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News from September 2003. The news is free; your purchases from Amazon help us pay the bills.![]() September News Investment in Asia and Emerging Markets Up Global investors have begun to move back into Asian markets, with $14 billion (US) dollars pumped into China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Singapore in the first 8 months of 2003, compared with less than $10 billion raised during all of 2002. Cross-border capital flows into developing countries plunged from almost $300 billion in 1997 to just $110 billion in 2002. Now, mutual funds, insurance companies, and other big institutional investors from Europe and the U.S. are channeling fresh money into emerging-market equities and bonds. The Institute of International Finance, the Washington (D.C.)-based association of leading international commercial and investment banks, now predicts that capital flows will rise to around $160 billion this year. Do the Opposite A September 26, 2003 editorial from the St. Petersburg Times tells of taking contrary investing to an absurd conclusion. The state of Florida's $92-billion employee pension fund is investing in Edison Schools Inc., the private education management company whose stock plummeted from $36.75 a share in 2001 to 15 cents last year. What were they thinking? The editorial asks, Was there no Enron stock left to buy? Shareholders More Active Around the World The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) reports that 74% of 310 senior asset managers polled around the world said shareholders were becoming more active in influencing how companies they own are operated. Once rubberstamp boards have become more assertive. Top management is also now spending more time on corporate governance issues than it did a year ago. Asset management companies have also beefed up their corporate governance teams, launching funds to specifically press companies on governance issues. The report noted that the appearance of greed by executives was very damaging to company reputations and that shareholders were likely to demand pay that properly reflected performance. (More Investors Worldwide Becoming Governance Activists, Plansponsor.com, 9/25/03) Public Funds Get Serious CalPERS, CalSTRS, AFSCME, the New York State Comptroller and the Connecticut State Treasurer's Office took a full page ad in the Wall Street Journal, urging the SEC to give American investors greater access to corporate election ballots, calling it "the next critical step of corporate reform." Contacts: CalPERS, Brad Pacheco, 916-326-3991. CalSTRS, Sherry Reser, 916-229-3258. AFSCME, Cheryl Kelly, 202-429-1145. New York State Comptroller, 518-474-4015. Connecticut State Treasurer's Office, Bernard Kavaler, 860-702-3277. Investors Deserve a True Voice in Board Elections American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME), AFL-CIO, released two polls providing new insight into corporate board elections on the eve of an SEC rule making to enhance proxy access for director nominations. The key findings of the Harris Interactive survey of more than 1,000 individual investors, show:
A large majority of these investors also believe shareholders should have access to corporate proxy materials to nominate board member candidates rather than leaving the decision solely in the hands of corporate management. Currently, any shareholders who want to challenge an incumbent board member has to pay hundreds of thousands, even millions, of dollars to run their own candidates. AFSCME says new rules being considered by the SEC should adhere to the following principles:
Later the same day, Sean Harrigan, president of the Board of Administration of CalPERS, testified before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs. Harrigan suggested strengthening, auditor independence, financial reporting, federal securities laws, and the resources of the SEC, including: enforcing an outright ban on audit firms performing non-audit services; developing internal controls over financial reporting; giving the SEC a greater degree of independence from the federal budget process; and studying whether the SEC should have additional authority to ban individuals from serving as an officer or director at public companies convicted of misconduct. Back to the top Davis Signs Governance Reforms Governor Gray Davis signed legislation to increase corporate accountability and rebuild public trust by cracking down on corporate fraud and establishing a whistle-blower protections.
"Crown Jewel" of Corporate Reform In an Op-Ed piece available through Institutional Investors' CalPERSWatch, Sean Harrigan says access to the proxy is the "crown jewel of fundamental reform in America." CalPERS objects to the trigger event requirement the SEC has indicated they may include in their proposed rules to allow shareholders to nominated directors. However, if the SEC feels compelled to include a trigger event, Harrigan appears to recommend the following:
Reed to Help Sort Out NYSE John S. Reed, former chairman and co-chief executive officer of Citigroup, will take over leadership at the NYSE and will they try to sort out how the exchange will be governed. He'll be paid $1. "At the New York Stock Exchange, we are talking about a board with a combined chairman and C.E.O., with a conflicted board that was mainly handpicked by the chairman and we are talking about excessive secrecy," said Stephen Davis, president of Davis Global Advisors. "For all the hue and cry about poor governance at the exchange, these kinds of sleepy boards are commonplace all across the nation." While the conflicts at most companies are largely between the interests of management and those of shareholders, at the NYSE it is between the commercial interests of its members and the investing community at large. The exchange proclaims that its "ultimate constituency" is the investing public but investors are given no role in selecting directors. Actually, that doesn't sound all that different from most corporations. There is at least some hope that may change. (In String of Corporate Troubles, Critics Focus on Boards' Failings, NYTimes, 9/21/030 The Corporate Governance Alliance Digest We've added The Corporate Governance Alliance Digest to our list of "Stakeholders." The Digest is published by Eleanor Bloxham, pioneer of economic value management & author of Economic Value Management, and John M. Nash, founder and President Emeritus of the National Association of Corporate Directors. Following are a couple of tidbits from the latest edition:
Ohio Pension Reforms Ohio legislators are working on a bill that would subject the states $107 billion public employee pension funds to more ethical, legal, and financial scrutiny. Possible provisions include:
The move came after questions were raised earlier in the year about the spending practices at the State Teachers Retirement System (STRS). Among the alleged excessive expenses were:
Ohio Pension Chair Steps Down The chairman of the Ohio Police and Fire Pension board resigned yesterday after the state's largest police organization called on him and two other trustees to step down over travel expenses. Dayton firefighter David Harker resigned because he had difficulty dealing with the pressure generated by news stories about the travel expenses, according to the Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Dayton Daily News reports that, trustees spent about $612,000 on travel and expenses at seminars and meetings in places including Las Vegas, Lake Tahoe, Palm Springs and Key West since 1998 on travel and expenses at seminars and meetings in various places. Cleveland police Detective Robert Beck, who was also criticized for the expenses, will take over as the fund's new chairman. Back to the top More Pressure on Grasso Four of America's largest public pension funds -- two in California, one in New York and one in North Carolina, with combined assets of $401 billion -- asked Grasso to step down. They asserted his $139.5 million deferred-pay package is too much, particularly amid efforts by U.S. companies to shore up their governance standards as the nation's stock markets recover from an unprecedented period of corporate fraud. "This pay package is out of line and it's part of a sickness of culture in this country where too many at the very top have forgotten what's right and fair in the American economy and what average workers make in this country," argued California state treasurer Phil Angelides, who along with the heads of the California Public Employees' Retirement System (or CalPERS) and the head of the California State Teachers' Retirement System expressed their dismay to Mr. Grasso in a letter Tuesday. They asserted that it would take an average American 5,200 years working a 40-hour workweek to receive the money Mr. Grasso has received. The NYSE is supposed to represent the interests of investors. In their letter to Mr. Grasso, the California pension funds and Mr. Angelides said: "The pay package sends the wrong signal at this critical time when public and private sector leaders must be steadfast in their commitment to restoring the credibility of our financial markets." They added: "It is particularly troubling that the most substantial amounts paid under the agreement were for a time period when the NYSE fell short of its central regulatory mission, as Americans endured the greatest wave of corporate scandals since the market manipulations of the 1920s." Epilogue: Grasso resigned as chairman and chief executive of the NYSE on 9/17/03 after the board voted 13 to 7 during a conference call to ask him to resign in order to restore investor confidence in the world's largest stock market. Five years ago Grasso was a member of the board of Computer Associates International and witnessed investor fury when the company tried to pay its senior executives more than $1 billion in stock. You'd think he might have learned from that experience. Grasso fought for more than two weeks to preserve his job and a lump-sum payment of nearly $140 million, even agreeing to forgo an additional $48 million he was "entitled to receive" over the next four years. Oh the sacrifices some people are willing to make; but it was too little, to late. By handpicking members of his own the compensation committee that set his pay, Grasso set a poor example for companies the NYSE "regulates." Grasso's resignation marks an end to an embarrassing episode for the exchange but I hope it doesn't end the controversy over how the exchange should be run. Conflicts of interest at the NYSE should be minimized. Critics have argued the SEC should divide the NYSE into two institutions, one to manage the exchange and one to regulate it, following the model of the Nasdaq and NASD. Will that be part of the plan the NYSE submits this fall? I'd like to see something more creative, with actual investor advocates sitting on the board. Let's get rid of NYSE's constitutional provision that requires that securities industry representatives take up 12 of the 27 seats on the board. Role Reversal in Warning at CalPERS If you want CalPERS investments, don't take our members' jobs. That's the message from CalPERS as the board considers restricting investments in companies that take over government services, putting at risk the jobs of its 1.4 million members. Charles Valdes, a trustee with the $145 billion pension fund who has often blasted "socially responsible investing" is quoted in the Sacramento Bee saying "We shouldn't have any part of that." On the other hand, State Treasurer Phil Angelides, who touts triple bottom line investment strategies cautioned his CalPERS colleagues about hamstringing the fund. "This policy could be fraught with peril. It's very important ... that we retain access to the top-tier investors in this country," Angelides said. "We have to be very careful about how we fight this. There may be instances where jobs can be best provided by the private sector." If they move forward they will be following the lead of similar restrictions at New York City and Ohio based funds. This would be a tough policy for boar members to oppose because it is an issue so crucial to CalPERS members. Outside money managers oversee more than 300 private equity funds with about $21 billion in investments or commitments from CalPERS. "I could not be more opposed to contracting out (government services)," said state Controller Steve Westly, a CalPERS board member. "This is a red herring issue --- people who promise to save millions of dollars. It comes on the backs of people who have their health care taken away." (Pension Trustees May Get Tough, Gilbert Chan, Sacramento Bee, 9/16/03) (see also editorial, CalPERS oversteps, Sacramento Bee, 9/17/03) The move comes at the same time that the board of directors of the California State Employees Association (CSEA) has scheduled a vote on disaffiliation from SEIU. The current president of CSEA is expected to be ousted in November; getting the board to disaffiliate from SEIU may be his last major act of desperation to stay in power. Valdes, who has historically been on the side of the old-line leadership at CSEA, may be trying to reposition himself, fearing that without SEIU support he will not be reelected in 2005. There are good reasons for limiting CalPERS investments in companies that take jobs away from public employees. The CalPERS board will have to balance its duties to the public and to its members. When they do, they'll find a way to serve both. Ralph Ward Predicts Professional Directors "Director education programs are booming, but I predict that this is just the beginning of a movement toward professionalizing the job of director," says board guru Ralph Ward and author of Saving the Corporate Board. "Within a few years, investors, courts and regulators will be looking closely at how many hours of training your board members have accumulated. Getting serious on sending your board back to school now will keep you ahead of the curve." The September edition of Ralph Ward's Boardroom INSIDER offers advice on establishing a chief governance officer, how to get the most our of boar training, outsourcing the boards busy work, getting regular updates on ethics issues, and how technology is changing the information going to corporate directors DJSI Adjusts Dow Jones Sustainability Indexes (DJSI) added more than 50 new constituents in its yearly adjustment, including Toyota (ticker: TM), which jumped into the leader position for the automobile sector, and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ). More than 40 companies, including DaimlerChrysler (DCX) and Bank of America (BAC), were deleted. The DJSI World Index covers the top 10 percent of largest 2,500 companies in the Dow Jones World Index. Toyota earned the leading position on the DJSI World Index in the automobile industry due to strong eco-efficiency performance, a proactive greenhouse gas (GHG) mitigation strategy, and high corporate average fuel economy. The Japanese car manufacturer also exhibited best practice in managing lower-carbon technologies, such as hybrid and fuel-cell technology, and maintains a strong life-cycle management of its products. DaimlerChrysler was dropped because of poorer fuel economy, the lack of a systematic CO2 strategy, and comparatively lower improvement in the eco-efficiency of operations. Over this past year, the DJSI World increased by 23.1% while the DJ World Index went up by 22.7% and the MSCI World rose by 21.2%. (SocialFunds.com, William Baue, 9/12/03) Redefining Directorship "For the first time, governance is as much about compliance as it is about board and corporate performance. Now is the time for action, yet there are still more questions than answers as directors begin to implement boardroom reforms." Answer these questions and more at the NACD 2003 Annual Corporate Governance Conference, which bills itself as the premier gathering of both public and private company board members for more than two decades. Agenda. IRRC Teams with Glass, Lewis & Co Investor Responsibility Research Center and San Francisco's Glass, Lewis & Co. are billing their new proxy voting service as a conflict-free option, in contrast to that offered by Institutional Shareholder Services. Dow Jones Newswires, September 4, 2003. The introduction of competing services in the marketplace may benefit institutional investors by giving them access to a diversity of opinion. Ms. Soulé, of Glass & Lewis, thinks that many institutional investors, particularly the larger ones, will buy both sets of recommendations before deciding on how to vote their proxies. The Voting Agency Service can decouple the recommendations from the voting mechanism, allowing clients to vote against Glass Lewis' recommendation while still retaining IRRC's voting services. Sixth Director Training and Certification Program on October 8-10, UCLA More than a dozen world-class subject matter experts will cover every aspect of being a successful corporate director. This two-day intensive director-level educational event is designed for executives, directors, and officers of private and public companies. For more information, see DIRECTORS.ORG. Five Indian Cos Rank High Five Indian companies rank high in a recent Corporate Governance Poll published in the latest issue of Asiamoney magazine.
Nonpublic CFOs see value in adopting new accounting standards Should privately held companies apply corporate governance standards that are mandated for publicly traded companies to their own businesses? Many financial executives from nonpublic companies say yes. In a new survey commissioned by Robert Half International, 1,356 CFOs from privately held companies to address the issue of governance. Thirty-eight percent of CFOs said private firms would benefit from implementing the same practices as are required of public companies under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002; 38 percent of respondents were undecided. (White Paper Examines Corporate Governance Trends Impacting Private Businesses, Accounting.smartpros.com, 9/12/03) Back to the top NYSE Overhaul Needed Floor traders were putting together a petition calling for Grasso's ouster. We're looking for the final NYSE report on corporate governance reform in early October" as part of a broad review, said an SEC spokesman. Access Denied? In "Access denied!" Hoffer Kaback (Directors & Boards) argues that once having elected a board, how can shareholders then seek to challenge a board's considered decision of nominating a slate through a company proxy that is, itself, in large part the formal product and document of those same board members in their capacity as representatives of those shareholders. Kaback sees this as an "analytical pretzel," where self-referential, circular, and renvoi problems are troubling. Mr. Kaback notes that if the SEC acts to "recreate the proxy world," "corporate elections as we know them will forever be transformed." Yes, they'll include an ounce of democracy. Average is Best? According to a recent study of 1,600 firms by GovernanceMetrics International Inc., companies with the worst corporate governance ratings returned 5.4% for the 12 months ended Aug. 12, compared with 11% for all stocks rated. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 9.7% in the 12 months ended Aug. 12. Over three years, the worst corporations lost an average of 13% a year compared with a loss of 1.8% for all companies. The Dow Jones industrials lost an average of 3.7% annually during that period. Highly rated firms beat those currently rated near the bottom over five and 10 years as well. "But good governance doesn't automatically make you rich," according to the report in the Wall Street Journal. "While bad governance makes for bad returns, buying companies with top-notch governance won't necessarily mean higher returns. While the companies that get top governance scores did best during the past three years, corporations with average ratings won the five- and 10-year contests." (Weak Boardrooms And Weak Stocks Go Hand in Hand, WSJ, 9/9/03) That seeming anomaly is easily explained. Many companies with the best corporate governance are the recent beneficiaries of intervention by activist shareholders like Ralph Whitworth, Burt Denton, and Andrew Shapiro who have been, in Maureen Nevin Duffy's terms, "pushing back." They've taken poorly performing companies and turned them around by instituting corporate governance reforms. Ms. Duffy's Corporate Governance Fund Report is the only publication systematically following these crusaders. Duffy provides coverage of the recent Council of Institutional Investors meeting. She reports that Ralph Whitworth said everyone knows you have to dance with the one that brought you to the dance. When push comes to shove corporate board members are more likely to vote with the one who put them on the board. Shareholders have to get a ticket to the dance. Open access to the corporate ballot would provide that ticket. Whitworth contends that none of the now notorious companies like Tyco and Enron would've set off a trigger event under upcoming SEC rules. The issue is to be proactive not reactive. If board members felt truly vulnerable under challenge, most companies would respond. Other factors being equal, over the long run, companies with excellent corporate governance will provide excellent returns. That's what I'm betting on. National Coalition of Corporate Reform In a keynote speech at the fall meeting of the Council of Institutional Investors, New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi, who oversees $90 billion in pension funds, called for investors to form an activist group that will police poorly behaving companies. The group would pursue its efforts through lobbying, litigation, proxy voting, and intervention in the regulatory process. Hevesis proposal to form the NCCR has been endorsed by a number of officials including California Treasurer Philip Angelides, Pennsylvania Treasurer Barbara Hafer, AFSCME International President Gerald McEntee, North Carolina Treasurer Richard Moore, AFL-CIO President John Sweeney, and California Controller Steve Westly. There are also expressions of support from New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, CALPERS Board President Sean Harrigan and New York City Comptroller William C. Thompson, Jr. An organizing meeting for the group is planned for early October. The goal of the coalition is to reform corporate governance and restore confidence in the financial markets. NCCR will unite institutional and individual investors, labor leaders, corporate CEOs, elected officials and community leaders in support of a program of corporate governance reforms, regulation and legislation, Hevesi said. (press release, 9/3/03) Back to the top CREF Faces Shareholder Resolution on Divestment of Gold Mining Companies On August 11, the College Retirement Equities Fund (pension fund for college/university faculty and staff), which offers the largest singly managed stock account in the word, notified the Securities and Exchange Commission that it was withdrawing its No-action request and would include an amended shareholder proposal requesting a vote at its November 2003 Annual Meeting on divestment of gold mining companies from CREF stock accounts. RESOLUTION TO CREF ON DIVESTMENT FROM GOLD MINING
It is unclear how much environmental liability, cleanup responsibility, and remediation costs may exist, and no existing audit contains information on any environmental liability. SEC Comment Deadline Draws Near September 15, 2003 is the deadline for public comments on SEC rulemaking release 34-48301: Disclosure Regarding Nominating Committee Functions and Communications between Security Holders and Boards of Directors. One of the more interesting comment letters was submitted by Mr. David A. Smith. His generously footnoted comments reference source materials and specific regulations in support of points influenced by his ongoing attempts to influence State Street Corporation (NYSE: STT). His efforts and those of others are documented at Shareholders Online, a site operated by Patrick Jorstad. I asked Mr. Smith to summarize his thought provoking recommendations for readers of CorpGov.Net. He graciously provided us with the following points:
Mutual Fund Fraud Eliot Spitzer, the New York attorney general, found major mutual fund companies engaging in fraudulent after-market trading practices with privileged institutional investors. Canary Capital Partners, has agreed to settle with Mr. Spitzer's office, returning $30 million in profits and paying a $10 million penalty. While Bank of America's mutual fund family, Nations Funds, is named most prominently in Spitzer's complaint, prosecutors also mentioned the names of other major fund companies that had provided similar trading benefits to institutional clients, including Janus, Security Trust Company and the mutual fund division at Bank One. Academic research has estimated that mutual fund shareholders lose billions of dollars annually due to the trading abuses that are the subject of Attorney General Spitzer's ongoing investigation. (see Spitzer's press release, 9/3/03; NYTimes, Mutual Funds Allowed Fraudulent Trading, Spitzer Says, 9/3/03) Only a few years ago Matthew P. Fink, President of the Investment Company Institute boasted that "over 80 million individual shareholders own mutual funds, nearly one in two households. Our industry opened the capital markets to all investors, and we have done so without scandal, without government bailouts, without betraying the trust and confidence of our shareholders." (2000 Mutual Funds and Investment Management Conference: Keynote Address) As recently as June 2003 Paul Roye, director of the SEC Division of Investment Management, credited the lack of scandal in the investment company industry to the fact that many funds have compliance officers and effective compliance procedures already in place. Yet, his division found no compliance controls in place as all at some investment company complexes. (Roye Outlines Investment Management Divisions Agenda) Let's see if they get religion. Handy's Democratic Vision The Fall 2003 edition of Strategy + Business, carries an informative article on one of the gods of modern business literature, Charles Handy. A good summary of Handys influence is found in a quote from Warren Bennis, If Peter Drucker is responsible for legitimizing the field of management and Tom Peters for popularizing it, then Charles Handy should be known as the person who gave it a philosophical elegance and eloquence that was missing from the field.
Perhaps two of the most important factors are relatively high employee ownership and unionization. One indicates commitment to the firm, the other is a crucible of democracy in the workplace. Back to the top
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