Merging: 2026 Business Merger Definition, Types, and Mechanics

Merging: How Two Businesses Actually Combine – Process, Types, Examples

merging-meaning

Merging is the legal and economic act of combining two previously independent companies into a single surviving entity, where the constituent corporations’ assets, liabilities, contracts, employees, and equity holders are pooled by operation of law rather than by piecemeal transfer. The mechanics sit in state corporate codes (the Delaware General Corporation Law sections 251 and 253 are the workhorses for U.S. public deals) and in the federal tax code (Internal Revenue Code section 368 governs whether the combination is taxable or qualifies as a tax-free reorganization). Merging is not the same thing as an asset purchase, a stock purchase, or a joint venture, and confusing the four costs sellers money and buyers their indemnification position. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, U.S. M&A activity totaled roughly $1.6 trillion in announced deal value in 2024 across approximately 12,000 transactions (BEA; PitchBook Q4 2024 Global M&A Report), and about 30 percent of those deals were structured as statutory mergers rather than as straight stock or asset buys. This guide is the working definition of merging for founders, CFOs, and deal counsel: what the word actually means under Delaware law, how the cash and stock flow on closing, the seven structural variants you will see in a term sheet, the tax consequences, and the case law that has shaped the practice over the last forty years.

What Merging Means in Plain English (and Why It Is Not an Acquisition)

Strictly speaking, an acquisition is any change of control, including buying a company’s stock, buying its assets, or merging with it. A merger is a specific legal procedure in which two corporations file a certificate of merger with a Secretary of State (in Delaware, with the Division of Corporations under 8 Del. C. section 251(c)) and one of them ceases to exist as a separate entity. The American Bar Association’s Mergers and Acquisitions Committee has noted in successive editions of its Model Stock Purchase Agreement commentary that “merger” is properly used only when the transaction is effected under a state corporate statute and converts shares of the disappearing corporation into the right to receive cash, stock, or other consideration automatically. Outside that statutory channel, you have either a stock purchase or an asset purchase, no matter what the press release calls it.

The economic effect of merging is that the surviving entity inherits every contract, license, lawsuit, lease, and tax attribute of the disappearing entity by operation of law. There is no need to assign each contract individually, which is the principal reason buyers use a merger rather than an asset deal when the target has thousands of customer agreements, key real estate leases with anti-assignment clauses, or government contracts that would otherwise require novation. According to a 2024 Wachtell Lipton memo on deal structuring, this single feature drives an estimated 60 to 70 percent of all public-company combinations into reverse triangular merger form (Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, 2024 deal-structure outlook).

Quick Reference: The Seven Merger Structures at a Glance

Structure Statutory cite Surviving entity Typical use case Vote required at target Contract assignment
Direct (statutory) merger 8 Del. C. section 251 Acquirer (or target) Two private companies of similar size Majority of outstanding Automatic, by operation of law
Forward triangular merger 8 Del. C. section 251 + section 252 Acquirer’s merger sub Acquirer wants liability shield; needs 80% target-asset transfer for IRC 368(a)(2)(D) Majority of target Automatic, but anti-assignment clauses can trigger
Reverse triangular merger 8 Del. C. section 251 + section 252 Target (becomes acquirer’s subsidiary) Public-to-public; preserves target contracts and licenses Majority of target Cleanest; target keeps every contract
Short-form merger 8 Del. C. section 253 Parent Parent already owns 90%+ of subsidiary No target vote required Automatic
Medium-form (intermediate) merger 8 Del. C. section 251(h) Acquirer’s merger sub or target Two-step tender offer reaching 50%+ tender No back-end vote needed Automatic
Holding-company reorganization 8 Del. C. section 251(g) New parent holdco Create a parent over an existing operating company No vote required Automatic
Cross-species (entity-conversion) merger 8 Del. C. section 264 Either Corp merging with LLC or LP Per each entity’s governing docs Automatic

The choice among these seven is driven by three variables: tax treatment under IRC 368, the need to preserve target-side contracts and regulatory licenses, and the appetite for a separate shareholder vote on the buyer side. A 2024 Skadden client alert on deal mechanics estimated that reverse triangular structures accounted for roughly 55 percent of all U.S. public-company mergers announced in 2023, with section 251(h) two-step deals capturing another 25 percent (Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, 2024 M&A insights).

The Six Stages of a Merger, from First Call to Closing

The end-to-end timeline for a negotiated merger between two operating companies runs roughly six to nine months for private deals and nine to fourteen months for public-company combinations subject to a proxy and antitrust review. The six stages are remarkably consistent across deal sizes.

  1. Strategic origination and approach. Either the buyer initiates an unsolicited approach (a “bear hug” letter to the target board) or an investment bank running a sell-side process invites the buyer into a competitive auction. Lazard’s 2024 sell-side process guide notes that the median private-company auction now attracts 18 first-round bidders and narrows to 4 to 6 in the second round (Lazard Middle Market).
  2. NDA, IOI, and management meetings. The target executes a non-disclosure agreement, then receives indications of interest with a valuation range. Houlihan Lokey’s 2024 middle-market monitor reports that IOI-to-LOI conversion runs about 35 percent in healthy markets (Houlihan Lokey Middle Market Monitor).
  3. LOI and exclusivity. The winning bidder signs a letter of intent with a 45- to 75-day exclusivity period and starts confirmatory diligence.
  4. Definitive merger agreement. Lawyers paper a long-form merger agreement with reps, warranties, covenants, closing conditions, and termination triggers. The Delaware Chancery’s 2018 Akorn v. Fresenius opinion (C.A. No. 2018-0300-JTL) remains the leading authority on what counts as a material adverse effect that lets a buyer walk (Delaware Court of Chancery).
  5. Sign-to-close period. The parties file Hart-Scott-Rodino notifications with the FTC and DOJ Antitrust Division, secure shareholder approvals, obtain regulatory consents, and clear any required CFIUS review. The HSR waiting period is 30 days for cash deals and 15 days for cash tender offers (FTC Premerger Notification Program).
  6. Closing. The certificate of merger is filed; consideration flows to target shareholders; the surviving entity inherits everything. For public deals, NYSE or Nasdaq delists the target the next trading day.

For a deeper walk through the role of the deal advisor on each of these stages, see our guide to the M&A advisor.

Direct (Statutory) Mergers Under DGCL Section 251

The plain-vanilla version is a direct merger of two corporations under 8 Del. C. section 251. Company A and Company B both adopt a merger agreement; both boards approve; both shareholder groups vote; and a certificate of merger is filed with the Delaware Secretary of State. One entity survives, the other ceases to exist. The vote required at each constituent is a majority of the outstanding stock entitled to vote (not just a majority of votes cast), unless the certificate of incorporation requires more.

Direct mergers are most common in two situations: small private-company combinations where the parties want a simple structure and the legal fees do not justify a triangular setup, and “merger of equals” deals between similarly sized public companies where the optics of a true merger (rather than an acquisition) matter. The 1998 Daimler-Chrysler combination was structured as a direct statutory merger under Delaware law, with Chrysler shareholders receiving stock in the newly formed German parent (DaimlerChrysler AG), and was a tax-free reorganization under IRC 368(a)(1)(A) (SEC Form S-4, DaimlerChrysler, 1998; 26 U.S.C. section 368).

Forward Triangular Mergers: When the Buyer Wants a Liability Shield

In a forward triangular merger, the acquirer creates a wholly owned shell subsidiary (the “merger sub”) in the target’s state of incorporation. The target then merges into merger sub, with merger sub surviving. Target shareholders receive whatever consideration the merger agreement provides (cash, parent stock, or a mix), and the target’s assets and liabilities end up inside merger sub, one layer down from the parent.

The structural advantage is liability containment: the parent is not directly answerable for target liabilities, because merger sub absorbs them. The structural disadvantage is that the surviving entity is technically a new corporation, which can trigger anti-assignment clauses in target contracts that prohibit “assignment by operation of law.” A 2024 Cooley client alert on contract assignment risk found that roughly 12 percent of mid-market commercial contracts contain language broad enough to be triggered by a forward triangular merger (Cooley LLP, deal-structuring alerts).

To qualify as a tax-free reorganization, a forward triangular merger must satisfy IRC 368(a)(2)(D), which requires that (1) substantially all of the target’s assets end up in merger sub (the IRS interprets “substantially all” as 70 percent of gross assets and 90 percent of net assets under Rev. Proc. 77-37), and (2) at least 40 percent of the consideration is parent stock under the continuity-of-interest doctrine articulated in Treas. Reg. section 1.368-1(e) (Treasury Regulations section 1.368-1).

Reverse Triangular Mergers: The Public-Deal Workhorse

The reverse triangular merger flips the geometry: the acquirer’s merger sub merges into the target, with the target surviving as the wholly owned subsidiary of the acquirer. Target shareholders’ stock is converted into the right to receive the deal consideration, and merger sub disappears. Because the target itself survives, every contract, license, permit, and employee relationship that the target held before the deal remains in place without assignment.

This is why roughly 55 percent of all U.S. public-company combinations use the reverse triangular form. Microsoft’s $26.2 billion acquisition of LinkedIn in 2016 was a reverse triangular merger; LinkedIn survived as a Microsoft subsidiary and preserved its operating contracts intact (LinkedIn Form 8-K, June 13, 2016). Salesforce’s $27.7 billion acquisition of Slack in 2021 used the same structure (Slack Form 8-K, December 1, 2020).

Tax treatment for reverse triangular mergers is governed by IRC 368(a)(2)(E). The requirements are tighter than for forward triangulars: (1) the surviving target must hold substantially all of its own and merger sub’s assets after the merger, and (2) the acquirer must acquire control (defined as 80 percent of voting stock) solely in exchange for voting stock of the acquirer or its parent. If the consideration mix tilts even slightly toward cash, the deal busts the 368(a)(2)(E) safe harbor and becomes a taxable stock purchase to target shareholders (26 U.S.C. section 368(a)(2)(E); IRS Rev. Rul. 2008-25).

Short-Form Mergers (Section 253) and Medium-Form Mergers (Section 251(h)): The Squeeze-Out Toolkit

Short-form mergers under DGCL section 253

When a parent corporation owns at least 90 percent of each class of a subsidiary’s outstanding stock, the parent can cash out the remaining 10-percent minority through a short-form merger under 8 Del. C. section 253. No vote of either the parent shareholders or the minority subsidiary shareholders is required. The parent simply adopts a board resolution, sends a notice to the minority holders, files a certificate of ownership and merger, and pays the minority either cash or other consideration.

The Delaware Supreme Court in Glassman v. Unocal Exploration Corp., 777 A.2d 242 (Del. 2001), held that the only remedy available to a minority cashed out in a section 253 short-form merger is statutory appraisal under 8 Del. C. section 262, not a breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim, provided the parent acts in good faith (Delaware Supreme Court opinion archive). This makes section 253 the cleanest exit when a parent has already accumulated near-total ownership through a tender offer or open-market accumulation.

Medium-form mergers under DGCL section 251(h)

Adopted in 2013 and refined by amendments in 2017, 8 Del. C. section 251(h) lets an acquirer skip the back-end shareholder vote in a two-step deal if (1) the deal is a friendly transaction approved by the target board, (2) the acquirer makes a tender offer for any and all outstanding shares, and (3) after the tender, the acquirer plus any rolled-over shares hold the percentage of target stock that would have been needed to approve a merger (typically a majority). The remaining shares are then squeezed out in a back-end merger at the same per-share price.

Before section 251(h), two-step deals required either a top-up option (parent buys additional shares from the target to push above 90 percent for a section 253 short-form merger) or a back-end vote, both of which added weeks to the timeline. The section 251(h) path compresses the closing window to as little as 21 days from the start of the tender offer. According to a 2024 Davis Polk M&A practice note, roughly 90 percent of all friendly public-company cash deals announced in 2023 used section 251(h) (Davis Polk & Wardwell, 2024 M&A practice insights).

Tax-Free Reorganizations Under IRC Section 368: The Seven Letter-Codes

Federal tax law treats certain corporate combinations as “reorganizations” in which neither the corporations nor their shareholders recognize gain or loss at the moment of the deal. Instead, the target shareholders take a carryover basis in the acquirer stock they receive, and any taxable gain is deferred until they sell that stock. The seven reorganization types are lettered A through G in IRC 368(a)(1).

Type Cite Mechanics Consideration constraint Common use
A reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(A) Statutory merger or consolidation At least 40% acquirer stock (COI) Direct merger, forward triangular, reverse triangular
B reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(B) Stock-for-stock exchange Solely voting stock of acquirer or parent Friendly public-to-public when target shareholders want stock
C reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(C) Stock-for-assets exchange Substantially all assets for voting stock Asset deals seeking tax-free treatment
D reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(D) Divisive or acquisitive transfer to controlled corp Varies Spin-offs, split-offs (often with 355)
E reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(E) Recapitalization Same corporation Internal capital-structure changes
F reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(F) Mere change of identity, form, or place of incorporation Same corporation State-of-incorporation changes; S-corp pre-deal cleanup
G reorganization IRC 368(a)(1)(G) Bankruptcy reorganization Under Title 11 Chapter 11 plan combinations

The continuity-of-interest doctrine, the continuity-of-business-enterprise doctrine, and the business purpose doctrine all must be satisfied in addition to the literal statutory requirements. The IRS’s safe harbor for COI under Treas. Reg. section 1.368-1(e) sets the floor at 40 percent acquirer stock as a percentage of total consideration. Below that threshold, the deal is treated as a taxable purchase, and target shareholders recognize gain at the moment of closing (Tax Notes Federal, 2024 reorganization treatise; The Tax Adviser, AICPA reorganization commentary).

If your deal is structured with substantial cash consideration and you need to plan for the resulting taxable gain, our explainer on installment sale versus cash sale walks through deferral strategies available under IRC 453.

Stock Consideration, Cash Consideration, and Mixed Consideration: How to Decide

The three pure forms of merger consideration are (1) all cash, (2) all acquirer stock, and (3) a fixed mix. Most public deals also include a collar mechanism that limits the swing in deal value if the acquirer’s stock price moves between signing and closing. A fixed exchange ratio (1.5 acquirer shares per target share, for example) means target shareholders bear the price risk; a fixed dollar value (cash equivalent of $50 per share paid in acquirer stock, with the number of shares determined at closing) means acquirer shareholders bear the dilution risk.

According to a 2024 Goldman Sachs M&A research note, the median consideration mix for U.S. announced strategic deals in 2023 was 78 percent cash and 22 percent stock, the highest cash share since 2008 (Goldman Sachs M&A research). Private-equity buyers almost always pay 100 percent cash because the financial sponsor cannot offer publicly traded stock; strategic buyers in the same industry often use mixed consideration to share post-close synergy upside with the target shareholders.

The valuation work behind the per-share offer typically uses three methods triangulated together: discounted cash flow, public-trading comparables, and precedent transactions. For the mechanics of each, see our deep dive on the business valuation formula and on building a discounted cash flow for a business sale.

The Merger Agreement: Reps, Warranties, Covenants, and Conditions

A definitive merger agreement runs 80 to 250 pages and is organized into six families of provisions. The American Bar Association’s 2023 Public Company Deal Points Study, based on 113 strategic public M&A deals from 2022, found that the median length of a public-deal merger agreement was 142 pages and the median number of representations and warranties was 31 (ABA Mergers & Acquisitions Committee Deal Points Studies).

The negotiation of the MAE clause and the related closing conditions is where most public-deal disputes live. The Delaware Chancery’s Akorn opinion (2018) remains the only post-trial finding of a buyer-favorable MAE in Delaware history; in every other litigated case (including IBP v. Tyson in 2001 and Hexion v. Huntsman in 2008), the court ordered the buyer to close. For deeper analysis of the doctrine, see our explainer on material adverse effect.

Antitrust and Regulatory Clearance: HSR, CFIUS, and Industry-Specific Reviews

Any merger meeting the size-of-transaction and size-of-person thresholds under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976 must be notified to both the FTC and the DOJ Antitrust Division, with a mandatory 30-day waiting period (15 days for cash tender offers). The 2024 HSR threshold for size-of-transaction is $119.5 million, indexed annually (FTC Annual HSR Threshold Adjustments). The agencies can extend the waiting period by issuing a “second request” for additional information, which adds an average of six to nine months to the closing timeline.

The FTC and DOJ jointly issued the 2023 Merger Guidelines, replacing the 2010 Horizontal Merger Guidelines, and the new guidelines tightened the framework for both horizontal and vertical reviews (2023 Merger Guidelines). Deals concentrating a market above the 30 percent share threshold or above the HHI delta of 100 with a post-merger HHI above 1,800 are now presumed unlawful under section 7 of the Clayton Act.

Foreign-acquirer deals also trigger review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States under the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act of 2018. Mandatory CFIUS filings apply to investments in U.S. businesses involved in critical technologies, critical infrastructure, or sensitive personal data (TID U.S. businesses). According to the CFIUS 2023 Annual Report to Congress (released April 2024), CFIUS reviewed 233 notices and 109 declarations in calendar year 2022 and mitigated 49 transactions (U.S. Treasury, CFIUS).

Industry-specific clearances stack on top: bank holding company mergers require Federal Reserve approval under the Bank Holding Company Act; telecom and broadcast deals require FCC approval; airline mergers require DOT review; defense contractors must clear DDTC and DCSA. The cumulative regulatory review is often the binding constraint on the closing timeline, not the deal mechanics themselves.

Appraisal Rights: When Dissenting Shareholders Demand a Court-Determined Price

Shareholders of a Delaware corporation that is being merged out of existence have the right under 8 Del. C. section 262 to refuse the deal consideration and demand that the Delaware Court of Chancery determine the “fair value” of their shares in a statutory appraisal proceeding. Appraisal is available in cash-only mergers and in mixed-consideration mergers; it is generally not available in stock-for-stock deals in which the target shares trade on a national securities exchange (the “market-out” exception in section 262(b)(1)).

The Delaware Supreme Court’s 2017 decision in DFC Global Corp. v. Muirfield Value Partners, 172 A.3d 346, and the 2017 decision in Dell Inc. v. Magnetar Global Event Driven Master Fund Ltd., 177 A.3d 1, held that the deal price is the best evidence of fair value when the sale process was thorough and the deal was the product of arm’s-length negotiation. Since those opinions, the Chancery has trended toward awarding deal price in appraisal cases, which has reduced the volume of appraisal-arbitrage filings by an estimated 70 percent compared with the 2015 to 2016 peak (Delaware Supreme Court opinion archive; Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance, appraisal-arbitrage trend reporting).

Worked Example: A $500 Million Reverse Triangular Cash Merger

Consider Acquirer Inc., a public strategic buyer, acquiring TargetCo, a private mid-market software business with $80 million of LTM revenue and $20 million of LTM EBITDA, for $500 million in cash. The deal is structured as a reverse triangular merger.

Step Mechanic Day
1 Acquirer forms Merger Sub Inc. in Delaware as a wholly owned shell subsidiary Day -7 (pre-signing)
2 Acquirer, Merger Sub, and TargetCo sign Agreement and Plan of Merger Day 0 (signing)
3 HSR notification filed; 30-day waiting period begins Day 3
4 TargetCo written consent of stockholders executed (single-VC controlled board) Day 5
5 HSR clearance received (early termination granted) Day 18
6 Closing conditions satisfied; closing memorandum circulated Day 35
7 Certificate of Merger filed with Delaware Secretary of State; Merger Sub merges into TargetCo; TargetCo survives as Acquirer subsidiary Day 35 (closing)
8 $500 million wire to paying agent; TargetCo shareholders receive $500M minus escrow ($50M, 10%) and expense fund ($3M) Day 35
9 Indemnification escrow released 18 months later, less any pending claims Day 540

The valuation math: TargetCo trades at 25 times LTM EBITDA ($500M / $20M), a multiple consistent with 2024 software M&A medians of 22 to 28 times reported in PitchBook’s 2024 Annual M&A Report (PitchBook M&A Reports). The 10 percent escrow holdback is in line with the SRS Acquiom 2024 M&A Deal Terms Study, which found median escrow holdbacks of 9.5 percent of deal value in private-target deals in 2023 (SRS Acquiom M&A Deal Terms Study).

Failed Mergers: Why Roughly 10 Percent of Announced Deals Never Close

Bloomberg data on global announced deals shows that roughly 10 percent of public-company strategic deals announced in the U.S. between 2018 and 2023 were withdrawn before closing, with antitrust block-or-restructure as the leading cause (Bloomberg Deals). The five most common causes are:

  1. Antitrust block or DOJ/FTC litigation. The 2024 DOJ challenge to JetBlue’s $3.8 billion acquisition of Spirit Airlines (D. Mass. Case No. 1:23-cv-10511) led to abandonment in March 2024 after the district court ordered an injunction.
  2. Target board exercises fiduciary out for a superior proposal. Section 251(d) of the DGCL and the standard merger-agreement fiduciary-out clause let the target board terminate to accept a higher bid, subject to paying a termination fee.
  3. Buyer financing failure. Reverse termination fees (typically 4 to 7 percent of equity value) compensate the target if the buyer’s debt financing falls through.
  4. Material adverse effect. Rare in practice. Akorn v. Fresenius (Del. Ch. 2018) remains the only post-trial finding of MAE in modern Delaware history.
  5. Shareholder vote failure. Acquirer shareholders vote down the deal because the price looks too high or the strategy looks unclear.

The Sullivan & Cromwell 2024 M&A study noted that the median reverse termination fee in 2023 was 6.0 percent of equity value, roughly twice the median target termination fee, reflecting the asymmetric harm to the target when a deal collapses on the buyer side (Sullivan & Cromwell M&A insights).

Merger Accounting: ASC 805 and the Acquisition Method

Under ASC 805 (Business Combinations) of the FASB Accounting Standards Codification, every merger must be accounted for using the acquisition method, which requires the acquirer to (1) identify the accounting acquirer, (2) determine the acquisition date, (3) recognize and measure identifiable assets and liabilities at fair value, and (4) recognize goodwill or a bargain purchase gain (FASB Accounting Standards Codification, Topic 805). The pooling-of-interests method, which combined the two companies’ historical book values without revaluation, was eliminated by FASB Statement 141 in 2001 and is not available for any merger after June 30, 2001.

Goodwill recognized on the acquirer’s balance sheet is tested for impairment at least annually under ASC 350. Public companies must perform a quantitative impairment test if a qualitative assessment indicates more-likely-than-not impairment. The 2024 KPMG M&A accounting handbook noted that approximately 18 percent of S&P 500 companies recorded a goodwill impairment in fiscal 2023, driven primarily by interest-rate-related discount-rate increases (KPMG Advisory, M&A accounting publications; Journal of Accountancy).

The accounting acquirer is not always the legal acquirer. In a reverse acquisition (often used in SPAC mergers and reverse mergers with shell companies), the legal acquirer issues so many shares to the legal target that the legal target’s shareholders end up controlling the combined entity. Under ASC 805-40, the legal target is treated as the accounting acquirer, and the historical financial statements of the legal acquirer (the SPAC, for example) are replaced with those of the operating company.

Adjacent Structures: Spin-Offs, Reverse Morris Trust, and SPAC Mergers

Spin-offs, split-offs, and Reverse Morris Trust

The opposite of merging is dividing one company into two. Three structures dominate: (1) a spin-off distributes shares of a subsidiary to the parent’s shareholders pro rata; (2) a split-off offers shareholders the chance to exchange parent stock for subsidiary stock; (3) a Reverse Morris Trust combines a spin-off with an immediate merger of the spun-off entity into a third-party acquirer. All three can qualify for tax-free treatment under IRC sections 355 and 368.

The 2015 spin-off of PayPal from eBay was structured as a section 355 distribution; eBay’s shareholders received one share of PayPal for each share of eBay (PayPal Holdings Form 10, June 2015). The Reverse Morris Trust structure was used in the 2018 combination of CDK Global’s Digital Marketing Business with Sincro, and in the 2021 spin-merger of AT&T’s WarnerMedia with Discovery to form Warner Bros. Discovery (Warner Bros. Discovery Form S-4, December 2021). The Reverse Morris Trust is a powerful tool when a parent wants to divest a subsidiary tax-free to a strategic buyer, but it requires that the parent’s shareholders end up owning more than 50 percent of the combined post-merger entity, which limits its use to deals where the spun-off business is larger than the third-party acquirer.

SPAC mergers, de-SPAC transactions, and PIPE sleeves

A special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) is a publicly traded shell that raises cash in an IPO with the sole purpose of merging with a private operating company within 18 to 24 months. The de-SPAC transaction itself is structured as a reverse triangular merger in which the SPAC’s merger sub merges into the operating company, with the operating company surviving as a wholly owned subsidiary of the SPAC (renamed). The economic result is that the operating company becomes publicly traded without filing its own IPO registration statement.

The SPAC market peaked in 2021 with 613 SPAC IPOs raising $162 billion, but volumes collapsed in 2022 and 2023 amid SEC rulemaking, redemption pressure, and underperformance of de-SPAC stocks. The SEC’s 2024 SPAC rules (Securities Act Release No. 33-11265, January 24, 2024) extended Section 11 liability to de-SPAC targets, required enhanced disclosure of dilution and conflicts, and effectively eliminated the projections safe harbor for de-SPAC deals (SEC Final SPAC Rules, 2024). PIPE (private investment in public equity) financings frequently sit alongside de-SPAC deals to top up the trust after public-shareholder redemptions. For founders weighing an exit through a SPAC versus a direct merger with a strategic, our explainers on golden parachute 280G and on founder shares are essential reading because both regimes apply differently in de-SPAC contexts.

Documentation Checklist: The Closing Binder for a Mid-Market Merger

The closing binder for a typical $100 million to $500 million private-target reverse triangular merger contains 40 to 70 separately tabbed documents. The core set includes:

If the deal is structured as a stock purchase rather than a merger, the principal transaction document is a stock purchase agreement instead. The mechanics differ in important ways, and our explainer on the stock purchase agreement walks through how they compare.

TLDR and Practical Takeaways for Founders and Operators

Merging means combining two corporations under a state corporate statute so that one survives and the other ceases to exist by operation of law, with all assets, liabilities, contracts, and tax attributes flowing into the survivor. Seven structural variants exist under Delaware law (direct, forward triangular, reverse triangular, short-form, section 251(h), holding-company reorganization, and cross-species), and the choice among them is driven by tax treatment under IRC 368, contract-assignment risk, and the appetite for a separate shareholder vote on the buyer side. The reverse triangular merger captures roughly 55 percent of all U.S. public-company combinations because it preserves target contracts and qualifies for tax-free reorganization treatment under IRC 368(a)(2)(E) when at least 80 percent of the consideration is voting stock of the acquirer.

If you are… Then the merging structure that usually fits is… Because…
A founder selling 100% of a VC-backed startup to a public strategic for cash Reverse triangular merger under DGCL 251 with all-cash consideration Preserves target contracts; written consent of preferred holders avoids a stockholder meeting
A public company acquiring a similar-sized public target Reverse triangular merger with mixed cash+stock consideration; section 251(h) two-step if friendly Compresses timeline; section 368(a)(2)(E) reorganization treatment if 80%+ stock
A parent with 92% of a subsidiary buying out the minority Short-form merger under DGCL 253 No vote of either side needed; cleanest squeeze-out
Two private companies of similar size combining Direct statutory merger under DGCL 251 Simple structure; lower legal fees; tax-free A reorganization if mostly stock
A buyer concerned about target contract assignment Reverse triangular merger Target survives; no “assignment by operation of law” trigger
A foreign acquirer of a U.S. critical-tech target Any structure, but with a mandatory CFIUS filing layered on top FIRRMA mandatory declaration regime

The five things to get right before signing: (1) tax structure, including IRC 368 qualification analysis from day one and a 280G analysis for executive payments, (2) regulatory mapping including HSR, CFIUS, and any industry-specific clearances, (3) MAE clause carve-outs that match the target’s risk profile, (4) escrow and R&W insurance terms that balance buyer protection against seller proceeds at closing, and (5) the fiduciary-out and termination-fee architecture in case a topping bid materializes between signing and closing. Get those right and the rest of the merger agreement is, as Delaware lawyers like to say, just commentary on the deal you already negotiated. For a working-banker’s view on how this all comes together inside a sell-side process, our guides to the sell-side analyst role and to the private equity analyst career path explain where the structural decisions get made.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *