Common use of Delay by Company Clause in Contracts

Delay by Company. The Company shall not be required to proceed to effect a demand registration under the Act pursuant to Section 1.1.1 above if (i) the Company receives a request for registration under Section 1.1.1 less than ninety (90) days preceding the anticipated effective date of a proposed underwritten public offering of securities of the Company approved by the Company’s Board of Directors prior to the Company’s receipt of the request and in such event the Company shall not be required to effect any such requested registration until one hundred eighty (180) days after the effective date of such proposed underwritten public offering; (ii) within 180 days prior to any such request for registration, a registration of securities of the Company has been effected in which the Initiating Holders had the right to participate pursuant to this Section 1.1 or Section 1.2 hereof; or (iii) the Board of Directors of the Company reasonably determines in good faith that effecting such a demand registration at such time would have a material adverse effect upon a proposed sale of all (or substantially all) of the assets of the Company, or a merger, share exchange, reorganization, recapitalization, or any other form of business combination or transaction materially affecting the capital structure, or equity ownership of the Company, or would otherwise be seriously detrimental to the Company because the Company was then in the process of raising capital in the public or private markets; provided, however, that the Company may only delay a demand registration pursuant to this Section 1.1.3 for a period not exceeding one hundred eighty (180) days (or until such earlier time as such transaction is consummated or no longer proposed) and may only defer any such filing pursuant to this Section 1.

Appears in 2 contracts

Sources: Registration Rights Agreement (Under Armour, Inc.), Registration Rights Agreement (Under Armour, Inc.)