Friday, July 5, 2013

Shareholders: Remember Your Rights on Independence Day

The Fourth of July brings to mind barbecues and fireworks. The idea of living in a free country underlies these festivities. It's the perfect holiday for thinking about freedom and the rights of individuals, as well as the importance of having rights such as free speech and voting in political elections.

Those who have invested in public companies have votes, too. For a long while, the corporate governance element of stock investing got lost in the bubbly times over the last several decades. As long as stocks made money, few investors thought much about corporate governance and their rights as shareholders.

However, we're moving into a more informed, more critical era. Incidents like the shareholder vote regarding Jamie Dimon's dual role at JPMorgan Chase illustrate that shareholder votes are important, and shareholders are beginning to take voting seriously.

Big bangs
Speaking of fireworks, shareholder votes have become more interesting at many companies this year. CEO compensation was previously one of the most accessible issues individual investors recognized, but other corporate governance issues are apparently building in shareholder support.

Majority voting is one of these. Really, majority voting is a simple and common-sense policy. It simply means that a majority of votes are required for functions such as director elections. Under plurality voting, a director can be elected with just one lousy vote. (Yes, that is outrageously similar to the kinds of things that would go on in a banana republic, in case you were wondering.)

This past proxy season, more investors have apparently seen the light when it comes to majority voting, and believe it will be a good thing at their companies. Check out the following significant vote results.

ExxonMobil (NYSE: XOM  ) is a massive and popular blue chip company. However, a sizable 45% of its shareholders voted in favor of majority voting. Devon Energy (NYSE: DVN  ) shareholders pretty much split in half on the majority voting issue, with 51% voting for the policy. In that case, individual investors who sat on the sidelines and didn't vote (and we know that many still do) could have made a difference in a victory that barely squeaked by. Aetna (NYSE: AET  ) experienced a landslide -- a landslide defeat on this issue, that is. John Chevedden's proposal for majority voting received 76% of shareholders' votes.

Significant shareholder revolts
Executive compensation remains the less esoteric issue, and it's alive and well in 2013 as majority voting gains more traction. This year, a few high-profile say-on-pay defeats or squeakers should grab our attention.

Target (NYSE: TGT  ) shareholders just barely approved the company's compensation policy. In contrast to Devon Energy's narrow defeat, Target gained narrow approval, with just 52% of its shareholders voting for its executive pay policies. That's an even bigger deal when you consider that in last year's say-on-pay vote, 83% of shareholders gave the thumbs-up to Target's executive compensation.

Corporate governance experts and proxy advisor Glass Lewis didn't approve of Target's pay policies, or ability to parallel pay and performance. One issue is that one of Target's executives received a one-time stock award valued at $2.7 million, and he's not even CEO; he's the discount retailer's new chief marketing officer. 

Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE: ANF  ) has been a serial offender when it comes to shareholder abuse in the executive pay arena. It recently lost its say-on-pay vote when a pathetic 19% of its shareholders voted in favor of CEO Mike Jeffries' pay. In fact, shareholder support for Abercrombie's compensation scheme has been deteriorating over the course of several years.

Speaking of abusive CEO pay rates, corporate governance junkies know that the average ratio of CEO pay to that of the average American worker is crazy; as of the AFL-CIO's latest calculation for 2012, the ratio was 354-to-1. 

If you think that's bad, just wait. Although Dodd-Frank has not yet mandated that companies disclose their specific internal pay ratios, Bloomberg conducted a fascinating bit of number crunching in April. According to the research, Jeffries' $48.1 million in fiscal 2012 pay created a compensation ratio of 1,640 times that of the average worker. Apparently flattery gets you everywhere in that company, notorious for hiring and exalting "beautiful people" -- it'd better, since they sure as heck aren't making much compared to Jeffries.

Barbecues and a side of food for thought
Beer, burgers, and pyrotechnics can certainly distract us from the reasons we celebrate July 4. However, let's remember that we do have rights and that we can and should use them. That goes for shareholders, too. After all, if everyone's brainwashed into thinking their votes and voice don't matter, it's a slippery slope into tyranny in one form or another.

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Check back at Fool.com for more of Alyce Lomax's columns on environmental, social, and governance issues.

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