Just two days out from Dellâs new deadline for counting votes on its founderâs proposed buyout, the companyâs fate appears to rest firmly in the hands of the dealâs most vociferous critics: the activist investor Carl C. Icahn and his ally, Southeastern Asset Management, as well as the mutual-fund manager T. Rowe Price, which has opposed the deal.
Chances are slim that the buyout can succeed without yes votes from those three investors, which together hold about 16 percent of the companyâs shares, according to an analysis for DealBook by Rotary Gallop, which uses statistical methods to model shareholder voting outcomes.
âIf and when the deal passes a shareholder vote it will be because one or all of them voted for it,â said Radhika Dirks, Rotary Gallopâs managing partner.
Together, those three investors cast the swing vote in 83 percent of possible voting situations, Rotary Gallop said. But the buyoutâs chance of succeeding is even lower than that number implies â" just 8.6 percent, thanks to a small number of theoretically possible situations under which the buyout fails regardless of the trioâs vote.
Of course, shifting alliances can improve Dellâs odds â" a little. Persuading just T. Rowe Price to switch sides, with its 4 percent of Dell shares, would help matters, though the votes of Mr. Icahn and Southeastern remain pivotal, according to the analysis.
Mr. Icahn and his allies have so much power in part because the buyout can succeed only if it garners a majority of votes from shares other than those held by the companyâs founder, Michael S. Dell and his allies, under a so-called majority of the minority requirement.
That gives the three investors considerable power despite owning just more than 16 percent of Dellâs shares, more than triple the holdings of the next largest single investor, other than insiders, Rotary Gallops says. (Mr. Dell owned about 14 percent of the companyâs shares at the end of 2012.)
In order to approve the buyout without the support of Mr. Icahn, Southeastern and T. Rowe Price, nearly every other share would have to be cast for the deal, Rotary Gallop concluded.
By contrast, if T. Rowe Price votes for the buyout proposal, the dealâs success becomes more possible, though Mr. Icahn and Southeastern remain pivotal. T. Roweâs support would increase Dellâs chance of winning the buyout vote from just less than 9 percent to 28.5 percent, said Rotary Gallopâs co-founder, Travis Dirks.
Mr. Icahn and company may be able to scuttle the buyout, but that doesnât translate into the power to force Dellâs board to accept an alternate proposal, like a recent one to buy back 1.1 billion shares at $14 each, while offering shareholders warrants to buy shares at $20 apiece.
That is largely because Mr. Dell and other insiders could vote against on any alternative from Mr. Icahn and Southeastern. Dell insiders have considerable control over the fate of the company â" more so than about 90 percent of the rest of the Standard & Poorâs 500, according to Rotary Gallop.
Dell representatives could not immediately be reached for comment.