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Colorado Covered Colorado Public Employees' Retirement Association has embraced covered call selling as a way of "having your cake and eating it too," according to Norman G. Benedict, deputy executive director for investments at the $31 billion fund. The hedging strategy designed to limit downside risk allows them to hold 80% in equities with the sam risk of a normal equity allocation of 65%. The obvious drawback to covered calls is the limit they also impose on upside gains but in today's volatile market, that's a risk more might be willing to take. Ohio and Wisconsin pension funds are apparently looking into the possibilities. (Pensions & Investments, "Colorado's use of call strategy covers its 80% equities allocation," 5/14/01) Great Opportunity! The Center for Working Capital is a nonprofit corporation based in Washington, DC, with a current staff of five. The Center is looking for an executive director to oversee all activities of the organization. This person will report to the Board of Directors. 1. Pension fund trustee education and training programs; Responsibilities of the executive director will include:
The ideal candidate should have:
Compensation: The compensation for the Executive Director will include a salary comparable to executive directors of not-for-profits of a similar size and an excellent benefits package. To apply News from the Corporate Monitoring Project Mark Latham and company have put out Newsletter #11. Support for the "Shareowners' Alternative Voting Information (SAVI)" proposal to let shareowners choose an independent proxy advisor was mixed this year. Mr. Latham represented me at the Equus II shareholder's meeting and we won approximately 17.8% of the vote. As far as I know, this was without major institutional backing. However, at Gillette Latham's proposal only picked up 2.4% of the vote, including the 1,842,391 cast by CalPERS. Both firms lost about 40-45% of their value during the last two years. You'd think both groups of shareholders would be equally receptive to innovative ideas for recovery. I was disappointed to learn that Latham's proposal to let shareowners vote to choose the auditor, instead of just rubber-stamping the Board's choice, was killed by the SEC as an ordinary business decision. Clearly, the importance of auditor independence was raised by no less than the chair of the SEC itself. According to Arthur Levitt, shareholders could be compromised if audit partners are concerned about losing lucrative consulting business. Maybe next year. In the meantime, I highly recommend subscribing to Mr. Latham's informative newsletter and keeping up on the Project's latest activities. Back to the top Emerging Trends Half of Americans log onto the Internet on a daily basis. Increasingly, we want a say in how "our" corporations are governed. Just as sharing information with employees led to a managerial revolution that generated wealth, informed investors are also adding value. Corporate Board Member, a journal for corporate directors and boards, has formed an Academic Council to participate in identifying emerging trends in corporate governance and issues impacting today's corporate boardrooms. The council - made up of the leading academic authorities on board governance representing the country's most prestigious universities and graduate programs will convene for its first set of roundtable discussions in Boston, Massachusetts on May 30. Willamette Employees Silenced On 5/7 the Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition reported that employees of Willamette Industries Inc. have shut down a Web site that opposed an ongoing hostile bid for Willamette being made by Weyerhauser Co. According to the report, the US Securities and Exchange Commission informed a representative of the employee group that the group would have to file a Form 14D-9 with the Commission if it wished to keep the site up. The group reportedly decided to close the Web site when it learned that legal fees for such a filing could be "as high as $50,000." Volume 2, Issue 33 of CyberSecuritiesLaw Tribune (Week of May 21, 2001) Proxy Monitor Supports Dissident Slate at Willamette Industries New York-based Proxy Monitor, a leading proxy voting advisor to institutional investors, announced today that it is recommending clients vote for the dissident slate of director nominees brought forth by Weyerhaeuser Co. at Willamette Industries, Inc. (NYSE: WLL) annual meeting. The slate of directors is scheduled to come to a vote at the meeting on June 7, 2001. Weyerhaeuser has made numerous attempts to negotiate a merger and in doing so has made a couple of tender offers including the most recent on May 10, 2001, offering a price of $50 per share. The Willamette board rejected the $5.5 billion offer as a gross under-valuation of the company. Proxy Monitor said in its recommendation to clients: Will the West Face a Boardroom "Trade Deficit?" Booming Western economies take great pride in the powerful success their economic structure provides and even feel a bit smug, sure that they have nothing to fear from those young economies of Asia. Such hubris nearly led to trade disaster a few decades ago -- but a replay could now be underway in a vital new arena -- good corporate governance. Exercise in Creative Writing Phil Goldstein, of Opportunity Partners, continues his creative use of SEC filings in his battle with Lincoln National Convertible Securities Fund, Inc. His latest, DFAN14A "THIS IS THE LETTER LNV MANAGEMENT WILL NEVER SEND YOU!! (so I wrote it for them)," is so creative that we decided to republish the entire letter here. Further information can be obtained from Dear Shareholder: When we originally told you that the incumbent directors were "duly elected" at last year's meeting of stockholders by a "valid vote of the Fund's shareholders" that was not really true. After a trial, a federal judge determined that (1) we breached our fiduciary duty to shareholders by conducting an illegal election last year (2) we violated the anti-fraud provision of the SEC's proxy rules by failing to disclose how we staggered our own terms so that shareholders could not later de-stagger them. As a result, the judge ordered us to conduct another election for the two seats that were filled last year. The court's opinion can be found at the following address: http://www.paed.uscourts.gov/documents/opinions/01D0329P.HTM.
Finally, if you have any questions, we have good news. In accordance with our new open-door policy, you no longer have to talk to our proxy solicitors. We are now willing to speak to any shareholder. Please call the Fund's secretary, David Connor, at (215) 255-8864 and ask to speak directly to me. (I still need someone to filter out crank calls.) In the meantime, I will try to find out what the Fund's legal expenses are. Thank you for your continued support. Who cares about fiduciary duty anyway? Back to the top Korn/Ferry Launches Board Services Practice in China Korn/Ferry International (NYSE:KFY), the world's leading recruitment firm, announced the launch of its Board Services Practice in "Greater China." The new practice will focus on providing independent board of director searches and corporate governance counsel to clients in China under the leadership of Korn/Ferry Managing Director, Robin Sears. Sears began his career with the firm in Tokyo in 1994 and has since worked at the CEO- and board-level for global clients in the telecommunications, private banking, insurance and professional services areas, and additionally led Korn/Ferry's Advanced Technology Practice in Asia. Sears will continue to serve those clients as Managing Director, Asia/Pacific Client Services, based in Hong Kong. Delaware Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Preferred Shareholder Rights Andrew Shapiro, President of San Francisco-based Lawndale Capital Management (phone 415-288-2330), announced a long-sought legal victory in Delaware Supreme Court against Agrium, Inc. (AGU) for former Nu-West Industries Preferred Shareholders. The Delaware Supreme Court affirmed an October 2000 Chancery Court ruling that dividends on Nu-West's Preferred Stock accrued daily to the date the Preferred Stock was redeemed and against Agrium's position that dividends accrued annually. Mr. Shapiro initiated this action in 1996 to enforce the Preferred Shareholders' rights when Agrium management and directors attempted to deny shareholders what was rightfully owed. We've Moved The offices of Corporate Governance have recently relocated to 9295 Yorkship Court, Elk Grove, CA 95758-7413. E-mail address for the editor remains jm@corpgov.net. We are sorry for recent disruptions and sparse postings. We hope to be fully up and running within a couple of weeks. Minority Shareholder Treatment Improves Mark Mobius, of Templeton Emerging Markets Fund finds that Asian companies are starting to improve their corporate governance and treatment of minority shareholders. Improvements are driven by a concern that institutions may invest elsewhere if shareholder rights are not protected. Two years ago, Mobius campaigned in Hong Kong against companies placing new shares without first offering them to all existing investors, to enable them to avoid their holdings being diluted. (Minority shareholders' lot improving) Limits to Activism Animal rights activists, upset with animal testing at Huntingdon Life Sciences Group PLC have taken their campaign to brokerage firms who deal in their stock. Protesters marched into the offices of securities firms, disrupting business, and then demonstrated at the homes of executives to intimidate them to stop trading their stock. Their tactics have met with success. Schwab Europe announced it will bar its clients from dealing in Huntington securities. MSF, the union for skilled and professional people, gave its whole- hearted support to the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI) in its threat to boycott financial institutions who give in to animal rights extremists. (see PR Newswire, 5/2) Even social investors Matthew Kiernan, of Innovest Strategic Value Investors, and Peter Kinder of KLD & Co., have criticized their tactics of personal intimidation. The April 30th edition of Pensions and Investments carries an editorial, "Brokers, not soldiers," which is critical of the intimidating tactics used at Huntingdon and sees parallels in those used by Social Choice for Social Change: Campaign for a new TIAA-CREF. We embrace their goal of getting TIAA-CREF to invest 5 to 10 percent of social choice account assets ($200-400 million) in companies that are models of social and environmental responsibility. Social Choice has not, as far as I know, disrupted business as brokerage firms, but they have taken their protest to the high-rise residence of John H. Biggs, its CEO. The borders of civility are not immediately apparent but we agree with P&I that brokers should not have to be soldiers and that they should demand protection from the police, rather than giving in to intimidation. Champion of Civil Rights and African Affairs, Leon H. Sullivan Dies at Age 78 Reverend Leon H. Sullivan, convener of the 6th African-African American Summit and world leader on Africa and related issues has succumbed to leukemia, announced his daughter Hope Sullivan Rose. Global Corporate Governance Forum Seeks Program Manager The Global Corporate Governance Forum, founded by the World Bank and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) promotes global, regional and local initiatives aimed at improving the institutional framework and practices of corporate governance of middle and low income countries. The Forums main activities include:
The Forum is governed by a Steering Committee and operated day-to-day by a Secretariat. The Steering Committee defines and directs the strategy of the Forum and oversees the Secretariat. The Secretariat is responsible for carrying out the work program of the Forum and is led by a Program Manager who heads a small team of professional and administrative staff. Applications and expressions of interest should be forwarded by May 11th. For additional information, see the Forum's announcement. Will corporations trump nations? William Greider, a columnist for The Nation, sees corporate governance of a different form in FTAA negotiations designed to expand NAFTAs rules to cover the entire western hemisphere. Chapter 11 of NAFTA allows corporations to demand compensation if the profit-making potential of their ventures has been injured by government decisions. Greider cites the familiar case of Methanex, which filed a $970 million claim against the United States after California banned gasoline additive, MTBE, after the EPA reported potential cancer risks and at least 10,000 groundwater sites were found polluted by the substance. As many as 15 cases have been launched to date, according to Greider but no one can be sure of the number, since there's no requirement to inform the public. "The contesting parties choose the judges who will arbitrate, choose which issues and legal principles are to apply and also decide whether the public has any access to the proceedings." Unlike other trade agreements, NAFTA allows corporations to litigate on their own, without having to ask national governments to act on their behalf in global forums. This isn't the corporate governance advocated here. While corporations should be accountable to investors, they shouldn't trump the rights of nations to protect the environment, the rights of labor and their own cultural values. Back to the top
Contact: All material on the Corporate Governance site is copyright ©1995- by Corporate Governance and James McRitchie except where otherwise indicated. All rights reserved. |
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