Company: RPTX
Filing Date: 2025-12-03
Form Type: PREM14A
Source: 0001193125-25-306948
Chunk: 80

Company: Repare Therapeutics Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-12-03
Form: PREM14A
Chunk 80
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 and holders of
Incentive Securities, pursuant to the Agreement, the Plan of Arrangement, or the CVR Agreement such Tax or other amounts as the applicable payor determines, acting reasonably, are required to be deducted and withheld therefrom in accordance with the
Tax Act or any other provisions of any applicable Laws or the administrative practice of any Governmental Entity. To the extent that Taxes or other amounts are so deducted or withheld, such deducted or withheld Taxes or other amounts shall be
treated for all purposes under the Agreement, the Plan of Arrangement or the CVR Agreement as having been paid to the person in respect of which such deduction or withholding was made. Any such deducted or withheld amounts shall be remitted to the
appropriate Governmental Entity as required by applicable Law.

Repare Management Dissolution Analysis

A dissolution analysis prepared by management was made available to the Board, the Transaction Committee and Leerink Partners (the
“Dissolution Analysis”). The Transaction Committee and the Board utilized the Dissolution Analysis in connection with their evaluation of the Arrangement and permitted Leerink Partners to use and rely on the Dissolution Analysis
for the purposes of its analysis and opinion. The information contained in the Dissolution Analysis may not be appropriate for other purposes. A summary of the Dissolution Analysis is being included in this Circular and Proxy Statement not to
influence your decision whether to vote “FOR,” “AGAINST” or “ABSTAIN” with respect to the proposal to adopt the Agreement, but because the Dissolution Analysis was made available to the Board, the Transaction
Committee and Leerink Partners.

The Dissolution Analysis, while necessarily presented with numerical specificity, was based on numerous
estimates and assumptions, some as to future events, that were inherently uncertain and many of which were beyond the Company’s management’s control at the time the Dissolution Analysis was prepared, such as, actual expenses incurred,
the amount of wind-down costs, the amount required to settle the Company’s remaining obligations under any contracts, the need to retain employees to facilitate the wind-down, the need to retain the services of outside contractors to assist
with the wind-down and the satisfaction by the Company of its remaining obligations (including obligations to continue SEC filings), and the need to retain funds beyond any liquidating distribution for known, unknown or contingent liabilities, all
of which were difficult to predict and many of which that are subject to change. The Dissolution Analysis includes multiple years and, by its nature, becomes subject to greater uncertainty with each successive