Enquête sur le leadership du conseil d’administration | Korn Ferry


Ce billet publié par Robert E. Hallagan et Dennis Carey, vice-présidents de Korn Ferry, présente une partie d’une étude conduite par l’Institut Korn Ferry en 2014 portant sur le leadership du C.A.

On constatera que la séparation des fonctions de président du conseil et de président et chef de la direction s’effectue lentement chez nos voisins du sud ! En effet, bien que tous les experts de la gouvernance reconnaissent le bien fondé d’avoir un président du conseil indépendant, on note un certain progrès à cet égard mais il y a encore loin de la coupe aux lèvres, surtout dans les grandes entreprises cotées aux ÉU.

Voici un aperçu de l’introduction de cette étude. Je vous invite à lire le document complet pour avoir une meilleure idée des résultats de l’enquête. Bonne lecture !

Survey of Board Leadership 2014

This is our second annual report on board leadership.

The numbers and trends are interesting but the subtleties and substance behind them are extremely valuable as the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD) and Korn Ferry continue their study of high-performing boards. The thoughtful selection and performance of board leaders is one of two pillars of leadership that drive long-term shareholder value—the other being the CEO of the company.IMG_00000694

There is universal agreement that each board must have an independent leader but how each company has achieved this takes many shapes.

In this year’s report, we see continued evidence of a slow and deliberate trend toward separation of the roles, higher in mid-cap companies than the large-cap S&P 500. Key catalysts included activism, and a transition of CEO leadership that prompted the board to elect to separate the roles.

There is universal agreement that each board must have an independent leader but how each company has achieved this takes many shapes.

In our first report we stated our commitment to remaining an honest broker of facts in the performance debate. Many proponents of separation claim it will enhance long-term shareholder value, yet no study to date has rendered conclusive evidence in either direction. We have now isolated companies that have made the change, documented their performance before and after, and will soon be comfortable debating the results. While we clearly understand the danger in relying solely on numbers and acknowledge that there are many potential ways to slice the data, we believe our attempt to get at the “facts” will generate engaged, healthy debate among our members and clients. We look forward to a rich dialogue at NACD conferences to come.

Methodology and approach

This study examined changes to and trends in board leadership structure for 900 US companies, namely the constituents of Standard & Poor’s Large Cap 500 Index (S&P 500) and the Mid-Cap Index (the S&P 400) as of December 31, 2012. Companies are added to the S&P 500 if they have unadjusted market capitalization of $4.6 billion or more, and to the S&P 400 if they have unadjusted market capitalization of between $1.2 billion and $5.1 billion. The S&P 500 Index represents a barometer of the state of the largest publicly traded US corporations, and the majority of the research and analysis in this study focuses on this group. To expand the scope beyond large-cap companies, and thus broaden the findings of the research, the constituents of the S&P 400 were also examined in detail.

For each company, we looked at the type of board leadership structure in place at the time of its proxy filing for each year between 2008 and 2012. This report focuses primarily on the leadership structure in place as of year-end 2012, and examines each company’s overall leadership approach as it pertains to the roles of chairman, CEO, and lead director (if at all). Proxy filings, annual reports, and the corporate governance section of company websites comprise the source documents for these determinations. Please note that numbers shown in this report reflect actual statistics and not data projected from a random sampling of companies.

In addition, each company that had a change in its leadership structure since January 1, 2003 (by replacing either the CEO or chairman) was investigated to understand the reason for the change, and additional details—such as tenure, age, education, committee responsibilities—were sought for the incoming chairman. Company and outside press reports and news articles were used to determine the reason for an executive’s departure, and executive biographical and company data were culled from secondary sources, including Reuters, Businessweek, MarketWatch, and Morningstar.

The trend to separate roles continues to move steadily forward.

Though board composition is not likely to be an area marked by rapid, significant change, the slow and steady trend to separate chairman and CEO roles continued in 2012. By the end of 2012, 56% of S&P 500 chairmen also held the position of CEO. This marks a significant departure from 2009, when 63% of all chairmen also held the company’s highest executive office. The change comes almost equally from increases in non-executive chairmen and chairmen who have some past affiliation with the company; additional analysis in this report will examine what types of companies are likely to favor the different approaches.

While it is reasonable to expect this gradual trend to continue, particularly as activist shareholders keep pushing for separation, some large companies, including IBM, Disney, and Urban Outfitters, are moving in the opposite direction and are recombining roles. In the case of IBM and Disney, the recombinations are part of longterm succession, though IBM Chairman-CEO Ginny Rometty added the Chairman role just 10 months after becoming CEO—faster than many expected. In the case of Urban Outfitters, founder Richard Hayne reclaimed the CEO role after his successor had difficulty maintaining the main brand’s appeal to young people. Our continued perspective is that there is no one-size-fits-all approach to board leadership and that careful analysis and trusted advisors should be leveraged to find the appropriate structure for each organization.

In our opinion, chairmen must meet several criteria to qualify as truly “non-executive” or independent. They must not currently hold an executive role (CEO or other), must not be former executives, and must not be founders or family members of founders. From time to time, companies may characterize these types of chairmen as “non-executive” in the language of their proxy reports or even in the chairman’s title, but our analysis re-characterizes them per the criteria above. The idea of an independent chairman is that he or she can bring an impartial and objective perspective to the board, and our experience finds that founders, family members of founders, and former executives tend not to possess that objectivity. This particular debate on nomenclature is a classic case of saying it doesn’t make it so. Being independent in title is not necessarily a reflection of reality. An analysis of the types of chairmen found in the S&P 500 in 2012 is described in Figure 2.

The trend toward separation of the chairman and CEO has been more pronounced over time within the mid-cap companies in the S&P 400 than it has been in the S&P 500. Separation rates in both groups rose by two points in 2012, to 44% in the S&P 500 and 55% in the S&P 400.

….

La place des jeunes sur les conseils d’administration de grandes sociétés : Êtes-vous pour ou contre ?


Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, les coordonnées d’un article d’Alan Mak et Andrew Hill sur le Blogue du FT du 2 juillet 2014. Les auteurs se questionnent sur la place des jeunes (millennials) dans les conseils d’administration du futur.

Vous y découvrirez plusieurs raisons qui militent en faveur de la nomination de jeunes au C.A. (Alan Mak) ainsi que la prise de position d’un auteur qui ne croit pas à la contribution des jeunes sur des C.A., principalement à cause de leur manque d’expérience (Andrew Hill).

Comme vous vous en doutez, je partage entièrement le point de vue d’Allan Mak qui propose l’engagement des jeunes sur les conseils.

La lecture des arguments pour et des arguments contre est intéressante. Qu’en pensez-vous ?

Bonne lecture !

Should under-35s sit on company boards ?

Yes

Alan Mak

Lord Davies in his report “Women on Boards” rightly said the best boards contain “a mix of voices [that] must include women”. It should also include millennials.

Today’s rapidly changing marketplace is more complex than ever and businesses that want to stay competitive, especially in customer-facing sectors, need Generation Y to help them deal with the big trends, from the rise of digitally empowered consumers to the febrile post-financial crisis business environment.

The business case for younger directors is strong. Generation Y, also known as millennials, are aged 18-35 and, at 2bn people, are the world’s biggest demographic group. By 2018 they will have the biggest spending power of any age group, Deloitte says. And three in four millennials say they influence the purchasing decisions of other generations. So, every business needs to understand Generation Y’s behaviour and aspirations, and younger, suitably qualified directors can be their champion in the boardroom.

Meanwhile, better decisions are made when companies draw on the widest possible range of talent regardless of age, and when directors bring to bear the broadest range of experiences, perspectives and lifestyles. In this context, “diversity” must include generational diversity, not just gender diversity. Adding a Generation Y perspective can be a powerful antidote to age-related groupthink. For example, millennials are more likely to take a longer-term approach to risk taking because they have to live with the financial and reputational consequences of failure when older colleagues may not.

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The financial crisis caused an irreversible cultural and structural shift. Corporations from banks to supermarkets are redefining their values and business models to become more accountable and sustainable. As David Jones explains in his book Who Cares Wins, for business, “the new price of doing well is doing good”.

Generation Y instinctively understands this new paradigm, and they are best placed to act as boardroom cultural translators.

Such rapid cultural change is itself largely driven by fast technological and demographic change. Social media have given today’s consumers more information about how companies do business than ever before. Whereas the industrial revolution empowered the corporation, the digital revolution empowered the consumer. As Jones observes, “ … there’s not been another time in history when the youngest people understood the most about what is going on”. Companies that fail to understand this new “good business zeitgeist” find their brands and share price diminished.

Generation Y directors add value by helping their companies to navigate this volatile, Twitter-driven landscape. That is why Starbucks appointed social media expert Clara Shih, then 29, to its main board.

Meanwhile, globalisation has created increasingly complex decision-making environments that require new skills and fresh insights – for example, into emerging markets and new technologies – that were simply not around, or as needed in the past. Every company must now balance Gen X’s experience with Gen Y’s inherently global outlook, digital aptitude and commitment to life-long learning. Putting younger leaders into the boardroom helps that development while sending a wider message that an organisation rewards talent and ambition.

Pessimists may say younger figures lack the industry knowledge or operational experience to step into the boardroom. These qualities can all be developed and naysayers should listen to Peter Cave-Gibbs, former London head of recruiter Heidrick & Struggles: “Board chairmen want outstanding leaders who can help their business succeed in today’s global marketplace. Gen Y talent is highly educated, multilingual, and comfortable with change and technology. They are changing the way business is done: age is just a number in business now.”

. . .

No

Andrew Hill

Boards are changing. The devastating economic and financial crisis has exposed the risk of groupthink in the boardroom and the weaknesses in established corporate governance, as pursued by establishment people, who, let’s face it, are still predominantly “white, male and stale”. Business logic and a simple sense of equity dictate that the gender and ethnic balance in the boardroom should alter. Research increasingly suggests that diverse teams come up with better ideas.

So, if more women and people from ethnic minorities are becoming non-executive directors, for these and other excellent reasons, shouldn’t large companies invite more young people to step up to the board?

No, they shouldn’t, and here’s why.

First, the immediate priority for large companies ought to be to assemble a balanced board with an accumulation of experience that will help supervise the executive team. By definition, younger candidates have less experience.

What ambitious and talented young people know could still be useful to the board and to the company. Millennials may help a consumer products company tailor its offering to younger customers.

While the boardroom dinosaurs are struggling with their iPads, they could help a natural resources company to understand coming risks to its reputation (posed, for example, by social media protests). But these contributions can be sought in better and more efficient ways than by inviting a representative into the boardroom. Smart companies are already tapping social media – the natural heir to focus groups – for a quantitative assessment of youth trends. Phil Clarke, Tesco’s chief executive, has a 20-something staffer in his office, precisely to keep him updated on such trends.

I am as suspicious as anyone of the power of vested interests. When a headhunter recently told me that a boardroom should “not be trying to reflect the demographic” and warned that 20-something non-executives with little corporate experience might “throw in grenades that are inappropriate”, I was almost ready to help them pull the pin.

Boards do need shaking up and young people with proven records of relevant achievement could have what it takes to hold their own in a boardroom packed with company veterans. But these candidates will be few and far between. Youth per se is no qualification.

Second, a bigger priority for boards is to reflect the gender and ethnic mix around them without compromising on experience. I would choose, say, a female executive informed by diverse experiences ahead of a promising younger businessperson with only youth on his or her side.

Finally, if companies want to draw on the energy and inspiration brought by younger people – and they should – they should employ them and promote them to executive roles. It may not have dawned on aspiring Gen Y non-executives, but the board is not the engine of creativity, innovation and strategy at big companies: it is a regulator of the engine, and an important sounding board for ideas brought by the executive team.

Most entrepreneurial young people I know would simply be frustrated by boardroom politics and bluster. Those young managers who feel they should start their non-executive portfolio in their 20s have got their careers back to front: they should be directing their best efforts to founding start-ups, or at least changing the way companies work, not the way they are supervised. If it is revolution they seek, they stand a better chance of pursuing it from the bottom up than from the top down.

Proposition d’une nouvelle approche à la gouvernance | IoD – GB


Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, un article de l’Institut de la gouvernance du Royaume-Uni (IoD) qui présente un document intitulé « The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies » dans lequel les auteurs décrivent une approche nouvelle à l’évaluation de la saine gouvernance.

Le document se distingue par la conception d’un modèle de prévision de la gouvernance, basé sur une multitude de facteurs explicatifs, et d’indices de performance.

Je vous invite à prendre connaissance du rapport de l’IoD.

Bonne lecture.

IoD calls on businesses and regulators to take a fresh approach to corporate governance

 

In a new report published today, the leading business organisation hopes its report will kickstart the debate about how to define good governance – and recognise those companies that do it best.

The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies, launched at the IoD this morning, sets out a new framework for assessing corporate governance, moving away from a focus on compliance and towards a more complex measurement which combines public perceptions with a range of objective factors.

The IoD launches a good corporate governance report titled The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies
Téléchargez le rapport complet

Launching the report, Ken Olisa, chairman of the advisory panel for the report, warned that the current system doesn’t fully address what corporate governance is truly about.

“No one factor dictates whether a company is well run,” Olisa said. “It is simply not correct for a company to say that because they have ticked certain boxes, they show good governance.

“Now is the time for some bold thinking on how we define and measure governance, including the recognition that it is essentially an organic process involving the interaction of groups of people.”

The new report is the first stage in a move towards creating a comprehensive Good Governance Index which ranks individual companies on their corporate governance, taking into account factors beyond just compliance and looking at a company’s wider corporate behaviour and culture.

Simon Walker, director general of the IoD, said that the new framework “challenges previous ways of measuring the governance of big companies, and kicks off a new debate on how firms can improve their transparency, accountability and performance.”

On Tuesday, Director.co.uk will provide updates and video from the official launch at the IoD’s central London headquarters at 116 Pall Mall of The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies. Keep an eye on the website and our Twitter feed @DirectorIoD for updates.

Download the full report now

 

Le rôle du comité exécutif versus le rôle du conseil d’administration | En rappel


Voici une discussion très intéressante paru sur le groupe de discussion LinkedIn Board of Directors Society, et initiée par Jean-François Denaultconcernant la nécessité de faire appel à un comité exécutif.

Je vous invite à lire les commentaires présentés sur le fil de discussion du groupe afin de vous former une opinion.

Personnellement, je crois que le comité exécutif est beaucoup trop souvent impliqué dans des activités de nature managériale.

Dans plusieurs cas, le CA pourrait s’en passer et reprendre l’initiative !

Qu’en pensez-vous ?

____________________________________________________

 

La situation exposée par  est la suivante (en anglais) :

I’m looking for feedback for a situation I encountered.
I am a board member for a non-profit. Some of us learned of an issue, and we brought it up at the last meeting for an update.IMG_20141013_145537
We were told that it was being handled by the Executive Committee, and would not be brought up in board meetings.
It is my understanding that the executive committee’s role is not to take issues upon themselves, but to act in interim of board meetings. It should not be discussing issues independently from the board.
Am I correct in thinking this? Should all issues be brought up to the board, or can the executive committee handle situations that it qualifies as « sensitive »?

 

The Role of the Executive Committee versus the main board of directors

Alan Kershaw

Chair of Regulatory Board

Depends whether it’s an operational matter I guess – e.g. a staffing issue below CEO/Director level. If it’s a matter of policy or strategy, or impacts on them, then the Board is entitled to be kept informed, surely, and to consider the matter itself. 

 

John Dinner

John T,  Dinner Board Governance Services

Helping boards improve their performance and contributionI’ll respond a bit more broadly, Jean-François. While I am not opposed to the use of executive committees, a red flag often goes up when I conduct a governance review for clients and review their EC mandate and practices. There is a slippery slope where such committees find themselves assuming more accountability for the board’s work over time. Two classes of directors often form unintentionally as a result. Your situation is an example where the executive committee has usurped the board’s final authority. While I don’t recommend one approach, my inclination is to suggest that boards try to function without an executive committee because of the frequency that situations similar to the one you describe arise at boards where such committees play an active role. There are pros and cons, of course, for having these committees, but I believe the associated risk often warrants reconsideration of their real value and need.

 

Chuck Molina

Chief Technology Officer at DHI

I currently sit on the EC and have been in that role with other boards. Although I can see the EC working on projects as a subset of the board we Always go back to the full board and disclose those projects and will take items to the full board for approval. The board as a whole is accountable for decisions! There has to be transparency on the board! I found this article for you. http://www.help4nonprofits.com/BrainTeaser/BrainTeaser-Role_of_Executive_Committee.htm , which concurs to John’s comment. If used correctly the EC or a subset of the board can work on board issues more efficiently then venting through the full board, but they should always go back to the Full board for consideration or approval.  

 

Dave Chapman

CHM and CEO of NorthPoint ERM

I have experienced couple of EB’s and unless the company is in deep financial or legal trouble for the most part the took away from the main board and in the whole worked ok but not great. If the board has over 10 to 15 board members it is almost a requirement but the board them is there for optics more than or effective and efficient decision making

Experienced CEO & Board member of Domestic and European companies.

I think Mr. Dinner, Mr. Molina, and Mr. Chapman summed it up beautifully:
– You cannot have two classes of Directors
– You have to have transparency and every Board member is entitled to the same information
– A Board of 10-15 members is inefficient and may need committees, but that does not change the fact that all Board members are entitled to have input into anything that the Board decides as a body.
– An Executive Committee is a sub-committee of the entire Board, not an independent body with extraordinary powers.

 

Al Errington

Entrepreneur & Governance Advocate

I agree with John, executive committees tend to be a slippery slope to bad governance. The board of directors has the responsibility of direction and oversight of the business or organization. If anything goes substantially wrong, the board of directors will also be accountable, legally. The rules of thumb for any and all committees is
– Committees must always be accountable to the board of directors, not the other way around.
– Committees must always have limits defined by the board of directors on authority and responsibility, and should have limits on duration.
– Committees should always have a specific reason to exist and that reason should be to support the board of directors in addressing it’s responsibilities. 

 

Emerson Galfo

Consulting CFO/COO / Board Member/Advisor

Judging from the responses, we need to clearly define the context of what an Executive Committee is. Every organization can have it’s own function/view of what an Executive Committee is.

From my experience, an Executive Committee is under the CEO and reflects a group of trusted C-level executives that influence his decisions. I have had NO experience with Executive Boards other than the usual specific Board Committees dealing with specific realms of the organization.

So coming from this perspective, the Executive Committee is two steps down from the organizational pecking order and should be treated or viewed in that context.. 

 

Terry Tormey

President & CEO at Prevention Pharmaceuticals Inc.

I concur with Mr. James Clouser (above).
They should be avoided except in matters involving a performance question regarding C-Level Executive Board member, where a replacement may be sought.

 

John Baily

Board of Directors at RLI Corp

James hit the nail on the head. Executive committees are a throwback to times when we didn’t have the communication tools we do now. They no longer have a reason for their existence. All directors, weather on a not for profit or a corporate board have equal responsibilities and legal exposures. There is no room or reason for a board within a board in today’s world.

 

Chinyere Nze

Chief Executive Officer

My experience is; Board members have the last say in all policy issues- especially when it concerns operational matter. But in this case, where there is Executive Committee, what it sounds like is that, the organization in question has not clearly identified, nor delineated the roles of each body- which seem to have brought up the issue of ‘conflict’ in final decision- making. Often Executive Committees are created to act as a buffer or interim to the Board, this may sometime cause some over-lapping in executive decision-making.

My suggestion is for the organization to assess and evaluate its current hierarchy- clearly identify & define roles-benefits for creating and having both bodies, and how specific policies/ protocol would benefit the organization. In other words, the CEO needs to define the goals or benefits of having just a Board or having both bodies, and to avoid role conflict or over-lap, which may lead to confusion, as it seems to have been the case here. 

 

STEPHEN KOSMALSKI

CEO / PRESIDENT/BOARD OF DIRECTORS /PRIVATE EQUITY OPERATING PARTNER known for returning growth to stagnant businesses

The critical consideration for all board members is ‘ fiduciary accountability’ of all bod members. With that exposure , all bod members should be aware of key issues . 

 

Thomas Brattle « Toby » Gannett

President and CEO at BCR Managment

I think for large organizations, that executive committees still have an important role as many board members have a great deal going on and operational matters may come up from time to time that need to be handled in a judicial manner. While I think that the Executive committee has an important, at times critical role for a BOD, it is also critical that trust is built between the executive Committee and the BOD. This is only done when the executive committee is transparent, and pushes as many decisions that it can to the full board. If the committee does not have time to bring a matter to the full BOD, then they must convey to the BOD the circumstances why and reasoning for their decision. It is the executive committees responsibility to build that trust with the BOD and work hard to maintain it. All strategic decisions must be made by the full BOD. It sounds like you either have a communication failure, governance issue, or need work with your policies and procedures or a combination of issues.

 

La gouvernance des entreprises et les responsabilités accrues des administrateurs | En reprise : Implications du projet de loi 26


Le séminaire à la maîtrise de Gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022) dispensé  par Ivan Tchotourian*, professeur en droit des affaires de la Faculté de droit de l’Université Laval, entend apporter aux étudiants une réflexion originale sur les liens entre la sphère économico-juridique, la gouvernance des entreprises et les enjeux sociétaux actuels**.

Ce travail a traité du projet de loi 26 faisant écho aux travaux de la commission Charbonneau et à la nécessaire réaction face aux phénomènes de corruption et de collusion.

Ce billet entend contribuer au partage des connaissances à une large échelle et montrer comment la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est l’un des leviers mis à la disposition du législateur.

Il expose le résultat des recherches de Mohamed Soumano et de Shadi J. Wazen, étudiants du cours de gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022).

 

La gouvernance des entreprises et les responsabilités accrues des administrateurs | Les implications du projet de loi 26

Par

Mohamed Soumano et Shadi J. Wazen

La gouvernance d’entreprise renvoie à l’ensemble des structures, processus, lois et institutions destinés à encadrer la manière dont l’entreprise est dirigée, administrée et contrôlée. Elle régule les relations entre les parties prenantes, de manière à rechercher un équilibre entre les rôles, responsabilités et pouvoirs de chacune d’entre elles. À cette fin, des principes et mécanismes sont proposés pour assurer une saine gouvernance d’entreprise.

images-14Parmi ceux-ci, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est l’un des leviers mis à la disposition du législateur. Depuis quelques années, ce levier fait l’objet d’une attention croissante par l’État[i], particulièrement en droit de l’environnement[ii]. Par ce levier, différents objectifs sont poursuivis, soit la prévention, la pédagogie et l’indemnisation[iii]. En effet, comme les entreprises ne peuvent pas être condamnés à l’emprisonnement à la suite d’une infraction criminelle et que les amendes pénales sont souvent insuffisantes pour responsabiliser les entreprises puisqu’elles risquent d’être incluses dans les coûts de production et imposées de fait à la clientèle, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs donne un message clair que nul n’est au-dessus des lois. Il s’agit là d’une reconnaissance que le rôle des administrateurs va bien au-delà d’une gestion pour le seul bénéfice des actionnaires[iv].

Récemment, c’est par le biais de cette responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs que l’État cherche à responsabiliser les entreprises qui souhaitent conclure des contrats publics ou qui en ont conclu par le passé. Le 3 décembre 2014, le gouvernement présentait à l’Assemblée nationale le projet de loi 26 – Loi visant principalement la récupération de sommes obtenues à la suite de fraudes ou de manœuvres dolosives dans le cadre de contrats publics[v]. Celui-ci fait écho aux révélations de collusion et de corruption faites à la Commission Charbonneau[vi] et à l’opinion publique pressant le gouvernement de récupérer les fonds publics versés en trop.

S’inspirant du modèle hollandais[vii], ce projet de loi propose d’instituer un programme de remboursement volontaire qui permettra aux entreprises fautives de rembourser les fonds reçus injustement, peu importe le secteur d’activités. À défaut d’entente, les entreprises s’exposent à des poursuites judiciaires. Son article 10 rend même personnellement et solidairement responsables les administrateurs de tout préjudice causé. Plus précisément, le deuxième alinéa de l’article 10, tel qu’amendé en commission parlementaire[viii], s’énonce comme suit :

« […] La responsabilité des administrateurs de l’entreprise en fonction au moment de la fraude ou de la manœuvre dolosive est également engagée s’il est établi qu’ils savaient ou auraient dû savoir qu’une fraude ou une manœuvre dolosive a été commise relativement au contrat visé, à moins qu’ils ne démontrent d’avoir agit avec le soin, la diligence et la compétence dont ferait preuve, en pareilles circonstances, une personne prudente. ».

Cette responsabilité s’étend sur une période de 20 ans précédant l’entrée en vigueur du projet de loi, et ce, jusqu’à 5 ans suivant son entrée en vigueur (art 16 et 37). Le projet de loi prévoit même que les recours rejetés par le passé au motif de prescription pourront être repris.

Ce projet de loi aura sans conteste des impacts significatifs sur la gouvernance des entreprises :

(1) Une surveillance accrue des administrateurs.

En principe, les administrateurs ne font pas de micro-gestion : c’est la règle du Nose in, Fingers out qui s’applique. Sauf exceptions, ils ne sont pas responsables des actes de leurs dirigeants. Or, le projet de loi leur impose un nouveau devoir de prudence et diligence en matière de contrats publics. Un tel devoir suppose que l’administrateur ne pourra ni prêcher par son inaction, ni faire preuve d’aveuglement volontaire[ix]. Au sujet de cette doctrine, la Cour suprême du Canada, dans l’arrêt Briscoe[x], rappelle que « l’ignorance volontaire impute une connaissance à l’accusé qui a des doutes au point de vouloir se renseigner davantage, mais qui choisit délibérément de ne pas le faire ». Suivant le projet de loi, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est engagée dès qu’il est établi qu’ils savaient ou auraient dû savoir que des manœuvres frauduleuses ou dolosives ont été commises, que ce soit préalablement à la conclusion d’un contrat public ou en cours d’exécution. Un tel devoir opère un changement au niveau de la gouvernance d’entreprise. Des activités autrefois déléguées aux dirigeants relèveront dorénavant du conseil d’administration. Celui-ci a le devoir de se renseigner, surveiller et contrôler adéquatement les actes de l’entreprise et ses dirigeants. Un tel devoir impose l’institution d’un processus adéquat pour supporter les décisions du conseil d’administration. Face aux risques de poursuites judiciaires, les administrateurs devront être en mesure de démontrer que, préalablement à la prise d’une décision, ils détenaient des informations pertinentes leur permettant de prendre une décision éclairée, que le processus pour analyser ces informations est adéquat et que le jugement d’affaires appliqué à la lumière des informations et à l’issu du processus est raisonnable. Un tel devoir impose des obligations élevées. Il est donc à prévoir que le conseil d’administration mettra davantage l’accent sur le processus et le contrôle de l’information, que celui de la création de valeur qui est l’essence même de son rôle.

(2) Une plus grande méfiance envers les dirigeants.

Le projet de loi ébranle aussi le principe traditionnel de confiance entre le conseil d’administration et la haute direction. En mettant l’accent sur le processus et le contrôle, cela pourrait engendrer une plus grande méfiance des administrateurs envers leurs dirigeants. En effet, devant les risques de poursuites, les administrateurs seraient justifiés de s’impliquer davantage dans la gestion et la direction de l’entreprise et, au besoin, de demander l’avis d’une tierce personne, tels un professionnel ou un comité d’éthique, ou même prendre les mesures nécessaires visant à prévenir et contrer les fraudes. Non seulement de telles actions engendrent des délais et des coûts, mais pourraient aussi créer un climat de méfiance envers les dirigeants, ce qui est insoutenable à terme et pourrait mettre en péril la pérennité de l’entreprise.

(3) Une application rétroactive de la nouvelle norme de conduite.

Enfin, soulignons que le projet de loi impose ce nouveau devoir de diligence et prudence à tout contrat public conclu au cours des 20 dernières années. Une question s’impose : comment valoir une défense de diligence raisonnable alors que cette norme de conduite ne constituait ni une obligation, ni une pratique exemplaire de gouvernance à l’époque des actes fautifs? D’ailleurs, mentionnons que ce n’est qu’en 2004 que la Cour suprême du Canada[xi] a indiqué que la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs envers les tiers pouvait être engagée en cas de manquement au devoir de diligence et prudence. Cet enseignement n’est cependant exact que pour les entreprises régies par la Loi canadienne sur les sociétés par actions puisque le gouvernement du Québec, lors de la réforme de la Loi sur les sociétés par actions, a clairement indiqué que le bénéficiaire de ce devoir est l’entreprise, à l’exclusion des tiers[xii]. En appliquant rétroactivement un devoir aussi exigeant, le projet de loi porte vraisemblablement atteinte aux normes qui étaient autrefois admises par le législateur et les tribunaux. Une telle préoccupation est aussi partagée par l’Institut des administrateurs de société[xiii].Au fil des années pour ne pas dire des scandales, le législateur et les tribunaux ont, de plus en plus, recherché à engager la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs. De nos jours, il est demandé aux administrateurs d’exercer leurs devoirs en toute connaissance de cause et de guider la gestion de l’entreprise sans se fier aveuglément à la haute direction. Il est donc dans l’intérêt de tout administrateur de bien comprendre la nature et la portée de ses obligations, en plus de faire preuve d’une conduite démontrant un sens élevé d’éthique.


[i] Stéphane Rousseau, La responsabilité civile et pénale des administrateurs : tableau synoptique (Législation à jour au 31 décembre 2011), Chaire en gouvernance et droit des affaires, Université de Montréal (https://papyrus.bib.umontreal.ca/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1866/6320/Tableau.pdf;jsessionid=2601674894C5BE75CD250D2F7B61BDCA?sequence=1); Marie-Andrée Latreille, « Responsabilité des administrateurs: un membership risqué pour les avocats! », Congrès annuel du Barreau 2002 (http://www.barreau.qc.ca/pdf/congres/2002/07-latreille.pdf); Nathalie Vallerand,, « Être administrateur, une lourde responsabilité », Journal Les affaires, 14 mai 2014 (https://www.cas.ulaval.ca/files/content/sites/college/files/documents/bulletin/juin2014/serie-gouvernance-lesaffaires-cercleasc-article2-responsabilite.pdf).

[ii] Christine Duchaine, et Nicolas Dubé, « Sanctions pénales, administratives ou ordonnances : en environnement, la diligence a bien meilleur goût! », Développements récents en droit de lenvironnement, Volume 370, 2013, (http://edoctrine.caij.qc.ca/developpements-recents/370/368152798/#Toc370821836); Yvan Allaire et André Laurin, La Loi 89 sur la qualité de l’environnement : Comment convaincre les personnes compétentes de siéger aux conseils d’administration, Institut sur la gouvernance d’organisations privées et publiques, janvier 2013 (http://igopp.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/article_loi_89-qualite-environnement-v2.pdf).

[iii] En ce sens, voir Blair c. Consolidated Enfield Corp., [1995] 4 R.C.S. 5 (par. 74).

[iv] Ivan Tchotourian, Devoir de prudence et de diligence des administrateurs et RSE : Approche comparative et prospective, Cowansville, Yvon Blais, 2014.

[v] http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/projets-loi/projet-loi-26-41-1.html.

[vi] https://www.ceic.gouv.qc.ca/la-commission.html.

[vii] Assemblée nationale, Commission des institutions, Journal des débats du 24 février 2015, ministre de la Justice : http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/commissions/ci-41-1/journal-debats/CI-150224.html; Voir aussi : LaPresse du 4 décembre 2014 (http://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/politique/politique-quebecoise/201412/04/01-4825088-contrats-publics-quebec-veut-recuperer-largent-vole-par-des-entreprises.php).

[viii] http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/projets-loi/projet-loi-26-41-1.html.

[ix] Au sujet de l’aveuglement volontaire et les administrateurs, voir Blair c. Consolidated Enfield Corp., note 3.

[x] R. c. Briscoe, 2010 CSC 13 (par. 21).

[xi] Magasins à rayons Peoples inc. (Syndic de) c. Wise, [2004] 3 R.C.S. 461, 2004 CSC 68.

[xii] http://elois.caij.qc.ca/References/AUTFR_docreference_2009-12-01_vol-1.pdf#Page=289.

[xiii] https://www.cas.ulaval.ca/files/content/sites/college/files/documents/references/memoire-ias-nouv-jan2015.pdf.


*Ivan Tchotourian, professeur en droit des affaires, codirecteur du Centre d’Études en Droit Économique (CÉDÉ), membre du Groupe de recherche en droit des services financiers (www.grdsf.ulaval.ca), Faculté de droit, Université Laval.

**Le séminaire s’interroge sur le contenu des normes de gouvernance et leur pertinence dans un contexte de profonds questionnements des modèles économique et financier. Dans le cadre de ce séminaire, il est proposé aux étudiants depuis l’hiver 2014 d’avoir une expérience originale de publication de leurs travaux de recherche qui ont porté sur des sujets d’actualité de gouvernance d’entreprise.

Reconnaissance accrue accordée à la gouvernance des sociétés à l’échelle mondiale


Aujourd’hui, je vous réfère à un excellent article publié par Lucy P. Marcus* dans le magazine Project – Syndicate qui montre, exemples à l’appui, l’essor phénoménal de l’importance accordée à la gouvernance à l’échelle mondiale. L’auteure fait ressortir plusieurs facteurs qui contribuent à prioriser l’amélioration des processus de gouvernance des organisations et des nations.

Entre autre, l’article souligne que les vagues de réforme se produisent en cascade à l’échelle planétaire, des nouvelles règlementations au Japon aux nouvelles orientations prises par le fond souverain norvégien.

(1) La gouvernance des sociétés étant un sujet brûlant, les parties prenantes font de plus en plus entendre leurs voix :

« Today’s deep economic uncertainty has broadened ordinary people’s awareness of the influence that companies have on politics, policy, and their own daily lives »

(2) Il y a un accroissement de la reconnaissance que la prospérité des nations requiert une approche règlementaire robuste mais équilibrée :

« Authorities now recognize that paying to ensure good governance now is far less costly (both financially and politically) than paying for the consequences of bad governance later »

Partout, en Asie, aux É.U., en Europe, on observe une tendance à une règlementation plus proactive en matière de gouvernance, comme en font foi les nouvelles règles de divulgation de la SEC eu égard aux écarts de rémunération entre le PCD et le salaire moyen des employés. L’Europe, quant à elle, est particulièrement attentive et active dans son approche à la diversité, notamment à la place des femmes sur les conseils d’administration.

(3) Le facteur le plus important semble être la croissance exponentielle des activités de financement et d’investissement international. Les investisseurs accordent une importance primordiale à la gouvernance des entreprises et des pays dans lesquels ils investissent :

Gouvernancemondiale2

« International investors are in a unique position to encourage, or even enforce, global best practices in corporate governance. If such investors show that they are willing to withdraw financing, they will gain real influence in bringing about sustainable change – to the benefit of us all.

This is especially true if investors are guided by principles that go beyond financial returns. Global funds that uphold high ethical standards concerning labor practices and environmental protections are safeguarding the global ecosystem on which they, and the rest of us, depend. As they establish and implement such principles, the resulting momentum has been changing corporate governance and behavior across industries and régions.

The shift in emphasis on best-practice corporate governance is real, and it is here to stay. It comes from people finding and raising their voices, from politicians recognizing the importance of corporate governance for sustainable economic growth, and from influential investors putting genuine pressure on companies to change their behavior. Companies and boards ignore this trend at their peril ».

Je vous invite à lire le document ci-dessous afin de mieux comprendre les grands enjeux de gouvernance à l’échelle mondiale.

Bonne lecture !

The Better Corporation

 

Around the world, the corporate governance landscape is shifting, as efforts to improve business practices and policies gain support and momentum. The wave of reform has become visible everywhere – from tough new regulations in Japan to sovereign wealth funds like Norway’s Norges Bank Investment Management taking a more active approach to their investments – and it is certain to continue to rise.

Three factors are driving these developments. First, today’s deep economic uncertainty has broadened ordinary people’s awareness of the influence that companies have on politics, policy, and their own daily lives. And, as I have noted previously, people are not only paying greater attention; they also have more power than ever before to make their voices heard.


*Lucy P. Marcus, founder and CEO of Marcus Venture Consulting, Ltd., is Professor of Leadership and Governance at IE Business School and a non-executive board director of Atlantia SpA.

Read more at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/corporate-governance-reform-worldwide-by-lucy-p–marcus-2015-08#uRFqS1p0cfiESV1K.99

Le CA est garant de l’intégrité de l’entreprise


Aujourd’hui, j’ai retenu un article publié par Richard Leblanc* dans le Magazine for Canadian Listed Companies (Listed) qui traite d’un sujet de grande actualité dans toutes les sphères de la vie organisationnelle : La valeur de l’intégrité.

Comme le dit si bien l’auteur, les entreprises sont portées à qualifier certains employés de pommes pourries lorsqu’elles découvrent des manquements à l’éthique. Il est vrai que certains individus sont responsables de plusieurs problèmes reliés au manque d’intégrité et d’honnêteté mais les comportements des employés sont largement dépendants de la culture de l’entreprise, des pratiques en cours, des contrôles internes …

Richard Leblanc croit que les défaillances, en ce qui a trait à l’intégrité des personnes, sont souvent du ressort du conseil d’administration lequel n’exerce pas un fort leadership éthique et n’affiche pas des valeurs claires à ce propos.

Cette affirmation implique que tous les membres d’un conseil d’administration doivent faire preuve d’une éthique exemplaire : « Tone at the Top ». Les membres sont en mesure d’évaluer cette valeur au sein de leur conseil et au sein de l’organisation.

C’est la responsabilité du conseil de veiller à ce que de solides valeurs d’intégrité soient transmises à l’échelle de toute l’organisation, que la direction et les employés connaissent bien les codes de conduites et que l’on s’assure d’un suivi adéquat à cet égard.

Les administrateurs doivent poser les bonnes questions afin de s’assurer de la transmission efficace du code de conduite de l’entreprise.

This lax control environment, where self-interest is pursued and where pressure is applied, is the heart of ethical failure.

Je vous invite à lire ce court article. Bonne lecture. Vos commentaires sont appréciés.

Integrity? The buck stops at the board

La valeur de l’intégrité transmise par le CA

 

There is not an excuse I have not heard for ethical failure. But when I investigate a company after allegations of fraud, corruption or workplace wrongdoing, I almost always find a complacent, captured or entrenched board that did not take corrective action. In a few cases, boards actually encouraged the wrongdoing.

The first myth is that the board is a “good” board. There is no relationship between the profile of directors and whether the board is “good.” Often times, there is an inverse relationship, as trophy or legacy directors typically lack industry and risk expertise, are not really independent, are coasting and not prepared to put in the work, or they themselves may not possess integrity.

How important is integrity? Extremely. Three factors make for a good director or manager: competence, commitment and integrity, with integrity ranking first. Otherwise, you have the first two working against you.

Integrity needs to be defined, recruited for, and enforced. “Does your colleague possess integrity?” “Yes” is an answer to this perfunctory question. Full marks. But when I define integrity to include avoiding conflicts of interest, consistency between what is said and done, ethical conduct and trustworthiness—and guarantee anonymity—I get a spread of performance scores. Those who do not possess integrity in the eyes of their colleagues are poison and should be extracted from any board or a senior management team. It is a recruitment failure to elect or hire them in the first place.

When fraud, toxic workplaces, bullying, harassment and pressure do occur, the bad news needs to rise. Boards need to ensure that protected, anonymous reporting channels exist and are used—including for a director or executive to speak up in confidence, and for an in- dependent consequential investigation to occur. If a whistleblowing program has any manager as the point of contact, it is not effective.

Frequently, I find ethical design and implementation failure are the culprits, with codes of conduct, conflict of interest policies, whistleblowing procedures, culture and workplace audits, and education and communication being perfunctory at best, overridden by management at worst, and not taken seriously by employees or key suppliers, with minimal assurance and oversight by the board.

After ethical failure happens, executives argue that it is a lone rogue employee or an isolated incident. Nothing could be further from the truth. It is an employee who reflects the true and actual culture, internal control environment and practices of the organization, and who is attracted to and flourishes within them. There is no such thing as a rogue employee. It is a board that approved the conditions that management proposed within which employees operate.

This lax control environment, where self-interest is pursued and where pressure is applied, is the heart of ethical failure.

Nowhere is there a more shocking lack of internal controls over employee and agent behaviour than in some corrupt jurisdictions where Western firms do business. Not only is the potential for fraud rampant, but the costs of compliance wind up being borne by companies that do not bribe and have proper controls. They are penalized for doing things right, and forced to compete on an unequal playing field.

This is why Western governments are seeking to put their countries and companies in the most competitive position possible. They are enforcing anti-corruption laws using long arms of justice to prosecute bribery. They are also debarring companies from government contracts who commit ethical breaches. This debarment is a powerful motivator to spur investment to internalize the costs of internal controls over integrity.

Western industry will mistakenly argue that integrity laws will disadvantage them or cost their industry jobs, but the reality is the opposite. Tough integrity laws will prevent substandard competitors from offering bribes, will reduce recipients’ incentive to receive bribes, and will strengthen Western companies that compete on the basis of price, quality and service.

__________________________________

*Richard Leblanc is an associate professor, governance, law & ethics, at York University’s Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies and a member of the Ontario Bar. E-mail: rleblanc@yorku.ca.

La situation du recrutement d’administrateurs en Europe | Au-delà du « Old Boys’ Network »


Je vous invite à lire un rapport très intéressant réalisé par European Confederation of Directors Associations (ecoDa) et la firme de consultation en recrutement de cadres et d’administrateurs Korn Ferry, portant sur l’évolution du processus de recrutement d’administrateurs dans les entreprises européennes.

L’étude conclu que l’ère de la nomination d’administrateurs, choisis parmi le cercle restreint du réseau de l’entreprise (Old Boys’ Network), est révolue. Les organisations européennes ont adopté un processus de recherche systématique d’administrateurs externes d’expérience.

En premier lieu, le document présente, succinctement et clairement, un aperçu des différents régimes de gouvernance européens. Cette partie du rapport apporte un éclairage concis sur la situation de la gouvernance en Europe.

À la suite d’entretiens avec des douzaines de praticiens chevronnés, l’étude identifie quatre grandes forces qui influencent le choix des administrateurs de sociétés :

  1. La turbulence économique et l’instabilité de la zone euro imposent de nouvelles façons de faire;
  2. Les entreprises sont de plus en plus soumises à de nouvelles règles en matière de gouvernance;
  3. La prise en compte de la diversité est une réalité bien européenne;
  4. Les actionnaires sont de plus en plus actifs et les entreprises font l’objet d’une supervision accrue de la part des investisseurs institutionnels.

Les auteurs se penchent également sur tout le débat entourant les procédures de nomination d’administrateurs en Europe.

La dernière section du rapport fait état de 14 étapes devant conduire à un solide processus de nomination d’administrateurs indépendants.

Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, un condensé du document. Pour en connaître plus sur le sujet, veuillez consulter le document ci-joint intitulé « Beyond the Old Boys’ Network »

Bonne lecture !

Beyond The Old Boys’ Network

A new pan-European report analysing what’s happening in boardrooms across the continent outlines a best practice guide to help boards and their nominations committees develop robust and effective nomination procedures.

The report, « Beyond the Old Boys’ Network: What’s happening in the European boardrooms and a guide to best practices » has been produced by the European Confederation of Directors Associations (ecoDa) and global leadership and talent consultancy Korn Ferry.

jvgovernancelarge1

It examines changes in how the board nominations process has worked over the last decade, primarily as a response to new waves of corporate governance guidelines, and explores governance systems used in some jurisdictions and whether they could be applied elsewhere.

Among the systems explored are one-tier versus two-tier boards; making major shareholders members of the nomination committee; ensuring that employees get adequate board representation; and establishing mandatory gender quotas.

The report, which draws on interviews with several dozen board practitioners from across the continent, finds that the implementation of a pan-European set of rules for nominations would be challenging, due to legal, technical and cultural differences.

For example, a fundamental principle of Nordic corporate governance is the « active ownership model », where the nomination committee is constituted not by board members but by representatives of the largest shareholders. While seen as positive in Scandinavia and given praise from other jurisdictions such as Italy, it met with little support from business leaders in the UK, reflecting the more complex nature of a typical UK company’s share register, with the largest shareholders seldom holding more than a 5% share of the company.

One chairman and senior independent director of a company that has seen investor battles said, « We have to represent all the shareholders, and having a couple of major shareholders deciding the appointments to the board could be hugely disruptive and chaotic. »

However, the report finds that although governance codes vary across jurisdictions, best practices transcend different governance jurisdictions. It makes 14 recommendations covering the entire nomination process, from the structuring of the process through succession planning, candidate selection, candidate interview, and the induction of new directors.

Dominic Schofield, Senior Client Partner at Korn Ferry, commented : « Appointing a board director is not what it used to be. Gone are the days of CEOs and chairmen single-handedly planning how to fill their boards with friends, family and colleagues. Market volatility and economic instability, heightened regulatory pressure, the demand and need for diversity, and growing shareholder activism have forced boards to rethink their nomination practices.

« Over the past decade, boards of directors around the world have seen their roles redefined from the scope of their responsibilities and their actual workload to the level of mental agility required. To fulfil their mission, today’s corporate boards must command a broad battery of qualities, skills, and experience. »

Turid Elisabeth Solvang, Managing Director of the Norwegian Institute of Directors, and board member of ecoDa has co-ordinated the project with Mr Schofield. She adds: « Also, having the right competencies and experiences around the board table alone is not sufficient to guarantee board effectiveness. Team dynamics and behaviours are equally important. Underestimating the role of relationships among board members means undermining the board’s ability to adequately support the company.

« As governance and the trend for greater rigour and transparency in boardroom processes increases, the recruitment of board directors has become more contentious: perceived ‘old practices’ often provoke a sharp and public reaction from investors and media observers alike. The goal of this report is to develop a set of best practice recommendations for boards’ recruitment that apply within the different national legal frameworks and corporate governance models. »

The best practice guidelines outlined in the report are:

1. Ensure rigour and independence in the board nomination process from the outset.

2. Keep the main stakeholders informed.

3. The CEO should not have the veto power on nomination committee decisions; however, he/she should be involved in the process and be consulted during the decision making.

4. Build a board succession plan.

5. Know when directors will leave/rotate off the board.

6. Conduct a gap analysis to match the skills and experiences needed with business strategy.

7. Be aware of how team dynamics facilitate (or hamper) board activities.

8. Maintain independence of process by hiring external professional advisors.

9. Use board appointments to foster diversity in the board’s makeup without losing sight of the skills needed.

10. Ask mission-critical questions during candidate interviews.

11. Reference thoroughly.

12. Establish a structured, informative and tailored induction programme.

13. Mentoring should be considered for new / first-time directors.

14. Value feedback from outgoing board members.

Proposition d’une nouvelle approche à la gouvernance | IoD – GB


Vous trouverez, ci-dessous, un article de l’Institut de la gouvernance du Royaume-Uni (IoD) qui présente un document intitulé « The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies » dans lequel les auteurs décrivent une approche nouvelle à l’évaluation de la saine gouvernance.

Le document se distingue par la conception d’un modèle de prévision de la gouvernance, basé sur une multitude de facteurs explicatifs, et d’indices de performance.

Je vous invite à prendre connaissance du rapport de l’IoD.

Bonne lecture.

IoD calls on businesses and regulators to take a fresh approach to corporate governance

 

In a new report published today, the leading business organisation hopes its report will kickstart the debate about how to define good governance – and recognise those companies that do it best.

The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies, launched at the IoD this morning, sets out a new framework for assessing corporate governance, moving away from a focus on compliance and towards a more complex measurement which combines public perceptions with a range of objective factors.

The IoD launches a good corporate governance report titled The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies
Téléchargez le rapport complet

Launching the report, Ken Olisa, chairman of the advisory panel for the report, warned that the current system doesn’t fully address what corporate governance is truly about.

“No one factor dictates whether a company is well run,” Olisa said. “It is simply not correct for a company to say that because they have ticked certain boxes, they show good governance.

“Now is the time for some bold thinking on how we define and measure governance, including the recognition that it is essentially an organic process involving the interaction of groups of people.”

The new report is the first stage in a move towards creating a comprehensive Good Governance Index which ranks individual companies on their corporate governance, taking into account factors beyond just compliance and looking at a company’s wider corporate behaviour and culture.

Simon Walker, director general of the IoD, said that the new framework “challenges previous ways of measuring the governance of big companies, and kicks off a new debate on how firms can improve their transparency, accountability and performance.”

On Tuesday, Director.co.uk will provide updates and video from the official launch at the IoD’s central London headquarters at 116 Pall Mall of The Great Governance Debate: Towards a good governance index for listed companies. Keep an eye on the website and our Twitter feed @DirectorIoD for updates.

Download the full report now

 

Gouvernance d’entreprise | Beignes-Burger-Café


Le séminaire à la maîtrise de Gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022) dispensé  par Ivan Tchotourian*, professeur en droit des affaires de la Faculté de droit de l’Université Laval, entend apporter aux étudiants une réflexion originale sur les liens entre la sphère économico-juridique, la gouvernance des entreprises et les enjeux sociétaux actuels**.

Ce billet réalisé par les étudiants-chercheurs veut contribuer au partage des connaissances en gouvernance à une large échelle. Celui-ci expose le résultat des recherches de Charlotte Davies et Marie-Michelle B. White sur la situation de la fusion des entreprises Burger King et Tim Hortons et les incidences en termes de gouvernance et de responsabilité sociale.

Bonne lecture ! Vos commentaires sont appréciés.

Beignes-Burger-Café [1] et gouvernance d’entreprise

Charlotte Davies

Marie-Michelle B. White

 

En décembre dernier, la fusion Tim Hortons-Burger King a défrayé la manchette. En effet, elle a mené à la création du Restaurant Brands International Inc (TSX, NYSE : QSR), représentant aujourd’hui plus de 18 000 restaurants dans 100 pays, soit la troisième plus grande chaîne de fast-food mondiale [2].

9afe487de556e59e6db6c862adfe25a4-will-the-new-tax-rules-deter-the-burger-king-tim-hortons-merger

Même si les chiffres ont été particulièrement médiatisés, les implications en termes de gouvernance, elles, n’ont pas suscité le même engouement. Pourtant, pour réaliser l’opération, le géant canadien devait commencer par obtenir le vote favorable de ses actionnaires ainsi que la non-intervention du bureau de la concurrence. Aussi, l’approbation du gouvernement canadien eu égard à la Loi sur l’investissement était primordiale.

Or, l’ensemble de ces autorisations [3] impliquait des prises de décisions à la fois des conseils d’administrations et des membres de la direction des deux groupes.

Quelles sont les grandes lignes de ce « trio beignes-burger-café » ?

Une stratégie trop favorable aux actionnaires ?

Si la décision de vendre à Burger King a pu étonner, elle a offert à Tim Hortons une expansion de ses franchises au niveau mondial, augmentant ainsi considérablement les marges de profits actionnariales [4]. Cette fusion a créé de la valeur additionnelle pour les actionnaires des deux sociétés et ce, dès l’annonce officielle communiquée le 26 août.

Plus encore, c’est le nouveau titre QSR qui dès le 15 décembre, a fait croître les profits. Au sein même de Burger King, c’est le fonds d’investissement brésilien 3G Capital, propriétaire d’environ 70% des actions, qui a conduit l’opération, détenant à lui seul la majorité nécessaire pour procéder au vote d’approbation.

Depuis quelques années, à coup d’acquisitions gigantesques – dernièrement Kraft Inc [5] –, en association avec le milliardaire Warren Buffett, 3G Capital Inc a réussi à se hisser à la tête de l’industrie agroalimentaire.

Que penser des réelles intentions de 3G capital ? Beaucoup sont d’avis qu’au-delà de la stratégie favorable à l’actionnariat, l’un des objectifs principaux consistait en l’inversion fiscale [6]. En effet, les actionnaires de Burger King bénéficient des règles fiscales avantageuses du Canada dès lors qu’est opéré le déménagement fiscal, c’est-à-dire le transfert du conseil d’administration et de la charge corporative afin de bénéficier des règles du pays de résidence.

Toutefois, cette politique qualifiable de court-termiste a eu, en contrepartie, des cures d’amaigrissement imposées aux actifs de Tim Hortons lesquelles semblent bien loin des engagements qui avaient été pris envers le gouvernement canadien avant l’opération.

Responsabilité sociale : bien mais à revoir

Dès les premières rumeurs d’acquisition, le gouvernement du Canada a fait connaître sa volonté que l’entreprise Tim Hortons soit gérée par « district brand » incluant une promesse de la part de l’américaine de ne pas changer les marques, les produits et l’image. Pourquoi cette intervention ?

Au-delà de ces arrangements, qui dans la pratique ont également conduit à une « double direction » afin de ne pas mélanger les deux entreprises, l’américaine a dû prendre des engagements en matière de responsabilité sociale pour recueillir l’approbation du Canada dont les suivants, tel qu’énoncés par le ministre de l’Industrie James Moore [7] le 4 décembre dernier :

  1. collaborer avec les franchisés de Tim Hortons pour maintenir à 100 % le nombre actuel d’emplois dans les franchises à l’échelle du Canada;
  2. établir à Oakville en Ontario le siège social de la nouvelle entreprise (issue de la fusion de Tim Hortons et de Burger King), maintenir un nombre important d’emplois à ce siège social et inscrire la société à la Bourse de Toronto;
  3. maintenir intégralement l’appui de Tim Hortons à des causes de bienfaisance ainsi que son engagement communautaire partout au Canada;
  4. faire en sorte qu’au moins 50 % des membres du conseil d’administration de la marque Tim Hortons soient des Canadiens.

Mais tout engagement, aussi solennel, soit-il génère aussi des compromis. Dès janvier 2015, des mises à pieds ont eu lieu, entre autres, au siège social de Tim Hortons. La direction de Restaurant Brands international Inc. a confirmé les motifs de ces congédiements dans une annonce la même journée : « Nous avons dû prendre des décisions difficiles, mais nécessaires aujourd’hui, afin de réorganiser notre compagnie. » (Alexandra Cygal, vice-présidente, affaires générales, Tim Hortons).

Dans le monde des affaires, 3G Capital est reconnue pour imposer des coupures importantes lorsqu’elle procède à l’acquisition d’autres compagnies [8]. Cette politique reflète-t-elle une saine gouvernance d’entreprise ?

Les principes de gouvernances [9] veulent que les décisions rendues par le Conseil d’administration tiennent compte des intérêts de la société, qu’elles soient rendues conformément avec leur devoir de prudence, de diligence et de fiduciaire [10] et qu’aucun intérêt d’un groupe ne doive prévaloir sur celui d’un autre groupe [11]. Si privilégier l’actionnariat aux dépens des employés permettait une meilleure efficience au sein d’administration de la compagnie, par notamment la suppression de postes doublons et la réorganisation en terme d’efficience stratégique, économique et financière, il reste que la suppression de plusieurs centaines d’emplois est en contradiction des engagements pris.

En outre, la réorganisation à l’interne a également conduit à des réorganisations aux seins des conseils d’administration, avec la création d’un conseil d’administration ainsi que d’une équipe de direction « mixte » [12] , mais pas également répartie entre les anciens Burger King et Tim Hortons. Plusieurs phénomènes expliquent cette répartition des pouvoirs, notamment le contexte de rachat entre concurrents de restauration rapide, et le fort endettement de la canadienne depuis 2013, suite à une périlleuse stratégie de croissance par ingénierie financière [13].

Quant aux engagements moraux, de bienfaisance et d’implication communautaire, ils sont certes pris en principe sur le long terme, mais rien n’est moins évident que de les suivre. Peuvent-ils réellement constituer une priorité pour Restaurant Brands qui a pris le parti d’une expansion internationale ?


[1] Expression utilisée pour la première fois dans un article paru le 26 août 2014 par Droit-Inc Québec (http://www.droit-inc.com/article13440-Un-petit-beigne-avec-votre-Whopper) et reprise depuis sous d’autres formes.

[2] http://www.ledevoir.com/economie/actualites-economiques/416913/transaction-rapide-en-restauration-rapide.

[3] Pour mieux comprendre les mécanismes liés à l’acquisition et à la fusion d’une entreprise canadienne, voir le guide du cabinet Stikeman Elliott : http://www.stikeman.com/fr/pdf/MA_Activity_Canada_FR.pdf.

[4] http://www.timhortons.com/ca/fr/corporate/lancement-de-la-troisieme.php.

[5] http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2015/03/25/395269545/heinz-kraft-announce-merger.

[6] http://www.droit-inc.ca/article13467-Burger-King-et-l-inversion-fiscale.

[7] http://nouvelles.gc.ca/web/article-fr.do?mthd=tp&crtr.page=8&nid=911859&crtr.tp1D=980.

[8] http://ici.radio-canada.ca/regions/ontario/2015/01/27/008-rumeurs-compressions-timhortons.shtml.

[9] Voir notamment le principe VI.A des principes de l’OCDE de 2004 : http://www.oecd.org/fr/gouvernementdentreprise/ae/principesdegouvernementdentreprise/31652074.PDF.

[10] Magasins à rayons Peoples Inc. (Syndic de) c. Wise, 2004 C.S.B. 68.

[11] BCE Inc. c. Détenteurs de débentures de 1976, 2008 C.S.C. 69.

[12] http://www.canadianbusiness.com/business-news/tim-hortons-burger-king-finalize-merger-to-form-restaurant-brands-international/.

[13] https://www.lesaffaires.com/blogues/yvan-allaire/pourquoi-tim-hortons-nachete-pas-burger-king/571559.


*Ivan Tchotourian, professeur en droit des affaires, codirecteur du Centre d’Études en Droit Économique (CÉDÉ), membre du Groupe de recherche en droit des services financiers (www.grdsf.ulaval.ca), Faculté de droit, Université Laval.

**Le séminaire s’interroge sur le contenu des normes de gouvernance et leur pertinence dans un contexte de profonds questionnements des modèles économique et financier. Dans le cadre de ce séminaire, il est proposé aux étudiants depuis l’hiver 2014 d’avoir une expérience originale de publication de leurs travaux de recherche qui ont porté sur des sujets d’actualité de gouvernance d’entreprise.

 

La communication avec les actionnaires-investisseurs est-elle un rempart contre l’activisme ?


Voici un article de Martin Lipton*, paru sur le blogue du Harvard Law School Forum, qui donne, en quelque sorte, une réponse au billet publié le 28 juin sur mon site, sous le titre de « Un nouveau paradigme dans le monde des administrateurs de sociétés | La communication avec les actionnaires-investisseurs« .

L’auteur relève plusieurs points sensibles relativement à l’influence des actionnaires-investisseurs sur la gouvernance des sociétés et sur l’éventualité de l’émergence d’un nouveau paradigme.

Selon lui, les grands investisseurs veulent s’arroger le monopole de la saine gouvernance en prétendant agir comme les « agents » des administrateurs de sociétés qui, eux, devraient mieux définir leurs stratégies de communication avec les parties prenantes (principalement avec les investisseurs-actionnaires) !

Voici la conclusion de Lipton qui en surprendra sûrement plusieurs :

As activism moves in-house at major investors and the new paradigm becomes pervasive, the influence of the activist hedge funds and ISS and Glass-Lewis will shrink and will be replaced by the policies, evaluations and decisions of the major investors.

While this will be a welcome relief from the short-termism imposed by the activist hedge funds, it raises a new fundamental question—how will investors use their power ? This remains to be seen.

It is not likely that activism and short-termism will totally disappear, but I’m comfortable that the influence of major investors will be more favorable to shareholders generally and to the Nation’s economy and society, than the self-seeking personal greed of hedge fund activists.

Bonne lecture. Vos commentaires sont appréciés.

Some Lessons from BlackRock, Vanguard and Dupont

Recent statements by the CEOs of BlackRock and Vanguard rejecting activism and supporting investment for long-term value creation and their support of DuPont in its proxy fight with Trian, prompt the thought that activism is moving in-house at these and other major investors and a new paradigm for corporate governance and portfolio oversight is emerging.

An instructive statement by the investors is that they view a company’s directors as their agents; that they want to know the directors and have access to the directors; that they want their opinions heard; and that their relations with the company and their support for its management and board will depend on appropriate discussion of, and response to, their opinions.

20150207_LDP001_0

The investors want to engage with the directors on a regular basis. They suggest that the company have a program or process for regular engagement. One suggestion is a shareholder relations committee of the board. Other suggestions range from directors accompanying management on investor visits; to directors attending investor day programs and being available to the investors; to the lead director being the liaison for communication. The investors are not wedded to any one form of engagement and are content to leave that to the company and its board.

The investors want independent oversight by a balanced board of effective directors that has appropriate skill sets to properly discharge its responsibilities. They expect the board to arrange meaningful evaluations of its performance and to regularly refresh its membership. They expect “best practices” corporate governance and compensation keyed to performance and shareholder returns.

The investors want the company to proactively communicate its business strategy to its shareholders, and to keep them advised of developments and problems. Vanguard suggests that directors think like activists “in the best sense” and question management’s blind spots and the board’s own blind spots. To aid in that effort, Vanguard suggests that the board bring in a sell-side analyst who has a sell recommendation. The investors will not accept that there is insufficient time for engagement and discussion of the business or that SEC Reg FD forecloses meaningful discussion.

The investors expect the company to hear out an activist hedge fund that takes a meaningful position in its shares. But Vanguard says, “It doesn’t mean that the board should capitulate to things that aren’t in the company’s long-term interest. Boards must take a principled stand to do the right thing for the long-term and not acquiesce to short-term demands simply to make them go away.”

…..


*Martin Lipton is a founding partner of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, specializing in mergers and acquisitions and matters affecting corporate policy and strategy.

Un nouveau paradigme dans le monde des administrateurs de sociétés | La communication avec les actionnaires-investisseurs


Voici un article publié par F. William McNabb III , président de la firme d’investissement Vanguard, dans Harvard Law School Forum récemment.

Il s’agit d’une conférence présentée lors d’un événement réunissant un grand groupe d’administrateurs de sociétés et dans laquelle il explique un nouveau paradigme qui confronte les administrateurs : La communication des administrateurs avec les actionnaires.

L’article décrit très bien l’importance des conseils d’administration pour des firmes comme Vanguard car ceux-ci sont les représentants des meilleurs intérêts des actionnaires. Ainsi, pour l’auteur il est essentiel que les administrateurs de sociétés trouvent les moyens appropriés pour échanger avec leurs actionnaires sur les différentes orientations prises ou à prendre.

Il est vrai que les CA travaillent encore trop souvent en vase clos et que les investisseurs peuvent eux aussi avoir de bonnes idées en matière de gouvernance. Il est ainsi primordial que les conseils d’administration soient en très grande partie composés d’administrateurs indépendants de la direction et, évidemment, compétents, expérimentés et visionnaires.

L’auteur donne plusieurs exemples de formules utilisées par les grandes entreprises pour engager la conversation avec les actionnaires sur une base régulière. Les entreprises doivent donc avoir une stratégie proactive de communication avec les investisseurs afin d’éviter les mauvaises surprises !

Je vous conseille de lire ce compte rendu de M. McNabb III afin de mieux appréhender les changements à envisager dans la gouvernance des entreprises, de mieux comprendre le point de vue d’investisseurs majeurs, tels que Vanguard, et de prévenir les actions des investisseurs activistes et opportunistes.

Bonne lecture !

Getting to Know You: The Case for Significant Shareholder Engagement

I’ll begin my remarks with a premise. It’s a simple belief that I have. And that is: Corporate governance should not be a mystery. For corporate boards, the way large investors vote their shares should not be a mystery. And for investors, the way corporate boards govern their companies should not be a mystery. I believe we’re moving in a direction where there is less mystery on both sides, but each side still has some work to do in how it tells its respective stories.feature-investisseur

So let me start by telling you a little bit about Vanguard’s story and our perspective. I’ll start with an anecdote that I believe is illustrative of some of the headwinds that we all face in our efforts to improve governance: “We didn’t think you cared.” A couple of years ago, we engaged with a very large firm on the West Coast. We had some specific concerns about a proposal that was coming to a vote, and we told them so.

The proposal failed, and it was embarrassing for the firm. They responded by reaching out for feedback from all of their largest shareholders—or so they said. They didn’t call their largest independent shareholder—Vanguard—nor did they apparently take into account the very specific feedback we had already provided.

In conversations afterward with them (once we finally got to the board), they told us, essentially, “You guys run index funds. We didn’t think that you cared.”

Well, we do care. A lot! Interesting postscript: Now that this company knows we care, they’ve taken substantive action in response to input from us and others.

A word about Vanguard

Let me pause for a moment to give you some additional context for Vanguard’s point of view. Today we are the largest mutual fund firm in the world. We have $3.3 trillion in global assets under management. We have 159 funds in the U.S., and an additional 123 in markets outside the U.S. In the U.S., we have nearly $1.7 trillion in index equities and an additional $356B in actively managed equity funds.

What that all means is that Vanguard investors collectively own about 5% of every publicly traded company in the United States and about 1% of nearly every public company outside of the U.S.

And, remember, when it comes to our indexed offerings, we are permanent shareholders. To borrow a phrase from Warren Buffet: Our favorite holding period is forever. We’re going to hold your stock when you hit your quarterly earnings target. And we’ll hold it when you don’t. We’re going to hold your stock if we like you. And if we don’t. We’re going to hold your stock when everyone else is piling in. And when everyone else is running for the exits.

In other words, we’re big, we don’t make a lot of noise, and we’re focused on the long term.

That is precisely why we care so much about good governance. Vanguard funds hold companies in perpetuity. We want to see our investments grow over the long-term. We’re not interested in managing the companies that we invest in. But we do want to provide oversight and input to the board of directors. And we count on boards to oversee management.

That perspective informs our approach to corporate governance. So let me share, at the very highest level, our six principles on governance. These are some of the same ideas that the panelists discussed earlier this evening:

  1. Independent oversight and, more broadly, appropriate board composition. It is the single most important factor in good governance. If you think about it, we’re in a representative democracy. We empower a group of people to oversee our interests as shareholders, to hire and fire the CEO, and to have a say in strategy, risk oversight, compensation, and so forth. We as shareholders are not there, and that group of representatives needs to be our eyes and ears. Who they are, how they interact, and the skills they bring to the table are critical from a long-term value standpoint.
  2. Accountability. Management should be accountable to the board. The board should be accountable to shareholders.
  3. Shareholder voting rights that are consistent with economic interests. This means one share, one vote. No special share classes for added voting power.
  4. Annual director elections and minimal anti-takeover devices. We believe that shareholders benefit when the market for corporate control functions freely.
  5. Sensible compensation tied to performance. The majority of executive pay should be tied to long-term shareholder value.
  6. Engagement. I’d like to place my greatest emphasis on engagement tonight, because it serves as a touchstone for all of our other core principles.

At Vanguard, we’ve been on a journey toward increased engagement over the past decade or so. Our peers in the mutual fund industry have as well. Proxy voting is not poker. Our votes should not come as a surprise to companies and their boards.

Our outreach efforts began many years ago by simply posting our proxy voting guidelines on our website, then having ad hoc, issue-driven conversations with companies. A few years later, we began writing letters to companies from our CEO (my predecessor in the role, Jack Brennan, started this practice). We wanted them to know that we were a significant shareholder, and we wanted them to be aware of our guidelines.

As we’ve gone along, we’ve become more targeted in whom we mailed letters to and more prescriptive in our language.

In March, we sent out 500 letters to independent chairs and lead directors at companies across the U.S. In the letter, we talked about our six principles for corporate governance and the importance of engaging with shareholders. In just two months, we’ve received 164 responses, and they were almost all uniformly positive, thanking us for reaching out. Directors shared the various formats they use for engagement:

Sometimes the lead director is in charge of shareholder engagement.

Sometimes it’s a committee of directors.

Some companies have board members involved in “investor days” for their industry, where they’re hearing from shareholders.

And at other companies, the general counsel meets with different investor groups and reports back to the board.

What we’re always advocating for, essentially, is thoughtful engagement. It’s really “quality over quantity”: knowing your shareholder base, knowing what they care about, and knowing how often they want to engage with you.

Engagement is bilateral and comes in many forms.

Engagement is a two-way street. It’s not just about publishing proxy guidelines or investors voicing concerns. There are some great examples of boards being proactive and getting their messages out to investors. Two examples from recent years:

Microsoft, in a number of instances, has used videos from their directors to communicate the board’s perspective on issues. Whether it’s the lead independent director describing the board’s role in overseeing strategy or the chair of the audit committee describing the board’s perspective on risk management, these insights into the board’s thinking provide helpful context for investors. This is a great example of one form of “one-to-many” engagement that is simple, underutilized, and very much appreciated by us as investors.

Another example: When Dell announced its intention to go private, we met with the special committee of the Dell board that had to make the decision on shareholders’ behalf to sell at a specific price. We listened to their perspective, their decision-making process. and the things that they took into account. It put us in a better position to decide whether this was a good deal. The more opportunities we have to interact with directors in the normal course, the more we have an increased level of insight.

An example that was resolved only a few hours ago, of course: DuPont and Trian. It’s a cautionary tale of how no company is truly immune to activist investors. DuPont is well-known and highly regarded, and, most relevant to our discussion here, has been reaching out to investors and acting on their feedback for years. The board gets feedback early, and feedback influences strategy at the company. DuPont and Trian engaged with each other for two years beforehand. But a proxy struggle ensued nonetheless.

Practical engagement around board composition

Sometimes engagement can mean just being crystal clear about your expectations—and about how you think through certain issues. This applies to boards and to investors. For example:

Do you have a set of written guidelines that spell out the type of expertise or perspectives that you want in your board members (i.e., these are the types of things we’re looking for, and these are the people we believe embody them)? We’re seeing an increasing number of companies offering this kind of perspective, and it’s very helpful to investors.

Do you have a way to assess appropriate board tenure, both at the aggregate and individual level? Investors might have questions about why, for example, a particular board member has served for 30 years and whether he or she is sufficiently independent of management.

There’s a need to have a framework to raise important questions and have meaningful discussions between boards and investors to help facilitate a level of self-awareness for boards. A framework allows them to say, in essence: We realize that our board is comprised differently (or operates differently) than other firms in our business—and here’s why.

There may be a good reason for a board to be an outlier. There may not be. But let’s provide as much context as we can and invite the discussion. Because investors are going have these questions anyway. In the absence of additional context, they may draw their own conclusions.

Thinking like an activist

The outlier concept extends beyond board composition and gets into matters of business oversight and strategy. The best boards work to understand where their companies might be different or might be perceived as different.

Are those differences strengths or vulnerabilities? Some of this is a defensive mindset. Some of this is the continued evolution of the board’s role in strategy. In many companies, we’re seeing the board’s role move beyond the historical perspective of “review and concur” to becoming more engaged in setting the strategy.

So how does a board inform itself? If you want to, as a director, you can be fed a steady diet of management’s perspective on issues. And in many instances, if left to your own devices, that’s what you get. Management comes in, gives you a presentation, and tells you why this is the right strategy. If that’s all you’ve got, shame on you.

As an aside here: I’m continually sounding the warning about the danger of complacency to employees and leadership at Vanguard. The firm has been doing very well, particularly over the past several years, in terms of cash flow, performance, and large-scale initiatives that we’ve rolled out. It would be very easy for us to feel like we can take a breath, maybe relax a bit. Complacency is a temptation. But we can’t succumb to that temptation. A relentless pursuit of excellence on behalf of our clients continues to drive everything we do. As Andy Grove, former CEO of Intel, put it, “Success breeds complacency. Complacency breeds failure. Only the paranoid survive.” I’d suggest that this is how boards need to be thinking—functional paranoia. Are you getting enough different viewpoints?

Healthy and vibrant boards think like an activist in the very best sense. They ask:

Where should we be pushing harder or taking costs out? What are the management team’s blind spots?

What are the board’s blind spots?

And how do we correct that? Some boards bring in sell-side analysts that have a “sell” on the company to tell them what they’re missing.

If all the board is listening to is management’s perspective, they may be surprised when an activist shows up and says, “Hey, your cost structure is way out of line with your competitors.”

Glenn Booraem, who heads up Vanguard’s corporate governance team, was just telling me about a conversation he had last week with an activist. The activist’s premise was, “As long as there are unhappy shareholders, activists have a role.”

This particular activist has a theory about maximization mindset versus sufficiency mindset. An owner is going to have a maximization mindset: the owner wants to maximize the value of an investment over time. So as an owner, if you have significant money on the line, you might make different decisions than what this activist described as some boards’ sufficiency mindset. If a board has a sufficiency mindset, then a presentation by the management team seeking approval for a big initiative might be met with, “Yeah, that looks good. That looks reasonable. You’ve made a sufficient case to make this capital investment.”

But if you’re looking at the presentation with a maximization mindset—you’re spending your own money, in essence—you might say, “Can you do it for 5% less? 10% less? 15% less?”

This activist’s contention was that some boards aren’t pushing hard enough because they’re not in the owner’s seat and aren’t thinking as owners of the organization might think.

Changing nature of activist investors

The nature of activist investing has changed significantly since the 1980s. Today, we’re seeing a greater trend toward constructive activists rather than destructive activists. Activists are not inherently good or bad. They often raise legitimate questions.

When activists raise legitimate questions and tie their business cases to long-term shareholder value, that gets our attention. I can think of several cases where a board wasn’t asking the right questions and eventually lost touch with how the company was being run and being perceived by investors. If the first time we’re hearing from a company in our role as shareowners is when the company is under siege by activists, that’s not good. The company is inherently on the defensive at that point. And they’ve lost control of the narrative, at least to some degree. Generally speaking, activism most often happens when something is broken.

I’ll share two instances where Vanguard has sided with activist campaigns in recent years.

Canadian Pacific Railway: In 2012, activist Bill Ackman identified some vulnerabilities in Canadian Pacific Railway. We agreed—as did many other large investors—that the company had been poorly run and governed. Ackman brought in an experienced CEO and a number of directors they thought could make a difference. It’s been an activist success story by and large.

Commonwealth REIT. Another example of us supporting an activist: In 2014, Corvex and Related Companies waged a successful campaign to replace the entire board of Commonwealth REIT. This was a company with a track record of poor performance and poor governance, and they were ultimately held accountable. Commonwealth was using a third-party management firm, RMR, that was run by family members of Commonwealth leadership. RMR extracted value from the public company. They didn’t operate it well, but they were paid well nonetheless. We supported wiping the slate clean. In the case of Commonwealth, we were the largest shareholder. We were important to Corvex’s case, but at the end of the day, I don’t think they needed us. Eighty-one percent of Commonwealth shareholders voted to remove the company’s board.

A caveat

There is a caveat that I want to mention, and it has to do with backbone. We’re talking about how dangerous it is for companies to essentially write off any particular group of shareholders. Part of the board’s role is to listen. If someone’s going to buy up 5% of the company, you should at least listen.

That said, it doesn’t mean that the board should capitulate to things that aren’t in the company’s long-term interest. Boards must have a backbone. To be frank, board members cannot be more worried about their own seats than they are about the future of the company they oversee. Boards must take a principled stand to do the right thing for the long term and not acquiesce to short-term demands simply to make them go away.

Don’t be dissuaded by common concerns

We do hear concerns from boards who haven’t fully embraced more significant shareholder involvement. The most common are:

“Strong shareholder engagement will disintermediate management.” This is not what large shareholders want in an engagement program. Boards will often choose to include management for legal support and to talk about operational issues. And then there are those matters that are the exclusive province of the board, such as CEO compensation, which we believe are appropriate for discussion with the board alone.

“We’ll get tripped up on Reg FD issues.” Just to be clear, large shareholders are not looking for inside information on strategy or future expectations. What they’re looking for is the chance to provide the perspective of a long-term investor. Companies individually have to decide how to best manage that risk, but it shouldn’t be by shutting out the shareholders completely. Firms can train directors, include their legal counsel in shareholder conversations, and set clear boundaries for discussions.

“There is no time in our agenda.” Boards should talk about how much time to allot to engagement. I would say, of course, that time for engagement with significant shareholders should be on the board’s agenda. Investors are an important constituency whom boards represent.

“This would be too difficult to implement.” Leading companies already have substantive engagement programs in place. The Shareholder-Director Exchange Protocol is available online and offers guidance on setting up engagement programs.

If your company doesn’t have an engagement program already underway, start where you are. Start now. The landscape has shifted, and companies cannot afford to be insular. The engagement train has left the station, and the leading companies are on board.

Shareholder engagement establishes common ground

A big part of the engagement process is establishing common ground, getting to the things that the shareholder and the board both know to be true, and getting to the things that they’re both trying to accomplish. There should be an extraordinary degree of alignment between the interests of the shareowners and the board, because the board represents the shareowners.

One critical benefit of good relationships that I’ve seen is being able to provide background on some of the votes we’ve cast. As you know, shareowners have only two votes: for or against. But not every “for” vote is “absolutely for.” A good relationship allows us to fill in those shades of gray between “absolutely for” and “absolutely against.” We may vote “for” but have reservations at the margin. If we don’t share those reservations, then the company has no opportunity to consider addressing those issues and might be very surprised to find that our vote has changed the next time. Or if we vote against the company’s recommendation, a good relationship allows us to share why we voted that way and what the company would need to do to get our support.

If all we’re doing is simply voting, it doesn’t give the company the full picture. So the company is flying blind, in a way.

From Vanguard’s point of view, we’re in the relationship to maximize the value of the longest of long terms for our fund investors. We understand that things don’t always go up in a straight line. So if we have a good relationship with a company, they have a great opportunity to tell us their story. If there are performance problems, for example, either own those problems or tell us what you’re doing to fix them. For example, “We know we’ve got cost problems. We’ve got this initiative underway to trim $1 billion in costs for the next three years, and we think that’s going to address our problems.” Whatever the particular issue might be.

It’s worth noting that in the vast majority of cases, we’re happy to engage with management, too. Many times the questions or concerns we have are ones that we’re very comfortable relaying to management and getting management’s perspective on. In fact, many companies are including in their proxy statements more information about the engagement they’ve done with their investors. We’ve seen tables that show “what we heard” and the corresponding “what we did.” We think that’s a great trend.

So much of engagement gets back to the idea of self-awareness and knowing the places in which you’re an outlier. Unless you know where you stand, both from a competitive standpoint and with your investors, you’re a sitting duck.

Looking ahead: The future of engagement

I’ll close my remarks with a few thoughts addressed directly to board members of public companies: We count on you to oversee the companies that our clients invest in. It’s an important role. In the U.S. alone, Vanguard invests in some 3,800 publicly traded companies. We place a great deal of trust and confidence in you. And trust and confidence are built upon open communication. We want to continue to increase the levels of engagement we have with boards. We believe that directors—and investors—are moving in the right direction on that front.

As we look ahead, I believe we can do more.

  1. One idea: The Shareholder-Director Exchange that I mentioned. It provides a protocol and some tools and guidelines for institutional investors and directors to talk. It’s a wonderful idea, and it has great promise. There’s an open question on how best to measure the effectiveness of engagement on a wider scale. But from our perspective, every positive change that we can help to effect is a win for our investors.
  2. Another possible channel that I’m passionate about: The creation of standing Shareholder Relations Committees on public boards. It could be an incredibly effective way for boards to gather those outside perspectives I discussed earlier. Frankly, we’re surprised that more boards don’t solicit our views on general industry topics. For example, we have a very successful actively managed Health Care Fund—the world’s largest health care fund, by a wide margin, at more than $50 billion in assets. I would think that the directors of pharmaceutical firms or biotech firms would be interested in talking to our portfolio manager to hear her opinions and outlook for the industry. There is a great opportunity for dialogue between investor and director on that level as well.

You, as directors, have a great opportunity to tell us how your bring value to investors. We want to listen. When you post a video to the company’s website, we’ll watch it! When you give a good explanation of an issue in your proxy statement, we’re reading it very carefully. When you provide context, we’re taking it in.

We are listening to your perspective. We want you to be aware of ours. We are your permanent investors. We care very deeply about the role that you play for our clients. And we thank you for doing the job well.


*F. William McNabb III is Chairman and CEO of Vanguard. This post is based on Mr. McNabb’s recent keynote address at Lazard’s 2015 Director Event, “Shareholder Expectations: The New Paradigm for Directors.”

Retour sur la résolution de la crise financière de 2008 et sur la gouvernance des entreprises


Le séminaire à la maîtrise de Gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022) dispensé  par Ivan Tchotourian*, professeur en droit des affaires de la Faculté de droit de l’Université Laval, entend apporter aux étudiants une réflexion originale sur les liens entre la sphère économico-juridique, la gouvernance des entreprises et les enjeux sociétaux actuels**.

Ce billet réalisé par les étudiants-chercheurs veut contribuer au partage des connaissances à une large échelle. Ces derniers ont travaillé sur un chapitre du livre « Handbook of Corporate Governance (SAGE Publications Ltd, 2012) d’Alice Klettner intitulé : « Corporate Governance and the Global Financial Crisis: The Regulatory Response ».

Dans le cadre de ce billet, les auteurs reviennent sur la nature des réponses apportées à la suite à la crise financière de 2008 et ils relèvent deux difficultés : (1) Le manque de recul et (2) la difficulté d’évaluer les bonnes pratiques et la structure d’un conseil d’administration.

Je vous en souhaite bonne lecture. J’espère que vous prendrez autant de plaisir à lire ce compte rendu que j’en ai eu à le corriger – Ivan Tchotourian

Retour sur Corporate Governance and the Global Financial Crisis

par

Sarah Tanoh et Dane Kennedy-Tremblay

« Chaque âge amène ses problèmes; on les résout à l’âge suivant » disait Maurice Chapelan en 1957. Il aura fallu une crise financière mondiale d’une ampleur insoupçonnée pour que la communauté internationale prenne la mesure des lacunes latentes et préjudiciables en matière de régulation des activités financières. Les problèmes furent identifiés (ou, du moins, reconnus) et des solutions furent proposées au lendemain de la crise de 2008. Les pratiques de gouvernance de l’entreprise furent considérées comme étant l’un des moteurs de l’effondrement de l’économie mondiale.

crise-bourse-05

Il était impératif de limiter la dispersion des effets de la crise et de renforcer le secteur financier afin qu’il puisse se relever et se maintenir. Pour cela, il était nécessaire de lui offrir de nouveaux appuis. C’est sur deux niveaux que le monde pris des mesures régulatrices. Une coordination internationale accompagna les mesures nationales, celles-ci tenant davantage compte des spécificités culturelles et politiques de chaque pays.

Sur le plan international, le Forum de la stabilité financière (FSF), sur lequel se fonda le G20 en 2009, établit cinq actions concrètes dans cinq domaines parmi lesquels on retrouve la gestion du risque, et plus particulièrement les mécanismes de rémunération. Les principes établis par le FSF eurent une portée toute particulière puisqu’ils ont servi de lignes directrices aux États participants au G20 (et peut-on espérer, au-delà). L’OCDE a également influencé les mesures régulatrices prises indépendamment par chaque État, notamment en énonçant à la suite de l’analyse du Steering Group qu’il n’était pas nécessaire de réformer les principes de gouvernance d’entreprise de l’OCDE mais qu’il fallait améliorer leur application. La conclusion fut de laisser au secteur privé lui-même la responsabilité d’améliorer l’application des principes sur la base du volontariat !

Sur le plan national, la réponse à la crise fut relativement similaire bien que l’accent fut mis sur certains pans de la gouvernance de l’entreprise selon les sensibilités politiques et la situation particulière de chaque pays. Aux États-Unis, le Dodd-Frank Act fut édicté en 2010 et eut une grande portée. Bien que considérée comme insuffisante, cette mesure législative eut néanmoins le mérite de proposer des mesures plus sévères à l’égard de ceux qui tiennent les rennes des grandes organisations du secteur privé. En Grande-Bretagne, on proposa une réforme du système dans son ensemble au niveau des organismes de régulation eux-mêmes. Le système Twin-Peaks (reposant sur une prudential regulation authority et un consumer protection and markets authority) fut envisagé en remplacement du système tripartite reposant sur la Bank of England, le trésor public et l’autorité des marchés financiers.

En ce qui concerne les mesures plus particulières, il est intéressant de noter que le Royaume-Uni a axé ses réformes sur les performances du conseil d’administration et les engagements des actionnaires, tandis que les États-Unis axèrent leurs réformes sur un système de rémunération davantage transparent.

Cet article de Klettner nous offre un bon aperçu des réponses apportées au lendemain de la crise eu égard à la gouvernance d’entreprise, tant par les organisations internationales publiques, que par les pays eux-mêmes. L’un des points positifs de l’article est qu’il reconnaît des limites à ces réformes. Deux difficultés sont à relever :

(1) Le manque de recul

Qu’elles aient principalement visées la nature du conseil (et son évaluation) ou sa façon de gérer le risque (plus particulièrement les mécanismes de rémunération de ses membres), les nouvelles normes en matière de bonne gouvernance ont été adoptées plutôt récemment. Il est encore tôt pour juger de leur efficacité !

(2) La difficulté d’évaluer les bonnes pratiques et la structure d’un conseil d’administration

L’évaluation de la performance est encouragée mais n’est pas obligatoire comme nous l’avons vu plus haut. Bien entendu, une telle évaluation peut certainement être faite selon différents critères qui ont semblé permettre une meilleure performance durant la crise. Néanmoins, certains critères sont beaucoup plus difficiles à évaluer bien que primordiaux. Le niveau d’expérience et l’expertise des membres du conseil d’administration sont très importants lorsque de bonnes courroies de transmission de l’information existent. Néanmoins, ce ne sont pas les seuls garants de l’efficacité ! De quelle manière pouvons-nous alors réguler ou promouvoir la cohésion d’un conseil, la bonne foi de ses membres et la tenue de débats constructifs ?

Enfin, au moment de la crise de 2008, la gouvernance des entreprises – et plus particulièrement des institutions financières – était inadéquate : des modèles d’affaires trop agressifs, combinés à une régulation prudentielle imprudente semblent y avoir été des facteurs déterminants. Ainsi, hier fut l’âge de la crise, et aujourd’hui celui des solutions.

Mais, comment savoir si les recommandations en matière de gouvernance, qui furent promulguées à la suite de la dernière crise, protègeront d’une éventuelle nouvelle dégradation brutale future ? Une telle situation survient, par définition, lorsque la plupart des acteurs ne s’y attendent pas…


*Ivan Tchotourian, professeur en droit des affaires, codirecteur du Centre d’Études en Droit Économique (CÉDÉ), membre du Groupe de recherche en droit des services financiers (www.grdsf.ulaval.ca), Faculté de droit, Université Laval.

**Le séminaire s’interroge sur le contenu des normes de gouvernance et leur pertinence dans un contexte de profonds questionnements des modèles économique et financier. Dans le cadre de ce séminaire, il est proposé aux étudiants depuis l’hiver 2014 d’avoir une expérience originale de publication de leurs travaux de recherche qui ont porté sur des sujets d’actualité de gouvernance d’entreprise.

 

La gouvernance : une discipline en évolution | Drew Stein et al.


Aujourd’hui, j’ai choisi de publier un récent billet du groupe de discussion LinkedIn, « Boards & Advisors » qui relate une discussion très intéressante sur l’avenir de la gouvernance, notamment sur le rôle du conseil d’administration eu égard aux communications avec les actionnaires/investisseurs.

Ce billet est issu d’une prise de position de Drew Stein, partagée par Richard Leblanc, et commentée par plusieurs experts en gouvernance.

Un premier courant de pensée stipule que la communication des administrateurs avec les actionnaires est inappropriée compte tenu que ceux-ci sont élus annuellement par les actionnaires pour les représenter…

Mais voilà, un autre courant de pensée, prône la communication avec les actionnaires étant donné, qu’avec le temps, les administrateurs sont devenus moins représentatifs puisque ce sont eux qui proposent les administrateurs aux actionnaires !

 

ECH20163057_1

 

Quel est votre point de vue sur ce sujet controversé ?

Governance as an Enabling Discipline | Drew Stein

Drew Stein:

« Corporate Governance as a professional discipline has over recent decades been subject to numerous influences. Gone are the days when a corporate “`Mission Statement “ was viewed as the guiding light which all corporate wisdom would be asked to worship. Gradually governance as a discipline has been accepted by most professional business practitioners as an enabling vehicle which provides a platform for determining sound corporate behaviour and structured decision making. Over the years I’ve read and worked with boards on numerous governance documents and it’s interesting to note the maturing of the discipline as it’s morphed from Mission Statement through various stages of re incarnation to today where the governance document and its inherent disciplines are considered mandatory to ensuring professional leadership processes. Most directors accept that a soundly based and structured governance document is one of the most significant discipline and corporate behaviour enablers contributing to a company’s success.

As the governance discipline has in the past continually changed its shape and matured there is no doubt it will continue to do so as the winds of change in the corporate world blow across the business community. It needs to be remembered that governance as a discipline is a living breathing entity which continually requires stroking and attention otherwise it will stagnate and lose its ability to be one of the prime enablers contributing to above average board performance.

Therefore it is my opinion that at present there is a very real risk that governance as a discipline will begin to lose focus of its prime purpose if it does not address strategically important emerging issues. As a result it risks being relegated in status to a simple process driven ideology rather than an enabler to address future pressures and provide the structured platform required to meet new challenges required by today’s market. Let me explain.

Most current governance documents remain relatively silent on the key issue of shareholder communication. Yet as we’ve seen from the growing influence of the shareholder activist groups this is an issue which won’t go away and in some cases is becoming a festering wound. Now it is my contention that within the governance document there should be a highlighted section on how the board manage shareholder communication. Such detail on this extremely important issue will ensure the governance discipline can fulfil its purpose as a high level corporate enabler by providing a structured communication bridge between shareholder/investors and the board. Naturally there will need to be discussions with the major shareholders and agreement reached which would certainly take the distrust out of the current argument. In addition it would cement in place the role of the governance discipline as a high level enabler towards achieving corporate excellence.

I appreciate some readers will not agree that the governance discipline is the place to address shareholder board problems. I’ve seen some commentators suggest that changes in the company’s “Articles of Association” need to occur. However this appears to be a sledge hammer driving a drawing pin when if covered with real purpose in the governance document the resulting platform should be sufficient to engender real harmony and a sense of combined purpose between shareholders and their elected board.

My final comment may not sit well with some business professionals. Never the less it is my belief that some boards have assumed a position of almost arrogance and conferred self-importance upon themselves, conveniently forgetting that they are accountable to the shareholder/investors. Further I believe through judicious application of the governance discipline the balance of accountability can be restored and shareholder/investors will claw back their rightful position as the ultimate stakeholders in any company structure. »

Al Errington

Thank you for posting this Richard. I really enjoy Drew Stein’s insights into business and governance. As a note to Drew, I am very comfortable with his statements about board arrogance and lack of connection to shareholders or membership having lived through a lot of that. Shareholders and membership needs to be treated as the ownership they are and board’s need to think of themselves less as business or organizational elite than stewards of the ownership investment.
To me good governance is less about structure and rules than being focused, effective and accountable. Structure and rules are tools to be focused, effective and accountable but structure and rules are not good governance in and of themselves.

Kaiser Naseem

I agree with what Drew articulates. However, just to emphasize, more important than the CG document/code itself is the ability and willingness of shareholders, board members and senior management to adhere to and practice the principles. I am sure all of us still remember that one of the best document/code ever written was that of ENRON (which later sold for 1 cent on E-bay).

On the comment about arrogance, while agreeing, we should keep in mind the level of sophistication of the shareholders. So it would depend on the market (and I work a lot in emerging markets). At times, the BOD needs to show the way, even to the shareholders. Of course, this should not breed arrogance

David FinchAgree with Dean, but at the risk of stating the obvious (my apologies – Internal Auditors & Risk Managers do this all the time), actions speak louder than words; actions take time and are expensive, while words are instant and cheap…

We need frameworks, but more than anything, we need the right « tone at the top » – a tone which, like the Captain on his ship, is able to work the engine (actions) and rudder ( framework) to steer the vessel through choppy waters and reach the desired destination.

Enron had some nice words, but the overall framework was rottten. The good rudder was missing its equally essential rudder stock, and the engine ploughed on to take the ship into dangerous waters.
So apologies again for a bag of mixed metaphors, but I trust you get my « drift »

Gillian Lansdowne

While ensuring a company or board has the right framework and governance structure is very important, it is relatively easy to accomplish. The more complex equation is getting the people, culture, accountability and performance right. In order to thrive, both elements are essential.

Cam Brinsdon

Commenters – If you read Drew’s other posts you will see that he promotes accountability, culture, ‘tone at the top’, and action. A sound approach in one area of governance does not preclude a positive focus on other attributes of good governance.

Peter Crow

You make some good points Drew, well done.

The core of the tension with many shareholder-owner relationships seems to come down to ‘power’, especially in PLCs where the owner is not easily identified. That hubris and other similar attributes abound in the boardroom doesn’t help either. Thankfully, the problems you describe are somewhat less apparent in privately-held businesses, where the owner (and the wishes of the owner) are more readily identified and asserted.

Notwithstanding this, your proposal, of documenting the relationship, is not the complete answer though, is it? To define how the board and shareholders should correspond and work together (or not!) is one thing. To get boards and shareholders to comply is something else in my view. David Finch’s comment, about ‘tone at the top’ is crucial, as is a very clear division of labour between the owner, the board and management. Have you turned your mind to this problem (of how to achieve the appropriate tone), especially as it relates to PLCs and given the fractious proxy access situation?

Ted Santos

Great insights, Drew.

There is a dilemma for how shareholders should engage the BoD and management, especially since hedge funds win most proxy fights. If there isn’t some CG in place, the shareholders can become more of a distraction to the BoD and management which will further support their reason for being disgruntled. Without governance, shareholders can cut off their nose to spite their face.

At the same time, there are many savvy shareholders who can be extremely valuable to management and the BoD. Therefore, it is in the best interest for boards and shareholders to have collaborative communication. Otherwise, it can be hubris on the board’s part and an example of squandering critical intellectual capital.

I have another concern. If any company becomes an amalgamation of processes, eventually they may lose their way. While processes are important, they cannot navigate the course of a business. They are simply tools for navigating. In other words, my concern is that businesses will lose sight of their prime purpose. Perhaps prime purpose was the difference between Steve Jobs and John Skully.

Henry D. Wolfe

Ted, I completely agree with your last paragraph re processes. In my view, one of the many things that is wrong with current governance is that it is too process driven thereby obscuring the primary responsibility of the board around value maximization. Private equity governance is just the opposite in that there is very little process and a substantial amount of substance as it relates to the performance of the business. To take your analogy a step further, public company governance would be John Skully and PE portfolio company governance would be Steve Jobs.

Ted Santos

Thanks, Henry and well put. There was an article posted in the WSJ that addressed exactly what you are saying about PE back companies. I will post it in this group.

Drew Stein

Governance as a discipline is naturally divisible into various sectorial accountability groups. Some of these groupings are entirely process driven with clearly identifiable boundaries while others are more judgmental by nature being influenced by experience and current market conditions but still being applied within designated boundaries.. It’s important to accept that governance documents require continual review and refreshing in order to fulfil their purpose as one of the most important strategic enablers available to board members. Chairman demonstrate their leadership of the board in many ways including being the sponsor and controller of the governance document and as such providing guidance to the directors on the application and accountability of the various factors shaped within the document.

Henry D. Wolfe

Ted – did you post the WSJ article that you referenced in your last comment?

Ted Santos

Yes, I did post it. It went up the next day. Here is the link to the article: http://blogs.wsj.com/privateequity/2014/10/29/pe-backed-companies-expand-revenue-faster-than-non-pe-peers/

Henry D. Wolfe

Thank you, Ted. In another study that was done by Ernst & Young, when compared to their publicly traded peers (same industry, same size business, etc.), over a 5 year period PE owned companies increased Enterprise Value 33% more than the comparable public companies. The PE governance model was singled out as the prime driver of this outperformance.

The following is a link to another study done re PE portfolio company performance with McKinsey attributing the high performance of the PE companies not to financial engineering but to the PE governance model. I have argued for years that the public company model is in need to being reshaped to approximate the PE model.

http://www.egonzehnder.com/us/leadership-insights/the-private-equity-board-a-good-governance-model.html

Ted Santos

You’re welcome, Henry. Thanks for adding the McKinsey study. I will read it.

Relations entre la rémunération globale des dirigeants et l’activisme des actionnaires


Comment une organisation susceptible d’être la cible d’actionnaires activistes doit-elle envisager la question de la rémunération globale de la direction ? C’est le sujet de ce court article publié par Jeremy L. Goldstein* sur le site du Harvard Law School Forum, aujourd’hui.

L’auteur montre que lorsque les actionnaires jugent que les projets de rémunérations sont excessifs dans le cadre de la consultation « Say on Pay »,  le résultat de cette opération sert souvent de premier signal d’alarme à d’éventuelles attaques d’activistes.

L’article met en lumière (1) le type de programme de rémunération que les activistes aiment voir, (2) le niveau de protection des employés si l’entreprise devient la cible des fonds activistes et (3) la capacité d’appliquer le programme de rémunération si le plan des activistes est implanté.

C’est un sujet un peu pointu, réservé à des administrateurs préoccupés par le phénomène de l’activisme, et présenté par le porte-parole d’une firme d’avocats qui a sûrement un intérêt de consultation dans le domaine.

Néanmoins, je crois que cette courte lecture devrait vous sensibiliser aux aspects qui influencent les relations entre la rémunération des dirigeants et l’activisme des actionnaires.

Bonne lecture. Vos commentaires sont les bienvenus.

Shareholder Activism and Executive Compensation

In today’s environment in which all public companies—no matter their size, industry, or performance—are potential targets of shareholder activists, companies should review their compensation programs with an eye toward making sure that the programs take into account the potential effects of the current wave of shareholder activism. In this regard, we have provided below some considerations for public company directors and management teams.

“Say on Pay”: Early Warning Sign

Low levels of support for a company’s “say on pay” vote can serve as an early warning sign for both companies and activists that shareholders may have mixed feelings about management’s performance or a board’s oversight. An activist attack following a failed vote may be particularly inopportune for target companies because a failed vote can result in tension between managements and boards. Moreover, activists will not hesitate to use pay as a wedge issue, even if there is nothing wrong with a company’s pay program. sans-titre

Companies should get ahead of potential activists by (1) understanding how their pay programs diverge from standards of shareholders and proxy advisors, (2) developing a robust, year-round program of shareholder engagement by management and independent directors, and (3) considering appropriate changes to pay and governance structures if advisable. Companies that are the most aggressive at shareholder outreach and develop the best relationships with both the investment and the governance representatives of their major holders will be best able to address an activist attack if it occurs.

What Pay Programs Do Activists Like to See?

While we have seen several recent situations in which certain prominent activist firms have expressed a preference for programs that emphasize return on invested capital, economic profit and/or return on equity rather than earnings per share or revenue-related targets, there is not a general type of pay program favored by most activists. In fact, few activist “white papers” even address executive pay and those that do usually only cite negative reports by proxy advisory firms and make vague reference to pay for performance disconnects in an effort to use pay as a wedge issue. The best way for a company to withstand these criticisms is to make sure that its pay programs reward executives for achievement of stated strategic and operational goals and that such goals are consistent with the company’s attempt to achieve sustainable, long-term growth.

Are Your Employees Protected if an Activist Attacks?

All too often change of control protections in compensation plans do not trigger under circumstances in which an activist is most likely to take control of a company in the current environment. Amending compensation programs—particularly change of control and severance protections—in the midst of an activist situation can often be difficult if not, from time-to-time as a practical matter, nearly impossible. Companies should therefore review the change of control provisions of their compensation programs on a clear day to ensure that they fulfill their intended purpose. In this regard, we note that many change of control programs do not trigger if an activist takes control of the majority of a board by reason of the settlement of an actual or threatened proxy contest. This can be a critical problem, given the number of activists that have recently attempted to gain control of at least a majority of board seats and given that ISS is increasingly showing support for “control” slates.

Do Your Pay Programs Work if an Activist Agenda is Implemented?

Activists pushing for changes at public companies most frequently advocate in favor of returns of capital through extraordinary dividends and share buybacks; divestitures through sales, spin-offs or otherwise; and sales of the entire company. Companies should review their pay programs to ensure that they work properly if any of these events occur, regardless of whether the activist actually obtains seats on the board or control of the company.

Specifically, companies should take measures to ensure that (1) adjustment provisions of stock plans permit adjustments to awards in the event of both extraordinary dividends and divestitures, (2) all plans are clear as to whether an employee ceasing to be part of the affiliated group of companies in a divestiture will be treated as a terminated employee for purposes of the relevant plans, (3) performance goals still work after extraordinary dividends, the divestiture of a major business and, particularly if there are per share performance metrics, a share buyback, and (4) performance plans are designed in a manner to minimize the effect of such events and related adjustments on the deductibility of compensation under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code.

Finally, while it has become less fashionable in recent years to focus on change in control protections, companies should, in light of the robust activist and M&A environment, have their change of control programs reviewed on a clear day by advisors who are experienced with how these programs should work when an actual change of control is threatened or occurs.


*Jeremy L. Goldstein est le fondateur de la firme Jeremy L. Goldstein & Associates, LLC.

 

La gouvernance des entreprises et les responsabilités accrues des administrateurs | Les implications du projet de loi 26


Le séminaire à la maîtrise de Gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022) dispensé  par Ivan Tchotourian*, professeur en droit des affaires de la Faculté de droit de l’Université Laval, entend apporter aux étudiants une réflexion originale sur les liens entre la sphère économico-juridique, la gouvernance des entreprises et les enjeux sociétaux actuels**.

Ce travail a traité du projet de loi 26 faisant écho aux travaux de la commission Charbonneau et à la nécessaire réaction face aux phénomènes de corruption et de collusion.

Ce billet entend contribuer au partage des connaissances à une large échelle et montrer comment la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est l’un des leviers mis à la disposition du législateur.

Il expose le résultat des recherches de Mohamed Soumano et de Shadi J. Wazen, étudiants du cours de gouvernance de l’entreprise (DRT-7022).

Je vous en souhaite bonne lecture et suis certain que vous prendrez autant de plaisir à le lire que j’ai pu en prendre à le corriger – Ivan Tchotourian

La gouvernance des entreprises et les responsabilités accrues des administrateurs | Les implications du projet de loi 26

Par

Mohamed Soumano et Shadi J. Wazen

La gouvernance d’entreprise renvoie à l’ensemble des structures, processus, lois et institutions destinés à encadrer la manière dont l’entreprise est dirigée, administrée et contrôlée. Elle régule les relations entre les parties prenantes, de manière à rechercher un équilibre entre les rôles, responsabilités et pouvoirs de chacune d’entre elles. À cette fin, des principes et mécanismes sont proposés pour assurer une saine gouvernance d’entreprise.

images-14Parmi ceux-ci, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est l’un des leviers mis à la disposition du législateur. Depuis quelques années, ce levier fait l’objet d’une attention croissante par l’État[i], particulièrement en droit de l’environnement[ii]. Par ce levier, différents objectifs sont poursuivis, soit la prévention, la pédagogie et l’indemnisation[iii]. En effet, comme les entreprises ne peuvent pas être condamnés à l’emprisonnement à la suite d’une infraction criminelle et que les amendes pénales sont souvent insuffisantes pour responsabiliser les entreprises puisqu’elles risquent d’être incluses dans les coûts de production et imposées de fait à la clientèle, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs donne un message clair que nul n’est au-dessus des lois. Il s’agit là d’une reconnaissance que le rôle des administrateurs va bien au-delà d’une gestion pour le seul bénéfice des actionnaires[iv].

Récemment, c’est par le biais de cette responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs que l’État cherche à responsabiliser les entreprises qui souhaitent conclure des contrats publics ou qui en ont conclu par le passé. Le 3 décembre 2014, le gouvernement présentait à l’Assemblée nationale le projet de loi 26 – Loi visant principalement la récupération de sommes obtenues à la suite de fraudes ou de manœuvres dolosives dans le cadre de contrats publics[v]. Celui-ci fait écho aux révélations de collusion et de corruption faites à la Commission Charbonneau[vi] et à l’opinion publique pressant le gouvernement de récupérer les fonds publics versés en trop.

S’inspirant du modèle hollandais[vii], ce projet de loi propose d’instituer un programme de remboursement volontaire qui permettra aux entreprises fautives de rembourser les fonds reçus injustement, peu importe le secteur d’activités. À défaut d’entente, les entreprises s’exposent à des poursuites judiciaires. Son article 10 rend même personnellement et solidairement responsables les administrateurs de tout préjudice causé. Plus précisément, le deuxième alinéa de l’article 10, tel qu’amendé en commission parlementaire[viii], s’énonce comme suit :

« […] La responsabilité des administrateurs de l’entreprise en fonction au moment de la fraude ou de la manœuvre dolosive est également engagée s’il est établi qu’ils savaient ou auraient dû savoir qu’une fraude ou une manœuvre dolosive a été commise relativement au contrat visé, à moins qu’ils ne démontrent d’avoir agit avec le soin, la diligence et la compétence dont ferait preuve, en pareilles circonstances, une personne prudente. ».

Cette responsabilité s’étend sur une période de 20 ans précédant l’entrée en vigueur du projet de loi, et ce, jusqu’à 5 ans suivant son entrée en vigueur (art 16 et 37). Le projet de loi prévoit même que les recours rejetés par le passé au motif de prescription pourront être repris.

Ce projet de loi aura sans conteste des impacts significatifs sur la gouvernance des entreprises :

(1) Une surveillance accrue des administrateurs.

En principe, les administrateurs ne font pas de micro-gestion : c’est la règle du Nose in, Fingers out qui s’applique. Sauf exceptions, ils ne sont pas responsables des actes de leurs dirigeants. Or, le projet de loi leur impose un nouveau devoir de prudence et diligence en matière de contrats publics. Un tel devoir suppose que l’administrateur ne pourra ni prêcher par son inaction, ni faire preuve d’aveuglement volontaire[ix]. Au sujet de cette doctrine, la Cour suprême du Canada, dans l’arrêt Briscoe[x], rappelle que « l’ignorance volontaire impute une connaissance à l’accusé qui a des doutes au point de vouloir se renseigner davantage, mais qui choisit délibérément de ne pas le faire ». Suivant le projet de loi, la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs est engagée dès qu’il est établi qu’ils savaient ou auraient dû savoir que des manœuvres frauduleuses ou dolosives ont été commises, que ce soit préalablement à la conclusion d’un contrat public ou en cours d’exécution. Un tel devoir opère un changement au niveau de la gouvernance d’entreprise. Des activités autrefois déléguées aux dirigeants relèveront dorénavant du conseil d’administration. Celui-ci a le devoir de se renseigner, surveiller et contrôler adéquatement les actes de l’entreprise et ses dirigeants. Un tel devoir impose l’institution d’un processus adéquat pour supporter les décisions du conseil d’administration. Face aux risques de poursuites judiciaires, les administrateurs devront être en mesure de démontrer que, préalablement à la prise d’une décision, ils détenaient des informations pertinentes leur permettant de prendre une décision éclairée, que le processus pour analyser ces informations est adéquat et que le jugement d’affaires appliqué à la lumière des informations et à l’issu du processus est raisonnable. Un tel devoir impose des obligations élevées. Il est donc à prévoir que le conseil d’administration mettra davantage l’accent sur le processus et le contrôle de l’information, que celui de la création de valeur qui est l’essence même de son rôle.

(2) Une plus grande méfiance envers les dirigeants.

Le projet de loi ébranle aussi le principe traditionnel de confiance entre le conseil d’administration et la haute direction. En mettant l’accent sur le processus et le contrôle, cela pourrait engendrer une plus grande méfiance des administrateurs envers leurs dirigeants. En effet, devant les risques de poursuites, les administrateurs seraient justifiés de s’impliquer davantage dans la gestion et la direction de l’entreprise et, au besoin, de demander l’avis d’une tierce personne, tels un professionnel ou un comité d’éthique, ou même prendre les mesures nécessaires visant à prévenir et contrer les fraudes. Non seulement de telles actions engendrent des délais et des coûts, mais pourraient aussi créer un climat de méfiance envers les dirigeants, ce qui est insoutenable à terme et pourrait mettre en péril la pérennité de l’entreprise.

(3) Une application rétroactive de la nouvelle norme de conduite.

Enfin, soulignons que le projet de loi impose ce nouveau devoir de diligence et prudence à tout contrat public conclu au cours des 20 dernières années. Une question s’impose : comment valoir une défense de diligence raisonnable alors que cette norme de conduite ne constituait ni une obligation, ni une pratique exemplaire de gouvernance à l’époque des actes fautifs? D’ailleurs, mentionnons que ce n’est qu’en 2004 que la Cour suprême du Canada[xi] a indiqué que la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs envers les tiers pouvait être engagée en cas de manquement au devoir de diligence et prudence. Cet enseignement n’est cependant exact que pour les entreprises régies par la Loi canadienne sur les sociétés par actions puisque le gouvernement du Québec, lors de la réforme de la Loi sur les sociétés par actions, a clairement indiqué que le bénéficiaire de ce devoir est l’entreprise, à l’exclusion des tiers[xii]. En appliquant rétroactivement un devoir aussi exigeant, le projet de loi porte vraisemblablement atteinte aux normes qui étaient autrefois admises par le législateur et les tribunaux. Une telle préoccupation est aussi partagée par l’Institut des administrateurs de société[xiii].Au fil des années pour ne pas dire des scandales, le législateur et les tribunaux ont, de plus en plus, recherché à engager la responsabilité personnelle des administrateurs. De nos jours, il est demandé aux administrateurs d’exercer leurs devoirs en toute connaissance de cause et de guider la gestion de l’entreprise sans se fier aveuglément à la haute direction. Il est donc dans l’intérêt de tout administrateur de bien comprendre la nature et la portée de ses obligations, en plus de faire preuve d’une conduite démontrant un sens élevé d’éthique.


[i] Stéphane Rousseau, La responsabilité civile et pénale des administrateurs : tableau synoptique (Législation à jour au 31 décembre 2011), Chaire en gouvernance et droit des affaires, Université de Montréal (https://papyrus.bib.umontreal.ca/xmlui/bitstream/handle/1866/6320/Tableau.pdf;jsessionid=2601674894C5BE75CD250D2F7B61BDCA?sequence=1); Marie-Andrée Latreille, « Responsabilité des administrateurs: un membership risqué pour les avocats! », Congrès annuel du Barreau 2002 (http://www.barreau.qc.ca/pdf/congres/2002/07-latreille.pdf); Nathalie Vallerand,, « Être administrateur, une lourde responsabilité », Journal Les affaires, 14 mai 2014 (https://www.cas.ulaval.ca/files/content/sites/college/files/documents/bulletin/juin2014/serie-gouvernance-lesaffaires-cercleasc-article2-responsabilite.pdf).

[ii] Christine Duchaine, et Nicolas Dubé, « Sanctions pénales, administratives ou ordonnances : en environnement, la diligence a bien meilleur goût! », Développements récents en droit de lenvironnement, Volume 370, 2013, (http://edoctrine.caij.qc.ca/developpements-recents/370/368152798/#Toc370821836); Yvan Allaire et André Laurin, La Loi 89 sur la qualité de l’environnement : Comment convaincre les personnes compétentes de siéger aux conseils d’administration, Institut sur la gouvernance d’organisations privées et publiques, janvier 2013 (http://igopp.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/article_loi_89-qualite-environnement-v2.pdf).

[iii] En ce sens, voir Blair c. Consolidated Enfield Corp., [1995] 4 R.C.S. 5 (par. 74).

[iv] Ivan Tchotourian, Devoir de prudence et de diligence des administrateurs et RSE : Approche comparative et prospective, Cowansville, Yvon Blais, 2014.

[v] http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/projets-loi/projet-loi-26-41-1.html.

[vi] https://www.ceic.gouv.qc.ca/la-commission.html.

[vii] Assemblée nationale, Commission des institutions, Journal des débats du 24 février 2015, ministre de la Justice : http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/commissions/ci-41-1/journal-debats/CI-150224.html; Voir aussi : LaPresse du 4 décembre 2014 (http://www.lapresse.ca/actualites/politique/politique-quebecoise/201412/04/01-4825088-contrats-publics-quebec-veut-recuperer-largent-vole-par-des-entreprises.php).

[viii] http://www.assnat.qc.ca/fr/travaux-parlementaires/projets-loi/projet-loi-26-41-1.html.

[ix] Au sujet de l’aveuglement volontaire et les administrateurs, voir Blair c. Consolidated Enfield Corp., note 3.

[x] R. c. Briscoe, 2010 CSC 13 (par. 21).

[xi] Magasins à rayons Peoples inc. (Syndic de) c. Wise, [2004] 3 R.C.S. 461, 2004 CSC 68.

[xii] http://elois.caij.qc.ca/References/AUTFR_docreference_2009-12-01_vol-1.pdf#Page=289.

[xiii] https://www.cas.ulaval.ca/files/content/sites/college/files/documents/references/memoire-ias-nouv-jan2015.pdf.


*Ivan Tchotourian, professeur en droit des affaires, codirecteur du Centre d’Études en Droit Économique (CÉDÉ), membre du Groupe de recherche en droit des services financiers (www.grdsf.ulaval.ca), Faculté de droit, Université Laval.

**Le séminaire s’interroge sur le contenu des normes de gouvernance et leur pertinence dans un contexte de profonds questionnements des modèles économique et financier. Dans le cadre de ce séminaire, il est proposé aux étudiants depuis l’hiver 2014 d’avoir une expérience originale de publication de leurs travaux de recherche qui ont porté sur des sujets d’actualité de gouvernance d’entreprise.

La divulgation des ratios, PCD (CEO)/ Moyenne des employés, aura-t-elle un effet sur le comportement des consommateurs ?


On se demande souvent comment faire pour réduire les rémunérations de plus en plus excessives des CEO, surtout en comparaison avec la moyenne de leurs salariés.

Gretchen Gavett, dans un article publié le 4 juin 2015 dans HBR, a peut-être découvert un bon moyen de sensibiliser les clients : utiliser l’argument du ratio CEO/ Moyenne des employés afin d’inciter les consommateurs à acheter chez le détaillant qui offre le meilleur « rendement ».

« It’s one thing to ask whether people are aware of the realities of these ratios, however. It’s quite another to predict whether their behavior will change based on that knowledge. If companies and countries were more transparent about salary, would it really have an effect on how people view the company — and, by extension, will it change whether they buy what it sells?
The answer, at least according to a new working paper, is “yes.” Consumers report being more likely to buy from companies with CEO-to-worker rations closer to what they deem fair ».

Voici donc un bref résumé de l’article de la revue HBR. Bien sûr, avant d’utiliser une telle stratégie, il faut une divulgation du ratio en question, ce qui n’est pas encore le cas !

Mais cette étude apporte de l’eau au moulin de ceux qui sont favorables à une telle divulgation.

Bonne lecture !

Is Your CEO’s High Salary Scaring Away Customers ?

Let’s say you’re in the market for some new towels. Nice towels, oversized and made with 100% Turkish cotton. They’re priced below your budget and in stock at a well-known retailer with both brick-and-mortar and online stores. So far, so good. But what if you were told that the retailer pays the average employee $22,400. Its CEO, $24 million. That’s a ratio of 1000 to 1. How do those towels sound now?

Currently, companies aren’t required to disclose their CEO-to-worker pay ratio (in the U.S. specifically, the provision of the Dodd-Frank Act calling for such disclosures has yet to be adopted by the SEC). At the same time, research is beginning to peel back the layers about what the general public knows about executive compensation — and all indications are that we’re woefully ignorant. For example, people drastically underestimate the compensation difference between average workers and Fortune 500 CEOs; globally, they say their ideal pay ratio for CEOs to unskilled workers is around 4.6 to 1. According to the AFL-CIO, the actual number is closer to 331 to 1 in the United States (most other developed countries have lower ratios than the U.S., but are still higher than the ideal).

Bhayva Mohan, a doctoral student at Harvard Business School, along with professors Michael Norton and Rohit Deshpande, set up several experiments to gauge consumers’ willingness to buy products when equipped with knowledge about the CEO-to-worker compensation ratio of the company selling them.

Which brings me back to the towels.

In the first three parts of the study, the researchers asked respondents (whose numbers ranged from more than 400 in the first experiment to between 100 and 160 in the second and third) about their willingness to buy a towel set under different conditions. Some were given a CEO-to-worker pay ratio of 1,000 to 1 (the estimated ratio at Walmart, given the information available, though respondents weren’t told this); others were given an ideal ratio of around 5 to 1 or a reality-based one of 60 to 1 (the estimated ratio at Costco); and in the third study, they were given options of comparing retailers with high and low ratios.

Across the board, people were more willing to buy from the company with the lower pay ratio, and more than 30% said they would pay more for the towels when given the option of two different companies with two different compensation ratios.

But the researchers knew that there could be a handful of ways a low ratio could backfire, too. For one, knowledge of the ratio along side of certain types of products could indicate a lower quality. It might also indicate the company is too warm and fuzzy, and thus seen as less competent. Finally, different political and economic beliefs among consumers could also change their willingness to buy.

So the researchers then tested against these assumptions, too. First, they found that the type of product didn’t much matter — the 151 people in this experiment were still more likely to buy from a company with a lower pay ratio.

W150601_GAVETT_CONSUMERSARE

 

Then, in a second test, they found that perceptions of warmth did not dissuade people from preferring the low-ratio retailer. Finally, in another test, which involved more than 250 respondents, they found that both Democrats and Independents responded positively to a low ratio. Republicans were indifferent. (The people who answered “other” did not provide additional information, and were about 4% of total respondents.)

W150601_GAVETT_DEMOCRATS

 

These tests led Mohan and her coauthors to conclude that an egalitarian compensation strategy “increases positive perceptions of most customers without harming perceptions of other customers.” In other words, your more politically conservative customers won’t run screaming if your CEO is paid a bit less.

In addition, they tested whether discounts might help consumers overlook high CEO-to-worker pay ratios. They don’t, until you slash the price of an item by 50%, according to a survey of more than 350 people.

W150601_GAVETT_WHATWOULDCONVINCE (1)

 

“We were surprised by how steep a price discount it took to make the products offered by high pay-ratio firm as appealing to consumers as the low pay-ratio firm,” Mohan told me over email.

So should companies be more strategic about making lower CEO-to-worker pay ratios public? Transparency can be a tricky thing. While showing the work that happens behind the scenes can sometimes pay off, like in the case of travel sites that visually indicate they’re trying to find you the best possible flight, disclosure can also backfire. “When websites reveal their processes only to suggest poor options (say, an unattractive date), consumers react more negatively,” write Mohan, Norton, and Deshpande.

Granted, these examples aren’t precisely aligned. But the authors conclude that their study suggests “that pay disclosure can have benefits,” and that companies with lower ratios compared to their competitors “may wish to begin to disclose this information voluntarily, as a means of garnering favorable consumer perceptions.” Mohan says the results “suggest that board executive compensation committees may wish to factor in the impact of CEO pay ratio on their customer behavior, particularly as the pay ratio disclosure law looms closer.”

….


*Gretchen Gavett is an associate editor at the Harvard Business Review. Follow her on Twitter @gretchenmarg.

L’efficacité des conseils | Cinq moyens à la disposition des présidents de CA


Voici un article intéressant partagé par Roseanne Landay sur son blogue. Il s’agit d’une synthèse d’un document de recherche de la firme Egon Zhender : Unlocking Great Leadership: How Chairmen Enhance Board Effectiveness.

Dans cet article, on met l’accent sur cinq (5) approches qui peuvent être utilisées par les présidents de conseils d’administration pour améliorer l’efficacité de leurs CA, en trouvant le juste équilibre entre la profitabilité à court terme et la vision à long terme, la surveillance effectuée par le CA et le management, l’expression d’idées diverses et la mise en œuvre d’une stratégie concertée.

Dans sa recherche, Egon Zhender a interrogé plusieurs présidents de conseils ainsi que plusieurs administrateurs indépendants de grandes entreprises multinationales afin d’identifier les meilleures pratiques eu égard à l’efficacité des CA, dans les domaines suivants :

(1)  La surveillance des risques;

(2)  La planification de la relève;

(3)  Les principes de saine gouvernance;

(4)  L’implication dans la stratégie de l’entreprise;

(5)  La culture et la dynamique du conseil.

Vous trouverez ci-dessous une très brève description des résultats de l’étude. Vous pouvez également prendre connaissance du document complet en allant sur le site http//www.egonzehnder.com/files/unlocking_great_leadership.pdf

Bonne lecture !

Board Effectiveness: 5 Best Practices For Achieving Balance

Risk Oversight :

Interviews with independent chairs and directors found that boards are experiencing an increase in the range of risks they must oversee — from financial, operational and reputational risks to risks associated with cybersecurity, sustainability, digital and social media, talent, and innovation. To ensure that risk is regularly addressed by the board, interviewees suggest not only including it on the agenda but also eliciting candid assessments from management, such as by asking the CEO « to articulate clearly the top three things that are going right and three that are not.”

le-conseil-d-administration-et-le-bureau-renouveles

Succession Planning : 

Increased attention to succession planning can improve Board effectiveness. Whereas many boards have an emergency succession plan, they might not have a plan for longer-term succession planning.  In its paper, EgonZhender elaborates in greater detail the following best practices for long-term succession planning: 1) Develop the CEO specification; 2) Assess internal candidates; and, 3) Assess potential external candidates.  The chair of a global insurance company where succession planning is a high priority states: “Succession planning is discussed at every other meeting of the board . . .  and information is shared transparently on the performance of possible successors.”

Good Governance :

Good governance begins with a clear understanding that the board’s role is to oversee the company, not manage it.  In addition, practicing good governance does not end at the board meeting but extends to the structure and functioning of board committees.  In fact, as an interviewee states, “The quality of committee work is more meaningful than the full board meeting. Two-thirds of the total time should be spent in committees and one-third in meetings of the full board.” Adds another, “The chair’s role is to encourage the committees to have candid, substantive discussions and synthesize their conclusions for the full board.”

Strategy Engagement :

Involvement in strategy is a major responsibility for boards. Different from management, independent board directors often can provide a broad, dispasionate perspective. Recent increases in activist shareholders and mergers and acquisitions also require independent directors to have a deep understanding of the company’s strategy and the ability to recognize what will be best for shareholders or, if a nonprofit, constituents. Furthermore, with a good understanding of the company’s long-term strategy, the board can better design its own composition to meet the demands of the future.

Culture & Dynamics :

The board chair sets the tone for the board’s culture and dynamics, the linchpin to an effective board. A culture of trust and openness is necessary for eliciting candid, constructive, diverse dialogue.  Among the ways chairs can develop a healthy atmosphere and productive interactions is to solicit input from independent directors and management prior to developing the board meeting agenda. This can be done through board surveys or one-on-one conversations. However, the chair must be careful not to split the board by creating a preferred group of insiders. Ultimately, says an independent director, the chairman should create an environment which “encourages participation and allows board members to derive meaning, inspiration and satisfaction from their work.”


*Egon Zehnder is the world’s leading privately held executive search and talent management consultancy with more than 400 consultants in 69 offices across 41 countries. The firm provides senior-level executive search, board search and advisory, CEO succession and family business advisory, as well as leadership assessment and development to the world’s most respected organizations. Egon Zehnder’s clients range from the largest corporations to emerging growth companies, family and private-equity controlled entities, government and regulatory bodies, and major educational and cultural organizations.

Pourquoi les dirigeants doivent-ils revoir la qualité de leurs prévisions ?


Les outils de prédiction (« forcasting ») se sont grandement améliorés au cours des vingt dernières années, malgré le fait que les économies soient de plus en plus interdépendantes, complexes et changeantes.  Selon KPMG, 13 % des entreprises errent au sujet de leurs prévisions, ce qui constitue un manque à gagner considérable.

Il devient très couteux pour les entreprises de faire des erreurs de prévision. Selon, *, dans un article paru récemment dans Chief Executive Magazine, les hauts dirigeants et le conseil d’administration sont, en grande partie, responsables de ces erreurs.

Heureusement, les progrès spectaculaires attribuables à l’ère numérique peuvent aider les organisations à mieux appréhender les tendances du futur et à améliorer leur compétitivité. L’auteur ne livre pas de recettes miracles mais il donne quelques exemples très éloquents.

Je crois que les CA doivent poser la question qui tue à leurs dirigeants : « Sur quelles bases prévoit-on la pérennité de l’entreprise ? »

« Quels instruments de prévision utilise-t-on ? Et que font nos concurrents à cet égard ? ».

L’article suivant devrait vous sensibiliser à l’importance de bien faire ce travail de prévision.

Voici un court extrait de l’article. Bonne lecture !

Why CEOs Must Change How Their Organizations Forecast

 

Forecasts are the foundation of all operational and strategic plans. If the forecasted expectations fail to align with reality, CEOs suffer the brunt of their decisions. The business literature is littered with dozens of examples of leading companies forced to concede missed expectations based on a failed forecast. The result is lost revenue growth and shareholder value, if not the CEO’s job.

income-forecasting-from-the-not-for-high-profits_2

This problem is acute and getting worse. Companies, on average, are missing their forecasts by an average of 13%, according to a KPMG survey. Altogether, they say, this adds up to more than $200 billion in projected revenue that was forecasted to materialize, but ultimately failed to happen.

Why do so many companies miss their targets? One answer is clear: Their CEOs are basing their decisions on half-baked assumptions, conclusions driven solely by the organization’s internal business data. The potential impact of external events is either generalized or disregarded in the analyses.

In an era of constant macroeconomic and geopolitical upheaval, creating a forecast leveraging just the company’s internal data is like predicting the temperature outside one’s house based on how warm it is inside. Yet, it’s this external information that can often make or break a forecast. No global company, for instance, is immune to the ongoing volatility in Asian markets. None can discount the effects of a weakened Euro, the gyrating cost of energy, or the rapid impact of innovative technologies on consumer behaviors.

Emerging economic trends in a geographic region may influence interest rates, inflation and credit capacity, resulting in higher than projected business expenses. Even changing weather patterns can disrupt supply chains and sharply curtail a country’s GDPt, snapping shut consumers’ wallets, when the forecast predicted rising disposable income.

This wide and growing range of potential outcomes from external events is lost in many of today’s forecasts, as they are focused on last year’s quarterly business data to guide next year’s quarterly projections. Target setting without external analyses is like tossing darts wearing a blindfold. Such dangerous forecasts lower the odds of a CEO making superior decisions on whether to enter or exit a market, develop a new product or stick with the current lineup, or engage a new geographic territory.

……

The bottom line: CEOs can no longer rest comfortably, assured that their business forecasts are accurate or even useful to their decision-making. With their jobs increasingly on the line for missing Wall Street estimates, the time has come to invest in robust forecasting tools with predictive data analytics that take into account the world around us.


*Rich Wagner is the founder and CEO of forecasting solutions provider Prevedere. The company’s cloud-based solution collects and analyzes more than 1.5 million global variables in real time to enable companies to systematically compare and correlate internal and external data to predict future revenue and costs.

Les conseils d’administration doivent veiller à la culture éthique de l’entreprise


Selon *, juriste, consultant et chercheur en gouvernance, la grande responsabilité des échecs dans le domaine des affaires revient aux conseils d’administration, souvent complaisants et irresponsables.

On croit, souvent à tort, que les CA sont toujours alertes et qu’ils veillent aux intérêts de l’entreprise. Ce n’est pas toujours le cas !

L’auteur pense même que les « Boards » sont ultimement responsables des fraudes, malversations et manques d’éthique parce que souvent certains de leurs membres manquent d’une valeur essentielle au succès des entreprises : l’éthique.

Il règne même, à l’occasion, une culture qui favorise le comportement non-éthique à la grandeur de l’organisation.

Leblanc blâme sévèrement les administrateurs pour leur manque de vigilance à cet égard. Et, je crois qu’il a raison.

« Tone at the top » devrait être l’expression la plus utilisée dans le domaine de l’éthique et des comportements socialement responsables. En effet, il faut donner l’exemple et ça commence par les actions et les messages véhiculés par le conseil et par son président, le porte-parole du CA.

Voici un extrait de l’article paru dans le HuffPost Business le 31 mai 2015.

Bonne lecture !

Western Companies Need More Integrity

« We didn’t know. » « We missed it. » « It was a rogue employee. » There is not an excuse I have not heard for ethical failure. But when I investigate a company after allegations of fraud, corruption or workplace wrongdoing, almost always there is a complacent, captured or entrenched board that did not take corrective action. In a few cases, boards actually encouraged the wrong-doing.interview

The first myth is that the board is a « good » board. There is no relationship between the « glow » or profile of directors and whether the board is « good. » Often times, there is an inverse relationship, as trophy or legacy directors typically lack industry and risk expertise in recognizing fraud or understanding what proper compliance looks like, are not really independent, are coasting and not prepared to put in the work, or they themselves may not possess integrity.

How important is integrity? Extremely. Three factors make for a good director or manager: competence, commitment and integrity, with integrity ranking first. Otherwise, you have the first two working against you.

Integrity needs to be defined, recruited for, and enforced. « Does your colleague possess integrity? » « Yes » is an answer to this perfunctory question. Full marks. But when I define integrity to include avoiding conflicts of interest, consistency between what is said and done, ethical conduct, and trustworthiness – and guarantee anonymity, I get a spread of performance scores. Those who do not possess integrity in the eyes of their colleagues are poison and should are extracted from any board or a senior management team. They never should have been elected or hired in the first place, which is a recruitment failure.

Fraud, toxic workplaces, bullying, harassment and pressure do not occur in a vacuum. Many people in the company know. The issue will not go away, will only get worse, and is a latent legal, financial and reputation risk.

For bad news to rise, boards need to ensure that protected channels exist and are used – including for a director or executive to speak up in confidence, and for an independent consequential investigation to occur.

Ethical reporting also needs to assure anonymity to the fullest possible extent to receive reliable information. If a whistle-blowing program has any manager as the point of contact, it is not effective. Whistle blowing, culture surveys, and ethics audits should be conducted independently and reported directly to the board without management interference.

Frequently, I find ethical design and implementation failure are the culprits, with codes of conduct, conflict of interest policies, whistle-blowing procedures, culture and workplace audits, and education and communication being perfunctory at best, overridden by management at worst, and not taken seriously by employees or key suppliers, with minimal assurance and oversight by the board.

à suivre …


*Richard Leblanc is a governance consultant, lawyer, academic, speaker and advisor to leading boards of directors. He can be reached at rleblanc@boardexpert.com or followed on Twitter @drrleblanc.