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“Say on Pay” Shareholder Advisory Votes on Executive Compensation. Gillian Hobson July 2008. Historical Perspective. Underlying concerns are not new Payment of unreasonable or excessive compensation by public corporations may be challenged on two distinct bases: Doctrine of waste
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“Say on Pay”Shareholder Advisory Votes on Executive Compensation Gillian Hobson July 2008
Historical Perspective • Underlying concerns are not new • Payment of unreasonable or excessive compensation by public corporations may be challenged on two distinct bases: • Doctrine of waste • Breach of duty to act in good faith and with due care
What Are “Say-on-Pay” Proposals? • Annual, advisory (nonbinding) shareholder vote on executive compensation • “Say on Pay” proposals have gained steam due to recent media and regulatory scrutiny over excessive CEO pay and new executive compensation disclosures. • Since 2003, practice has been mandated in the U.K.
Legislative Initiatives • Proponents have sought enactment of the “Shareholder Vote on Executive Compensation Act,” H.R. 1257/S. 1181, sponsored by Congressman Barney Frank (D-MA) and Senator Barack Obama, which would mandate an annual vote on executive compensation. The bill passed the House 269-134 in 2007, but has not yet been considered in the Senate. • On June 10, 2008, Senator John McCain publicly announced support for proposed reforms to require “all aspects of a CEO’s pay, including any severance agreements” to be approved by shareholders.
Policy Concerns • Undermines the board’s ability to exercise its business judgment? • Is it really a referendum on the board’s decision making? • Yes-or-no vote is not meaningful feedback and shareholders can register dissatisfaction by withholding votes from directors.
Policy Concerns (continued) • Corporations are representative democracies not pure democracies • However, unique source of potential conflicts of interest for boards • Shifting leverage from one constituency to another should be examined carefully • May result in cursory reviews by investors and rote pay packages from boards
Policy Concerns (continued) • Boards can police themselves by creating stronger links between pay and performance • Would discussions between institutional shareholders and board members be more effective in bringing about change? • Are shareholders able to determine whether pay is appropriate • Shareholder review of proxy information is cursory; may lead to hollow decisions
2008 Proxy Season Results • Activist shareholders submitted “say-on-pay” proposals to at more than 90 U.S. companies in 2008 up from 73 last year and nine in 2006.1 • More than 40 of Fortune 100 received proposals in 20081 • Proposals failed at financial services firms – Citigroup, Wachovia, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley 1Preliminary results of Sherman and Sterling corporate governance survey.
2008 Proxy Season Results (continued) • Policy adopted: AFLAC and Verizon • Proposals received majority support: Blockbuster, Ingersoll-Rand, JC Penney, Motorola, Valero Energy, Apple and Lexmark • Proposed to implement in the future: RiskMetrics (ISS)
Avoiding a “Say on Pay” Proposal • Enhance the transparency of executive compensation disclosures • Avoid adopting aggressive executive pay packages • Have the compensation committee carefully review its internal processes • Consider reviewing current executive compensation programs against the current ISS and other proxy advisory firm voting policies with regard to executive compensation • Consider engaging major shareholders in a dialogue about executive compensation programs
What should you do if your company receives a “Say on Pay” proposal? • Work towards an acceptable compromise with the sponsoring shareholder • “Say on Pay” proposal couched as a non-binding request for the board to implement an annual “Say on Pay” advisory vote can not be excluded under Rule 14a-8 • Try to defeat the proposal at the annual meeting • Voluntarily adopt a “Say on Pay” policy and rely on the “substantial implementation” exclusion under Rule 14a-8 to avoid a vote on the shareholder proposal (Last Resort)