This article is part of
an ongoing seriesabout the Shareholder Bill of Rights
currently in Congress. Together, we can ensure that this
bill truly represents our interests as shareholders and
individual investors.
Take a quick glance at the resumes of the now-defunct
Lehman Brothers board. You'll see an
impressive smattering of Ivy League graduates and
senior-level executives with decades of management experience
at companies such as
Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS),
IBM (NYSE: IBM), and
Halliburton (NYSE: HAL).
This was not a board of stupid people. And yet they let
the company over which they presided pursue a truly stupid
course of business.
Second-grade arithmetic was all that was required to
recognize that letting Lehman
leverage 30-to-1exposed shareholders to disaster. All it
would take was a mere 3.3% dip in the value of the
company's assets to wipe out the
company.
In the end, that's exactly what
happened.Â
The current situation
What went wrong at Lehman? Why
didn't the board do its job?
Â
This group of highly educated and successful people -- the
very people elected to the corporate board to provide
oversight over management and ensure that the company
operated with shareholders' best interests
in mind -- failed. Big time. Instead, in the words of Lehman
CEO and Chairman of the Board Richard Fuld, the board was
“wonderfully supportive†of
him.
“The board … had
served too long, was too out of touch with massive changes in
the industry, had too little of their own net worth at risk
and was too compromised for rigorous independent
oversight,†Nell Minnow of the Corporate Library
told the House committee investigating
Lehman's collapse. One Lehman board member
put it more bluntly: “Our board is a
joke.â€
One provision of the Shareholder Bill of Rights Act would
allow a shareholder or a group of shareholders to actually
put competing candidates on the company ballot.
Typically, the current board is responsible for nominating
new members. In practice, management often gets a strong say
in who gets picked to represent shareholders on the board.
While shareholders can wage proxy battles to elect their own
candidates, as they have done recently to varying success at
companies like
Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO) and
Target (NYSE: TGT), it's a
relatively rare and costly process. Many experts believe that
the sometimes insular way directors are nominated presents
its share of problems.
When we asked
Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE: BRK-A) (NYSE:
BRK-B) CEO Warren Buffett for his thoughts on the subject, he
told us that many directors love the job for the salary and
sociability and are afraid to challenge management on
important issues like executive compensation that might get
them kicked off the board or prevent them from being invited
onto other boards. There's a lot of money at stake; last
year, the average compensation for an S&P 500 board
member was more than $217,000.
Unless shareholders are empowered to hold
directors' feet to the fire, boardrooms
will continue to be populated by people who have all the
incentive in the world not to rock the boat -- even when
confronted with dumb business decisions, as occurred with
Lehman.
What the bill would do
That brings us back to the current proposal in front of
Congress. The idea behind the bill is to make it easier for
ordinary shareholders to get representation on boards of
directors.
In particular, the bill calls upon the SEC to establish
rules allowing any shareholder or group of shareholders that
has owned 1% or more of a company's voting securities for at
least the two years preceding the company's next regular
annual meeting to nominate candidates for the board using the
company's own proxy materials. That would make challenging a
current board a lot simpler than it is now. Continued... |