BlackRock's voting record
clashes with CEO's tough talk on buybacks
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[August 04, 2016]
By Ross Kerber
BOSTON (Reuters) - When Adam Kanzer
wanted to stop the board of 3M Co from including the lucrative
impact of share buybacks in their chief executive's pay, he quoted
Laurence Fink.
Sitting atop the world's largest investment fund manager, BlackRock
Inc <BLK.N>, Fink is a vocal critic of companies’ excessive use of
share buybacks. The practice is happening at a rapid clip among S&P
500 companies and according to critics is helping boost shareholder
returns – and bosses’ pay – to the detriment of long-term growth.
Kanzer, who is managing director of Domini Social Investments,
channeled Fink at the top of his firm's resolution to the 3M <MMM.N>
board, quoting his warning that large buybacks send "a discouraging
message about a company’s ability to use its resources wisely."
It didn't help. The resolution failed with 94 percent of shares cast
voting against it. Shares held by BlackRock, 3M's third-largest
investor with a 5.7 percent stake in the maker of Post-it notes and
Scotch tape, according to its proxy, apparently were not supportive.
Despite their CEO's strong views, funds run by BlackRock side with
company management on questions tied to stock buybacks most of the
time, according to filings analyzed by research firm Proxy Insight
for Reuters.
BlackRock is not alone. Large asset managers like Fidelity
Investments and State Street Corp <STT.N> have a similar voting
record on the matter, according to the analysis.
But Fink's exhortations and BlackRock's size make its voting record
stand out.
In the last three years, Fink has made his concerns about buybacks a
top theme of an annual letter to other CEOs stressing the importance
of companies investing for the long term. His views have been
carried widely in the financial press and echoed by U.S.
presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton.
BlackRock's nearly $5 trillion in managed assets mean that it is
often a top investor in many of the companies buying back their
shares, giving it an outsize voice on whether that strategy is the
right one.
"Larry Fink’s letters demonstrate that leadership. We hope it's not
all posturing," said Brandon Rees deputy director of the office of
investment for the AFL-CIO, of Fink's efforts.
The AFL-CIO is the largest federation of U.S. labor unions and
sponsored a resolution at Illinois Tool Works <ITW.N> that, like
Domini’s 3M resolution, called on the company to exclude the impact
of share repurchases from executive pay calculations.
The resolution failed, with 95 percent of votes cast against it. It
is unclear if BlackRock, a top five investor in the equipment maker,
voted for it. The company does not comment on how it votes or its
engagement with individual companies, and public filings showing its
votes are not yet available.
Rees said while he admires Fink's sentiments, BlackRock does not
release enough detail to fully evaluate whether BlackRock's
engagement with particular companies has much impact.
Fink, who was not made available to comment on this story, does not
think all buybacks are bad. Some may be a prudent use of excess
capital, and BlackRock itself has been buying roughly $275 million
of its own shares every quarter, he has said.
Spokesman Ed Sweeney said when BlackRock has concerns about a
company's direction or corporate governance, it meets with directors
and executives privately to "catalyze positive changes," and votes
against management when talks fail. He added that capital allocation
matters like buybacks are just one of many areas it considers in its
proxy voting process.
In one case, BlackRock withheld support from two directors at "a
large oil and gas corporation" this spring after the company --
which it declined to name -- did not make board members available to
explain their strategy and capital allocation decisions, according
to its website.
It also did not support a member of Discovery Communications Inc's <DISCA.O>
compensation committee last year after the company awarded its CEO
the largest pay package in the S&P 500, according to securities
filings.
To guide those decisions, BlackRock turns to a team of 22 people who
determine how to vote on thousands of ballot items each year at U.S.
companies' annual meetings. Sweeney said that this division, headed
by Michelle Edkins, is independent and votes in accordance with,
"our fiduciary duty to our clients." BlackRock did not make Edkins
available to comment.
Matthew Weatherley-White, managing director of investment adviser
Caprock Group, said BlackRock cannot vote too aggressively because
many clients would not share Fink's views. For instance, choosing to
buy back shares can boost shareholder returns in the short-term
because it raises earnings per share.
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"Fink is sincere, but structurally they have a hard time following through,"
Weatherley-White said.
THE POWER OF THE VOTE
S&P 500 firms are purchasing $445 billion in stock over the last 12 months of
earnings reports, matching the previous year's peak. Add in dividends, and the
total of $838 billion spent surpasses total capital expenditures of $707 billion
in that time, according to a Reuters analysis
Much of BlackRock's nearly $5 trillion in managed assets is in passive
investment products that buy and hold stocks only because they are in a
particular index. That means that proxy votes are one of the few ways of
expressing displeasure with a company. Actively managed funds can sell a
company's stock anytime they become dissatisfied.
"As an index fund owner, you have to own some really crummy companies" that
happen to be in an index, Fink said at an investor conference two years ago. The
"only power you have is your vote," he said.
But BlackRock rarely exercised that power. In last year's proxy season,
BlackRock funds opposed five percent of resolutions to approve share buybacks or
repurchases, according to Proxy Insight's analysis for Reuters. To be sure, that
was a stronger record than some rivals like Vanguard Group or T. Rowe Price <TROW.O>,
which opposed the resolutions one percent of the time and 2.7 percent of the
time, respectively.
Both T. Rowe Price and Vanguard declined to comment.
BlackRock's Global Opportunities Fund <MDLOX.N>, for instance, opposed
management on just two of 85 resolutions in that period, including at
construction firm Bouygues SA <BOUY.PA> and distiller Remy Cointreau <RCOP.PA>.
BlackRock's Sweeney declined to discuss the votes, but proxy adviser Glass,
Lewis had recommended against both measures on concerns they could be used to
thwart takeover attempts.
Filings analyzed by Proxy Insight for Reuters also show that of the 30 S&P 500
companies that bought back the highest proportion of their stock in 2014, funds
run by BlackRock supported those companies' directors about 97 percent of the
time the following year, the most recent period available. That is roughly as
often as they supported S&P 500 directors overall.
Public filings showing BlackRock's votes on specific directors and shareholder
proposals this year are not yet available, including Kanzer's 3M resolution on
buybacks.
Proxy adviser Institutional Shareholder Services did not support the change at
3M or at Illinois Tool, which is a blow since backing from ISS can add an extra
30 percentage points or so to the support level for a typical shareholder
proposal, according to pay consulting firm Semler Brossy.
But Kanzer was counting on Fink's BlackRock to back him up.
"Considering the helpful things Larry Fink has been saying about excessive share
buybacks, we had hoped to see BlackRock underscore that message through its
proxy voting," said Kanzer of Domini Social Investments, an investment adviser
that specializes in socially responsible investing and sponsored the 3M
resolution.
Kanzer noted that his resolution at least prompted 3M to offer more disclosure
around its rationale for the buybacks, and said he had a "productive
conversation" with 3M management.
Will Domini re-submit similar resolutions at 3M and elsewhere next year?
"Still thinking about it," he said.
(Additional reporting by David Gaffen and Trevor Hunnicutt in New York; Editing
by Carmel Crimmins and Edward Tobin)
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