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Corporate Governance

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Assets & liabilities separate from the owner. Why do we need ... Minimise opportunities for malfeasance. Shareholders ultimately responsible for governance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Corporate Governance


1
Corporate Governance
  • Kenneth Dyson

2
The Corporate Form
  • Artificial person
  • Independent legal existence
  • Assets liabilities separate from the owner
  • Why do we need corporate governance?
  • Advantages of corporate form necessitate
    separation of ownership control

3
Corporate Objectives
  • Maximising shareholders wealth
  • Hayek and Friedman
  • Benefit shareholders and society at large
  • Originates with Berle Means (1932)
  • What about?
  • Employees Creditors Customers Managers

4
What is Corporate Governance?
  • Capitalist definition
  • A set of methods to ensure that shareholders get
    maximum return on their funds
  • Socialist (stakeholder) definition
  • Maximise the welfare of all (potential)
    stakeholders (i.e. customers etc)
  • Codes of best practise capitalist perspective
    Calper (US) Cadbury (UK)

5
An Overview of Corporate Governance Systems
  • Two distinct cultural approaches
  • Market orientated (US UK)
  • Bank or relations based (Germany Japan)
  • Bank based
  • Long-term relationship with businesses
  • Sit on board own a large block of shares
  • Market based
  • Dispersed ownership (individuals institutions)

6
Cultural Differences
  • Europe
  • Ownership highly concentrated
  • Family ownership (Bosch, Muller etc)
  • Hostile takeovers rare (Mannesman)
  • Asia
  • Long-term relationship with banks
  • Bank holds debt equity

7
US UK Approach
  • Principal/Agent relationship
  • Principal (shareholder)
  • Agents (directors)
  • Moral hazard
  • Adverse selection
  • Directors
  • A lot of discretion as to their actions
  • Not clear how the primary objective is to be
    achieved

8
Agency Problem
  • Incentive problem between the shareholders and
    the management
  • Managers engage in activities detrimental to the
    core objective
  • Perks entrenchment etc
  • Risk taking beyond the norm for short-term gain
  • Shareholders wary of investing further funds
  • Equity more expensive than internal funds

9
Provision of Incentives to Minimise Agency
Problems
  • Executive compensation
  • Accounting performance based
  • Equity options
  • Promotion/dismissal
  • All can be manipulated
  • Information release controlled by management

10
Monitoring Control
  • Two forms
  • Passive
  • Active
  • Passive
  • Better information reduces the agency problem
    i.e. signalling debt issues etc
  • Active
  • Control of management with a
  • board of directors large shareholder creditor
    potential takeover

11
Information the Accounts (Passive)
  • Annual financial accounts
  • Audited
  • Information to evaluate management performance
  • Presented at the AGM
  • AGM
  • Remove directors
  • Authorise certain activity i.e. remuneration

12
Board of Directors (Active)
  • Responsibility
  • Direct corporation to achieve shareholders core
    objective
  • Set
  • Policy
  • Authorise decisions
  • Appoint management
  • Set remuneration

13
The Role of the Director
  • Conceptually different from management
  • Director directs corporation to achieve core
    objective
  • Management then execute the directors strategy
    to achieve the core objective
  • Often the two roles are combined
  • Board dominated by management
  • Encouraged non-executive directorships to develop
  • Director should be a steward (i.e. watchdog for
    the shareholders)
  • Independence (from management) is essential

14
Large Shareholders (Active)
  • Concentration improves the control of management
  • Small shareholders/debt holders may be sidelined
  • May reduce the incentive for initiative
  • May take excessive risks to satisfy short-term
    objectives i.e. max share price

15
Large Creditors (Active)
  • Debt acts as a disciplining device
  • Interest payments must be met
  • Less scope for miss-appropriating earnings
  • Free cash flow theory (Jensen, 1986)
  • Reputation (Diamond, 1989)
  • Liquidation/bankruptcy (Hart, 1995)

16
Market for Corporate Control Takeover (Active)
  • Depends on the tendency for new owners to replace
    directors/management
  • Problems as a controlling device
  • Winners curse
  • Blocked by politics i.e. public interest
  • Typically poor performers

17
Summary
  • Defined the corporate form
  • Core objective
  • Corporate Governance What why?
  • Approaches
  • UK US
  • Agency problem
  • Monitoring control

18
How Governance Might be Improved
  • A more competitive market for corporate control
  • Drop barriers i.e. public interest
  • Reduce cost of shareholder activism
  • How?
  • Corporate objectives
  • Votes
  • Directors
  • Disclosure audits
  • Enforcement
  • Critical information systems
  • Institutional investors

19
Corporate Objective
  • Companies could differentiate themselves from the
    competition
  • Identify corporate objective(s) more precisely

20
Votes
  • Extend scope and reduce cost of voting in
    corporate elections
  • More meaningful
  • Compulsory (institutional shareholders)
  • Easier for shareholders to get resolutions on to
    the agendas of AGMs

21
Directors
  • Identification and selection criteria more
    transparent
  • Independence from management
  • Non-executive
  • Chairperson/CEO role split
  • Reports
  • Greenbury Cadbury Hampel

22
Disclosure Audits
  • Interim/Quarterly reports
  • Risk management reports
  • Environmental Ethical audits
  • Governance audit
  • Extent to which a companies structures systems
    are achieving the desire core objective(s)

23
Critical Information Systems
  • Good information systems
  • Real-time
  • Not historic
  • Measure actual desirable performance

24
Institutional Investors
  • Comprise the bulk of investors in the UK
  • 60 to 70
  • Preferential briefings (until recently)
  • Cosy relationship
  • More active involvement in governance
  • Raise agenda items
  • Vote
  • Declare conflicts of interest i.e. pensions etc

25
At the end of the Day
  • Whatever mechanisms are used, corporate
    governance is the responsibility of the
    shareholders
  • Must be critically aware
  • Take nothing at face value

26
Conclusions
  • Corporate governance is an agency problem
  • Minimise conflicts of interest
  • Minimise opportunities for malfeasance
  • Shareholders ultimately responsible for governance
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