For roughly a century, more than two-thirds of Fortune 500 companies have called Delaware their legal home. That arrangement is unraveling fast. Tesla reincorporated in Texas. TripAdvisor moved to Nevada. Dropbox followed. The trickle is becoming a current, and the result isn’t liberation from a corporate cartel โ it’s the loss of one of the few stable anchors in American business law.
What Delaware actually provides
Delaware’s Chancery Court is genuinely unusual. It hears business disputes without juries, with judges who specialize in corporate matters, and produces written opinions that read more like academic treatises than rulings. Over a century, that body of work created a predictable map: lawyers and directors could look up almost any fiduciary question and find precedent. Companies didn’t choose Delaware because the state was lenient. They chose it because outcomes were knowable. Insurance underwriters priced D&O coverage off Delaware case law. Boards structured deals around it. The system was a piece of public infrastructure that the rest of the country quietly free-rode on.
What’s driving the exodus
The trigger was the 2024 Tornetta v. Musk ruling that voided Elon Musk’s $56 billion Tesla pay package. Delaware’s Chancellor Kathaleen McCormick concluded the board hadn’t negotiated at arm’s length. Whatever you think of the merits, it spooked CEOs and venture investors, who suddenly saw Delaware as a place where compensation and control structures could be unwound years later. Texas opened a specialized business court. Nevada had already pitched itself as director-friendly. The new venues advertise looser fiduciary standards, weaker shareholder rights, and limited derivative litigation. For executives that’s the appeal. For minority investors and the public, that’s the warning.
Why fragmentation is worse than monopoly
The replacement for Delaware isn’t competition that produces better law. It’s a race in which states pitch themselves to executives by promising to make it harder to sue them. Cornell’s Lucian Bebchuk and a generation of corporate scholars have documented this pattern: when states compete for incorporations, they compete on what management wants, not what shareholders or employees need. The result is a patchwork in which the rules depend on where a company filed its papers, precedent gets thinner, insurance gets more expensive, and small investors lose the standardized protections Delaware quietly enforced. Markets like predictability. They’re about to get much less of it.
The bottom line
Delaware’s dominance was never beloved, and the state collected real franchise fees for the service. But the alternative emerging now isn’t a cleaner system โ it’s a fragmented one optimized for the people who already hold power inside companies. The Chancery Court’s century of precedent existed because one venue handled enough cases to develop deep doctrine. Splitting that volume across Texas, Nevada, and a half-dozen state legislatures rewriting their codes year by year produces shallower law, more forum shopping, and weaker accountability. It’s an outcome that benefits a narrow class of executives and the lawyers who advise them, and leaves almost everyone else with a less reliable set of rules.
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