Following up on January’s post on this topic, we have some updates. This is the list I’ve compiled so far.

Announced Moves as of February 26

Company NameStock TickerOrigination StateDestination State
TruGolfTRUGDelawareNevada
Forian, Inc.FORADelawareMaryland
LQR HouseYHCNevadaDelaware
CBAK EnergyCBATNevadaCayman Islands
Cheetah NetCTNTNorth CarolinaDelaware
GalectoGLTODelawareCayman Islands
Resolute Holdings Management, Inc.RHLDDelawareNevada
Forward Industries, INCFWDINew YorkTexas
EQV Ventures AcquisitionFTWCayman IslandsDelaware
Datadog, Inc.DDOGDelawareNevada
Haymaker Acquisition Corp 4HYACCayman IslandsDelaware
CDT EquityCDTDelawareCayman Islands
eXp World HoldingsEXPIDelawareTexas
ArcBest CorpARCBDelawareTexas

We’ve got an additional seven entries since the last update with some multi-billion dollar companies announcing for Texas now, including ArcBest which came out today.

To make this easier to understand, I’ve recruited a couple of Research Assistants to help with data visualizations, so many thanks to Ethan Viator and Hunter Hawkins for helping pull these together. You can see my full data here with some notes for follow up from our two brave research assistants. I’ve also added a column to track disclosed outside counsel. We’re just looking to capture firms that have provided advice and are identified that way in the proxy statements. Our hope is that collecting this information will make it easier to then go and look at other things later. For example, I want to see whether the market reacts to these announcements.

Turning to the visuals, the first two show where companies are leaving and where they are going. Nevada, as the Silver State, obviously gets the silver coloration.

We also put together a basic pie chart to show market cap by jurisdiction. The big driver for Nevada’s market cap position is Datadog with its roughly $44 billion market cap.

I wanted to get this out in advance of tomorrow’s symposium at SMU. It’s titled Welcome to Ya’ll Street and should have some interesting discussion. These recent moves should inform the panels about what to expect.

In terms of what the year may hold, I know that “proxy season” usually runs from about April to June for peak activity. We’re at fourteen moves before the end of February at this point–and Delaware is the most popular destination at this moment. I still think we’ll see an uptick from last year, but I don’t know how significant it will be.

Quick Thoughts on ArcBest

The proxy just came out today, so I haven’t been able to spend as much time reading it as it deserves, but ArcBest‘s move seems different than others. Notably, it does not seek maximal protection available under Texas law:

In furtherance of the Board’s intent to preserve stockholders’ existing rights, the Texas Charter includes provisions that expressly opt out of Section 21.373 (regarding ownership and solicitation thresholds to submit shareholder proposals) and Section 21.552(3) (regarding ownership thresholds to bring derivative lawsuits) of the TBOC.  As a result, the Company will not be subject to, and cannot elect to be subject to, these provisions without an amendment to the Texas Charter, which would require separate shareholder approval.  The Board believes that Sections 21.373 and 21.552(3) not only significantly depart from shareholder rights under Delaware law, but also are inconsistent with shareholder value and preferences.

In terms of reasons for the shift, ArcLight expressed concern about Delaware’s litigation environment and a desire to have a closer connection to the incorporation jurisdiction. This is how it put it:

The Board believes that a closer geographic nexus between its operations and its state of incorporation would benefit the Company and its stockholders because, among other things, it reduces the costs to the Company for directors and officers to attend legal proceedings related to the Company, and it increases the possibility that politicians and judges making decisions about the Company have a better understanding of the effect of such decisions on the Company and its long-term value.

Back when the SEC announced it was functionally no longer going to weigh in on whether companies may legally exclude shareholder proposals, I made a prediction in a number of spaces – except embarrassingly, I can’t remember which ones. Possibly podcasts, webinars, conferences, I’m sure someone remembers.

Which was: Companies now are in a heads-I-win, tails-you-lose position. They can exclude proposals, regardless of their legal basis for doing so. They can be confident that the SEC – which is now hostile to proposals – will not sue to force their inclusion. Very few shareholders will have the resources to sue over an improperly excluded proposal, and if any shareholder bothers, the company can simply moot the action by voluntarily agreeing to include the proposal even before filing an answer to a complaint. There is no risk to the company in simply excluding proposals, and waiting to see who sues.

And – behold!

AT&T said it would exclude a proposal offered by a variety of NYC pension funds asking for the company to disclose its EEOC-1, i.e., a form AT&T is required to submit to the federal government regarding the racial and gender makeup of its workforce. AT&T claimed that such a disclosure falls under the ordinary business exclusion of Rule 14a-8.

So, NYC pension funds – a well-heeled group of investors – filed a lawsuit, arguing that their proposal was not subject to the ordinary business exclusion. If you guessed it only took eight days for AT&T to agree to include the proposal on its proxy rather than litigate – you were correct.

A similar situation just unfolded with Pepsico; within days of the filing of a complaint, Pepsico agreed to include a proposal rather than litigate its exclusion.

There remains, as far as I know, one other case along these lines; in that case, the defendant company, Axon, is litigating in response, but I suspect even if that goes on much longer, it will be an outlier. I suspect our future looks more like AT&T and Pepsico: wealthy investors will get their proposals included, either because companies voluntarily agree at the outset, or because they cave at the filing of a complaint; investors without those resources will be excluded. And note, this is not about the actual size of the investor’s stake; plenty of investors may have small stakes but resources to litigate, and that’s what will carry the day. If anything, this will make the proposal process more political, rather than less, because interest groups are more likely to have litigation infrastructure.

And another thing. In this week’s Shareholder Primacy podcast, Mike Levin and I talk about efforts to regulate proxy advisors at the state level. Here at Apple; here at Spotify; and here at YouTube.

As I noted here a few weeks ago, I flew out to Detroit for the third annual Peter J. Henning Memorial Lecture two weeks ago. This year’s distinguished speaker, Jerry Israel, regaled us with observations on how federal courts take (or do not take) wealth into account in pre-trial release decisions. This can be, of course, a matter of interest in white collar crime proceedings, given that some white collar criminal defendants are wealthy individuals.

Taking us back to language in the First Judiciary Act and the Bail Reform Act of 1966, Jerry offered us a history of, and various standards for, bail. These standards are, of course, subject to interpretation in context. And Jerry was armed with court opinions in a number of cases that serve as interesting examples.

A former student of mine, Willie Santana, has been active in attempting to enforce pre-trial release standards under Tennessee law in our trial courts. Willie explains the issues in this article for the Tennessee Bar Association. Willie’s work led me to ask a question of Jerry about parallels between state and federal law bail determinations.

The lecture was engaging and a lovely tribute to Peter’s life and work. And it was a pleasure to meet Jerry in person. He certainly is a master of his craft.

I read with interest this FBI Most Wanted notice concerning a certain Joshua Link, who is accused of, well:

Joshua Robert Link is wanted for his alleged involvement in a fraud scheme between January of 2021 and December of 2023. Through his company, Agridime LLC, Link and his co-conspirators solicited cattle contracts from buyers throughout the United States. They told prospective buyers that Agridime would purchase cattle, care for and feed the cattle, have it processed, and sell the meat through Agridime’s distribution channels. Agridime offered investment returns from 15% to 32% to prospective cattle contract buyers. In reality, Agridime purchased only a fraction of the cattle. The scheme resulted in an approximate loss of $115 million to over 2,000 cattle contract buyers nationwide. On January 29, 2026, a federal arrest warrant was issued for Link in the United States District Court, Northern District of Texas, Fort Worth Division, after he was charged with Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud.

Upon further research, I discovered that the SEC had previously brought a civil action against him and his co-conspirators. As I understand the scheme, the fraudsters sold specific cattle to individual investors, promised to hold on to the cattle, raise, feed, slaughter, and process them, and then buy the cattle back at a guaranteed higher price.  Of course, none of that actually happened – they just took the money.

So how is this a security, such that the SEC can bring an enforcement action? The SEC’s complaint makes clear that these cattle contracts were sold to investors on the promise of profit, and that the investors themselves were entirely passive which satisfies the first three elements of the Howey test for a security (investment of money, for profit, derived from the efforts of others).

But what about the common enterprise prong, if each investor thinks they’re buying individual cattle?

Certainly, broad vertical commonality is present here – in the sense that investors know the promoter will profit if they do – and that was enough for the Eleventh Circuit to find commonality met in the conceptually-similar case of Securities and Exchange Commission v. ETS Payphones, 408 F.3d 727 (11th Cir. 2005), where you bought a plot of land and telephone equipment that someone else would lease from you to run a payphone business and then buy back from you at the end of the contract.  But broad vertical commonality is fragile as a legal concept because there’s so much overlap with the “efforts of others” Howey prong.

So the SEC says something else.  According to the SEC’s complaint:

Agridime has not purchased enough cattle to fulfill its Cattle Contracts.  Agridime’s investors, therefore, do not actually invest in specific, identifiable animals. Instead, the success of the investments depends on the success of Agridime’s purported cattle operation, including its ability to attract new investors.

Get it? The investors think they’re investing in identifiable animals, but that didn’t actually happen, so any returns investors receive actually come from the (Ponzi scheme) enterprise, which is common across multiple investors.

Which sounds like an odd elision from investors’ subjective understanding to the reality of how any profits were made – but in the payphones case, and in other similar kinds of cases (like Miller v. Cent. Chinchilla Grp., Inc., 494 F.2d 414 (8th Cir. 1974), the infamous chinchilla-raising scheme, everyone loves the chinchilla-raising scheme), courts make a similar sort of move. They note that investors may be buying identifiable plots of land or chinchillas or cattle, but they can only make money when the promoter finds new investors.  ETS Payphones, 408 F.3d at 732 (“Investors were dependent upon Edwards’s ability to attract new business to realize profits.”); Central Chinchilla, 494 F.2d at 417 (“The record shows that the plaintiffs invested money in a common enterprise with the expectation that they would profit if the defendants secured additional investors.”).  And in a beaver-raising case, the Tenth Circuit found commonality in the fact that no one expected to profit from the beaver sales unless they understood the defendants to be taking part in a larger beaver industry, which was also sufficient for commonality, Continental Mktg. Corp. v. SEC, 387 F.2d 466 (10th Cir. 1967), and perhaps not unlike investors’ faith in “Agridime’s purported cattle operation.”

Anyway, leaving aside the grimness of the “raise-an-adorable-animal-for-slaughter” aspects of these schemes (“The owner may care for his own animals with each pair of beaver requiring a private swimming pool, patio, den and nesting box together with the services of a veterinarian…”) maybe the ultimate lesson here is really, courts aren’t interesting in getting into the weeds of where you find commonality when it walks like an investment scheme and talks like an investment scheme.

And another thing.  The Shareholder Primacy podcast is back! This week, Mike Levin and I talk about the securities fraud case against Elon Musk that appears to be heading for trial in March, and the latest (as of Sunday afternoon) developments in Warner/Paramount/Netflix.  Here at Apple; here at Spotify; here at Youtube.

As I write this at the end of President’s Day, I am marveling at how busy I was on this federal holiday–not a holiday for employees at The University of Tennessee. My mind wandered back to my childhood. As I remember things, we had George Washington’s Birthday, February 22, off from school. I also remember celebrating Abraham Lincoln’s Birthday, February 12. But I do not remember having it off from school.

And then, at some point (it seems when I was 10), I recall the holidays being combined into one–or maybe George Washington’s Birthday getting a name change. My first memory of President’s Day. But I never knew why. Apparently, the catalyst was an act of Congress–the law that instituted our Monday work holidays. Now codified as part of 5 U.S.C. § 6103, the Uniform Monday Holiday Act moved George Washington’s Birthday from February 22 to the third Monday in February, as noted on a civics website hosted by the Sandra Day O’Connor Institute. Statutorily, the federal holiday is still George Washington’s Birthday, although many of us (me included) now know it as President’s Day.

Our retired co-blogger Steve Bradford once wrote here about this holiday, quoting from Presidents Washington and Lincoln. I do not remember reading that post. But maybe I did. I had occasion to communicate with Steve recently. Yes, Steve Bradford is alive and well. And he has had quite an adventure over the years since his retirement. And he has written about it. His book, Cabin Catastrophe, chronicles (in Steve’s inimitable way) that adventure. I own the book. I have paged through it. I look forward to reading it when time permits and to reviewing it here.

By the time I finished typing and editing this, President’s Day was over on the East coast. It is now time for me to call it a day. I do wish I could have had the day off to honor George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, or any number of our U.S. presidents. But alas, it was not to be. The next holiday for us is Memorial Day (although we have an administrative closure on Good Friday as a spring recess day). [sigh] And so, back to work I go.

It was reported this week that OpenAI has disbanded its mission alignment team, and fired a woman (ostensibly because she discriminated against men) who opposed adding an “Adult Mode” to ChatGPT. Meanwhile, a former OpenAI researcher published a NYT op-ed about the erosion of OpenAI’s principles.

Notably, these moves come after OpenAI’s contentious restructuring into a Delaware public benefit corporation, which required assurances to the AGs of California and Delaware that the new structure would remain true to OpenAI’s original nonprofit mission to develop AI for humanity’s benefit. The way this was supposed to occur was that OpenAI-the-nonprofit was given a golden share to control OpenAI-the-benefit-corporation’s board.

The available evidence suggests … the mission may have been redirected.

Now, maybe that’s because of the identity of the individuals appointed to OpenAI-the-nonprofit’s board, which include current and former tech execs, a private equity guy, a corporate lawyer, and Sam Altman. And certainly, there may be a broader lesson here about the general toothlessness of the benefit corporation form – we’re seeing similar issues at Anthropic, which is also organized as a benefit corporation.

But the problem likely runs deeper. For one thing, we all remember when OpenAI’s board tried to fire Altman, resulting in an employee revolt. That wasn’t surprising, because OpenAI (and Anthropic) compensate their employees with equity – incentivizing them to prioritize financial value. OpenAI and Anthropic have operated much more like VC-backed startups than social enterprises, and that may ultimately be rooted in the fact that AI requires such enormous capital investment that it simply is not practical to expect anything other than prioritization of profit.

Each year, SEALS hosts a Prospective Law Teachers Workshop (PLTW), which provides intensive mentorship opportunities for VAPs, fellows, and practitioners who plan on entering the law teaching market in August 2026. Participation in PLTW is by acceptance only. Selected PLTW participants also attend a luncheon (separate ticket purchase required) as part of the workshop programming. Past PLTW participants have secured tenure-track appointments at an impressive array of law schools.

This year’s Prospective Law Teachers Workshop will begin on Monday, July 13, 2026, with an online orientation and 1-on-1 sessions to receive faculty feedback on application materials, and will continue with in-person programming in conjunction with the SEALS Conference at the Omni Amelia Island Resort in Fernandina Beach, Florida. Specifically, PLTW participants will engage in moot job interviews and job talks. The Workshop will begin at 8:00 am on Monday, July 27, 2026, and end on Wednesday, July 29, 2026. PLTW participants must both participate in the online programming and arrive the day before the workshop begins. After the workshop concludes, PLTW participants can stay for the rest of the conference (for networking) or depart after the workshop programming concludes on Wednesday (we plan to conclude by early afternoon on Wednesday). 

If you are interested in participating in the Prospective Law Teachers Workshop, please complete this application form, and attach a copy of your CV and a brief statement explaining your interest in the workshop. Any questions about this workshop should be directed to Professors Shakira D. Pleasant, spleasan@uic.edu, and John Rice, john.rice@lmunet.edu.   Applications are due by March 15, 2026, with decisions to be made in advance of the opening of conference registration on April 1, 2026. 

SEALS is delighted to offer a Faculty Hiring Portal on which schools may search for candidates and candidates may search for jobs. The SEALS hiring portal has three components: (1) a list of job announcements, (2) a visiting professor portal, and (3) a candidate portal. PLTW participants will be well prepared to post their profiles on the Portal in advance of the SEALS conference. 

SEALS also offers a workshop that has broader programming for anyone pursuing law teaching jobs in the future. The Aspiring Law Teachers Workshop (ALTW) includes informational sessions on designing your teaching package, navigating the market as a nontraditional candidate, mapping academic opportunities, what’s in a job talk, crafting scholarship goals, the art of self-promotion, as well as a luncheon (separate ticket purchase required). SEALS works hard to ensure that PLTW participants can also choose to fully participate in ALTW programming. 

More information about the conference and the most up-to-date SEALS 2026 Conference Schedule, including both PLTW and ALTW programming, will be posted here.

South Texas College of Law Houston (STCL) invites applications from both entry-level and experienced faculty for one or more full-time, tenure-track positions beginning in the 2026–27 academic year. Also, STCL invites applications for visiting assistant professor (VAP) positions beginning in the 2026-27 academic year. STCL’s VAPs typically serve two years in a program designed to assist individuals to transition to academia by providing mentoring, teaching experience, and scholarly support.

While all candidates for our open tenure-track and VAP positions will be considered, we particularly seek candidates interested in teaching Contracts and Commercial Law (including courses such as Payments Systems, Secured Transactions, and/or Sales). We seek candidates with outstanding academic records who are committed to both excellence in teaching and sustained scholarly achievement.

STCL is committed to fulfilling our mission of providing a diverse body of students with the opportunity to obtain an exceptional legal education, preparing graduates to serve their community and the profession with distinction. STCL is known for its supportive and collegial culture and its commitment to student success. The school, located in downtown Houston, was founded in 1923 and is the oldest law school in the city. STCL is a private, nonprofit, independent law school, fully accredited by the American Bar Association and a member of the Association of American Law Schools, with 50 full-time professors, 60 adjunct professors, one visiting professor, and one jurist-in-residence serving a student body of 1109 full- and part-time students. The school is home to the most-decorated advocacy program in the U.S. and the nationally recognized Frank Evans Center for Conflict Resolution. Additional information regarding South Texas is available at http://www.stcl.edu.

STCL is an Equal Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate on the basis of actual or perceived sex, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, race, color, national origin, ethnicity, religion, disability, age, pregnancy and related conditions, veteran/military status, genetic characteristics, or any other characteristic protected by applicable federal, state or local law. Pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act, requests for reasonable accommodation needed during the application process should be communicated with the application. STCL encourages applications from all qualified candidates who are authorized to work in the United States. STCL cannot guarantee immigration sponsorship of any candidate at this time.

Please send letters of interest and resumes to:
Professor Joe Leahy
Faculty Appointments Committee, Chair
jleahy@stcl.edu

Last week, I flew out to NYC for a quick turnaround trip and a PLI panel about Reincorporations and Redomestications. It was a part of a two-day program on Mergers & Acquisitions 2026: Advanced Trends and Developments.

Our panel featured Steve Haas from Hunton , Charlotte Newell from Sidley, and Robert Rosenberg from Houlihan Lokey. You can access the panel from PLI’s website.

Both Hunton and Sidley have put out interesting things on corporate law issues that have been on my radar. Charlotte has covered Delaware litigation and has expertise on the current state of play there as Delaware lawyer. Steve recently drafted an article for the American Bar Association: Delaware Supreme Court Establishes Test for Reviewing Reincorporation Decisions.

Although I can’t speak for the other panelists here, I think we all expect that Delaware will remain king of the hill by a substantial margin. There have been some shifts and some companies moving, but Delaware will continue to grow both in terms of overall numbers from private entity formation, public company IPOs, and public companies deciding to move to Delaware from other jurisdictions. Delaware’s overall numbers depend on both DExits and DEntries. Companies sometimes shift their incorporation from one jurisdiction to another. As long as more are moving in than moving out, Delaware will continue to grow. Delaware has a dominant product. That isn’t likely to change anytime soon. But that doesn’t mean that there isn’t any room for other states to offer alternatives.

Robert also came in with detailed slide deck with granular data. He looked at some historical moves like Costco in 1998 and Microsoft in 1993 and also pulled in recent IPO data. Most years, Delaware gets about 80% of IPOs. But 2025 looked a little different.

Nevada pulled in about 16.8% of IPOs and Delaware came in with 61.8%, picking up another 81 public companies. That’s a bigger number than the number of companies that left Delaware last year. As expected, Delaware continues to grow at a nice clip.

I haven’t yet gone an identified the 22 IPO firms and looked to see if they have any interesting or explanatory characteristics yet. Fortunately, law students are always looking for research projects and this could be an interesting one.

Ultimately, if this trend holds, it may be possible for Nevada to start accumulating more companies with IPOs. This doesn’t mean that corporate law will turn into our primary economic driver anytime soon, but it could help diversify Nevada’s economy and make it easier for me to find my students jobs in business law.