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The news is free; your purchases from Amazon help us pay the bills. Proxy Monitor Acquires Investors Research Bureau Proxy Monitor, a leading proxy voting advisor to institutional investors, announced its acquisition of Investors Research Bureau, Inc., publisher of Securities Class Action Alert, the authoritative publication on federal securities class action lawsuits. "Tracking securities litigation, and making sure that they participate in settlements and judgments, is an increasingly important compliance responsibility for our clients," said James E. Heard, Proxy Monitors CEO. "This acquisition will enable us to provide Proxy Monitors clients with timely, accurate and comprehensive information about class action suits nationwide." Pension Board Sets Own Course The California Public Employees' Retirement System's board voted to invest $125 million in CIM California Urban Real Estate Fund, despite objections from investment staff who recommended only $50 million because of the firm's inexperience managing money for institutions, according to the ISS Friday Report, 9/22. California Treasurer Philip Angelides (who often favors the "double dividend" of investing in California), State Controller Kathleen Connell and CalPERS President William Crist objected to the investment. The Sacramento Bee reported that former board members Villalobos and Shimada, as well as retired state state Senator William Campbell, will split a $2.5 million "placement agent" fee from CIM. Name and Shame Regulations which took effect in July required UK pension funds to disclose the extent, if any, to which "social, environmental or ethical concerns are taken into account in the selection, retention and realization of investments." They don't need to create such policies but, if they have them, they must be disclosed. Expectations are that fund managers and analysts will be under pressure to become familiar with socially responsible investment practices if they want to attract pension fund business. Friends of the Earth and others have promised to name and shame those funds that state they apply no social, environmental or ethical considerations but others warn that fund trustees aren't the nation's moral arbiters; that's government's job. To learn more see, U.K. Pension Funds Forced to Reveal Ethical Policies, Kit Bingham, ISS Issue Alert, 7-8/00. Back to the top AFSCME Sides with Tenet The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, owner of 6.5 million Tenet Healthcare Corp shares valued around $235 million, urges Tenet shareholders to reject a slate of dissident directors headed by Dr. M. Lee Pearce and to support Tenet's nominees. Their letter, cites Pearce's conflicts of interest with Tenet and its shareholders and his lack of qualifications as a corporate governance reformer. Once again working capital is leading with full disclosure and smart tactics. See AFSCME Lobbies Shareholders to Vote Against Dissident Slate at Tenet Citing Group's Conflicts of Interest, Checkered Governance Record. However, Californias public employee pension system CalPERS has announced its 1.8 million Tenet shares will support the Pearce slate, citing Tenets failure to honor shareholder votes for annual director election and proposed "excessive" stock option grants to board members. Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), the nation's leading institutional shareholder advisory firm and provider of corporate ISS was particularly biting in its commentary on Tenet's corporate governance philosophy: "Management ... believes that varying industry and regulatory forces demand that directors take a longer-term view of company strategy and that a staggered board provides the continuity to achieve that end. This paternalistic argument -- that shareholders somehow must be saved from themselves -- does not hold water in today's investment and corporate governance landscape. Effective corporate governance depends upon the board being accountable to shareholders ... and we believe the Tenet board has failed on this account." Investor Relations Advice Investor Relations on the Web by Stephen J. Dolmatch & Amy L. Goodman offers excellent advice in a reprint from American Corporate Counsel Association Docket Magazine. Find it free on FindLaw.com. Companies are responsible for the accuracy of their Internet postings if they "reasonably can be expected to reach investors or the securities markets." The article focuses on reviewing your firm's entire website from the standpoint of securities law disclosure. Major points: avoid the duty to update through the use of archives, use disclaimers, hyperlink with caution, take special precautions before and during securities offerings, avoid a general solicitation of company securities, beware of chat rooms and message boards, recognize the limitations the SEC has placed on the Internet for fair disclosure, but take advantage of the tremendous opportunities the Internet offers for investor communications. Corporate Rule or Shareholder Loss? Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman's latest article, Withering Democracy, calls attention to political contributions by corporations. Every major industrial sector except for communications/electronics now favors the Republican Party but most hedge their bets by contributing to both. Already, corporate contributions are 50 percent higher than in the 1992, and there's plenty of time to go. "The system formally remains one of one person, one vote, but is it the people or the corporations who rule?" I would further question if such contributions are a wise investment of shareholder resources. The trouble is that one company can't easily stop unless their competitors do as well. Campaign reform would pay double; more democracy for citizens, more money left for shareholder dividends or reinvestment. Improving Survival of Family Firms Privately-held companies have the advantage of being able to make long-term strategic decisions based, on "patient capital" but only if family members trust each and share a common vision for the company. Research by Whartons Family-Controlled Corporation Program (FCCP) focuses on relationship dynamics that include trust levels, goal agreement, a participatory culture and views on the long-term health and competitiveness of the business. Family leaders should invest time in building unity among shareholders and professionalizing the strategies and structures through which they interact, according to FCCP director Timothy G. Habbershon. Why they don't and how they can are the subjects of a research paper, Improving the Long-run Survival of Family Firms. Corporate Governance Responsibilities Outlined Simeon Chanduru, partner in charge of Business Risk Consulting, Ernst & Young Zimbabwe, highlights the duties and responsibilities that directors assume when they accept appointment to the board in Zimbabwe's The Financial Gazette, 9/21. For a Malaysian perspective, see Corporate governance way to renew vigour, by Cheah Foo Song, thestar.com.my, 9/5. Corporate Governance in the New Economy - Singapore The New York Institute of Finance is offering a course in Singapore (30 October 1 November 2000) which will cover topics such as: the legal environment for directors, what makes an effective board, how to assess board performance, minimizing risk, financial statements and audits, strategic planning, employee issues and future trends. For more information contact Calyn Siew, Director - Marketing (Asia Pacific), New York Institute of Finance, Tel : +65 236 9690. Size Does Matter As we reported last month, Dan Dalton and Catherine Daily, both of Indiana University, have found a positive correlation between large boards and performance. They reviewed 27 studies published over the last 40 years covering more than 20,000 firms. (Number of Directors on the Board and Financial Performance: A Meta-Analysis. Academy of Management Journal) In August's Director's Monthly, the authors explain that larger boards are better able to secure critical resources through the networks their directors create. In addition, larger boards allow coalitions to form that are more likely to challenge CEOs and moderate their dominating influence, they promote diversity and they provide an indispensable training ground for succession planning. Back to the top Board Investments Make Difference Donald Hambrick and Eric Jackson tracked the level of stock ownership at companies over a 10 year period and found that board members held an average $470,000 for top perfomers in each sector, in comparison with $80,000 for poorly performing companies. They suggest a matching purchase program so that each board member would have at least 5% of their net worth invested in the companies they serve. (CFO, September 2000, page 27) Bits Webcasting of conference call is now up to 61%, compared with 48% six months ago, according to a survey by the National Investor relations Institute. Hybrid pensions, including cash balance plans, now make up 32% of the Fortune 100's plans, according to Watson Wyatt Worldwide. Pearl Myers survey finds that 17.5% of largest 200 firms offer stock options to all employees. Corporate giving as a percent of pretax income declined between 1986 and 1996 from 2% to 1%. Pensionsnet.com aims to create greater transparency within Europe's pension fund industry by providing news and information, analysis, statistics, company details and jobs in an interactive format. International Federation of Accountants invites comment on their code of ethics regarding independence. CalPERS Shouldn't Ignore the Law The California Public Employees Retirement System Board recently voted themselves pay increases and higher reimbursements to their employers so they can put in more time on Board activities. See CalPERS board votes itself big pay increase, Sacramento Bee, 9/20/00. On the surface their action sounds fine, but the Board is ignoring the law and risks permanent alienation from its members. Back to the top Reg FD Criticised By Trade Associations Fair disclosure rules which take effect October 23rd are still coming under fire from trade associations like the Financial Executives Institute which says two business days would have been more reasonable than 24 hours for reporting accidental releases. Their members may only recognize the significance of information provided once analysts use it. Stuart Kaswell, of the National Investor Relations Institute, says "many companies will probably clam up. Reg. FD creates an uneven playing field and stymies competition - it will do the exact opposite of what it's intended to do." However, an analysis by Investor Relations Business says "those companies that make it a point not to practice selective disclosure say that the rule will not change much of what they did before." If those who have been selectively disclosing "clam up," the regulation will have served its purpose. FD mandates an even playing field for information users. Those who are not adept at providing it fairly are likely to stumble. Its up to trade associations like FEI and NIRI to build their membership and provide training so that companies have an even playing field when it comes to knowing what information is likely to be deemed materially significant. The competition for providing good information on how to live within the rules may be just beginning. Backers of FD, such as the Council of Institutional Investors are right, analysts who owe a company for selective disclosure aren't producing objective reports. FD isn't a perfect solution but it certainly is a step in the right direction. I doubt if it creates the precipice that critics imagine but only time and future SEC enforcement actions will tell. (see Criticism of Reg. FD Continues, Investor Relations Business, 9/11) Paid Exposure Wallstreetbeat.com offers monitoring and reporting exposure. Companies can send in a brief summary, and $11,250 for the first 90 days. The company also collects a fee from companies for arranging introductions to outside analysts and distributing research to brokers and investors. According to Investor Relations Business (9/11), wallstreetbeat.com's 18 own analysts write reports "at their own discretion." Companies covered "have no control over the content of reports." Of course if their reports are unfavorable, companies aren't too likely to renew, are they? They are reportedly "in negotiation with six or seven companies" for their services. I'll be stopping by their site now and then to see how business is going. I've got a feeling the SEC might also be popping by for a visit. Group Under PSLRA Defined Group created by Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes & Lerach isn't a "group" within the meaning of the 1995 Private Securities Litigation Reform Act, according to U.S. District Court Judge Jeremy Fogel who held it "beyond dispute that one of the Reform Act's primary purposes was to eradicate lawyer-driven securities fraud class actions." The Policemen and Firemen retirement System of the City of Detroit was awarded lead plaintiff status instead, even though the reportedly alleged half the damages of the solicited group. (Corporate Governance Highlights, 8/25) Exec Pay Levels Inconsistent With Healthy Democracy CEO compensation rose 535% in the 1990s, while the S&P 500 rose 297%, according to a report by the Institute for Policy Studies and United for a Fair Economy. If the minimum wage had risen as quickly, it would now be $24.13/hr. instead of $5.15. The trend toward greater inequity "is inconsistent with a healthy democracy, according to the Institute. Top execs as 50 top Internet firms held an average $235 million in unrealized options. The report also expresses concern that an increasing gap between top level public and private sector execs will lead to a government brain drain, especially since 65% of government's senior execs will be eligible for retirement by 2004. (ISS Friday Report, 9/8) In a related item, a PricewaterhouseCoopers survey found Internet firms are transitioning to exec compensation packages similar to traditional firms, large base salary and bonuses for meeting revenue and profit goals. Fewer managers are now willing to accept lower cash compensation. (ISS Friday Report, 8/25) Labor Coalition Blocks Insider Takeover The AFL-CIO and the Paper Allied-Industrial, Chemical and Energy Workers Union won a vote against the Crown Central Petroleum insider Takeover by Rosemore Acquisition, run by the Rosenberg family which also owns a controlling interest in Crown. The Rosenbergs controlled nearly 46% of Crown's voting power but the offer required a two-thirds majority of all shareholders. Labor's clout in corporate governance continues to grow. (ISS Friday Report, 8/31) Back to the top Europeans to Disclose Executive Pay Disclosure of executive pay is taboo no longer in Europe, according to a 9/11 report in the Wall Street Journal. In France the Socialist-led coalition government wants to require it through federal regulations. The Irish Stock Exchange has mandated salary disclosure a condition for listing. "The writing is on the wall: Secrecy is on the way out for executive pay," says Stephen Davis of Davis Global Advisors. Dick Cheney: Corporate Governance Hero Or Political Greedhead? Click Locally, Vote Globally That's the reported unofficial motto of proxymaster.com, a new service of Institutional Shareholder Services, which will enable institutional investors to customize their proxy voting policies and vote online for 9,000 US and 8,400 nonUS firms. (see Proxymaster website to offer proxy voting, Pensions and Investments, 9/4 or contact ) Analysts Need to Retool An editorial in Pensions and Investments (Everyone an Analyst, 9/4) praises the SEC's rule requiring broader disclosure and calls on analysts to take a new role in providing "value-added interpretation of data." "Analysts have spent far too much time trying to estimate, with the help of nods and winks form corporate managments', next quarter's earnings per share. But research suggests analysts' earnings estimates, despite the information from corporate managements, are unreliable." Severance Pay Reaches Obscene Levels for Failure Louis Lavelle editorializes in Business Week the with regard to CEO pay, "Nothing Succeeds Like Failure." Looking at the severance packages of failed CEOs, Lavelle finds them "insulting not just to us workers, but to shareholders as well." The latest evidence is the $9.5 million bonus given to ousted Durk I. Jager by P&G, even though during his short 17 months the stock is down 50%. "Directors should take the lead of Sunbeam Corp. (SOC), which after firing Albert J. Dunlap in the face of a disastrous restructuring and allegations of accounting improprieties, resisted his demands that he be allowed to accelerate all of his outstanding options." Business Week Calls for New Social Contract Noting the American people are upset with corporations who invade their privacy, overwork and underpay them, threaten their safety and buy off their government, a Business Week editorial (9/11) (subscription required for link) calls on corporations to take the following steps:
Cultural Exchange Promoted by Japanese Businesses Japanese firms have gotten the message...more independent board members are needed to ensure better alignment of management and shareholder interests. However, in "High-profile foreigners take seats in Japan's boardrooms" the Financial Times rightfully questions the value of substituting senior executives with little experience in other industries with foreign dignitaries. FT notes that Corazon Aquino, recently appointed to the board of Sanyo Electric, is "more famous for her yellow dresses than her knowledge of semiconductors." Former US vice president, Dan Quayle, has joined the board of Aozora Bank, the former Nippon Credit Bank. "Analysts warn the external director system may end up being little more than a cultural exchange between Japanese and foreign businessmen." Brazilian Reforms Stall Corporate governance reform has been postponed again and a vote will not come until after the October elections. Under the stalled legislation, ordinary shareholders would be guaranteed the same selling price when a company is taken over as those with a controlling interest. Minorities with a stake of 15 percent or more would be entitled to a seat on the board. The powers of Brazil's securities regulator would be strengthened and insider trading would be outlawed. Back to the top Ten Step Plan for Better Boards The Board Book: Making Your Corporate Board a Strategic Force in Your Company's Success by
Shultz also includes a discussion of director liability and future board trends. Appendices contain additional resources:
Shultz interviewed an impressive list of academics, attorneys, CEOs, consultants, directors, institutional investors, and others for background material. This allows her to pepper her book with real life examples and compelling stories. The Board Book can help boards avoid common pitfalls and investors act like owners, instead of speculators. Ethical Laws and Investments Go Hand In Hand In "Look Who Demands Profits Above All" (Los Angeles Times, 9/1) former Secretary of Labor, Robert Reich, argues that CalPERS and TIAA-CREF are only doing their job, maximizing the value of their investors' portfolios, when they refuse to consider ethics in their investments. "If we want companies to be more socially responsible, we'll have to pass laws requiring them to be so, and those laws will have to be enforced. And not just national laws...ultimately, many such laws will have to be international." Reich appeared to take a much different position while at the Department of Labor when he released a booklet, "Road to High-Performance Workplaces: A Guide to Better Jobs and Better Business Results" which argues:
While his more recent statement is true, international laws are needed and must be enforced, it is also true that pension and mutual funds have an important role in finding the correlation between responsible investments and positive returns. SRI funds have been out-performing the market, not just because they identify good management and reduce liability, but because SRI funds recognize social trends and consider them an essential part of their investment strategy. Tobacco is one example. It can only be profitable if we give little value to life and society agrees to pay for the health care needs which tobacco use creates. The Council for Responsible Public Investment estimates that California looses more than $10 billion a year from tobacco use due to health costs and time lost at work. As these "hidden" costs are revealed tobacco profits erode. Outraged citizens demand litigation, increased taxes, reduced subsidies, etc. SRI pension and mutual funds will outperform where they can identify the convergence of investment opportunities and social concerns. Back to the top Back to the top
Contact: All material on the Corporate Governance site is copyright ©1995-2000 by Corporate Governance and James McRitchie except where otherwise indicated. All rights reserved. |
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