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Dodd-Franks Say on Pay: Will It Lead To A Greater Role for - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dodd-Franks Say on Pay: Will It Lead To A Greater Role for - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Dodd-Franks Say on Pay: Will It Lead To A Greater Role for Shareholders in Corporate Governance? Randall S. Thomas, Alan R. Palmiter and James F. Cotter VANDERBILT Law School VANDERBILT Law School Background Implementation of a
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Background
- Implementation of a mandatory say on pay
vote for shareholders was first enacted in the U.K. in 2002.
- Executive pay critics argued that it would
provide an important check on the observed upward movement in pay levels.
- Skeptics claimed that at best it would operate
as a check on pay arrangements that deviated far from the norm (Cheffins and Thomas 2001).
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Arguments in Favor of Say On Pay
- Make corporate management more
accountable to shareholders and shift balance of power in favor of shareholders.
- Encourage boards to align pay and
performance.
- Arrest the upward spiral of pay levels.
- Push boards to eliminate pay structures
that encourage excessive risk taking.
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Arguments Against Say On Pay
- Upset the traditional balance of power
between managers and shareholders.
- Shareholders are poor judges of proper pay
practices and levels.
- Increase power of ISS and voting advisors.
- Increase disclosure and voting costs,
especially for smaller companies.
- Push American companies to adopt one-size-
fits-all pay programs.
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Dodd Frank’s “Say On Pay” Mandate
- Section 951 of the Dodd-Frank bill requires
public companies to give their shareholders an advisory vote to approve or disapprove the compensation paid to named executives during the prior fiscal year.
- SEC rules implemented this requirement with
detailed specifications on the form of the proposal and the particular officers whose compensation will be subject to the vote.
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Data– Shareholder Proposals On Executive Compensation
- For many years prior to the enactment of
Dodd-Frank, shareholders had submitted advisory proposals related to executive compensation matters using Rule 14a-8. These included proposals to approve certain features of executive pay, including SERP payments and Golden Parachutes.
- Voting support for these proposals ranged
from around 10% for less popular categories to 50+% for the most popular ones.
Pre-Dodd Frank: Shareholder Executive Compensation Proposals (2003-2010)
Table 1: Shareholder Proposals on Executive Compensation (Number and % Support) 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Majority Support Report 16 5 25 3 4 3 3 9 11.2% 10.3% 8.4% 9.0% 6.9% 7.6% 10.2% 6.2% Disclose 1 9 3 4 3 2 5.5% 27.4% 8.0% 8.3% 10.8% 10.2% Approve 16 23 14 15 7 3 5 4 43 56.6% 48.9% 55.4% 41.4% 45.8% 57.3% 31.9% 58.3% Cap 1 9 6 8 7 1 2 5.1% 10.2% 10.7% 5.2% 5.4% 9.2% 5.1% Link 48 7 35 37 73 27 8 12 14 16.6% 34.6% 29.6% 32.5% 29.8% 32.3% 26.0% 32.5% Reduce 47 33 7 11 16 15 6 10 14 32.6% 13.2% 12.0% 23.2% 23.0% 20.2% 23.9% 29.1% Restrict 3 7 25 38 30.1% 23.1% 29.1% 25.8%
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Shareholder Proposals -- Overview
- f Voting Results
- Report, cap and disclose proposals attract
little support (<10%).
- Link, reduce and restrict attract moderate
levels of support (15% to 25%).
- Approve proposals, asking a board to
institute an advisory shareholder vote on particular pay practices such as SERPs, attract the highest average levels of support (49.6%) and the most “majority support” proposals.
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Shareholder and Management Proposals on “Say on Pay”
- Shareholders began submitting “say on
pay” proposals in 2006, recommending to boards that they give shareholders an advisory vote on executive pay.
- Shortly thereafter, management
sponsored say on pay proposals began to appear – a few on a voluntarily basis but largely because TARP-funded firms were required to do so.
Pre-Dodd Frank: Management and Shareholder Say On Pay Proposals
Table 2: Say-On-Pay Proposals Pre-Dodd Frank (Number, Support and Majority Support) Panel A – Shareholder Sponsored Proposals Year Number of "say on pay" 14a-8 proposals Shareholder support (% For) # receiving majority support 2006 5 42.5% 2007 52 37.5%*** 7 2008 71 38.1%*** 8 2009 61 41.1%*** 21 2010 48 40.3%*** 9 Panel B – Management Sponsored Proposals Year Number of "say on pay" proposals Shareholder support (% For) # receiving majority support 2006 2007 2 98.2%*** 2 2008 8 89.2%*** 8 2009 152 87.6%*** 152 2010 146 88.7%*** 143
*** represent a test of the difference of the mean of the percentage of shares voted in favor of “Say-On-Pay” vote by year between shareholder and
management proposals at the 1% level in a two tailed test.
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Say On Pay Proposals– Overview
- f Results
- Shareholder say on pay proposals ask the
board to institute an advisory say on pay
- vote. They average 42% support and 16%
receive majority support.
- Management say on pay proposals ask
shareholders to approve the top 5 executives
- pay. They average 88%, and only 1% failed
to attract majority support. These are
- verwhelmingly for financial institutions.
Pre-Dodd Frank: Impact of ISS Voting Recommendations (2003-2010)
Table 4: Pre-Dodd Frank Management and ISS Recommendations (Number and Support) ISS and Management “For” Recommendation Management Only “For” Recommendation ISS Only “For” Recommendation ISS and Management “Against” Recommendation Report 1 1 66 24.5% 15.5% 8.6% Disclose 5 17 41.7% 9.0% Approve 2 79 6 84.4% 50.3% 28.2% Cap 1 33 24.7% 7.1% Link 1 156 89 91.3% 35.5% 14.1% Reduce 53 88 43.1% 10.4% Restrict 70 3 27.6% 8.3% S’holder Say
- n Pay
1 273 2 51.8% 42.0% 12.7% M’gment Say
- n Pay
234 69 92.4% 73.4
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Interpreting the Results
- Management rarely recommends in favor of a
shareholder proposal on executive pay issues.
- ISS generally recommended against shareholder
proposals to report, disclose, cap and reduce pay.
- ISS recommended in favor of management say on
pay proposals 77% of the time.
- A negative ISS recommendation on a
management say on pay proposal is associated with approximately 20% lower “for” votes.
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Post-Dodd Frank: First Year’s Experience (I)
- Commentators on first season’s results
have made several observations, including:
- Management garnered 91.2% average
support from shareholders on these mandatory votes.
- Say on pay proposals were defeated only
1.6% of the time = 37 firms from Russell 3000.
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Post-Dodd Frank: First Year’s Experience (II)
- Low stock returns and high CEO pay resulted
in lower support for say on pay proposals.
- Pay for performance issues were raised at
almost all companies with failed votes: half of them had double digit negative three year total share returns (TSR).
- Firms with CEO pay in the top quartile and
TSR in the bottom quartile received the weakest average shareholder support levels (73.9%).
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Post-Dodd Frank: First Year’s Experience (III)
- ISS issued negative say on pay
recommendations at 285 firms, but 86% of them still obtained majority approval of their executives’ pay packages.
- Negative recommendations were associated
with a 25% average decline in voting support.
- ISS negative recommendations largely
focused on pay for performance issues (ex: high pay and negative TSR).
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Impact of Say On Pay
- Even before say on pay votes, many
companies made changes to the substance and disclosures of their pay programs.
- Some companies receiving negative ISS
recommendations filed supplemental proxy disclosures and engaged shareholders actively.
- Some companies with failed votes are named
in derivative law suits alleging breach of fiduciary duties.
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Open Questions
- Has Dodd Frank opened new lines of
communication between management and shareholders on executive pay issues?
- Is there evidence of a change in corporate
governance practices at firms experiencing low shareholder approval levels?
- Will there be substantive changes to pay