before any issues, rather than implementing it as a tactical plan after the horse has left the barn. Shareholder rights plans with retroactive effect risk being struck down, and boards cannot rely on retroactive poison pills to rewrite otherwise lawful deals.
Publication
Impacts of evolving trade regulations and compliance risks
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