The Securities and Exchange Commission issued an exemptive order permitting companies to execute tender offers under compressed disclosure schedules, eliminating the traditional 20-business-day minimum offer period in certain transactions. The guidance arrived via WilmerHale's capital markets desk the same week Open Lending Corporation (NASDAQ: LPRO) announced a $3.15 per share all-cash tender offer, a structure now executable under the new framework.
The SEC order applies to transactions where target boards have negotiated and approved the offer in advance, removing the mandatory cooling-off period designed for hostile bids. Acquirers must still file Schedule TO and provide all material disclosures, but the Commission permits acceleration of response deadlines and withdrawal rights. Open Lending's board unanimously recommended the $3.15 offer, which values the auto lending technology platform at approximately $315 million equity value. The stock closed at $2.87 on the prior session, implying a 9.8% premium to unaffected levels. LPRO shareholders have until a date certain—likely within 20 calendar days—to tender or hold for potential appraisal rights, a tighter window than the 40-50 days previously standard.
This regulatory shift matters because it removes the structural advantage dissidents previously held in tender offer battles. Under prior rules, a 20-business-day minimum gave activists time to organize opposition, solicit alternative bids, or file competing slates. Now, boards and acquirers control the tempo. For allocators, this compresses diligence windows and eliminates the option value embedded in drawn-out processes. If you hold LPRO or similar small-cap financial technology names, the spread between offer price and trading price will collapse faster, and secondary liquidity will evaporate as arbitrageurs step in. The order also clarifies that acquirers may condition offers on minimum tender thresholds without triggering extended disclosure periods, a feature that benefits private equity and strategic buyers willing to walk at 49% participation.
Watch for the first contested tender under this regime, likely within six months as activists test whether they can still marshal opposition in compressed timeframes. Monitor whether target boards begin negotiating higher break fees in exchange for recommending accelerated structures—those fees previously ranged 2-3% of equity value but may drift toward 4-5% as compensation for eliminating shareholder optionality. Note also whether public pension funds or ISS challenge the SEC order in comment letters, particularly if retail shareholders claim inadequate time to evaluate offers.
The Open Lending transaction will close in Q2 2025 assuming no financing or regulatory conditions. The acquirer identity remains undisclosed in public filings as of this note, though the $3.15 price and structure suggest a financial sponsor rather than strategic buyer. The absence of a go-shop period confirms the board negotiated exclusivity in exchange for price certainty.