IN RE APPRAISAL OF AOL INC. ( 2018 )


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  •    IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
    IN RE APPRAISAL OF AOL INC. ) C.A. No. 11204-VCG
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Date Submitted: January 17, 2018
    Date Decided: February 23, 2018
    Stuart M. Grant, Mary S. Thomas, and Laina M. Herbert, of GRANT &
    EISENHOFER P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Petitioners.
    Kevin R. Shannon, Berton W. Ashman, Jr., and Christopher N. Kelly, of POTTER
    ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; OF COUNSEL: William
    Savitt, Ryan A. McLeod, Andrew J.H. Cheung, Nicholas Walter, and Courtney L.
    Shike, of WACHTELL, LIPTON, ROSEN & KATZ, New York, New York,
    Attorneys for Respondent.
    GLASSCOCK, Vice Chancellor
    Each block of marble, Michelangelo believed (or purported to believe)
    contained a sculpture; the sculptor’s job was merely to pitch the overburden to reveal
    the beauty within. Early jurists believed (or purported to believe) something similar
    about common law; that it existed in perfect form, awaiting “finding” by the judge.1
    By contrast, even Blackstone would expect that statutory law would be an explicit,
    if blunt, tool of justice; manufactured, rather than revealed. Our appraisal statute,
    Section 262 of the DGCL, 2 is an exception. Broth of many cooks and opaque of
    intent, it provides every opportunity for judicial sculpting.3
    The latest pitching of stone from the underlying statutory body occurred in
    our Supreme Court’s recent decisions in DFC and Dell.4 Those cases, in distilled
    form, provide that the statute requires that, where a petitioner is entitled to a
    determination of the fair value of her stock, the trial judge must consider “all relevant
    factors,” 5 and that no presumption in favor of transaction price obtains. Where,
    however, transaction price represents an unhindered, informed, and competitive
    market valuation, the trial judge must give particular and serious consideration to
    1
    E.g., 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries, *38–62.
    2
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262.
    3
    See Dell, Inc. v. Magnetar Global Event Driven Master Fund Ltd., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *13
    (Del. Dec. 14, 2017) (noting that although the appraisal remedy is “entirely a creature of statute,”
    statutory fair value has become a “jurisprudential, rather than purely economic, construct.”).
    4
    DFC Global Corp. v. Muirfield Value Partners, L.P., 
    172 A.3d 346
    (Del. 2017); Dell, 
    2017 WL 6375829
    .
    5
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262(h).
    1
    transaction price as evidence of fair value.            Where information necessary for
    participants in the market to make a bid is widely disseminated, and where the terms
    of the transaction are not structurally prohibitive or unduly limiting to such market
    participation, the trial court in its determination of fair value must take into
    consideration the transaction price as set by the market. I will refer to transactions
    compliant with such conditions by the shorthand “Dell Compliant.” In sum, while
    no presumption in favor of transaction price obtains, a transaction that demonstrates
    an unhindered, informed, and competitive market value is at least first among equals
    of valuation methodologies in deciding fair value. Where a transaction price is used
    to determine fair value, synergies transferred to the sellers must be deducted, to the
    extent they represent “element[s] of value arising from the . . . merger” itself.6
    This matter is before me seeking a post-trial finding of the fair value of AOL
    Inc. (“Respondent,” the “Company,” or “AOL”) under the appraisal statute.
    Because the seminal cases referenced above issued during the pendency of this
    matter, I asked the parties to supplement the briefing to reference the instruction that
    DFC and Dell supply. I note that, throughout that helpful briefing, both the
    Respondent and Petitioners continue to advocate for my reliance on financial metrics
    rather than transaction price.7 Applying the Dell criteria of information distribution
    6
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262(h).
    7
    The Respondent, however, argues strenuously that the transaction was Dell Compliant, and that
    I should accept their expert’s DCF valuation as consistent with the “ceiling” of deal price, from
    2
    and barriers to entry with respect to market participation in evaluating whether the
    transaction here is Dell Compliant, I find the matter a close question. AOL was
    widely known to be in play, the Company talked to numerous potential purchasers
    in relation to the sale of part (or all) of AOL, the no-shop period running post-
    agreement was not protected by a prohibitive break-up fee, and the actions of the
    AOL unaffiliated directors appear compliant with their fiduciary duties. No topping
    offer emerged. Nonetheless, the merger agreement was protected by a no-shop and
    matching right provisions. Moreover, the statements made by AOL’s CEO, who
    negotiated the deal, in my view signaled to potential market participants that the deal
    was “done,” and that they need not bother making an offer.
    Market participants at this level are not shrinking violets, nor are they
    barnacles that are happy players during a favorable tide, but shut tight at its ebb.
    Nonetheless, I find the unusually preclusive statements by the CEO, in light of the
    other attributes of this transaction, such that I cannot be assured that a less restrictive
    environment was unlikely to have resulted in a higher price for AOL. Accordingly,
    I am unable to ascribe fair value solely to market price.
    Having rejected transaction price as the sole determinant of value, I find
    myself further unable, in a principled way, to assign it any weight as a portion of my
    which the DCF excludes synergy value. Resp’t’s Br. Addressing the Supreme Court’s Decision
    in Dell. 1, 6.
    3
    fair value determination. It is difficult, in other words, to ascribe to a non-Dell-
    Compliant sales price (on non-arbitrary grounds) 25%, or 75%, or any particular
    weight in a fair value determination. Therefore, I take the parties’ suggestion to
    ascribe full weight to a discounted cash flow analysis. I relegate transaction price to
    a role as a check on that DCF valuation: any such valuation significantly departing
    from even the problematic deal price here should cause me to closely revisit my
    assumptions.
    After consideration of the experts’ reports provided by the parties, and after
    addressing the differences between the parties in the proper construction of a DCF
    valuation, in light of the evidence at trial, I find that the fair value of AOL stock at
    the time of the merger was $48.70 per share. This is my post-trial decision on fair
    value; my reasoning follows.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. The Company
    AOL was a well-known 8 global media technology company with a range of
    digital brands, services, and products that it provided to advertisers, consumers,
    subscribers, and publishers.9 AOL underwent significant changes in both perception
    and fortune after its apex in 2002, when it had more than twenty-six million
    8
    Famous among users of a certain age as a provider of email access, as announced by the
    grammatically questionable “You’ve Got Mail.”
    9
    Stipulated Joint Pre-Trial Order ¶ 96.
    4
    subscribers in the United States and $9 billion in revenues. 10 AOL spun off as a
    public company from parent Time Warner in 2009, with Tim Armstrong named as
    Chairman and CEO. 11 After the spin-off, AOL shrank, ultimately to five million
    subscribers.12 AOL faced substantial competition by 2014 and found itself in need
    of extensive consumer data to shift its desired focus to the online advertising
    industry. 13 In order to compete, AOL purchased a number of “content” and “ad-
    tech” companies, such as the Huffington Post, TechCrunch, Thing Labs, Inc.,
    Adapt.tv, and Vidible. 14 These and other purchases allowed AOL to reposition itself
    as an ad tech company. 15
    10
    JX26 (AOL 10-K ending December 31, 2002) at F-13, F-16.
    11
    JX66 (AOL 10-K ending December 31, 2010) at 2, 15.
    12
    
    Id. at 46.
    13
    JX750 at 4 (quoting Armstrong message in January 29, 2015 board agenda that “[w]hile I believe
    our overall strategic value as a company will continue to increase, the Wall Street view of the
    company will be neutral to negative unless one of our products becomes a catalyst for increased
    growth in 2015.”); JX 1817 (quoting Armstrong in a March 26, 2015 email expressing concern
    about AOL’s ability to obtain the required data and content to compete); JX 1079 (referring to a
    March 15, 2015 Armstrong email to the AOL Board about the lack of data and potential ways to
    address it, including a possible auction of the company); but see JX972 (quoting Armstrong email
    of February 28, 2015 to the AOL Board where Armstrong states that “[o]ur strategy and direction
    is dead on with the market and we have built a company that is strong and capable”).
    14
    JX2901 (describing AOL’s acquisition of the Huffington Post on AOL’s Form 8-K filed
    February 6, 2011); JX0066 at 85–86 (containing AOL’s Form 10-K filed on December 31, 2010);
    JX0199 at 80–82 (containing AOL’s Form 10-K filed on December 31, 2013); JX0968 at 2, 85–
    87, 90 (containing AOL’s Form 10-K filed on December 31, 2014).
    15
    JX2196 (Verizon CEO McAdam) at 105:22–24 (“Q. Was AOL discussed as one of the few
    players that had scale and advertising technology? A. Yes.”), 106:11–15 (“One of those markets
    was mobile advertising. And to deliver—to participate in that market and to build capability, AOL
    was one of the opportunities we saw to enter the market quickly and to have a reasonable starting
    point.”); Trial Tr. 333:13–19 (Marni Walden, head of Verizon’s Product Innovation and New
    Businesses division, spoke with Armstrong about Verizon’s interest in AOL’s “ad tech
    capabilities”).
    5
    AOL organized itself into three segments: Membership, Brands, and
    Platforms. 16 The Membership Group included the legacy dial-up internet and search
    services.17    The Brands Group included the Huffington Post, TechCrunch,
    MapQuest, and other content providers. 18 The Platforms Group provided automated
    online advertising services for advertisers and publishers across multiple device and
    media formats. 19 As with other companies of similar size, AOL was closely
    followed by numerous analysts. 20
    B. Initial Discussions and Negotiation
    Similar to other boards of directors, the AOL board of directions (the “AOL
    Board” or the “Board”) “regularly review[ed] and assess[ed] the Company’s
    business strategies and objectives,” in order to “enhanc[e] stockholder value.” 21 The
    AOL Board frequently considered many types of transactions and partnerships with
    other companies.22      “In addition, the Company and its representatives [were]
    routinely approached by other companies and their representatives regarding
    possible transactions.” 23 Several of those included inquiries from Silver Lake,24
    16
    JX1180 at 3.
    17
    JX0968 (AOL 10K filed on December 31, 2014) at 8.
    18
    
    Id. at 8.
    19
    JX1180 at 4.
    20
    See, e.g., JX1803 (examining JMP Securities, Our Thoughts on Verizon’s $50 per share Offer
    for AOL: Maintain Market Perform Rating, May 12, 2015).
    21
    JX1851 (the “Solicitation” or “AOL Schedule 14D-9”) at 16.
    22
    
    Id. 23 Id.
    24
    JX1180 at 4.
    6
    Tomorrow Focus,25 Axel Springer,26 Providence Equity, 27 and Hellman &
    Friedman. 28
    In June 2014, at the request of Verizon Communications Inc. (“Verizon”),
    AOL CEO Armstrong and Verizon CEO Lowell McAdam “discussed ongoing and
    emerging trends in their respective industries” at a media finance conference.29 In
    October 2014, Verizon management contacted AOL to propose an initial meeting
    regarding “potential partnership opportunities” and the two CEOs met again that
    November. 30       A Verizon subsidiary and AOL entered into a confidentiality
    agreement in late November. 31
    In early December, representatives of AOL and Verizon met over three days
    to discuss “several potential collaborative opportunities,” although McAdam
    informed Armstrong that “Verizon had no interest in the acquisition of the entire
    Company or of a majority interest in the Company.” 32 In addition, AOL held a
    preliminary discussion with Comcast, a global telecommunications conglomerate,
    “regarding a potential transaction involving all or part of AOL’s businesses” on
    25
    JX140.
    26
    JX0155.
    27
    JX293.
    28
    JX0155.
    29
    
    Id. 30 Id.
    31
    
    Id. 32 Id.
    at 16–17.
    7
    December 9, 2014.33 McAdam and Armstrong spoke again by phone in mid-
    December 2014 and met in mid-January 2015 to “explore a joint venture.” 34
    AOL management discussed a potential Verizon transaction with the AOL
    Board during their January 2015 meeting. 35 In January 2015, rumors about a
    potential transaction involving AOL leaked and caused AOL’s stock price to rise. 36
    In February 2015, Verizon presented AOL with a high-level term sheet for a
    potential joint venture and the parties met several times to discuss it that February
    and March and continue with due diligence. 37 Verizon was not the only suitor for a
    deal with AOL. An AOL executive emailed Armstrong on February 20, 2015 that:
    Given the [Verizon] news in the press, the [AT&T] President of
    Advertising has express [sic] a very strong interest in having broader
    strategic conversation with us. They want a bite at the apple and don't
    want to be boxed out by [Verizon]. If we are going to move forward
    here we should engage at the CEO level is my view. 38
    Armstrong responded:
    I know . . . the [AT&T] CEO well - but we should discuss this . . . . We
    need to be ethical (not suggesting you were suggesting that – and know
    this is natural with press and BD - but me calling CEO of AT&T feels
    like a bridge too far).39
    33
    AOL Schedule 14D-9 at 17.
    34
    
    Id. at 17.
    35
    
    Id. 36 Stipulated
    Joint Pre-Trial Order, Ex. A; JX1974 (quoting AOL CEO Armstrong about rumors
    surrounding AOL).
    37
    
    Id. at 18.
    38
    JX0902 at 1.
    39
    
    Id. 8 Armstrong
    described his rationale for this answer during trial:
    Q. And why did you say that calling the CEO of AT&T in these
    circumstances was a bridge too far?
    A. Well, I think that from where we were at the time period and
    knowing what we knew about AT&T and knowing what we knew about
    Verizon, the risk of having Verizon walk away at this point was much
    higher than the upside of trying to get AT&T involved when they were
    clearly outsourcing their core business in our core area to us, overall.
    So it just did not seem like a smart move.
    Q. Why were you concerned that a contact with AT&T might cause
    Verizon to walk away?
    A. I think one is Verizon was upset about the leak. And I think in the
    situation in a deal negotiation where, you know, we're in negotiations
    with Verizon, AT&T is not a real candidate, and we go to them,
    [Verizon CEO and Chairman McAdam], I think, is a very ethical person
    and somebody that, you know, he would take this the wrong way and
    we would risk losing the deal.40
    Armstrong explained during his deposition that the AT&T overture was not
    “somebody senior at AT&T speaking for AT&T. This [was] somebody at the
    division that [AT&T was] looking to outsource to us, talking to one of our lower-
    level [business development] people.”41 In a later explanation to Verizon executive
    Marni Walden about these discussions with AT&T, Armstrong described these as
    “advanced discussions to launch a new strategic partnership. At the core of the
    40
    Trial Tr. 490:1–20 (Armstrong).
    41
    
    Id. at 543:16–19.
    9
    discussions was AT&T's content and service portal, which has been powered for
    Yahoo for many years.” 42
    Fox, a multinational mass media corporation, also contacted AOL to express
    interest in AOL’s platforms and brands businesses on February 26, 2015.43 Private
    equity firm General Atlantic contacted AOL in March 2015 “to discuss an
    acquisition of certain of the Company's assets” and entered into a confidentiality
    agreement on March 7, 2015.44 General Atlantic conducted limited preliminary
    diligence on these assets.45 Fox entered into a confidentiality agreement with AOL
    and listened to a presentation by AOL on March 9, 2015.46
    C. Sales Process
    On March 25, 2015, Verizon proposed obtaining majority ownership of AOL
    for the first time. 47 The AOL Board began to meet weekly to “review the deal
    landscape, including the potential transaction with Verizon.”48
    AOL declined to conduct an auction. Fredric Reynolds, AOL’s lead director,
    explained why AOL did not pursue an auction during his deposition:
    Q: Could you please explain why, in your view or in the view of the
    board as a whole, you thought it was not desirable for AOL to run an
    auction?
    42
    JX1958 at 1 (June 22, 2015 email from Armstrong to Walden).
    43
    AOL Schedule 14D-9 at 18.
    44
    
    Id. 45 Id.
    46
    
    Id. 47 Id.
    48
    
    Id. at 19.
    10
    A: Again, I think, if I wasn't clear, I think in a business that has to do
    with technology and content, that it's a very fragile business, and letting
    the world know that you're for sale impacts your relationship with your
    -- with your competitors for sure, but also with your partners, be they
    publishers, being the search companies, being the talent that you want
    to attract.
    Those are all very difficult relationships that I think are almost
    impossible to be managed if a media company or a technology company
    is for sale.
    I -- I don't recall any large technology or large media company ever
    putting itself up for sale. I think, as evidenced last week, AT&T buys
    Time Warner. There was not an auction of that. It's just a very, very --
    it's unusual, but technology and media companies don't have hard
    assets, they don't have long-term contracts that make airplanes or
    iPhones or anything like that. It's all ephemeral. 49
    Reynolds stated that “the company was not for sale and it was purposeful that it not
    be for sale” 50 and that the Board did “not auction[] the company. We had had no
    intention of auctioning the company.” 51
    Discussions between AOL and Verizon continued in early April, and
    McAdam “raised the possibility of a 100% acquisition of the Company with Mr.
    Armstrong” on April 8, 2015.52 Comcast entered into a confidentiality agreement
    with AOL that day, but declined to proceed any further with a transaction.53
    49
    JX2210 (Reynolds Dep.) at 119:8–120:4.
    50
    
    Id. at 84:17–18.
    51
    
    Id. at 85:5–8.
    52
    
    Id. 53 AOL
    Schedule 14D-9 at 19.
    11
    On April 12, 2015, AOL management discussed the Verizon transaction with
    the Board, including “the emphasis that [Verizon] . . . put on their ability to retain
    the Company’s management.” 54 The Board “requested that Mr. Armstrong keep the
    Board apprised of these discussions as they progressed” but authorized further
    discussions with Verizon regarding both the transaction and management
    retention.55 AOL opened a data room to Verizon on April 13, 2015. 56
    Verizon’s counsel engaged AOL’s counsel in a discussion on April 14, 2015
    about “the importance to Verizon of retaining the Company’s CEO and others on its
    management team and Verizon’s desire to engage in a discussion with Mr.
    Armstrong regarding such future employment arrangements.” 57 AOL’s counsel
    informed Verizon that “Verizon’s views had been discussed with the Board and that
    the Board had authorized Mr. Armstrong to engage in such discussions.”58 McAdam
    and Armstrong met again on April 17, 2015 to “discuss the potential integration of
    AOL and its personnel into Verizon’s business.” 59 During this period, Fox made
    several diligence calls to AOL, but did not contact AOL for further information.60
    54
    JX1293 at 3.
    55
    
    Id. 56 AOL
    Schedule 14D-9 at 19.
    57
    
    Id. 58 Id.
    59
    
    Id. 60 Id.
    12
    Verizon sent a draft merger agreement to AOL on April 22, 2015. 61 The
    AOL Board met on April 26, 2015 to discuss the draft agreement, the deal landscape,
    “the possibility of seeking alternative offers,” Verizon’s “emphasi[s] . . . [on] the
    retention of the Company’s management team,” and AOL’s continued retention of
    Allen & Company (“Allen & Co.”) as its financial advisor.62 AOL returned a revised
    draft merger agreement to Verizon on April 27, 2015 that proposed changes to a
    number of terms, including termination rights, the non-solicitation provision,
    antitrust approval, and others.63 Verizon management spoke with Armstrong on
    April 30, 2015 about “the importance to Verizon that AOL's talent continue at the
    Company following the Merger and indicated that employment arrangements would
    be structured by Verizon to include compensation opportunities tied to the
    performance of the Company and in aggregate amounts at least comparable to
    current compensation opportunities.”64 However, “[n]o specific details of such
    compensation arrangements were discussed.” 65
    AOL and Verizon exchanged draft agreements on May 1 and May 3, 2015.66
    The AOL Board discussed these drafts and “the importance that Verizon was placing
    61
    
    Id. at 20.
    62
    
    Id. 63 Id.
    64
    
    Id. 65 Id.
    66
    
    Id. at 20–21.
    13
    on the retention of the Company's management team and Verizon's desire for
    employment and retention arrangements” on May 3, 2015.67
    On May 4, 2015, a consortium including, among others, General Atlantic,
    Axel Spring SE, and Huffington Post CEO and founder Arianna Huffington,
    submitted a letter to AOL indicating its willingness to purchase a 51% stake in
    AOL’s Huffington Post asset for approximately $500 million. 68
    On a May 7, 2015 phone call, Verizon informed AOL that Verizon “was
    planning to submit a formal offer to acquire the entire Company.” 69 The AOL
    representative indicated that AOL expected a price per share “in the 50s” but the
    Verizon representative indicated that it would be “in the high 40s.” 70 Verizon also
    indicated that it would present Armstrong with a specific employment proposal.71
    AOL reported financial results that beat analysts’ expectations on May 8, 2015.72
    On May 8, 2015, a Verizon representative made an oral offer of $47.00 per
    share for AOL. 73 An AOL representative countered and Verizon agreed to pay
    $50.00 per share in cash. 74 Verizon stated that “there was no further room for
    negotiation with respect to the offer price and that if this price was not of interest,
    67
    
    Id. at 21.
    68
    JX1582 at 6.
    69
    
    Id. 70 Id.
    71
    
    Id. 72 Id.
    73
    
    Id. 74 Id.
    14
    Verizon was prepared to withdraw its offer.” 75 Verizon submitted a written offer at
    $50 later that day. The AOL Board discussed the offer, and counsel from the two
    companies negotiated certain terms. 76
    Armstrong phoned a Verizon representative on May 9, 2015 to request a
    higher price but was told “that there was no further room for negotiation with respect
    to the offer price,” although Verizon agreed to lower the termination fee from 4.5%
    to 3.5%.77 The AOL Board discussed the developments that same day. 78
    The parties exchanged additional draft agreements and Verizon delivered a
    draft employment letter offer to Armstrong on May 10, 2015. 79 “Mr. Armstrong had
    no conversations with Verizon regarding the draft letter prior to the conclusion of
    the Company's next Board meeting.”80
    On May 11, 2015, the AOL Board discussed the Verizon merger agreement
    with management and its legal and financial advisors.81                       The Board then
    “unanimously voted to approve the Merger Agreement.” 82 Later that day, “Verizon
    75
    
    Id. 76 Id.
    at 21–22.
    77
    
    Id. at 22;
    JX1755 at 3 (May 11, 2015 Verizon internal slideshow about the sales process stated
    that “Verizon did not communicate any flexibility on price, but signaled flexibility on break fee.”
    Verizon submitted an offer of $47 per share but later submitted an offer for $50 per share “after
    significant verbal negotiations.”).
    78
    
    Id. 79 Id.
    80
    
    Id. 81 Id.
    82
    
    Id. 15 informed
    Mr. Armstrong that they were unwilling to proceed with a transaction
    without his agreement to terms” of employment and Armstrong and Verizon came
    to an agreement.83
    The Verizon board of directors also approved the merger agreement, which
    was executed on May 11, 2015 (the “Merger Agreement” or “Agreement”).84 The
    deal was announced on May 12, 2015.85 According to Armstrong, “a couple of days
    after [the] Verizon acquisition was announced, AT&T terminated contract
    negotiations and asked us to stop all development on product and content based on
    general sensitivities to competitor concerns, data separation, etc.” 86
    In a CNBC television interview on the day the merger was announced,
    Armstrong gave this account of how the Verizon deal came together:
    Interviewer: Hey, Tim, couple of quick things. Help us with this first.
    Was there an auction? Give us back story here. Meaning, who went to
    whom? How did this happen?
    Armstrong: You know, basically, this happened in a very natural way
    and no auction. Basically over the course of time I sat down last
    summer at the Sun Valley conference and we talked about where the
    world was going and we have been big partners and we were kind of
    reviewing what the companies were doing together. That sort of kicked
    off sort of a natural progression to where we are today and I think
    facilitated by Nancy of Allen and Company and David Shapiro we were
    able to basically bring this deal together in a way that I think was
    83
    
    Id. 84 Id.
    at 23.
    85
    
    Id. 86 JX1958
    at 1 (June 22, 2015 email from Armstrong to Walden).
    16
    incredibly natural. If you look at the two visions on the companies and
    the platforms and both companies were doing the same thing.
    Interviewer: It's trading slightly above the premium right now. you
    didn't shop this to anybody else?
    Armstrong: No, I'm committed to doing the deal with Verizon and I
    think that as we chose each other because that's the path we're on. I gave
    the team at Verizon my word that, you know, [w]e're in a place where
    this deal is going to happen and we're excited about it.
    ...
    Interviewer: Not to push you on it, but why not pursue an auction?
    Armstrong: You know, Andrew, I think the process of where we are as
    a company right now and the process we went through and knew you
    guys covered, lots of rumors about AOL in general. So, if somebody,
    we have always been a public company and been available. If
    somebody wanted to come do a deal with us, they would have done it.
    The Verizon deal was built around the strategy of where we're going. 87
    D. Merger and Subsequent Events
    The Merger Agreement contained a no-shop provision, a 3.5% termination fee
    of $150 million, and unlimited three-day matching rights.88 Stockholders were
    informed that the Merger Agreement allowed for the “ability to accept a superior
    proposal.”89 Verizon was “[p]repared for market action but expect[ed] limited
    interest from media/technology strategics and financial sponsors” due to its
    87
    JX1794 at 6.
    88
    AOL Schedule 14D-9 at 222, 24–25; Trial Tr. 796:13–20 (Reynolds) (“We were encouraged
    that there – the deal was drafted in a way that would allow an unfettered bid from a third party and
    it would enhance our shareholders' value.”).
    89
    AOL Schedule 14D-9 at 21.
    17
    assessment of a “limited interloper risk given [the] current sale status with [a] lack
    of full company buyers.”90 No topping bidder emerged.91 More than 60% of AOL’s
    outstanding common shares were tendered and the merger closed on June 23, 2015
    (the “Valuation Date”). 92
    The Petitioners filed for appraisal rights under Section 262 of the DGCL.93
    Six appraisal petitions were filed, which are consolidated in this action.94 The parties
    and experts agree that a DCF analysis is the most appropriate valuation method in
    this matter.95 My analysis follows.
    II. WAS THE SALES PROCESS DELL COMPLIANT?
    The appraisal remedy was created by statute to allow dissenting stockholders
    an “independent judicial determination of the fair value of their shares.” 96 Because
    neither party bears the burden of proof, “in reality, the ‘burden’ falls on the judge to
    determine fair value, using ‘all relevant factors.’” 97 The fair value of those shares is
    “exclusive of any element of value arising from the accomplishment or expectation
    of the merger or consolidation,”98 and calculated based on the “operative reality of
    90
    JX1755 at 14 (including a Verizon internal presentation from May 11, 2015).
    91
    Trial Tr. 796:21–22 (Reynolds).
    92
    Stipulated Joint Pre-Trial Order ¶¶ 8–9.
    93
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262.
    94
    Stipulated Joint Pre-Trial Order ¶ 2–3.
    95
    Sept. 19, 2017 Oral Arg. Tr. 25:4–8.
    96
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *12 (citing Ala. By-Products Corp. v. Cede & Co. ex rel.
    Shearson Lehman Bros., Inc., 
    657 A.2d 254
    , 258 (Del. 1995)).
    97
    In re Appraisal of Ancestry.com, Inc., 
    2015 WL 399726
    , at *1 (Del. Ch. Jan. 30, 2015) (citations
    omitted).
    98
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262.
    18
    the company” 99 as of “the date of the merger.”100 The court should view the
    company as a standalone “going concern”101 or an “on-going enterprise, occupying
    a particular market position in the light of future prospects.” 102 Because the court
    values the “corporation itself,” a minority discount 103 and “any synergies or other
    value expected from the merger giving rise to the appraisal proceeding itself must
    be disregarded.”104        Accordingly, petitioning stockholders are given their
    “proportionate interest” of the value of the corporation on the date of the merger,
    plus interest. 105
    Because each transaction is unique, “[a]ppraisal is, by design, a flexible
    process.”106     However, “the clash of contrary, and often antagonistic, expert
    opinions” with “widely divergent views” is a common feature of the genre.107 As
    further described below, there is “no perfect methodology for arriving at fair value
    for a given set of facts.” 108
    99
    M.G. Bancorporation, Inc. v. Le Beau, 
    737 A.2d 513
    , 525 (Del. 1999).
    100
    Cavalier Oil Corp. v. Harnett, 
    564 A.2d 1137
    , 1142 (Del. 1989).
    101
    
    Id. at 1145.
    102
    In re Appraisal of Shell Oil Co., 
    607 A.2d 1213
    , 1218 (Del. 1992).
    103
    Cavalier Oil 
    Corp., 564 A.2d at 1144
    .
    104
    Global GT LP v. Golden Telecom, Inc., 
    993 A.2d 497
    , 507 (Del. Ch. 2010), aff'd, 
    11 A.3d 214
    (Del. 2010).
    105
    Cavalier Oil 
    Corp., 564 A.2d at 1144
    .
    106
    Golden Telecom, 
    Inc., 11 A.3d at 218
    .
    107
    In re Appraisal of Shell Oil 
    Co., 607 A.2d at 1222
    .
    108
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *15 (citing DFC Global 
    Corp., 172 A.3d at 348
    –49, 351).
    19
    The Supreme Court has “reject[ed] requests for the adoption of a presumption
    that the deal price reflects fair value if certain preconditions are met, such as when
    the merger is the product of arm's-length negotiation and a robust, non-conflicted
    market check, and where bidders had full information and few, if any, barriers to bid
    for the deal.”109 Indeed, the Supreme Court doubts its ability “to craft, on a general
    basis, the precise pre-conditions that would be necessary to invoke a presumption of
    that kind.110 That said, the Supreme Court in DFC stated:
    Although there is no presumption in favor of the deal price, under the
    conditions found [in DFC] by the Court of Chancery, economic
    principles suggest that the best evidence of fair value was the deal price,
    as it resulted from an open process, informed by robust public
    information, and easy access to deeper, non-public information, in
    which many parties with an incentive to make a profit had a chance to
    bid. 111
    A. The Sales Process Was Not “Dell Compliant”
    The question before me is whether the sales process here is Dell Compliant.
    A transaction is Dell Compliant where (i) information was sufficiently disseminated
    to potential bidders, so that (ii) an informed sale could take place, (iii) without undue
    impediments imposed by the deal structure itself. In other words, before I may
    consider the deal price as persuasive evidence of statutory fair value, I must find that
    the deal process developed fair market value. I conclude that, under the unique
    109
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *14 (citing DFC Global 
    Corp., 172 A.3d at 348
    ).
    110
    DFC Global 
    Corp., 172 A.3d at 366
    .
    111
    
    Id. at 349.
    20
    circumstances of this case, the sales process was insufficient to this task, and the
    deal price is not the best evidence of fair value.
    The AOL Board made a deliberate decision that stockholder value would not
    be maximized through an auction, and instead decided to pursue potential bidders
    individually by direct contact through bankers and other sources.        Given the
    dynamics of AOL’s particular industry, this decision appears reasonable. However,
    if front-end information sharing is truncated or limited, the post-agreement period
    should be correspondingly robust, so to ensure that information is sufficiently
    disseminated that an informed sale can take place and bids can be received without
    disabling impediments.
    Despite statements by AOL’s leadership that AOL was not for sale, the
    persistent market rumors seem to indicate that the market understood that the
    Company was likely in play. AOL was well-covered by analysts, traded frequently,
    and generally known in the market. AOL approached, and was approached by, a
    number of potential buyers of some (or all) of the Company, several of whom entered
    into confidentiality agreements and conducted due diligence.
    21
    AOL appears to have engaged with anyone that indicated a serious interest in
    doing a deal. 112 On the front end, the market canvas appears sufficient so long as
    interested parties could submit bids on the back end without disabling impediments.
    However, here my concern arises. Immediately after announcement of the
    transaction, Armstrong gave a public interview and stated:
    I'm committed to doing the deal with Verizon and I think that as we
    chose each other because that's the path we're on. I gave the team at
    Verizon my word that, you know, [w]e're in a place where this deal is
    going to happen and we're excited about it. 113
    Armstrong’s post-Agreement statements to the press about giving his “word”
    to Verizon could reasonably cause potential bidders to pause when combined with
    the deal protections here. In Dell, by comparison, the merger agreement included
    one-time matching rights until the stockholder vote; a forty-five day go-shop period;
    and termination fees of approximately 1% of the equity value during the go-shop or
    approximately 2% afterward.114 Here, a termination fee of 3.5% and a forty-two day
    window between agreement and closing would probably not deter bids by
    themselves. But that period was constrained by a no-shop provision, combined with:
    (i) the declared intent of the acting CEO to consummate a deal with Verizon, (ii) the
    112
    The Petitioners point to the fact that AT&T’s potential approach was rebuffed. However, given
    the circumstances here, including the record evidence that there was a fear that engaging with
    AT&T would discourage or endanger the developing deal with Verizon, lack of engagement with
    AT&T, pre-Agreement, appears reasonable.
    113
    JX1794 at 6.
    114
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *6–7.
    22
    CEO’s prospect of post-merger employment with Verizon, (iii) unlimited three-day
    matching rights, and (iv) the fact that Verizon already had ninety days between
    expressing interest in acquiring the entire company and signing the Merger
    Agreement, including seventy-one days of data room access. Cumulatively, these
    factors make for a considerable risk of informational and structural disadvantages
    dissuading any prospective bidder.
    In Dell, after the “bankers canvassed the interest of sixty-seven parties,
    including twenty possible strategic acquirers during the go-shop,” the “more likely
    explanation for the lack of a higher bid [was] that the deal market was already robust
    and that a topping bid involved a serious risk of overpayment,” which “suggest[ed]
    the price [was] already at a level that [was] fair.”115 Here, given Armstrong’s
    statements and situation, together with significantly less canvassing and stronger
    post-agreement protections than in Dell, I am less confident that is true. I cannot say
    that, under these conditions, deal price is the “best evidence of fair value . . . as it
    resulted from an open process, informed by robust public information, and easy
    access to deeper, non-public information, in which many parties with an incentive
    to make a profit had a chance to bid.”116
    115
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *21, 24.
    116
    DFC Global 
    Corp., 172 A.3d at 349
    .
    23
    B. Deal Price as a Check
    “The dependability of a transaction price is only as strong as the process by
    which it was negotiated.”117 I find the deal price is not sufficient evidence of fair
    value to warrant deference, but it is still useful to an extent. I will use it as a “check”
    in my determination of fair value, although I decline to give the deal price explicit
    weight in that determination. Given the process here, a determination of fair value
    via financial metrics that results in a valuation grossly deviant from deal price, under
    these circumstances, should give me reason to revisit my assumptions. In this way,
    the deal price operates as a check in my determination of fair value.118
    The parties have not suggested a principled way to use deal price under the
    circumstances here, in a blended valuation of deal price and other valuation metrics,
    and none occurs to me. Instead, the parties agree, and I concur, that a discounted
    cash flow analysis is the best way to value the Company. 119 I turn to that now.
    117
    Merlin Partners LP v. AutoInfo, Inc., 
    2015 WL 2069417
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2015).
    118
    AOL stock publicly traded on the New York Stock Exchange. The unaffected stock price was
    $42.59, and the merger price was thus at a premium to the unaffected trading price. As with deal
    price, an efficiently derived stock trading price can serve as a check on a fair value analysis.
    Recently, this Court in Verition Partners Master Fund Ltd. v. Aruba Networks, Inc., 
    2018 WL 922139
    (Del. Ch. Feb. 15, 2018), found an efficiently derived trading price to be fair value. I note
    that no party has advocated such here, and that no evidence concerning the efficiency of the market
    for AOL stock is before me. Moreover, the use of trading price to determine fair value requires a
    number of assumptions that, to my mind, are best made or rejected after being subject to a forensic
    and adversarial presentation by interested parties. Thus, I do not consider stock trading price
    further.
    119
    See supra note 7. Because I do not explicitly give weight to the deal price, I need not address
    certain related issues, such as the calculation of synergies.
    24
    III. FAIR VALUE AND DISCOUNTED CASH FLOW ANALYSIS
    A. Use of Discounted Cash Flow Analysis
    Under 
    8 Del. C
    . § 262, to determine “fair value,” a court must value a
    corporation as a “going concern” according to the corporation’s “operative reality”
    as of the date of the merger.120 Further, a court “must take into consideration all
    factors and elements which reasonably might enter into the fixing of value,” and
    consider “facts which were known or which could be ascertained as of the date of
    merger.” 121 The court retains discretion to use “different valuation methodologies”
    so long as the court justifies that exercise of discretion “in a manner supported by
    the record before it.”122 The court must derive the fair value of the shares “exclusive
    of any element arising from the accomplishment or expectation of the merger.”123
    When using a DCF analysis, “this Court has recognized that management is, as a
    general proposition, in the best position to know the business and, therefore, prepare
    projections” in the “ordinary course of business.” 124 With these general principles
    in mind, I turn to my valuation of AOL.
    I rely primarily upon a DCF analysis, as “[b]oth experts agree that the DCF is
    the best and most reliable way to value AOL as a going concern as of the merger
    120
    M.G. Bancorporation, 
    Inc., 737 A.2d at 525
    .
    121
    Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 
    457 A.2d 701
    , 713 (Del. 1983) (quoting Tri-Continental Corp. v.
    Battye, 
    74 A.2d 71
    , 72 (Del. 1950)).
    122
    DFC Global 
    Corp., 172 A.3d at 35
             1.
    123
    
    8 Del. C
    . § 262(h).
    124
    In re Appraisal of Ancestry.com, Inc., 
    2015 WL 399726
    , at *18.
    25
    date.” 125 A DCF analysis, “although complex in practice, is rooted around a simple
    principle: the value of the company at the time of the merger is simply the sum of
    its future cash flows discounted back to present value.”126 Further, a DCF analysis
    “is only as reliable as the inputs relied upon and the assumptions underlying those
    inputs.”127 However, “the use of math should not obscure the necessarily more
    subjective exercise in judgment that a valuation exercise requires.”128         I also
    acknowledge the Dell court’s recent delineation of the weaknesses of the method:
    Although widely considered the best tool for valuing companies when
    there is no credible market information and no market check, DCF
    valuations involve many inputs—all subject to disagreement by well-
    compensated and highly credentialed experts—and even slight
    differences in these inputs can produce large valuation gaps.129
    The Petitioners hired a well-qualified academic, Dr. Bradford Cornell, a
    visiting professor at the California Institute of Technology, as their expert witness.
    Cornell performed a financial analysis, and concluded that the fair value of AOL
    stock was $68.98 per share.130 For reasons not necessary to detail, however, the
    Respondent questioned Dr. Cornell’s impartiality in this matter, and the Petitioners
    seem content to use the DCF model presented by the Respondent’s expert as a
    starting point for my analysis. Accordingly, I start with the DCF valuation provided
    125
    Sept. 19, 2017 Oral Arg. Tr. 25:5–8.
    126
    In re of SWS Grp., Inc., 
    2017 WL 2334852
    , at *11 (Del. Ch. May 30, 2017).
    127
    
    Id. 128 Agranoff
    v. Miller, 
    791 A.2d 880
    , 896 (Del. Ch. 2001).
    129
    Dell, Inc., 
    2017 WL 6375829
    , at *28.
    130
    Trial Tr. 108:17–21 (Cornell).
    26
    by that expert, Professor Daniel Fischel, and consider the Petitioners’ limited
    arguments that certain assumption or inputs in that valuation must be changed.
    Fischel opined that the fair value of AOL stock was $44.85 per share.131 The
    Petitioners’ disagreements with the Fischel analysis are limited, although the effects
    of that disagreement on the calculation of fair value are vast. The parties dispute
    only four items: (1) the proper cash flow projections for the DCF; (2) the operative
    reality assumed in the DCF with regard to two deals with Microsoft and one deal
    with Millennial Media Inc.; (3) the proper projection period and terminal growth
    rate; and (4) how much of AOL’s cash balance must be added back after the DCF.
    I discuss each in turn.
    B. Disputed Addition and Inputs
    1. Cash Flow Projections
    “The most important input necessary for performing a proper DCF is                  a
    projection of the subject company's cash flows. Without a reliable estimate of cash
    flows, a DCF analysis is simply a guess.”132 The parties point to three potential sets
    of cash flow projections. The projections relied on by Fischel in his analysis, which
    I use as a starting point, are management’s long-term plan for 2015 (the
    “Management Projections” or the “LTP”). 133 Fischel selected these projections
    131
    Trial Tr. 1065:6–9 (Fischel).
    132
    Del. Open MRI Radiology Assocs., P.A. v. Kessler, 
    898 A.2d 290
    , 332 (Del. Ch. 2006).
    133
    JX0917; JX0921 at 46.
    27
    because they were “described as the ‘best currently available estimates and
    judgements of [AOL]'s management as to the future operating and financial
    performance of [AOL],’ and were used by AOL's financial advisor Allen in its May
    11, 2015 fairness opinion.” 134 The Petitioners encourage me to use either of two
    other projections relied on by Cornell. The first is based on ten-year projections that
    AOL submitted to Deloitte for a tax impairment analysis (the “Deloitte
    Projections”).135 The second, (the “Disputed Projections”), contained substantial
    differences, compared to the Management Projections, in working capital
    requirements and was sent by AOL to Verizon’s advisors in April 2015. I find that
    the best estimate of cash flow projections is the Management Projections, made in
    the regular course of business, for the reasons that follow.
    The Management Projections were completed in mid-February 2015 and
    presented to the AOL Board.136 The AOL Board created four-year long-term plans
    as a part of its annual internal budgeting process.137 AOL executives testified that
    the LTP did not include costs or risks from specific acquisitions or transactions;138
    however, the LTP assumed that AOL would fill strategic gaps in areas such as
    134
    JX2255 (Fischel Report) ¶ 41; AOL Schedule 14D-9 at 24.
    135
    Trial Tr. 649:19–650:3 (Dykstra).
    136
    JX0917; JX0921 at 46.
    137
    Trial Tr. 355:17–22 (AOL CFO of Platforms Bellomo), 641:17–642:10 (AOL CFO Dykstra).
    138
    
    Id. at 363:10–13
    (quoting AOL CFO of Platforms Bellomo’s response that the LTP did not
    “account for the cost of acquiring Millennial Media or integrating it”); JX1248 (quoting an email
    from AOL CFO of Platforms Bellomo to another AOL employee: “[I]s our LTP a tough case to
    achieve on an organic basis?” “[T]he current LTP does not assume any acquisitions . . . .”).
    28
    mobile supply, shifting demographics, and consumer data. 139 AOL financial advisor
    Allen & Co. sent the Management Projections to Verizon, albeit without AOL
    management’s sign off. 140
    The Deloitte Projections were created after AOL hired Deloitte to perform a
    goodwill impairment valuation of the Company using a set of ten-year projections
    developed by AOL for this purpose.141 AOL CFO Dykstra testified that she did not
    create the Deloitte Projections for non-tax purposes. 142 These projections were
    created through inputs provided by AOL Senior Vice President of Financial
    Planning and Analysis Michael Nolan,143 after which “[Deloitte] . . . r[a]n it through
    their standard model.” 144 According to Cornell, a DCF analysis based on the
    Deloitte Projections―instead of the Management Projections―values AOL stock at
    $55.36 per share. 145
    The Disputed Projections were created when Allen & Co. expressed concern,
    in April 2015, that AOL’s projected working capital “appear[ed] to be materially
    139
    Trial Tr. 361:19–364:16 (Bellomo); JX1712 at 3 (“Major Product/Solution Improvement
    Assumptions”).
    140
    Trial Tr. 889:13–22 (Roszkowski); JX1332; JX1457; JX2991; JX1286.
    141
    Trial Tr. 649:19–650:3 (Dykstra).
    142
    
    Id. at 653:22–654:10
    (Dykstra) (“I wouldn't use them for formal valuation purposes for a
    different purpose. I mean, this goodwill impairment testing is a different purpose, to just judge
    whether you have a non-cash impairment charge for that period . . . It was a different process,
    different people involved.”).
    143
    Trial Tr. 650:12–13 (Dykstra).
    144
    
    Id. at 650:21–23
    (Dykstra).
    145
    Pet’rs’ Opening Br. Ex. A.
    29
    different from research estimates”146 AOL prepared and sent another version of the
    working capital projections—the Disputed Projections—with different assumptions
    to Verizon’s advisors. 147 AOL CFO of Platforms Nick Bellomo stated that he
    “reviewed the numbers that were shared [with Verizon] to “mak[e] them more
    optimistic” in order to “decrease[] the change in working capital, which would have
    had an increase in cash flow for the business, which would ultimately increase the
    valuation of the business under certain valuation methodologies.” 148 Bellomo stated
    that it was his “understanding that the valuation that was initially floated to AOL for
    the purchase of AOL may [have] be[en] taken down unless these numbers were
    improved.”149 Allen & Co. director Isani explained to AOL Senior Vice President
    Mark Roszkowski on February 8, 2015 that:
    I think we should be presenting a robust opportunity case to
    [Verizon]―and as is typical for these processes, it will vary from
    budget. For internal purposes and record keeping, we should have the
    bridge btw that case and the board budget as well as document the
    rationale for the gap.
    146
    JX1266 (quoting email from Allen & Co. that “[w]e have included [net working capital] from
    the LRP as well, which appears to be materially different from research estimates, are we sure the
    numbers we have for NWC are correct?”); see also JX2473 (quoting an internal AOL email from
    May 8, 2015 that the “increase in working capital seems crazy high”).
    147
    Trial Tr. 371:5–15 (Bellomo); 
    Id. at 832:16–833:7,
    835:22–836:2 (Allen & Co. director Isani)
    (“Q. And what do you understand the purpose of these [Disputed] cash flow projections to be? A.
    To make a case to Verizon on how the cash flow could be improved over time, should the company
    successfully deploy certain efforts.”); but see 
    id. at 827:7–828:2
    (Isani) (agreeing that “it was
    typical in these processes to present a robust opportunity case to a potential buyer”).
    148
    
    Id. at 370:14–18
    (Bellomo).
    149
    
    Id. at 371:1–4.
    30
    However, for the dialogue with [Verizon], we present only the robust
    case and completely own it as "the" plan. Typically we would not show
    board minutes as this is not a corporate deal (this case is tricky as the
    asset represents a large portion of total value). They will ask is this
    budget and we will have to rehearse the answer. But for a process like
    this it is not typical for the financials to be revised upward from the
    conservative board/budget ones
    (Should probably also connect w/ legal to get their input into the caveats
    for documenting the gap). 150
    AOL management sometimes referred to the Disputed Projections as “aspirational”
    in their internal correspondence. 151 There is also contemporaneous correspondence
    and trial testimony that the Disputed Projections were created with the assumption
    that AOL would become part of Verizon. 152
    150
    JX0819 at 1–2 (citing emails between AOL and Allen & Co. executives); accord Trial Tr.
    311:7–312:3 (Doherty).
    151
    Trial Tr. 656:19–21 (Dykstra) (“So we did that exercise and came up with a more aspirational
    set of working capital projections.”); JX1691 (quoting a May 10, 2015 email from Dykstra to
    Roszkowski that “[w]e are going to note to the board at the meeting tomorrow that we provided a
    more aspirational cash flow to the [Verizon] team as part of the process and we'll need to note the
    differences at a very high level to the cash flow we provide to the board”); JX1748 (quoting an
    email from AOL Senior Vice President of Financial Planning & Analysis Michael Nolan to
    Dykstra on May 10, 2015 that “[b]elow [financial projections] compare[] base case vs aspiration
    as well as revised tax comment” and refer[] to an assumption that “improved work capital driven
    by DSO [days sales outstanding] and DPO [days payable outstanding] improvement initiatives
    planned in LRP,” which allegedly could only be achieved by a Verizon acquisition of AOL).
    152
    Trial Tr. 656:5–21, 658:23–659:8 (Dykstra) (“I believe they were talking about the exercise of
    taking a . . . stretch or aspirational approach to looking to see what numbers we could tweak in the
    model, and things that would be impacted by Verizon if they were there with us . . . . )”, 662:4–
    663:12 (“[W]e went back and said what if we could stretch and Verizon could help us improve
    some of the dynamics in our cash flow, and collections in particular.”); 
    Id. at 896:20–897:20
    (Roszkowski); JX1690 (quoting same email as JX1691); Trial Tr. 371:16–373:15 (Bellomo); 
    Id. at 656:5–657:20,
    662:4–663:16 (“Q. And when you wrote about the "more aspirational cash flow
    given to Verizon," to what are you referring? A. I'm referring to that exercise that we talked about,
    where we went back and said what if we could stretch and Verizon could help us improve some
    of the dynamics in our cash flow, and collections in particular.”), 695:3–9 (Dykstra) (“Again, I've
    said that the additional assumptions were assuming we would get better leverage with Verizon.”);
    31
    I note that other evidence challenges this narrative. The Disputed Projections
    were created after a rigorous internal process that involved input from a variety of
    departments within AOL. 153            Certain of AOL’s employees signed off on the
    projections while they were unaware of a potential or likely sale to Verizon. 154 The
    Disputed Projections were submitted to Verizon and explained to AOL’s Board,
    apparently as though they were current projections. 155 There are emails between
    AOL employees that refer to the LRP as being “incorrect” and outdated. 156 The
    Trial Tr. 835:4–836:2 (Isani); 
    Id. at 892:2–10,
    893:11–23 (Roszkowski); JX1286 (working capital
    would improve if AOL had “more leverage on both payment terms and ability to collect . . . .”);
    JX1452 at 1 (quoting internal LionTree emails in April 2015 that “AOL is assuming . . . more
    scale” would lead to “a faster collection time”); JX1306 (April 14, 2015 email from Allen & Co.
    to AOL executives that an assumed change in working capital would be due to “[m]ore leverage
    over advertisers and publishers”); JX1419 (April 18, 2015 email from Allen & Co. to Verizon
    financial advisors including a “Net Working Capital Overview” with a “[c]hange in net working
    capital projections by segment”).
    153
    JX1280 (noting the Disputed Projections were prepared after “an internal review of the LRP”);
    JX1423 (quoting an internal AOL email chain discussing the change in projection assumptions in
    advance of a call); JX1414 (detailing the extensive internal input into the Disputed Projections
    from Corporate Development, Financial Planning & Analysis, and Allen & Co.); JX1398 at 1
    (quoting an AOL finance team email of April 17, 2015 that the updated working capital projections
    resulted in “no change in AOIBDA [free cash flow] or end cash”).
    154
    JX1437 (quoting Allen & Co. director Isani in an April 20, 2015 email that: “FYI – [AOL] will
    also have their controller Lara sweet [sic] join the call at noon. PLEASE NOTE: Lara is not aware
    of the change in the structure to a 100% deal. As such, please continue to provide the context that
    the discussion is re: a deal with the last 80/20 public minority structure”); JX1434 at 1 (citing email
    to show that Lara Sweet, AOL’s Controller was unaware of the potential Verizon transaction when
    she endorsed the Updated Projection); JX1411 at 1 (Armstrong e-mail to the Board, outside
    counsel, Allen & Co., and Dykstra, and Roszkowski, stating “[i]t is really important you know that
    the main people represented on this email are the limited set of people that have information on
    our deals”).
    155
    Trial Tr. 715:20–716:24 (Dykstra) (agreeing that Dykstra “t[old] the board the difference in
    cash flows at a very high level” after the Disputed Projections had been sent to Verizon).
    156
    JX2451 at 2 (quoting an internal AOL email that “AJ can send you the LRP – caveat being that
    it is incorrect and does not reflect the updated numbers per all discussions since that time”);
    JX1406 (quoting internal email from Allen & Co. on April 18, 2015 that “[w]e have already told
    32
    Petitioners contend that AOL’s goal for more leverage to decrease day sales
    outstanding (thus decreasing the required working capital and thereby improving
    cash flow) could have occurred outside of an anticipated deal with Verizon, although
    an exact method is left unspecified. 157
    I find that the Management Projections are in fact management’s best estimate
    as of the Valuation Date. While a close call, the record indicates that the Disputed
    Projections were most likely created as a marketing tool in AOL’s attempted sale of
    itself to Verizon. My purpose here is to determine the fair value of AOL, and not
    AOL’s value as-advertised. I am not persuaded that the Disputed Projections
    represent the most recent and valid projections used by AOL management prior to
    the Valuation Date.
    Finally, I find that the goodwill impairment projections are not pertinent to
    my DCF analysis here. The purpose behind any set of projections matters because
    it determines the appropriateness of various assumptions that must be made. The
    Deloitte Projections were made for the goodwill impairment analysis―a tax-driven
    assessment with a host of required assumptions that should not, in these
    circumstances, be used for a DCF analysis. While certain assumptions may be
    [Verizon] all old numbers should be disregarded as they are not correct, however they would still
    like to have a call”).
    157
    Pet’rs Answering Post-Trial Br. 17 (“The documents cited by Respondent generally assert that
    working capital would improve if AOL had more scale or leverage (which AOL could obtain in
    ways other than an acquisition by Verizon) among several other strategies AOL had employed to
    improve working capital.”).
    33
    appropriate for a tax analysis, those same assumptions may be nonsensical for
    valuation purposes. Consequently, I use the Management Projections in my DCF
    analysis.
    2. Pending Transactions as of the Merger
    I start with the following assumptions. “The determination of fair value must
    be based on all relevant factors, including . . . elements of future value, where
    appropriate.”158 “[A]ny . . . facts which were known or which could be ascertained
    as of the date of the merger and which throw any light on [the] future prospects of
    the merged corporation” must be considered in fixing fair value. 159 A corporation
    “must be valued as a going concern based upon the ‘operative reality’ of the
    company as of the time of the merger.” 160          I must exclude speculative costs or
    revenues, however.161       Mere “actions in furtherance” of a potential transaction,
    without a manifest ability to proceed, should not be valued as part of a company’s
    operative reality. 162
    158
    Glassman v. Unocal Exploration Corp., 
    777 A.2d 242
    , 248 (Del. 2001).
    159
    Montgomery Cellular Holding Co., 
    880 A.2d 206
    at 222 (Del. 2005).
    160
    Ala. By-Prods. Corp. v. Neal, 
    588 A.2d 255
    , 256–67 (Del. 1991); M.G. Bancorporation, 
    Inc, 737 A.2d at 525
    ; LongPath Capital, LLC v. Ramtron Int'l Corp., 
    2015 WL 4540443
    , at *9 (Del.
    Ch. June 30, 2015).
    161
    Ramtron, 
    2015 WL 4540443
    , at *13 & n.113; see also M.G. Bancorporation, 
    Inc., 737 A.2d at 525
    ; Ala. By-Prods. 
    Corp., 588 A.2d at 256
    –67.
    162
    Gearreald v. Just Care, Inc., 
    2012 WL 1569818
    , at *6 (Del. Ch. Apr. 30, 2012).
    34
    The Petitioners argue that three potential deals were part of AOL’s operative
    reality, and that any fair value analysis of AOL must include these transactions.163
    These include: (i) AOL’s acquisition of Millennial, a programmatic mobile
    advertising platform; 164 (ii) a deal for Microsoft’s Bing search engine to replace
    Google in powering search results on AOL properties (the “Search Deal”),165 and
    (iii) a ten-year commercial partnership for AOL to run the sales of display, mobile,
    and video ads on Microsoft properties in the United States and eight international
    markets (the “Display Deal”) (the Display Deal and Search Deal are together
    referred to as the “Microsoft Deals”).166 Fischel did not ascribe value to these
    transactions in his DCF analysis.167 For each of these transactions I ask: (i) if the
    transaction was part of the “operative reality” of the Company as of the Valuation
    Date, and (ii) if so, was the transaction appropriately valued in the LTP. I will adjust
    my Fischel-based DCF analysis to include the financial impact of those transactions
    that were part of the Company’s operative reality on the Valuation Date but which
    were not included in the LTP.
    163
    Pet’rs’ Answering Br. 47.
    164
    JX2076 at 2–3 (citing August 25, 2015 internal Verizon proposal for merger agreement with
    Millennial); Trial Tr. 48:6–7 (“Millennial Media . . . is basically a programmatic mobile platform
    . . . .”).
    165
    JX2008 (including an “Advertising Sales and Services Agreement” executed on June 30, 2015).
    166
    JX2441 (including a “Sales Partnership Agreement for AOL’s Operation of [Microsoft’s]
    Display and Video Advertising Monetization” executed on June 23, 2015).
    167
    See JX2346 (LTP) at Tab I. A.2 Key assumptions (displaying unawareness of Search Deal in
    statement that “[n]ew search deal terms set in for 2016. This will negatively impact revenue and
    bottom line for Core”).
    35
    a. Operative Reality
    i. Description of the Deals
    As mentioned, the Display Deal allowed AOL to run the sale of display,
    mobile, and video ads on Microsoft properties such as Xbox, Skype, Outlook, MSN,
    and others in the United States and eight other markets.168                   After months of
    negotiation,169 Microsoft and AOL traded draft term sheets at least through May
    2015. 170 Armstrong testified that the Display Deal “could have blown up at any
    time” because of, among other things, uncertainty surrounding the customers and
    the Microsoft employees AOL would need to onboard. 171 Armstrong confirmed in
    a May 14, 2015 email that AOL expected to close the Display Deal on May 27,
    2015. 172 Nevertheless, AOL pushed back the Microsoft announcement until after
    the Verizon announcement. 173 AOL signed an agreement for the Display Deal with
    Microsoft on June 28, 2015 and announced the transaction on June 30, 2015. 174 The
    168
    JX2441.
    169
    JX2009 at 1 (quoting AOL executive that the MSFT deal “was 9 months of long drawn out
    internal and external negotiation”).
    170
    JX2412 (citing May 7, 2015 email from Bain to AOL: “Deal terms are still in flux; we anticipate
    having final terms on Friday 5/8, with some work still to be done on PMP terms.”); JX2413
    (quoting May 8, 2015 internal AOL email with “the latest term sheet” with updates about “[AOL’s]
    latest reconciliation on terms with [Microsoft]”).
    171
    Trial Tr. 510:4–8, 12–13 (Armstrong).
    172
    JX1816 at 1 (email from Armstrong to AOL executives on May 14, 2015).
    173
    JX2425 (quoting email from AOL executive Roszkowski to another AOL employee on June 2,
    2015 to hold off on announcing the Display Deal until after the Verizon announcement).
    174
    JX2008 at 38–39 (Display); JX1997.
    36
    Petitioners imply that the Display Deal contributes $2.57 per share if included under
    Fischel’s DCF Model. 175
    The Search Deal replaced a soon-to-expire contract with Google to allow
    Microsoft’s Bing search engine to power advertising and results on AOL’s
    properties.176 Similar to the Display Deal, AOL planned to close the Search Deal on
    May 27, 2015 but delayed until after the Verizon announcement. 177 An AOL
    presentation from June 10, 2015 included the key terms, financial projections, and
    other business implications of the Search Deal. 178 The Search Deal closed on June
    26, 2015.179 Microsoft and AOL announced the Microsoft Deals on June 30,
    2015. 180 The Petitioners do not quantify the impact of the Search Deal but instead
    urge me to “select a DCF value slightly above the median to account for the value
    added by the Microsoft Search Deal, which was accretive to free cash flow beginning
    in 2016.”181
    175
    Pet’rs’ Answering Br. 46–47 (stating that the Millennial and Display Deals contribute $6.71
    per share and that the Millennial Deal accounts for $4.14 per share of that contribution). I note
    that Cornell examines the Millennial and Display Deals as combined. Pet’rs’ Post-Trial
    Answering Br., Ex. A.
    176
    JX2008; Trial Tr. 512:12–20 (Armstrong); JX2146.
    177
    JX1816 at 1 (email from Armstrong to AOL executives on May 14, 2015); JX2425 (quoting
    email from AOL executive Roszkowski to another AOL employee on June 2, 2015 to hold off on
    announcing the Display Deal until after the Verizon announcement).
    178
    JX2433.
    179
    JX2146 at 1–2 (including a copy of the Search Deal agreement); JX1997 (including an internal
    AOL email circulating the signature pages). The parties dispute whether the Search Deal closed
    on June 26 or 28, 2015; the distinction is not material to my decision here.
    180
    JX2008; JX2146.
    181
    Pet’rs’ Answering Br. 47.
    37
    The path of Millennial Media, Inc. (“Millennial”) to an acquisition by AOL
    (the “Millennial Deal”) was more circuitous than the Microsoft Deals. After
    conducting initial diligence, AOL passed on buying Millennial in late 2014 but
    resumed preliminary diligence in February 2015. 182 AOL paused its diligence in
    April 2015 until Millennial announced its quarterly earnings. 183 In May 2015,
    Armstrong told the AOL Board that Millennial might “secure another offer in the
    near term, but we are willing to take that risk.”184 Armstrong made a non-binding
    offer to Millennial for $2.10 per share on June 5, 2015, “conditioned on exclusivity,”
    and stated that “AOL was prepared to move expeditiously to negotiate and sign a
    definitive agreement to effect the transaction.” 185 AOL sent a “written, non-binding
    proposal . . . reflecting the terms of the June 5 Proposal, and which also included an
    exclusivity period to negotiate a transaction between the parties until July 17,
    2015.” 186 On June 10, 2015, Millennial opened a data room to AOL and its
    advisors.187 On June 15, 2015, Millennial and AOL signed an agreement to negotiate
    exclusively until July 17, 2015, and “which contained a standstill provision that
    would terminate if the Company entered into a definitive agreement with a third
    182
    JX0663 at 1; JX2112 at 14.
    183
    JX1476 at 1.
    184
    JX1595 at 2.
    185
    JX2112 (Millennial Schedule 14D-9) at 17.
    186
    
    Id. at 18.
    187
    
    Id. 38 party
    to effect a business combination.”188 Representatives of AOL and Millennial
    met on June 17–19, 2015 to discuss Millennial’s “financials, business operations,
    product and technology, real estate and security infrastructure.” 189 On June 23,
    2015, Verizon closed the merger with AOL. 190
    On June 30, 2015, AOL’s counsel “circulated a first draft of the Merger
    Agreement,” followed by two weeks of meetings, discussions, and negotiations.191
    The parties discussed:
    [T]he scope of the representations and warranties, the benefits to be
    offered to the Company's employees following the transaction, the
    conduct of the Company's business between signing and closing of the
    transaction, the parties' respective conditions to closing, AOL's
    obligation to indemnify and maintain insurance for the Company's
    directors and officers, the rights of the parties to terminate the
    transaction, and the amount and conditions of payment by the Company
    of the termination fee and expense reimbursement described above. 192
    The SEC sent Millennial a letter “notifying [Millennial] that the SEC was conducting
    an information investigation” for fraud starting in July 2015.193 After the expiration
    of the exclusivity agreement, Millennial attempted to auction itself to six other
    buyers, but AOL was the only party to submit a proposal. 194 AOL, by then under
    Verizon, agreed to pay $1.75 per share to acquire Millennial on September 2,
    188
    
    Id. at 19.
    189
    
    Id. 190 Stipulated
    Joint Pre-Trial Order ¶ 9.
    191
    
    Id. 192 Id.
    ¶ 20.
    193
    JX2112 (Millennial Schedule 14D-9) at 19–20.
    194
    
    Id. at 20–24,
    26 (“AOL was the only party to submit a proposal to acquire Millennial”);
    39
    2015. 195 AOL signed the Millennial Deal on September 3, 2015.196 The Millennial
    Deal closed on October 23, 2015.197 The Petitioners argue that the Millennial Deal
    contributes $4.14 per share if included under Fischel’s DCF model.198
    ii. Conclusions
    I find that the Display Deal was part of the operative reality of AOL as of the
    Valuation Date. I am persuaded by the level of certainty in that transaction, given
    AOL’s internal correspondence and the concrete plans for an announcement date. I
    also find that the Search Deal was part of the operative reality of AOL as of the
    Valuation Date. I am persuaded by the apparent certainty of the transaction, based
    on internal correspondence and presentations, that this transaction was one that both
    sides fully expected to occur. However, I find that the Millennial Deal was not part
    of AOL’s operative reality as of the Valuation Date. AOL had taken a number of
    steps toward a transaction, such as sending a non-binding offer subject to an
    exclusivity period, beginning the due diligence process, and meeting with
    executives. However, no merger agreement drafts had been exchanged and weeks
    of negotiations, a robust due diligence process, and an entire auction yet remained.
    The actions taken by AOL before the Valuation Date showed substantial interest in
    195
    
    Id. at 23;
    JX2988.
    196
    JX2112 at 25.
    197
    JX2130 at 2.
    198
    Pet’rs’ Answering Br. 47.
    40
    a transaction but are not, to my mind, sufficiently certain as to be part of the operative
    reality of AOL on the Valuation Date.
    b. LTP Assumptions
    The second question is whether the operative reality of AOL as of the
    Valuation Date, including the relevant transactions mentioned above, was properly
    included in the LTP. Because I find that the Millennial Deal was not part of the
    operative reality of AOL on the Valuation Date, I need not answer the second
    question for that particular transaction. In essence, the question before me is this:
    what is the scope of the assumptions made in the LTP? The Petitioners urge me to
    view them narrowly―these specific deals were not assumed―making the Microsoft
    Deals additive to the Management Projections. The Respondent, by contrast, urges
    me to view them broadly―the LTP assumes that strategic gaps will be filled and
    these transactions merely fill that role―so that the LTP remains as management’s
    best prediction of future cash flows and the Microsoft Deals should not be additive.
    My attempt to differentiate the new ingredients from those already baked in is below.
    i. The Display Deal
    The Display Deal and its relation to the LTP were specifically discussed
    internally after the AOL-Verizon merger. AOL executive Roszkowski explained to
    Verizon executive Walden in a September 3, 2015 email that the Microsoft and
    Millennial Deals were “accretive to [the LTP], but should not be a straight addition
    41
    to revenue and margin” and that “the [] LTP assumed deals like MSFT and that
    [AOL] would close [its] mobile technology/talent gap.” 199                   Roszkowski later
    testified that AOL’s LTP was “optimistic . . . and . . . included assumptions that
    [AOL] [would] solve[] for key strategic capability gaps” so that the Microsoft Deals
    “actually made the long-term plan more certain” and could not be a “straight . . .
    addition” to the LTP.200 The Display Deal included a number of risks, including
    adding approximately 1,270 Microsoft employees in nine countries. 201 The parties
    also dispute smaller, non-dispositive issues. 202
    The parties give me two choices with regard to the Display Deal: add the full
    value of the Display Deal as urged by the Petitioners, implicitly worth $2.57, or
    decline to add it to the LTP, as the Respondent recommends. I find that the Display
    199
    JX2100 at 1 (emphases added); see also Trial Tr. 578:15–579:17, 582:7–18 (Doherty) (“Q. And
    in your view, Mr. Doherty, could you simply add the projections relating to the new Microsoft
    deal on top of the prior management projections? A. No. Not at all. I mean, two reasons. Number
    one, I felt it was already pretty much baked into their plan; and, number two, we didn't have a set
    of projections.”).
    200
    
    Id. at 901:3–14
    (AOL head of corporate development Roszkowski); see also 
    id. at 343:1–7
    (Verizon EVP Walden); 
    Id. at 314:1–19
    (Verizon SVP Doherty).
    201
    Tr. 374:15–375:12 (Bellomo); Tr. 512:2–513:8 (Armstrong); JX1993 at 6, 13–15 (quoting a
    June 25, 2015 internal Verizon slide deck explaining the deal and its risks and benefits to AOL
    and Verizon, including employee integration schedules); JX2008 at 9–16, 22–23 (“Advertising
    Sales and Services Agreement” between AOL and Microsoft dated June 30, 2015).
    202
    The parties dispute the meaning of “delivered value” in an exhibit (JX2436) as either “revenue
    that is delivered to AOL and Microsoft on account of the deal” (Resp’t’s Answering Br. 57) or “by
    definition . . . additive” (Pet’rs’ Opening Br. 59). The parties also dispute a slide (JX2441 at 8)
    that was either “apparently put together by a Bain consultant and never shared outside a small
    group of AOL’s management, showing how AOL might be able to perform as part of Verizon,
    with illustrative numbers added on to AOL’s long-term plan” (Resp’t’s Answering Br. 57) or as
    evidence that AOL viewed the Display and Millennial Deals as directly additive to the LTP (Pet’rs’
    Opening Br. 59–60).
    42
    Deal was, at least, partially accretive. I am convinced that AOL internally viewed it
    as at least partially additive to its LTP as evidenced by its internal presentations and
    communications, but I also suspect that it should not be entirely additive. Because
    I lack the information necessary to cut a finer slice in this instance, I add the full
    $2.57 per share to my DCF analysis. In other words, the record gives me no basis
    that another value for the display deal is less arbitrary than $2.57 per share.
    ii. The Search Deal
    Neither Fischel nor Cornell included the Search Deal in their DCF analyses,203
    purportedly because “AOL did not produce detailed forecasts for the Search
    Deal.”204 The LTP initially assumed that a new search deal with Google would be
    less favorable to AOL than the previous deal.205 Armstrong testified that the Search
    Deal, together with the Display Deal, was “meant as a mitigation to the search money
    that we would lose when we switched from Google at the end of that year to
    Microsoft. But it was unlikely that the Microsoft deal would make up for the search
    loss that we were going to experience overall.”206 However, a June 10, 2015 AOL
    presentation included financial projections that explicitly portrayed the Search Deal
    203
    Trial Tr. 232:18–19 (Cornell); JX2255 ¶ 41 n.90 (Fischel Report).
    204
    Pet’rs’ Opening Br. 56.
    205
    JX2346 at Tab I. A.2 Key assumptions [for AOL’s LTP] (“New search deal terms set in for
    2016. This will negatively impact revenue and bottom line for Core.”).
    206
    Trial Tr. 512:12–20 (Armstrong).
    43
    as additive to AOL’s OIBDA in comparison with the LTP. 207
    I find that the preponderance of the evidence shows that the Search Deal is, at
    least minimally, additive to the LTP. The record is lacking in a principled way to
    account for the Search Deal, however. The Petitioners do no more than urge me to
    “select a number slightly higher than the mid-point share price to account for the
    Search Deal’s benefits.” 208 I find fair value, therefore, is best expressed by omitting
    any speculation as to the value to AOL of the pending Search Deal. In other words,
    the record gives me no basis to find that another value for the Search Deal is less
    arbitrary than $0. I also note that I have included the full value of the Display Deal
    as accretive to value, potentially overstating fair value, and I find it prudent not to
    exaggerate that effect by adding speculative value here.
    3. Projection Period
    Any DCF analysis must include a post-projection period of valuation into
    perpetuity at a steady state. This case is a now-classic appraisal story of “the tale of
    two companies.” AOL was divided into three segments: two parts small and rapidly
    growing; one senescent. The question before me is, in the context of four-year
    projections, ending with two segments enjoying high growth rates and a quiescent
    third segment, what is the best way to view the terminal period?
    207
    JX1906_VZ-0056420 at 5–6 (comparing difference in Search Deal projections to “AOL May
    2015 Outlook + 2016–18 Long Term Plan”).
    208
    Pet’rs’ Opening Br. 56.
    44
    Fischel selected 3.25% as the perpetuity growth rate for AOL. 209 Fischel
    noted that the “perpetuity growth rates reported by analysts and advisors ranged from
    1.0% to 6.6%, with a median of 2.5% and an average of 2.9%.” 210 Fischel then
    averaged the 2.9% perpetuity growth rate given by analysts and advisors with the
    4.6% long-term GDP growth estimate and 2.3% long-term inflation rate, resulting
    in an average rate of 3.28%. 211 Fischel reduced the perpetuity growth rate to 3.25%
    due to his concern that “AOL's Membership segment was the largest contributor to
    AOIBDA and was declining, so this may overstate the expected growth rate for the
    firm.” 212 However, Fischel noted that because “AOL Projections do not provide
    estimates beyond 2018 . . . there is some possibility that AOL could experience
    growth in the short term at a rate higher than inflation due to higher growth in the
    Platforms and Brands segments or even potential acquisitions.” 213 Lastly, Fischel
    tested the “sensitivity of the implied value of AOL's common shares to the perpetuity
    growth rate by using a range of 3.0% to 3.5%.” 214
    Unsurprisingly, the Petitioners characterize Fischel’s perpetuity growth rate
    of 3.25% as “flawed” because, they say, combined with his use of a two-stage model,
    Fischel insufficiently accounts for AOL’s high growth rate prior to reaching steady
    209
    JX2255 ¶ 54 (Fischel Report).
    210
    
    Id. ¶ 52.
    211
    
    Id. ¶ 54.
    212
    
    Id. ¶ 54
    n.104.
    213
    
    Id. ¶ 53.
    214
    
    Id. ¶ 54
    n.104.
    45
    state.215 The Petitioners argue that a three-stage DCF is more appropriate here
    because “academic literature [such as that by Professor Damodaran] counsels that if
    the growth in the final forecast year is well above the terminal growth rate, then a
    three-stage model is preferred.”216 The Petitioners point to Fischel’s agreement, that
    two of the AOL businesses were experiencing “hypergrowth”217 at the end of the
    two-stage projection period used by Fischel, as evidence that a two-stage model is
    inappropriate here.218 The Petitioners illustrate this lost value using a chart: 219
    215
    Pet’rs’ Post-Trial Opening Br. 64.
    216
    
    Id. at 65.
    217
    Trial Tr. 1105:20–1106:2 (Fischel) (“Q. Okay. Now, two of the AOL business segments
    experienced hypergrowth at the end of the projection period that you used. Correct? A. That's
    right. Q. And AOL did not reach a steady state at the end of the projection period. Correct? A. I
    think that's fair.”).
    218
    Pet’rs’ Post-Trial Answering Br. 50.
    219
    Pet’rs’ Post-Trial Opening Br. 66.
    46
    As an alternative, the Petitioners advocate using the ten-year Deloitte
    projections used for the tax impairment analysis to account for the post-Management
    Projections growth gap described above.220 I have already rejected this approach,
    for reasons set out above; I also note that AOL management did not believe it could
    reliably forecast beyond four years. 221
    In a fast-paced industry with significant fluctuations, where management is
    hesitant to project beyond four years, using a three-stage DCF model or a ten-year
    projection period seems particularly brazen. I find that a two-stage model is
    appropriate under these circumstances. However, I agree with the Petitioners that
    Fischel’s two-stage model and perpetuity growth rate of 3.25% do not accurately
    capture the trajectories of the two divisions of AOL that were in hypergrowth at the
    end of the Management Projection period, despite the presence of the
    aforementioned senescent “You’ve Got Mail” laggard. I find a perpetuity growth
    rate of 3.5% more accurately captures AOL’s prospects after the Management
    220
    
    Id. at 66–67;
    JX2277 (Cornell Report) ¶¶ 89–92.
    221
    Resp’t’s Opening Post-Trial Br. 74; Trial Tr. 642:11–23 (Dykstra) (“Q. Why did you only
    project out four years as part of the long-term planning process? A. It was very difficult to go
    beyond four years. You know, we were in businesses and markets where the world was changing
    pretty quickly. I mean, digital marketing really was just coming into play, so it was moving fast.
    We -- it's difficult to predict advertising trends to begin with.”); JX2233 at 112:22–113:5 (Eoin
    Ryan Dep., former AOL head of investor relations and now AOL head of financial planning); Trial
    Tr. 642:11–23 (Dykstra); JX2233 at 112:22–113:5 (Ryan Dep.).
    47
    Projection period ends. When a 3.5% perpetuity growth rate is applied to Fischel’s
    DCF model, the fair value of AOL stock increases by $1.28 per share. 222
    4. Cash Balance
    The value of working capital that is required “to fund [a company’s] ongoing
    operations . . . is already reflected in one sense in the discounted present value of
    those operations.”; any balance of cash not so required is “‘excess’ and may be added
    to the discounted cash flow.” 223 Fischel and Cornell agree that any such balance
    should be added back to the valuation for AOL after the DCF analysis. Fischel cites
    to Professor Aswath Damodaran for the financial valuation rule that “only cash in
    excess of the minimum cash balance needed for operations should be included in a
    DCF.” 224
    The cash on hand of the Company on the Valuation Date was $554 million.225
    Fischel adds $404 million at the end of the DCF but reserves $150 million as working
    222
    I use the Fischel model the parties provided to calculate my DCF. I note that Fischel’s model
    includes a broken reference (#REF!) in Ex. N on the “AOL Dilutive Results (lexicon)” tab at cell
    BJ4. The reference impacts calculations made in the “DCF” tab regarding the shares outstanding
    at cell B16. I input “85.1” into cell B16 in accordance with Fischel’s Report at JX2255 ¶ 57, which
    states that “AOL had approximately 85.1 million fully diluted shares outstanding as of the
    Valuation Date.” The result was a $1.28 per share difference when applying a 3.5% perpetuity
    growth rate, or $46.13 per share. The parties may address any concerns with this approach before
    the Final Order.
    223
    Neal v. Ala. By-Products Corp., 
    1990 WL 109243
    , at *16 (Del. Ch. Aug. 1, 1990), aff'd, 
    588 A.2d 255
    (Del. 1991).
    224
    JX2255 at 36 (citing Aswath Damodaran, Dealing with Cash, Cross Holdings and Other Non-
    Operating Assets: Approaches and Implications, working paper, Sept. 2005, at 12)
    (“Damodaran”).
    225
    JX2255 (Fischel Report) ¶ 55 (including “cash and equivalents of $530 million plus assets held
    for sale of $24 million”).
    48
    capital, an asset necessary to develop the return on investment that is represented in
    the DCF.226 Cornell adds back AOL’s entire cash balance of $554 million. 227 The
    Petitioners contend that the $150 million “minimum balance” is “litigation
    driven”228 by pointing to (i) Verizon’s and AOL’s advisors purportedly opposite
    position in their valuations 229 and (ii) AOL’s historic dips below $150 million cash
    on hand in 2014.230 They contend that none of this cash should be excluded and that
    no working cash exclusion is appropriate.
    I am not persuaded that, in evaluating the fair value of AOL under these
    circumstances, I should add back all of the cash of AOL, implicitly assuming that
    zero working capital would be required to achieve the returns that the DCF analysis
    projects. While I recognize that AOL dropped below $150 million in cash in the
    recent past, which the Petitioners point to as evidence that the minimum cash balance
    is a litigation façade, I also acknowledge that historical dips in cash reserves pertain
    to a different time period with different capital requirements. The preponderance of
    226
    
    Id. 227 JX2277
    (Cornell Report) at 134.
    228
    Pet’rs Post-Trial Opening Br. 69.
    229
    See JX1546 at 12 (Guggenheim) (showing $477 million cash in an enterprise value analysis);
    JX2319 (Allen) at Tabs “WholeCo Multiple Val,” “SOTP-Mult” (showing each as incorporating
    $493 million cash under a multiple-based valuation analysis), “WholeCo DCF (Old CF),”
    (including $493 million cash in calculating the weighted average cost of capital). I note that the
    Petitioners do not clearly point to an example of where Allen & Co. added back all of AOL’s cash
    balance after a DCF analysis.
    230
    See, e.g., JX2267 (excerpt of AOL June 30, 2014 10-Q showing cash and equivalents of $136.2
    million); JX2268 (excerpt of AOL March 31, 2014 10-Q showing cash and equivalents of $123.5
    million); Trial Tr. (Dykstra) 764:1–2 (“I don’t remember when we first came up with the [$150
    million] minimum cash [goal].”).
    49
    the evidence indicates that this not a litigation-driven argument. 231 I instead find
    that the withholding of $150 million as working capital is reasonable and decline to
    add it back into the DCF.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    In arriving at fair value, for the reasons discussed above, I give full weight to
    my DCF valuation. I begin with Fischel’s DCF valuation of $44.85 and add $1.28
    per share 232 for the adjustment to a 3.5% perpetuity growth rate and $2.57 per share
    to include the Display Deal as part of AOL’s operative reality. My DCF analysis
    therefore results in a fair value of $48.70 per share. While the deal process was not
    Dell Compliant and thus not entitled to deference as a reliable indicator of fair value,
    it was sufficiently robust that I use the deal price as a “check” on my analysis, while
    granting it zero explicit weight. I note that value derived from my DCF does not
    deviate grossly from the deal price of $50.
    I am cognizant, however, that I am saying two seemingly incongruent things;
    namely, that AOL’s deal process was insufficient to warrant deal price deference at
    $50 per share―because, due to deal deficiencies, the sales price may not capture the
    full fair value of the Company―while also holding, based on my DCF analysis, that
    231
    Trial Tr. 765:4–7 (AOL CFO Karen Dykstra) (“I said we had a goal of maintaining $150
    million. We felt that that should be our minimum cash balance. We felt that that was prudent.”);
    JX00921 at 31 (Feb. 27, 2015 AOL Board Agenda: “To balance our growth strategy with cash
    management objectives, our goals are to maintain . . . at least $150m of cash on hand, using the
    credit facility for strategic transactions (share repurchases and M&A transactions).”).
    232
    See supra note 222.
    50
    the value of AOL stock is even lower, at $48.70 per share. One explanation for this
    incongruity is that a deal price may contain synergies that have been shared with the
    seller in the deal but that are not properly included in fair value.
    For the reasons described above, I hold that the fair value of AOL stock was
    $48.70 per share on the Valuation Date. The Petitioners are entitled to the fair value
    of their shares together with interest at the statutory rate. The parties should confer
    and provide a form of order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion.
    51