Icahn regulatory role
gives activist investors strong Washington voice
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[December 23, 2016]
By Michael Flaherty, Sarah N. Lynch and Ross Kerber
NEW
YORK/WASHINGTON/BOSTON (Reuters) - U.S. chief executives, already
wrestling with a steady flow of activist investors in their board rooms,
face a newly challenging landscape now that the loudest voice of the
bunch will have the ear of the next president and his securities' rule
makers.
The advisory role granted to billionaire investor Carl Icahn by
President-elect Donald Trump is a potential blow to CEOs and board
directors who hoped the new Securities and Exchange Commission would
favor corporate management teams over shareholder proposals that they
deem too friendly to shareholders.
Icahn's appointment, announced on Wednesday, spans all regulatory
matters. That includes vetting SEC candidates, a significant boost to
shareholder activists who want commissioners to keep corporate
governance initiatives on the front burner.
While Icahn has spent four decades antagonizing CEOs and boards, the
extent of his Washington influence and where he will lean on shareholder
issues remains to be seen. Still, it is clear that holding the feet of
executives and directors to the fire of activists is high on his list of
priorities.
"We don't hold our managements or boards accountable enough," he said
Thursday in a CNBC interview following his appointment.
Icahn's strong support of the "universal" proxy card, a major initiative
that activists feared would die in a Trump administration, may help it
survive its current SEC review. In a contested shareholder vote on board
membership, universal proxy cards allow investors to pick and choose
among all nominees, rather than just being able to vote for an entire
slate.
But Icahn has thrown cold water on other governance proposals and has
yet to voice an opinion on another key initiative: the SEC's adoption of
a rule requiring public companies to disclose the ratio of the
compensation of their CEOs to the median employee compensation.
"The question I have is, Which Carl Icahn do we see in this role? Icahn
the activist, or Icahn the businessman, advocating for the business
community?" said Keith Gottfried, a Washington D.C.-based partner at law
firm Morgan Lewis, who specializes in activist defense. "We will
probably see more of the latter."
Icahn's support of universal proxy cards pits him against the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, a powerful business lobbying arm, and Republican
SEC commissioner Michael Piwowar, who believes the rule favors
shareholder activists at the expense of other investors.
SEC Chair Mary Jo White outlined the rules in October, but she has said
she will leave her post at the end of the Obama administration. With the
SEC accepting comments through Jan. 9, that leaves only a small window
for her to act before Trump takes office on Jan. 20, a prospect most see
as slim.
"With Icahn playing a role in selecting commissioners, it's very
possible universal proxy cards will remain on the agenda," said Bruce
Goldfarb, CEO of Okapi Partners, a proxy advisory firm that represents
activists and companies.
Icahn may also have influence over the pay ratio rule, which was adopted
by securities regulators in 2015 and set to begin next year.
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Billionaire activist-investor Carl Icahn gives an interview on FOX
Business Network's Neil Cavuto show in New York, U.S. on February
11, 2014. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Republicans and the Chamber of Commerce have fought the rule, which is seen as
being too favorable to shareholder activists who focus on keeping executive pay
in check. Icahn has not indicated his view.
ACTIVIST AGENDA
Shareholder activists have launched 670 campaigns against U.S. companies since
2015 and have placed 213 directors on boards of companies with a market value of
$500 million or more, data from Lazard show.
Icahn, known for inviting CEOs he's targeting to his home and offering them a
martini, has placed nine directors on boards this year alone.
Icahn’s new role is “probably going to be mildly bad news” for most CEOs, said
Michael Levin, an activist investor and director on the board of Comarco Inc.
Levin said he does not expect Icahn to have much interest in changes related to
social or environmental activism by shareholders.
Once seen as a sideshow, the proposals have often drawn traction since the
financial crisis. Measures calling on companies to report on sustainability
averaged around 30 percent support from shareholders this year for instance,
according to the Sustainable Investments Institute.
But
critics have pushed back at the ballot questions, often seeing them as
nonbinding distractions or unrelated to core business issues and best left for
managers to decide.
Paul Atkins, a transition adviser and a former SEC commissioner who is one of
two leading choices to head the SEC, which regulates how questions can be put on
company ballots, has been a steady critic of the trend. In a 2008 speech he
referred to "the abusive use of the shareholder proposal process by some
institutional investors."
Another SEC front runner, Debra Wong Yang, is a partner at law firm Gibson, Dunn
& Crutcher, which is frequently tapped by companies to fend off unwanted
shareholder proposals.
Although Icahn himself has filed shareholder proposals, such as one calling for
Apple Inc <AAPL.O> to up its stock buybacks, he has voiced skepticism of
smaller-scale proposals aiming for what he regards as minor governance changes,
which he said in a 2013 interview, do not “move the needle much.”
(Editing by Dan Burns and Leslie Adler)
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