Sprint Nextel pushed back on Monday against Dish Networkâs attempt to stymie its bid for full control of Clearwire, accusing Dish of breaking Delaware law with its tender offer.
In a letter to Clearwireâs board, Sprint said that Dishâs tender offer of $4.40 a share was not âactionable,â since it broke an existing shareholder agreement at the wireless network operator. That pact applies to Clearwireâs certificate of incorporation and other corporate governance matters.
âSprint will enforce its legal and contractual rights,â Daniel R. Hesse, the companyâs chief executive, wrote in the letter. âThus, the Dish proposal is not actionable.â
The letter comes after Dishâs raised offer last week, which trumped Sprintâs $3.40-a-share bid only two days before Clearwire investors were expected to vote. Dish, which is also bidding for Sprint itself, has sought a cellphone network operator to make use of its own wireless spectrum holdings.
Sprint, which already owns more than 50 percent of Clearwire, is seeking to buy full control in a move to bolster its own network expansion efforts. Even if the bid is voted down, Sprint is in line to own more than 65 percent of Clearwire through existing agreements with other major shareholders.
A number of minority investors in Clearwire, however, have protested that Sprintâs approach remains too low.
Shares of Clearwire fell 1.3 percent, to $4.42, in morning trading on Monday.