By Liz Hoffman 

Banks are being sued for loan provisions that can protect corporate clients from boardroom attacks by hedge funds and hostile bidders.

The lawsuits, filed on behalf of shareholders of corporate borrowers, say the provisions--which require companies to repay debt ahead of schedule if dissidents seize majority control of their boards--entrench incumbent directors and discourage dissidents whose arrival could benefit all investors.

The cases shine a light on corporate defenses of all stripes, which are under scrutiny as hedge funds ramp up boardroom assaults and hostile bidders seize on a hot merger market. The lawsuits against Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc. and other banks in recent months also highlight a tug of war between lenders and corporate borrowers that has intensified as loan protections have eroded in recent years, market participants said.

These clauses force companies to repay loans before they are due if a majority of directors are ousted. They are ostensibly meant to protect creditors, but their ability to shield embattled boards has earned them the nickname "proxy puts," after the campaigns, known as proxy fights, often waged by activists.

Nearly 200 companies have struck new loan agreements since the beginning of 2014 with the provision, including drug maker Actavis PLC and software provider Salesforce.com Inc., a review of securities filings shows. Some advisers said banks push to include it, wary that an activist coup could usher in debt-fueled buybacks, dividends or other balance-sheet shake-ups that would erode credit ratings.

"A few years ago, this wasn't necessarily front of mind for most boards or lenders, but with the level of activism we're seeing today, that has changed," said Kai Haakon Liekefett, head of the shareholder-activism group of law firm Vinson & Elkins LLP.

Plaintiffs' lawyers have brought at least 10 lawsuits in recent months against companies and their lenders. The suits, filed in Delaware's special corporate court, said the arrangements discourage would-be activists by threatening a forced refinancing of the company's borrowings.

Gambling company MGM Resorts International and retailer HSN Inc. are among the companies facing such lawsuits, and plaintiffs' lawyers said they are looking closely at new credit agreements for any that include a proxy put.

"Corporate boards and their advisers are using the threat of massive debt default to punish shareholders for seeking to replace directors," Mark Lebovitch, a lawyer for plaintiffs in several of the lawsuits, said in an interview.

Delaware courts tend to be skeptical of defensive boardroom tactics.

Last fall, a judge refused to dismiss claims that Healthways Inc., a health and wellness company, harmed shareholders by agreeing, in a loan from SunTrust Banks Inc., to repay its debt should a majority of its board seats turn over. At the time, the company was facing shareholder pressure to dismantle some corporate defenses; shortly after, a hedge fund picked a fight for board seats.

The judge in that case said the debt provision was "highly suspect" and amounted to a "Sword of Damocles" hanging over shareholders' heads. Particularly concerning, he said, was that Healthways's board couldn't waive the provision for dissident directors, even if it wanted to.

The specter of tighter judicial scrutiny has led some lenders and companies to drop these provisions, advisers said. Healthways and SunTrust agreed in February to take it out as part of a settlement, up for court approval next month, that includes a fee of as much as $1.2 million for the shareholders' lawyers. MGM has agreed to do so, too, and is awaiting bank approval, court filings show.

Bank of America, which advisers said had held tight to the provision, in recent weeks began phasing it out of their credit agreements, according to a person familiar with the matter.

But some banks are pushing back, advisers said. Lenders like the certainty of knowing they can cash out if a company's leadership is replaced.

"Certain lenders are pushing hard for the feature in light of the current shareholder activism wave," Vinson & Elkins and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. wrote in a February presentation.

Activist investors, whose assets under management have swelled to more than $127 billion, according to researcher HFR, often urge companies to sell slower-expanding businesses or borrow money to pay dividends or buy back shares, all of which can divert cash flow, ding credit ratings and unnerve debtholders. They have run 127 campaigns so far this year, the most since 2008, according to FactSet.

"Creditors don't want to wake up one day and find out someone else is driving the train," said Richard Farley, a finance partner at law firm Paul Hastings LLP.

Darden Restaurants Inc., eBay Inc. and DuPont Co. are among companies that have had their credit ratings downgraded or placed on review in the wake of activist campaigns. "Shareholder activism is rarely good news for credit investors," Moody's Investors Service wrote in a report this month.

Mr. Lebovitch, a partner at Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann LLP, said lenders can protect themselves in other ways, like barring companies from taking on excessive debt or selling assets without approval.

But those restrictions, known as covenants, are less common these days and offer banks less protection than they once did, said Alexander Dill of Moody's. In a recent survey, the credit-rating firm found bonds today are far less likely to include limits on how companies can borrow, use cash and structure new debt.

Write to Liz Hoffman at liz.hoffman@wsj.com

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