The Williams Act – Tender Offers and Stock Accumulations tells you how to make filings of a Schedule 13D or Schedule 13G. This practical guide includes a step-by-step list of what a tender offeror and a target company should do in a tender offer. Corporate lawyers, securities lawyers, investors that take greater that 5% positions in public companies, companies that are subject to a Schedule 13D or Schedule 13G filing, target companies in a tender offer, and law schools will find this work helpful. There are three lists of the steps – a friendly tender offer, a hostile tender offer, and a hostile tender offer that becomes friendly. The text covers: The definition of tender offer How to determine what to disclose in a Schedule 13D or 13G How to determine if a group is formed Identifying securities a person beneficially owns When you can sue to attack a false Schedule 13D or Schedule 13G What a target company can do to defend itself against a tender offer