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News from April 2002. The news is free; your purchases from Amazon help us pay the bills.![]()
April 2002 ExxonMobil A major study from Claros Consulting will show that ExxonMobil's attitude towards global warming could cost the company's shareholders billions of dollars in coming years. The Claros Consulting report finds that ExxonMobil's climate-change strategy involves unnecessary risks and missed opportunities - and is helping its competitors more than ExxonMobil itself. Commissioned by shareholder activist Robert A.G. Monks, CERES and Campaign ExxonMobil, the study also details the five steps shareholders can take to encourage ExxonMobil management to act responsibly on climate change. The release of the report comes about one month before ExxonMobil shareholders will vote on two related resolutions at the company's annual stockholder meeting on May 29, 2002. Speakers during the live, two-way media briefing (including Q&A) will be:
TO PARTICIPATE: A live, two-way telenews media briefing will take place at 1-800/966-6338 (or 1-415/217-0050 outside the U.S.) at 1:30 p.m. EDT on May 2, 2002. Ask for the "ExxonMobil study" or "global warming" call. To ensure that you hear the media briefing from the beginning, make sure to call in by 1:25 p.m. Options Aren't Free Stock options accounted for 58% of CEO pay at big American companies last year and diluted corporate equity at America's top 200 corporations by 16.4% of total shares outstanding as of 2000. Accounting treatment of options has overstated profits by a little over 10% in 1998 but this has risen to an average of 19.7% in 2000 and a staggering 72.8% in the case of information-technology companies. Unlike wages and other benefits, options are not subtracted from current earnings. President Bush's suggestions for improving corporate governance avoided the issue. But the International Accountancy Standards Board will produce a new draft standard on options in the autumn. According the The Economist, "There are no good arguments for continuing to pretend that options cost nothing. The rules should at last reflect reality." (An expense by any other name, 4/4/02) Without Warning According to a report by Bloomberg News, Andersen's apparent unwillingness to sound warnings about Enron's financial health was not unusual. In 54% of the 673 largest bankruptcies of public companies since 1996, auditors provided no warning in annual financial statements before the bankruptcy filing. System Software Associates, for example, was given a clean audit, even though the company was being investigated by the SEC for alleged accounting fraud. Investors lost $119.8 billion in the 10 largest bankruptcies following audits that raised no concerns. Bloomberg also noted that Andersen actually issued audit warnings before bankruptcies more often than any of the Big Five accounting firms. Bloomberg also found that auditors are much more likely to raise concerns with small rather than large companies. The implication: professional services firms don't want to risk losing big accounts by issuing warnings. In the 50 largest bankruptcy cases since 1996, only 14 of those companies received an auditor's caution letter. Auditors issued caution letters to 70% of the 50 smallest companies that declared bankruptcy. (see Teetering on the Brink at CFO.com) Survey Results on Board Compensation BoardSeat, a Silicon Valley search firm that specializes exclusively in board director and advisory board searches and consulting, published a report on the compensation and administration of boards of directors and advisory boards of venture capital-backed companies. Call 415-648-0808 to order. A few highlights are as follows:
CalPERS Focus List CalPERS' new Focus List consists of only five companies. They include: Lucent Technologies of Murray Hill, New Jersey; NTL, Inc. of New York, New York; Qwest Communications of Denver, Colorado; Cincinnati Financial Corporation of Cincinnati, Ohio; and Gateway Computers of San Diego, California. However, CalPERS is closely monitoring four other companies. Possible actions regarding the companies will be disclosed throughout the proxy season. Paper Tigers A PricewaterhouseCoopers survey reported in Investor Relations Business found that, although institutional investors hold 60% of the shares at most major companies, they don't wield much influence. Of company executives surveyed, 34% said the influence of institutional investors is neutral and over a quarter said they have no influence at all! The vast majority put this down to good investor relations - keeping institutional investors informed about long-term strategies. The 10 largest institutional investors typically own 27% of large firms; the top 5 own just under 20% and the largest holds a 9% stake. (IRB, 4/22/02, Many Institutions Take a Back Seat) Back to the top
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