Full opinion text
OPINION LONGOBARDI, District Judge. The General Electric Company pic (“GEC”) has made a tender offer in England for the stock of The Plessey Company pic (“Plessey”). Both companies are organized and doing business under the laws of Great Britain. The parties are before the Court upon Plessey’s motion for a preliminary injunction and GEC’s motion to dismiss. THE PARTIES Plaintiff Plessey is one of the leading telecommunications and technology companies in Great Britain with annual revenues in excess of 2 billion dollars. It has operations in the United States which provide revenue in the area of 220 million dollars. Although the vast majority of Plessey securities are traded overseas, there are three types of Plessey securities currently registered or exempted from registration in the United States pursuant to section 12 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) and section 5 of the Securities Act of 1933 (the “1933 Act”). Docket Item (“D.I.”) 1, p. 4. Plessey American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”) are registered securities which are traded on the New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”). There are about 1.2 million outstanding Plessey ADRs which are held by approximately 3,000 persons throughout the United States. D.I. 1, p. 3. On December 9, 1985, there were 14 holders of Plessey ADRs in Delaware who held a total of 768 ADRs. Affidavit of Seth Dubin, D.I. 22, Exhibit C. Each Plessey ADR can be converted to Dollar Ordinary shares (“Dollar shares”) and these Dollar shares can be converted to Sterling Ordinary shares (“Ordinary shares”). Dollar shares and Ordinary shares are not traded in the United States but are registered securities in the United States. Plessey Ordinary shares are identical to Dollar shares except as to the form of dividend payment. D.I. 1, p. 4. The parties agree that Dollar shares, ADRs and Ordinary shares are separate classes of Plessey stock. Plessey Opening Brief, D.I. 19, p. 1; GEC Memorandum of Law, D.I. 31, pp. 10-11; D.I. 22, Exhibit A, p. 1. Defendant GEC is also a major telecommunications and high technology concern. Last year, its total revenues worldwide approximated 8.8 billion dollars with 1.2 billion dollars of that amount derived from its United States operations. GEC securities in the United States consist solely of GEC ADRs which are traded over-the-counter. D.I. 1, p. 3. STAGE OF PROCEEDINGS The parties are before the Court because of the nature of the GEC takeover bid. GEC maintains that its takeover offer (the “Offer") is being made to all Plessey shareholders except those in the United States who hold ADRs or Dollar shares. As a result, GEC argues that it is not subject to United States tender offer regulation. GEC explains that it never sent its tender offer solicitation material to any United States shareholder (directly or indirectly) and, that under federal securities law, the registration and reporting requirements of the Exchange Act and the 1933 Act are not triggered unless an instrument of interstate commerce is used by the tender offer- or. GEC has moved to dismiss the complaint due to the Court’s alleged lack of jurisdiction over GEC, lack of subject matter jurisdiction, improper venue, improper service of process and a variety of other procedural deficiencies. Plessey argues that GEC made a tender offer in the United States on December 9, 1985 when it issued a press release in the United Kingdom which announced its imminent United Kingdom tender offer for Plessey. According to Plessey, publication of certain information contained in the press release by the United States media triggered the reporting and registration requirements of the United States securities laws. Plessey maintains that GEC failed to file the required prospectus and documents mandated by sections 14(d) and 14(e) of the Exchange Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d) and 15 U.S.C. § 78n(e), and has, as a result, left United States Plessey ADR holders very confused about the status of their investments and how to tender their ADRs. To complicate matters, since December 3, 1985, when GEC issued its first press release announcing its proposed offer, the price for Plessey ADRs on the NYSE has risen dramatically. D.I. 22, Exhibit D. According to Plessey, the rise in the market price occasioned by the press release serves only to intensify the need of Plessey ADR holders for tender offer information which fulfills section 14(d) and section 14(e) requirements. Only then, concludes Plessey, can the Plessey ADR holders make a knowing and intelligent investment decision about their ADRs. Therefore, Plessey has moved the Court for a preliminary injunction to require GEC to satisfy Securities & Exchange Commission (“SEC”) reporting and securities registration requirements under section 5 of the 1933 Act and sections 14(d) and 14(e) of the Exchange Act. I. FACTS On December 3, 1985, GEC issued a press release stating that it had proposed to Plessey “a combination of their two companies.” D.I. 1, Exhibit A. At that time, GEC indicated that it had requested Plessey management to consider an offer which valued Plessey shares at 160p. The press release did not specify the amount of securities GEC sought or what class of classes of Plessey securities GEC was interested in acquiring. The release is silent as to whether the proposed offer would be made to Plessey ADR holders in the United States. Distribution of the December 3 press release to the London stock exchange was followed that same day by a press conference in GEC’s offices in England. Deposition of Michael Lester, D.I. 27, p. 16. In attendance at that conference were representatives from the London press, BBC and ITV. Copies of the press release were given to those individuals and questions regarding the proposed combination were answered. Copies of the press release were also distributed by the GEC press officer to the London financial press. Ibid., p. 16. The Plaintiff has not demonstrated on the present record whether representatives of the United States press were in attendance at the December 3 press conference, but it is certain that the GEC press officer “was not instructed to tell journalists at the press conference not to send any material to the United States.” Ibid., pp. 22-23. News of the GEC proposal to combine with Plessey reached the United States almost immediately. The Associated Press and Dow Jones tape each distributed a story on the GEC proposal on December 3. D.I. 22, Exhibit E, pp. 1-2. The Wall Street Journal of December 4, 1985 contained a story entitled “GEC Offers to Buy Plessey For $1.79 Billion”, ibid., p. 3. Similarly, the December 4, 1985 edition of The New York Times contained a story discussing GEC’s disclosure to purchase Plessey. Ibid., p. 4. Plessey’s board of directors rejected GEC’s merger proposal on December- 4, 1985. The United States press reported Plessey’s reply on December 4 through the Associated Press, The New York Times and Dow Jones tape and, on December 5, in The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Ibid., pp. 5-8. A significant change in the market price for Plessey ADRs occurred on the NYSE commencing December 3, 1985. The record before the Court reflects that prior to December 3, the closing price for Plessey ADRs on November 25, 1985 and November 26, 1985 was 22V4 each day. On December 3, 1985, the market closed with Plessey ADRs valued at 25%. December 3 also showed a new “high” for Plessey ADR’s at 26. The prices of Plessey ADRs reached new “highs” on December 4 and December 6, when the prices were 27 and 27V4 respectively. D.I. 22, Exhibit D. GEC issued a second press release on December 9, 1985. The pertinent part of that press release is contained in its first paragraph: “GEC announces that it is today making an offer for Plessey of more than 160p per ordinary share, which values the company at approximately £1.18 billion. Full details of this offer are contained in the attached announcement by S.G. War-burg & Co. Ltd.” Affidavit of R. Franklin Balotti, D.I. 35, Exhibit F, p. 1. The attached Warburg announcement (“War-burg press release”) details the terms and conditions of the offer but refers to the status of the offer as only a proposal: “The Board of GEC proposes to make an offer (the “Offer”) for the whole of the Ordinary share capital of Plessey____” Ibid., p. 4. Additional preparatory language is found at the very end of the Warburg press release: “S.G. Warburg & Co. Ltd. will despatch documents containing the formal offer on behalf of GEC as soon as practicable.” Ibid., p. 9. The Warburg press release contains detailed information about GEC’s takeover offer for Plessey. Specifically, it states the identity of the offeror (GEC), the identity of the offeree (Plessey), the amount and class of securities being sought and the price being offered for Plessey “Ordinary shares.” It also contains the following provisions which are material to disposition of the instant motions: 1. “The Offer will not extend to Dollar Ordinary shares of 25p each of Plessey (“Dollar shares”) or to American Depository Receipts evidencing Dollar shares.” Ibid., p. 5; and 2. “The Offer will be made for all the Plessey Ordinary shares in issue at the date on which the Offer is made and for all Plessey Ordinary shares which, while the Offer remains open for acceptance, subsequently arise or are allotted as a result of the exercise of options under the Plessey share option schemes or the conversion of Dollar shares including those arising upon the exercise of conversion rights attaching to the Plessey Inc. 472% Convertible Subordinated Debentures due June 1, 1993 (“the Plessey Inc. Debentures”). The Offer will not be made directly or indirectly in, or by use of the mails or by any means or instrumentality of inter-state or foreign commerce or of any facilities of a national securities exchange of, the United States of America, its possessions or territories or any area subject to its jurisdiction or any political sub-division thereof.” D.I. 35, Exhibit F, p. 5. The December 9 press release was distributed by GEC to the London financial press. This included the Observer, The Sun Times, The Times, the Financial Times and The Daily Mail. D.I. 27, p. 25. The GEC press officer was given instructions by the company not to mail the press release to the United States. Ibid., pp. 25-26. GEC also instructed Warburg not to send any copies of the Warburg press release to the United States. Affidavit of Derek Alan Higgs, D.I. 34, p. 6. News of the press release did reach the United States shortly thereafter. On December 10, 1985, the Wall Street Journal published a story entitled “GEC Sets the Terms Of Offer for Plessey.” D.I. 22, Exhibit E, p. 24. That day’s issue of The New York Times contained a similar story which stated the bidder’s name, the target’s name and the amount offered for each share of Plessey stock. Ibid,., p. 25. Neither news item made any mention of the press release provision which stated that “[t]he offer will not be made directly or indirectly in ... the United States” and “The Offer will not extend to Dollar Ordinary shares of 25p each of Plessey (“Dollar shares”) or to American Depository (sic) Receipts evidencing Dollar shares.” News of the “offering” also reached the United States through a December 11 mailing by Plessey which directly or indirectly reached all United States holders of ADRs and Dollar shares. The Plessey mailing, however, contained only the Warburg press release. It did not contain the GEC press release. Affidavit of Warren J. Sinsheimer, D.I. 36, p. 2. Plessey felt compelled to distribute the press release to its shareholders of record pursuant to United Kingdom rules regarding takeovers and mergers. The City Code on Takeovers and Mergers (“Code”) provides as follows: “Promptly after the first announcement of an offer or possible offer, a copy of the press notice or a circular summarizing the terms and conditions of the offer must be sent by the offeree company to its shareholders ...” Affidavit of Graham Fenwick Pimlott, D.I. 20, Exhibit 1, Code, Rule 2.6. Also, “[d]uring the course of a take-over, or when such is in contemplation, neither the offeror, nor the offeree company ... may furnish information to some shareholders which is not made available to all shareholders.” D.I. 20, Exhibit 2, Code, General Principle 2. The Code requires only that an offeree (or possible offeree) distribute an offeror’s “press notices” and “circulars” to its shareholders of record. D.I. 20, p. 2. At present, Citibank, N.A. is the sole record holder of Plessey Dollar shares and is the Depositary of Plessey ADRs. D.I. 21, p. 2, ¶ 6. Therefore, the United Kingdom Code required Plessey to send a copy of the Warburg press release only to Citibank. Plessey went a step further, however, and arranged to have the press release sent to all of its ADR holders. It did this pursuant to an existing contractual agreement with Citibank wherein Citibank, at Plessey’s expense, “is required to mail to all holders of ADRs copies of all notices and other reports and communications which are made generally available by Plessey to holders of Dollar shares.” D.I. 21, p. 2. The result of this maneuvering by Plessey was that it placed the December 9, 1985 press release directly into the hands of its United States ADR holders. The parties appear to agree that under United Kingdom law the press releases of December 3 and December 9 were steps preliminary to the release of an official offer or “Offering Circular” required to follow within 28 days. It also appears that the parties agree that the procedure followed by GEC in England was done in accordance with British law and practice prescribed for takeovers. The price for Plessey ADRs on the NYSE remained fairly constant and was apparently unaffected by the issuance of the Warburg press release on December 9. The daily closing prices for Plessey ADRs through that period were December 6 (27V4), December 9 (27), December 10 (25V4), December 11 (26), December 12 (26), December 13 (26%), December 16 (27), December 17 (26), December 18 (25V4), December 19 (25%), December 20 (25V2), December 23 (25). D.I. 22, Exhibit D. As can be seen, the closing price for ADRs actually declined on the date the Warburg press release issued; the price declined even further the following day. After GEC’s December 9 press release was issued in London, both parties received inquiries from the United States regarding GEC’s intentions. Plessey states that it received between 15-20 telephone calls, including one each from Dean Witter and Salomon Brothers. Deposition of Warren J. Sinsheimer, D.I. 26, p. 26. Most of the inquiries were believed to be from United States Plessey shareholders who stated “We’re terribly confused. We don’t know what to do. What is this all about? Are they going to buy our shares or aren’t they?” Ibid., p. 21. Plessey responded to the inquiries by stating that it did not know GEC’s intentions and that “I [Plessey] was as confused as they were.” Ibid., p. 22. GEC received two or three telephone calls from the United States regarding its December 9 press release. GEC responded to United States inquiries by instructing its press office “that the offer was not being made in the United States, the offer was not being made for Dollar shares or ADRs and the offer could not be discussed with any person in the United States.” Affidavit of Michael Lester, D.I. 33, p. 7, ¶ 10. No telephone inquiries regarding the December 9 press release were received from the United States by Warburg. Ibid., p. 8, mi. A third and final written communication from GEC regarding its intended acquisition of Plessey occurred on December 23, 1985. It distributed a document titled “GEC Offer for Plessey” [“Offering Circular”]. D.I. 35, Exhibits A-C. The parties agree that the December 23 Offering Circular contains the present terms and conditions of GEC’s tender offer for Plessey securities. D.I. 1, pp. 6-7. The document contains three sections, each of which fulfills a particular function. The first part, entitled “GEC Offer for Plessey” (“Offer”), contains background information and the terms of the offer. D.I. 35, Exhibit A. The second part, entitled “Form of Acceptance for use by Ordinary Shareholders of the Plessey Company pic ...” (“Form of Acceptance”), contains instructions for those who wish to accept the Offer. D.I. 35, Exhibit B. The final section, which is entitled “Listing Particulars —GEC” (“Listing Particulars”), provides a comprehensive analysis of the financial conditions of both GEC and Plessey. D.I. 35, Exhibit C. THE OFFERING CIRCULAR Some provisions of the Offering Circular are particularly relevant to the issues before the Court regarding GEC’s alleged violations of sections 14(d) and 14(e) of the Exchange Act. For example, all three sections begin with a boldface disclaimer that “[t]he Offer is not being made in, and this document must not be distributed into, the U.S.A.” Aside from the initial disclaimers found in each of the three sections, the Offering Circular contains a variety of other qualifications and restrictions on the Offer. For example, it advises that “[t]he Offer is not being made directly or indirectly in, or by use of the mails or by any means or instrumentality of inter-state or foreign commerce or of any facilities of a national securities exchange of, the U.S.A.” Ibid., Exhibit A, pp. 13, 25. Also, with respect to rights of withdrawal under the Offer, it warns that “[n]o notice which is postmarked in, or otherwise appears to GEC or its agents to have been sent from, the U.S.A. will be treated as valid.” Ibid., Exhibit A, p. 23. Finally, the Offer contains the following significant language: [c]opies of this document, the Form of Acceptance, the Listing Particulars and any related offering documents are not being mailed or otherwise distributed or sent into the U.S.A., including to Plessey shareholders with registered addresses in the U.S.A. Persons receiving such documents should not distribute or send them into the U.S.A. or use the mails or any such instrumentality in connection with the Offer, and so doing may affect the validity of any relative purported acceptance. Envelopes containing Forms of Acceptance should not be postmarked in the U.S.A. or otherwise despatched from the U.S.A. and all acceptors must provide addresses outside the U.S.A. for the receipt of securities, the remittance of cash or the return of Plessey share certificates. In addition, neither the new GEC shares nor the GEC Convertible Stock nor the GEC Loan Notes to be issued to acceptors of the Offer will be registered under the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended. GEC will not authorise the delivery of any documentes) of title in respect of any new GEC shares, GEC Convertible Stock or GEC Loan Notes in the U.S.A. or to any person who is, or whom GEC believes to be, a U.S. person or who fails to make the declaration set out in paragraph 2, Part A of the Form of Acceptance to the effect that he is not a U.S. person, does not hold Plessey shares on behalf of a U.S. person and will not hold or acquire any of the new GEC shares or GEC Convertible Stock or GEC Loan Notes for the account or benefit of a U.S. person or with a view to the offer, sale or delivery, directly or indirectly, of any such securities in the U.S.A. or to U.S. persons. Accordingly, any Plessey shareholder who is a U.S. person or who is unable to make the declaration and who accepts the Offer will be deemed also to have accepted the Cash Alternative in respect of all the Plessey shares for which he accepts the Offer and must also sign the authority in Part C of the Form of Acceptance which irrevocably and unconditionally authorises Warburgs or its agents to sell the new GEC shares and the GEC Convertible Stock to which he would otherwise be entitled under the Offer on his behalf and remit the proceeds of sale thereof (less expenses) to him or his agent outside the U.S.A. D.I. 35, Exhibit A, p. 25. The Form of Acceptance again directs in bold print that no forms received either directly or indirectly from the United States would be accepted: “No Form of Acceptance which is received in an envelope postmarked in, or which otherwise appears to GEC or its agents to have been sent from, the U.S.A. will be treated as valid.” Ibid., Exhibit B, p. 2. To accept the Offer, all individuals must certify that they either are not U.S. persons or that they satisfy certain special conditions. Ibid., Exhibit B, pp. 3-4. United States persons who accept the Offer are made specifically ineligible to receive a package of cash and GEC securities in exchange for their tendered Plessey shares. Rather, if otherwise eligible, they must accept a cash only option. Ibid., Exhibit A, p. 18. The Form of Acceptance also includes a request that all individuals accepting the Offer provide a daytime telephone number outside the United States where the person can be contacted in the event of a query. Ibid., Exhibit B, p. 3. The GEC Offering Circular provides that the Offer is being made only to acquire the Ordinary shares of Plessey. Ibid., Exhibit A, pp. 2, 9, 11. “The Offer does not extend to Dollar shares or to American Depositary Receipts evidencing American Units comprised of Dollar shares. The Offer does extend to Plessey shares arising on the conversion of Dollar shares, including those resulting from the exercise of conversion rights attaching to the Plessey Inc. Debentures.” Ibid., Exhibit A, p. 13. Finally, under the terms of the Offer, “GEC reserves the right to treat as valid any acceptance of the Offer which is not entirely in order____” Ibid., Exhibit A, p. 18. GEC sent copies of the Offering Circular to Plessey to be forwarded to Plessey’s shareholders whose addresses are not in the United States or its territories and possessions. Affidavit of Derek Alan Higgs, D.I. 34, p. 12; Deposition of Michael Lester, D.I. 27, p. 39. GEC also sent copies of the circular to its own shareholders whose approval of the acquisition is necessary. Ibid., p. 38. GEC did not mail its United States stockholders copies of the Offering Circular for their review. Ibid., p. 48. GEC states that it did not forward the Offering Circular to its United States shareholders because “[t]he documents themselves are marked not to be distributed into the United States of America.” Ibid., p. 48. No press release was issued or press conference held in conjunction with the December 23, 1985 Offering Circular distribution. Ibid., pp. 42-43. Still, the United States news media did report the issuance of GEC’s formal Offering Circular. D.I. 22, Exhibit E, pp. 35-37 [one article in the Financial Times (United States Edition) on December 24, 1985 and two articles in the same tabloid on December 27, 1985]; ibid., p. 39 [“GEC Moves on Hostile Buy of Plessey”, Electronic News, December 30, 1985]. Daily closing prices for Plessey ADRs on the NYSE remained fairly constant through the period December 20, 1985 to January 7, 1986. The closing price of Plessey ADRs on the NYSE on the day the GEC Offering Circular was distributed in London was a decline from the prior date’s price. It declined even further the following day, December 24. Specifically, the closing prices for Plessey ADRs through that period were December 20 (25V2), December 23 (25), December 24 (24V2), December 26 (25), December 27 (26), December 30 (26%), January 2, 1986 (26%), January 3 (26V2), January 6 (26) and January 7 (26%). As stated earlier, Plessey ADRs, Dollar shares and Ordinary shares are separate, convertible classes of Plessey securities. Although GEC’s December 9, 1985 press release and December 23, 1985 Offering Circular express the company’s interest in acquiring Ordinary shares, not a single Dollar share was converted to an Ordinary share by a United States Plessey shareholder between December 3, 1985 and January 3, 1986 (the record on this point ends with January 3). D.I. 35, Exhibit H. In addition, one of Warburg’s directors states that to his knowledge, no inquiries have been received from the United States requesting to participate in the December 23 Offering Circular. Affidavit of Derek Alan Higgs, D.I. 34, p. 12, 1126. II. STANDARD FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION This matter is before the Court on Plessey’s motion for preliminary relief. In order for a preliminary injunction to issue, the well established rule in this Circuit requires Plessey to demonstrate: (1) a reasonable probability of eventual success in the litigation and (2) that the movant will be irreparably injured pendente lite if relief is not granted ____ Moreover, while the burden rests upon the moving party to make these requisite showings, the district court “should take into account, when they are relevant, (3) the possibility of harm to other interested persons from the grant or denial of the injunction, and (4) the public interest” ..., While these factors structure the inquiry, however, no one aspect will necessarily determine its outcome. Rather, proper judgment entails a “delicate balancing” of all elements. On the basis of the data before it, the district court must attempt to minimize the probable harm to legally protected interests between the time that the motion for a preliminary injunction is filed and the time of the final hearing. Eli Lilly and Co. v. Premo Pharmaceutical Labs, 630 F.2d 120, 136 (3d Cir.1980), quoting Constructors Association of Western Pennsylvania v. Kreps, 573 F.2d 811, 814-15 (3d Cir.1978). A. LIKELIHOOD OF SUCCESS ON MERITS To satisfy the burden imposed by this application, Plessey must show that at a trial on the merits it is likely to prove that GEC’s December 9 press release triggered the disclosure requirements of the Williams Act. Specifically, Plessey must show that GEC (1) made a tender offer to American ADR holders that (2) used the “jurisdictional means” contemplated by section 14(d)(1). By “jurisdictional means” we refer to the threshold requirement of section 14(d)(1) that a tender offer be made “directly or indirectly, by use of the mails or by any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce or of any facility of a national securities exchange or otherwise.” 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d)(l). Plessey’s task is complicated by the nebulousness of the “tender offer” and “jurisdictional means” concepts and their uncertain application to transactions originated offshore. In reviewing the merits of Plessey’s proffer, therefore, this Court cannot ignore the policies which motivated passage of the Williams Act. The statutory language relevant to disposition of this case is embodied in section 14(d)(1) which makes it: unlawful for any person, directly or indirectly, by use of the mails or by any means or instrumentality of interstate commerce or of any facility of a national securities exchange or otherwise, to make a tender offer for, or a request or invitation for tenders of, any class of any equity security which is registered pursuant to section 12 of this title ... unless at the time copies of the offer or request or invitation are first published or sent or given to security holders such person has filed with the Commission a statement containing such of the information specified in section 13(d) of this title, and such additional information as the Commission may by rules and regulations prescribed as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of investors. 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d)(1). Although the term “tender offer” has never been expressly defined by Congress, the legislative history suggests a congressional intent to retain flexibility so that the courts and the SEC can effectuate the goals of the Williams Act. See Hazen, The Law of Securities Regulation 348-49 (1985). Both the courts and the SEC have developed factors relevant to a determination of whether a tender offer exists but no single set of factors is exclusively accepted. While instrumentalities of interstate commerce other than the mails have been held to constitute the jurisdictional means for the triggering of the Williams Act, see, e.g., Leasco Data Processing Equipment Corp. v. Maxwell, 468 F.2d 1326 (2d Cir.1972), the boundaries of the concept have never been enumerated. It appears, therefore, that a court determining the applicability of the Williams Act to a particular transaction must weigh the facts unique to the case before it, informed by both the relevant precedents and the congressional purpose. The Supreme Court summarized the congressional intent expressed by passage of the Williams Act in Rondeau v. Mosinee Paper Corp., 422 U.S. 49, 95 S.Ct. 2069, 45 L.Ed.2d 12 (1975): The purpose of the Williams Act is to insure that public shareholders who are confronted by a cash tender offer for their stock will not be required to respond without adequate information regarding the qualifications and intentions of the offering party. By requiring disclosure of information to the target corporation as well as the Securities and Exchange Commission, Congress intended to do no more than give incumbent management an opportunity to express and explain its position. The Congress expressly disclaimed an intention to provide a weapon for management to discourage takeover bids or prevent large accumulations of stock which would create the potential for such attempts. Id. at 58, 95 S.Ct. at 2076 (emphasis added). Two important policies emerge from the Court’s opinion. First, the Williams Act seeks to protect only those shareholders who face the tender decision. Second, the requirements of the Williams Act are not to be interpreted to provide incumbent management with advantages against their hostile suitors. 1. Does the December 9 Press Release Constitute an Offer to the American ADR Holders? Plessey argues that the December 9 press release is an offer to the American holders of ADRs and 4V2% Convertible Subordinated Debentures because it states that GEC will honor Ordinary shares arising through the conversion of these instruments. Plessey is unpersuaded by GEC’s provisos warning against the introduction of the offer into America, claiming essentially that the boldface admonishments on the released documents constitute a ruse to conceal GEC’s true desire to acquire ownership of the 1.6% of Plessey’s equity securities in the United States. In its defense, GEC points to the express language of the Williams Act limiting the scope of section 14(d)(1) to a tender offer for “any class of any equity security”, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d)(l) (emphasis added), as evidence that its offer can be restricted to Ordinary shareholders without implicating the rights accruing to holders of other Plessey equity securities. Each side has cited a case “dispositive” of the issue but neither precedent truly addresses the question before us. We must, therefore, look to several sources of authority to assess the contentions of the parties. Since Plessey has not contended that this Court should refuse to give meaning to the “any class” language of section 14(d)(1), our task is not to determine whether GEC has made an offer for an “equity security” but rather whether GEC has made an offer for a class of equity securities which subsumes ADRs and convertible debentures. We begin by examining Plessey’s most recent Form 20-F which was filed with the SEC for the fiscal year ending March 29, 1985. Dubin Affidavit, D.I. 22, Exhibit A. Under the heading “Title of Each Class” (of Registered Securities), Plessey listed the following: “Dollar Ordinary Shares, par value 25 pence per share Ordinary Shares, par value 25 pence per share American Depositary Receipts evidencing the above By Plessey’s own admission, the Dollar shares available to ADR and debenture holders are a different class of security. When the holders of Dollar shares exchange them for Ordinary shares, they are deemed by Plessey to have changed security classes. This class distinction is further illuminated by the events of December 11. Section 2.6 of the British City Code requires an offeree to mail copies of the offer to its record shareholders; in addition, General Principle No. 2 of the City Code prohibits an offeree company from “furnish[ing] information to some shareholders which is not available to all shareholders.” Plessey complied with these rules by mailing the Warburg release only to Citibank, the record shareholder of the Dollar shares. Citibank’s mailing to ADR holders was a contractual exercise not compelled by the City Code. Thus, it appears that Plessey understood British law to differentiate Ordinary shareholders from ADR holders because it did not itself treat the ADR holders as record shareholders entitled to know of the GEC offer. GEC has argued that the distinctions made in its offer between convertible securities and Ordinary shares are not unique to this tender offer. GEC has cited a number of tender offers extant in the United States in which the bidder has made a tender offer for the principal class of common stock but not for the class of securities convertible into it. While this apparent evidence of a general practice is certainly relevant to the issue, it can hardly be considered compelling in the absence of judicial approval. The precedents to which we have been cited as authority for each side’s position, Securities & Exch. Comm’n v. Texas Intern. Co., 498 F.Supp. 1231 (N.D.Ill., E.D.1980) (by Plessey), and Sargent v. Genesco, Inc., 492 F.2d 750 (5th Cir.1974) (by GEC), are also not dispositive. Plessey cites Texas Intern. Co. for the proposition that an offer is “deemed to include securities where they are encompassed by and are part of the object of the tender offer.” Plessey Brief, D.I. 19, p. 28. But Texas Intern. Co. involved the purchase of creditors’ claims which were to be mandatorily exchanged for a registered equity security following approval of a reorganization plan. Because of the unique circumstances, that court found the interest at stake to be an equity security. Here, however, both the unique circumstances and the mandatory conversion features are missing. Plessey’s ADR and debenture holders clearly have the right not to convert. (At argument, Plessey alluded to GEC’s plans to eliminate the rest of the Plessey shares as a “mandatory aspect” of this case. Transcript, D.I. 39, p. 35. However, GEC has not finalized any such plans. Moreover, the issue of whether such conduct by GEC would be appropriate is not before us.) The circumstances of the case also do not compel the conclusion that the offer for Ordinary shares was effectively an offer for ADRs and debentures. We therefore cannot rely on Texas Intern. Co. to resolve this issue. Sargent v. Genesco, Inc., 492 F.2d 750, is also distinguishable from the problem presented here because the plaintiffs, common shareholders of defendant corporation, had no right to convert their common shares into the convertible debentures for which the offer was made. There was also no evidence that the debenture holders had received inadequate information about the offer made to them. Hence, we cannot adopt Genesco for the broad principle that holders of convertible securities are never implicated in an offer for the shares into which they can be converted. The remaining arguments made by counsel are essentially variations on the themes already discussed, namely, GEC’s contention that the ADRs and debentures are often treated differently from Plessey Ordinary shares and Plessey’s claim that GEC’s Offer should be deemed as made to holders of the convertible instruments because it purports to honor Ordinary shares that may subsequently arise after conversion. Standing alone, no authority is dis-positive of the issue before us. At a minimum, Plessey’s own treatment of its ADR and debenture holders casts doubt upon its position here. Thus we cannot say on the record before us that Plessey has proved that it would probably succeed on this issue at a trial. Although this could prove dispositive of Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary injunctive relief, the Court is impelled by the circumstances of this case to address alternate issues. 2. Did GEC Make an Offer Within the Jurisdictional Means of the Williams Act? Whether or not the December 9 press release represents an offer intended for American ADR holders, it is doubtful that GEC transmitted the offer by the means necessary to trigger provisions of the Williams Act. Plessey contends that the jurisdictional means are satisfied by two events, namely, (1) Citibank’s December 11 mailing to the American ADR holders, and (2) the reports of GEC’s December 9 press release disseminated by the American media. Both arguments, however, appear to push the Williams Act beyond the boundaries of its intended purpose. Moreover, application of the statute to such conduct would raise serious concerns of comity with British law and practice. Such a ruling could also unfairly tilt the balance of our regulations and statutes in favor of takeover targets in cases that only remotely implicate American interests. Fortunately, the precedents do not compel us to reach those results. (a) Did Plessey’s December 11 Mailing Employ the Jurisdictional Means of the Williams Act? The notion that a bidder should not be held responsible for information distributed by its target is most clearly enunciated in Electronic Specialty Co. v. International Controls Corp., 409 F.2d 937 (2d Cir.1969). In that case, rumors of an imminent takeover were printed in the Wall Street Journal’s “Heard on the Street” column. The story identified both the bidder and the target and stated the expected offering price at between $45 and $50 per share. While the bidder had, in fact, contemplated an offer, the price estimates reported by the column exceeded the offeror’s valuation of the target. The market reacted to the Journal’s story by driving the target’s stock to an all-time high of 427s, an event so clearly contrary to the bidder’s interest that the plaintiffs did not accuse the bidder of originating the rumors. Plaintiffs did contend, however, that the bidder had a duty to correct the Journal’s error. Judge Friendly rejected the claim: While a company may choose to correct a misstatement in the press not attributable to it ... we find nothing in the securities legislation requiring it to do so. This is particularly true when the misstatement relates to its plans in regard to another company and it has reason to think the comment was an effort by the target corporation to obtain disclosure before the time Congress had stipulated. Id. at 949 (emphasis added). While the facts of this case differ from our own, the essence of Judge Friendly’s argument — that a bidder’s disclosure obligations cannot be triggered by the calculated efforts of the target — cuts to the heart of the issue before us. It would be entirely contrary to the neutrality policy of the Williams Act to invoke its requirements simply because the target engaged in jurisdiction triggering conduct that the bidder had carefully avoided. The Sixth Circuit reflected this thinking in an entirely different context when it refused to allow the purported victims of an intrastate fraud to manufacture jurisdiction under section 10(b) by mailing an allegedly fraudulent promissory note among themselves for signature. Allied Development Corp. v. The First National Bank & Trust Co. of Steubenville, 496 F.2d 1180 (6th Cir.1974). The court refused to assert federal “jurisdiction over a matter which was otherwise purely an intrastate dispute, to be governed by state law” simply because of the complainant’s acts. Id. at 1181. In our case, all significant events, save the December 11 mailing, occurred in England. The December 11 mailing itself was an act involving only Plessey and its shareholders. The Allied Development holding suggests that in a case where the complainants initiated the only use of interstate commerce channels, it is proper to respect the integrity of the sovereign with the overwhelming interest and deny application of the federal securities laws. The result suggested by both Electronic Specialty Co. and Allied Development Corp. is firmly supported by the policies of the Williams Act. A ruling in favor of Plessey on this issue would allow a foreign corporation targeted by a hostile foreign bidder to impose upon its suitor the obligations and requirements of American law, thereby gaining additional time with which to undertake other defensive tactics, simply by mailing details of the offer to an interested American or by “arranging” a press release in the United States. The Williams Act can hardly be read to authorize such indiscriminate intervention and the attendant burden upon American courts and regulatory agencies when it steadfastly refuses to upset the even-handed balance of its regulations in quintessentially American transactions. Cf. Bersch v. Drexel Firestone, Inc., 519 F.2d 974, 985 (2d Cir.1985), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1018, 96 S.Ct. 453, 46 L.Ed.2d 389 (1975) (“When ... a court is confronted with transactions that" on any view are predominantly foreign, it must seek to determine whether congress would have wished the precious resources of United States courts and law enforcement agencies to be devoted to them rather than leave the problem to foreign countries.”) (Friendly, J.) Moreover, such a reading would render the jurisdictional means language of section 14(d)(1), largely a provision imposing limitations on the application of the Williams Act, pointless. Consequently, we must conclude that the December 11 mailing does not implicate the jurisdictional means of the Williams Act. (b) Did the American Press Accounts of the December 9 Press Release Employ the Jurisdictional Means of the Williams Act? Although Plessey’s argument that the domestic news reports of GEC’s activities triggered the requirements of the Williams Act presents a closer and more complex issue, the relevant precedents and policies also appear contrary to its position. Plessey relies heavily on In the Matter of Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co., 38 S.E.C. 843 (1959) and Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Bangor Punta Corp., 426 F.2d 569 (2d Cir.1970), for the proposition that “[pjress releases have often been the cause of Section 5 violations.” Plessey Brief, D.I. 19, at 31. Plessey also emphasizes these cases when it identifies its real concern with GEC’s conduct, namely, “the plain intention of the December 9 Press Releases ... to arouse interest on the part of ADR holders in converting and tendering their shares into the Exchange Offer.” Plessey Brief, D.I. 19, p. 35. However, Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co., 38 S.E.C. 843, is actually contrary to the position advocated by Plessey while Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Bangor Punta Corp., 426 F.2d 569, is distinguishable in its essential details. In addition, Plessey has ignored the precedents which limit an offeror’s liability for what is printed in the press about his activities. Lastly, the precedents which give transnational effect to the Exchange Act do not appear to contemplate a case such as this one where the absence of both a harmful domestic impact and elements of fraud heighten our concern with principles of comity. Plessey fairly and accurately cites language from Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co., 38 S.E.C. 843, where the SEC found a violation of section 5 because a “press release and resultant publicity’’ about a forthcoming 25 to 30 million dollar stock offering “was of the character calculated, by arousing and stimulating investor and dealer interest ... to set in motion the process of distribution." Id., 38 S.E.C. at 851-53 (emphasis added). In its brief, Plessey emphasizes many words from Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co. but it does not highlight the word “calculated.” The defendants in that case deliberately timed their press release to gain exposure in three prominent New York newspapers. They also distributed the release to the domestic wire services. Their efforts were rewarded by expressions of interest from 101 securities firms and 58 members of the public in the two days following the announcement. In contrast, GEC excluded all members of the American media from their December 9 press conference. The impact of their efforts can be seen in the relative dearth of inquiries received from Americans following the press accounts of the offer. The light of good faith which these factual distinctions cast upon GEC’s conduct is especially important when this language is considered: • Difficult and close questions of fact may arise as to whether a particular item of publicity by an issuer is part of a selling effort or whether it is an item of legitimate disclosure to investors unrelated to such an offer, n. 20 / Whether in any particular case publicity is an offer depends upon all the facts, and the surrounding circumstances including the nature, source, distribution, timing, and apparent purpose and effect of the published material. Id. at 853 (emphasis added). Given Plessey’s concession that the December 9 press release is a step required by British takeover practice, the legitimacy of the act cannot be denied. Plessey may, however, contend that the press release nonetheless amounts to an effort to sell to Americans,but our discussion supra at page 24 shows that at best GEC’s motives toward ADR holders is an open question. When all the other factors are weighed — the exclusion of the American media, the prohibitions against distribution of the release in America, the abbreviated and distorted reporting in the United States, the minimal percentage and relative unimportance of the shares held in America, and the minimal effect on the American market — the inquiry suggested by Carl M. Loeb, Rhoades & Co. contradicts the result sought by Plessey. The Second Circuit’s en banc decision in Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. v. Bangor Punta Corp., 426 F.2d 569, also fails to address the real issue before us. In that case, Bangor Punta issued a press release stating that it had “agreed to file a registration statement” for an offer of securities having a value of $80 or more, which shares it planned to exchange for the common stock of its target, Piper Aircraft. Id. at 571-72. The court issued the preliminary injunction sought by a competing suit- or, Chris-Craft Industries, because the press release exceeded the bounds of prefiling disclosure permitted by Rule 135. The court found it: reasonable to conclude that the assigning of a value to offered shares constitutes an offer to sell. One of the evils of a premature offer is its tendency to encourage the formation by the offeree of an opinion of the value of the securities before a registration statement and prospectus are filed. There is then no information on file at the SEC by which the Commission can check the accuracy of the information which forms the basis of the offeror’s estimate of value, and any offeree, such as the reader of a press release, is encouraged to form a premature opinion of the value without benefit of the full set of facts contained in a prospectus. Id. at 574-75. GEC does not contest the result reached in Chris-Craft. It concedes that its press release would have constituted an offer for Plessey Ordinary shares within the meaning of the Williams Act if the events of December 9 had occurred in the United States. The key distinction between our case and Chris-Craft, however, is the fact that GEC did not issue its release in the United States. Rather, its contents were summarized and disseminated by American journalists who did not receive the release directly. The penultimate question is whether what was done falls within the intended jurisdiction of section 14. To resolve that question, we must turn to those cases which discuss either an offeror’s responsibility for press accounts or the extraterritorial effect of the American securities laws. Following in the spirit of Electronic Specialty Co. v. International Controls Corp., 409 F.2d 937, the Second Circuit has found that a bidder is not responsible for reports on the Dow Jones tape that it has “effectively increased” its offering price when it has not, in fact, done so. Osofsky v. J. Ray McDermott & Co., Inc., 725 F.2d 1057, 1059 (2d Cir.1984). In Osofsky, the bidder’s offering materials stated the tender offer price to be $62.50, a sum which included a $2.50 special dividend owed by the target. Confusion arose because the bidder had reserved the right to reduce the offer to reflect the special dividend. When the bidder publicly announced his decision not to exercise this option, i.e., to “pass on” the $2.50, it effectively agreed to offer a total value of $62,50. The Dow Jones tape mistakenly reported the special dividend decision as an effective increase in the offer to $65.00. While the court noted that the public announcement could conceivably have been viewed as an increase in the offer because it came in response to a move by a rival, the record before it did not reveal that to be the logical interpretation. The factors considered by the court in reaching its decision are illuminating: all of the [bidder’s] material stated the tender offer price to be $62.50 ... there apparently was no testimony that any tendering shareholder in fact believed the price to be $65.00. Under Electronic Specialty Co. ... the [bidder] was not obligated to correct the statement on the Dow Jones tape that [it] “effectively increased” the offer price to $65.00, since the statement wasn’t attributable to [it]. Id. at 1059 (emphasis added). Here, all of the December 9 material that Citibank mailed to ADR holders states that the offer was not open in the United States. More importantly, there is no evidence that any ADR holder thought that an offer had been made to him. After December 9, no ADRs were converted to Dollar shares. In addition, the trading volume of the ADRs was within the historic norms. Finally, the reports printed in the United States are not fairly attributable to GEC because they omit GEC’s clear proviso that the offer is not open in America. Consequently, although both GEC and the Osofsky bidder spoke to the press, the mistaken contents of the reports (here the possibility that the offer would be open to Americans) cannot be fairly attributed to them. The protection accorded by Electronic Specialty and Osofsky can be vitiated by evidence that the defendant “sufficiently entangled itself” with the disseminated reports. See, Elkind v. Liggett & Myers, Inc., 635 F.2d 156 (2d Cir.1980). Here, all factors presently in the record evidence a considerable distance between GEC and the American press reports. The December 9 press conference was a British only affair where the materials distributed visibly warned recipients that the offer would not be made in the channels of American commerce. Thus, the protections that we have analogized from the Electronics Specialty line of case appears to remain available to the “non-entangled” GEC conduct. Further support for the proposition that the American press reports should not be deemed to have triggered the jurisdictional means of section 14(a)(1) can be gleaned from Indiana Nat. Bank v. Mobil Oil Corp., 578 F.2d 180 (7th Cir.1978), where the legal significance of a “public announcement” was weighed by its “generally accepted meaning in [the] field.” Id. at 185. In that case, Mobil allowed sophisticated investors to accept its tender by mailing the necessary documents to its depositary “eight business days after [a] public announcement by Mobil that a specified number of Shares will be purchased under this Offer.” Id. at 182. A controversy arose about whether Mobil had made such a “public announcement” by a “press release to the Dow Jones Wire Service, Reuters Economic Services, Platts Oilgram, the Oil and Gas Journal, Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, and a press service which distributed it to the wire services, radio and television networks and major newspapers.” Id. at 183. The court concluded that Mobil had made a “public announcement” because the term “has a generally accepted meaning in the field and involves the issuance ... of a press release. Put another way, the courts have equated a press release with a public announcement in the context of tender offers or related securities transactions.” Id. at 185 (citations omitted). This approach to the issue raises a question in our case, namely, how do both sophisticated and unsophisticated investors perceive American news accounts of a foreign press release not available in this country. The events following December 9 strongly suggest that, at least in this case, investors did not “generally accept” the news accounts as tender offers. Both the sophisticated and unsophisticated remained on the sidelines. Beginning on December 9, both the trading volume and price of ADRs were stable, particularly when compared to the December 3-9 period. In addition, no ADR conversions occurred. While by no means dispositive, the analysis suggested by Indiana Nat. Bank adds another factor in our perception that the reports published by the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times do not constitute the use of an instrumentality of interstate commerce within the meaning of the Williams Act. (c) The Extraterritorial Effect of the Securities Laws — Notions of Comity and Policy Plessey has argued that news accounts of the December 9 press release should be considered to have triggered the jurisdictional means of the Williams Act because the Act has been construed to have an extraterritorial effect that embraces the conduct before us. Although the Second Circuit has developed a substantial jurisprudence on the extraterritorial effect of the Exchange Act, see e.g., Schoenbaum v. Firstbrook, 405 F.2d 200, rev’d in part, 405 F.2d 215 (2d Cir.1968) (en banc), cert. denied, 395 U.S. 906, 89 S.Ct. 1747, 23 L.Ed.2d 219 (1969); Leasco Data Processing Equipment Corp. v. Maxwell, 468 F.2d 1326; Bersch v. Drexel Firestone, Incorporated, 519 F.2d 974 (2d Cir.1975), cert. denied, 423 U.S. 1018, 96 S.Ct. 453, 46 L.Ed.2d 389 (1975); IIT, an Intern. Inv. Trust v. Vencap, Ltd., 519 F.2d 1001 (2d Cir.1975); IIT v. Cornfeld, 619 F.2d 909 (2d Cir.1980), its cases have focused largely on adjudicating acts of fraud, a harm not claimed here. As Judge Friendly has said, “[t]he problem of conflict between our laws and that of a foreign government is much less when the issue is the enforcement of the anti-fraud sections of the securities laws than with such provisions as those requiring registration of persons or securities.” ITT v. Cornfeld, 619 F.2d at 921. Thus, while the extraterritorial reach of the Exchange Act is undeniable, we find that the language of section 14(d)(1) is too inconclusive to lead us to believe that Congress intended to impose rules governing conduct throughout the world in every instance where an American might have an interest. See Leasco Data Processing Equipment Corp. v. Maxwell, 468 F.2d at 1334 (making such comment about section 10(b), which contains language similar to section 14(d)(1)). Hence, in addition to the relevant precedents, considerations of comity and policy should play a role in our interpretation of the jurisdictional means of the Williams Act. See SEC.v. Kasser, 548 F.2d 109, 116 (3d Cir.1977). The results reached by the Second Circuit in the cases cited above do not control the outcome here because they achieve solutions to problems with which we are not confronted. To prevent the United States from becoming a “Barbary Coast” hospitable to international securities “pirates” who defraud investors, the exercise of jurisdiction by American courts must be broad. SEC v. Kasser, 548 F.2d at 116. But “[i]t is elementary that the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws apply to many transactions which are neither within the registration requirements nor on organized American markets.” Bersch v. Drexel Firestone, Inc., 519 F.2d at 986 (emphasis added). It is also evident from the precedents that, in the absence of a strong American interest, there is “no reason to extend jurisdiction to cases where the United States activities ... are relatively small in comparison to those abroad.” IIT v. Cornfeld, 619 F.2d at 920, citing Bersch v. Drexel Firestone, Inc., 519 F.2d at 987. Here, the American interest asserted by Plessey is the dissemination of information to domestic investors who are faced with a hold or sell decision. First, it is at best an open question whether the American ADR holders face such pressure in this case. In addition, the very existence of the jurisdictional means language of section 14(d)(1) suggests that tender offers will not implicate an American interest if they are conducted outside the instrumentalities of interstate commerce. Thus, where a foreign bidder has steadfastly avoided American channels in its pursuit of a foreign target, the American interest in extensive disclosure appears minimal. Where the only acts within the United States are second hand news accounts not directly attributable to the bidder, the American contact which would justify an exercise of jurisdiction is relatively small and counsels against its use. The distinction between our case and those decided by the Second Circuit can be seen by a brief examination of the seminal case, Schoenbaum v. Firstbrook, 405 F.2d 200. In that case, “an issue of stock to insiders of a Canadian company in Canada, allegedly at an unfairly low price, adversely affected the value and the price of its shares listed on the American Stock Exchange, some of which were held by resident American citizens, including the plaintiff.” Bersch v. Drexel Firestone, Inc., 519 F.2d at 985-86. The court exercised its jurisdiction because it believed “that Congress intended the Exchange Act to have extraterritorial application in order to protect domestic investors who have purchased foreign securities on American exchanges and to protect the domestic securities market from the effects of improper foreign transactions in American securities.” Schoenbaum v. Firstbrook, 405 F.2d at 206. While we must bear in mind that “the presence or absence of any single factor considered significant in other cases dealing with the question of federal jurisdiction in transnational securities cases is not necessarily dispositive [of] future cases,” the absence of certain key facts in our case points away from an exercise of American jurisdiction. IITv. Cornfeld, 619 F.2d at 918. First, the transaction in question can hardly be labeled an “improper foreign transaction.” Everything that GEC did up to and including the events of December 9 conformed with British law and practice without violating such substantive American rules as those against fraud and self-dealing. Consider also that GEC had concluded that its offer should avoid the American market and its attendant regulations. With that in mind, it called in the British press and told them, among other things, that the offer would not be made to the American market. Admittedly, such a newsworthy event would have international implications that GEC could have foreseen. But what more could GEC have done? Certainly it could not muzzle its own press to prevent international transmission. Nor could it prohibit the subsequent indirect transmission to the United States which emerged in an abbreviated and dangerously distorted fashion. Should we impose on GEC the obligation to monitor the world press? Could it correct every error regardless of who made it or where it was published? Consider also that there has been a beneficial, rather than an adverse, effect on the American ADR market and no evidence exists that GEC “intended to produce ... detrimental effects within” the United States. See Schoenbaum v. Firstbrook, 405 F.2d at 206. Thus, we are confronted with the takeover of one British compan