MAC Clause (Material Adverse Change)
A contractual provision in M&A agreements that allows a buyer to withdraw from a transaction if events occur between signing and closing that materially and adversely affect the target company's business, financial condition, or prospects.
What Is a MAC Clause?
A material adverse change (MAC) clause — also referred to as a material adverse effect (MAE) clause — is a key risk-allocation mechanism in M&A agreements. It gives the buyer the right to walk away from a signed deal if the target company suffers a significant negative change before the transaction closes.
The MAC clause functions as a form of insurance for the buyer during the period between signing the definitive agreement and closing — a window that can span weeks or months while regulatory approvals and other conditions are satisfied.
How MAC Clauses Work
A typical MAC clause has two components:
The MAC Definition
The agreement defines what constitutes a “material adverse change” — generally any event, circumstance, or change that has had, or would reasonably be expected to have, a material adverse effect on the business, operations, financial condition, or results of the target.
The Carve-Outs
Equally important are the exceptions — events that are explicitly excluded from triggering a MAC, even if they adversely affect the target:
- General economic conditions — recessions, market downturns, or financial crises affecting the broader economy
- Industry-wide changes — developments affecting the target’s entire sector, not the target specifically
- Changes in law or regulation — new legislation or regulatory requirements applicable to the industry
- Changes in accounting standards — mandatory shifts in GAAP or IFRS treatment
- Natural disasters, pandemics, or acts of war — force majeure events
- Effects of the transaction itself — customer or employee attrition resulting from the announcement of the deal
- Failure to meet projections — missing forecasts alone is typically not a MAC (though the underlying cause may be)
The negotiation of carve-outs is often the most contentious aspect of MAC clause drafting. Sellers want broad carve-outs; buyers want narrow ones.
Invoking a MAC Clause
Despite their prominence in deal agreements, MAC clauses are rarely invoked successfully. Courts and tribunals have set a high bar:
- The adverse change must be material — typically interpreted as significantly affecting the target’s long-term earnings power, not just short-term results
- The change must be durationally significant — temporary fluctuations generally do not qualify
- The burden of proof falls on the buyer claiming the MAC
Historically, only a handful of cases have resulted in a court permitting a buyer to terminate based on a MAC clause, making it more of a negotiating tool and deterrent than a practical exit mechanism (Corporate Finance Institute).
MAC Clauses and Deal Certainty
The interplay between MAC clauses and deal certainty is critical in competitive processes:
- Sellers prefer narrow MAC clauses (or no MAC condition at all) to maximise deal certainty
- Buyers want broad MAC protection, particularly for deals with long closing timelines or regulatory uncertainty
- In auction processes, a buyer’s willingness to accept a tighter MAC clause can differentiate their bid — a dynamic explored in our overview of the sell-side M&A process — even at a slightly lower price
MAC Clauses in Asia Pacific
MAC clause drafting in Asia Pacific transactions requires sensitivity to local market conditions, as our M&A process guide details. In economies subject to currency volatility (e.g., Southeast Asian markets), parties must consider whether exchange rate movements constitute a MAC or fall within the general economic conditions carve-out. In cross-border M&A across Asia, changes in government policy can have outsized effects on target businesses, making the regulatory change carve-out particularly important. Platforms like Amafi help cross-border advisors track macroeconomic and regulatory developments across the region that could bear on MAC clause analysis.