Lack of voting rights may
keep Snap, others from MSCI indexes
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[July 17, 2017]
By Ross Kerber
BOSTON (Reuters) - MSCI Inc has proposed
leaving shares of Snap Inc and other companies including Eaton Vance
Corp out of stock indexes because they lack voting rights, a sign of the
rising skepticism facing corporate structures that boost the power of
insiders.
In a paper sent to clients in June, MSCI <MSCI.N> said its proposal
aimed "to address the growing concern pertaining to listings of only
non-voting shares," and invited feedback.
Index providers have been reviewing the issue of whether to include
companies with non-voting shares since Snap's IPO in March. MSCI's idea
resembles a skeptical view that rival FTSE Russell has already put
forward about companies that offer shares with unequal voting rights,
even as some technology firms move in that direction.
A third index provider, S&P Dow Jones, has its own review underway, with
decisions due in coming weeks.
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Being excluded from stock indexes would be a blow to young companies
like Snap by making it harder, or impossible, for some big fund managers
to buy the stock. Critics including big pension funds worry giving
shareholders less say over matters like executive pay or board elections
will make corporate leaders less accountable, while some executives say
tighter control helps them run their business with a longer-term focus.
Shares in the parent of Snapchat have already been under pressure since
its $3.4 billion IPO in March and last week sank below their $17 initial
sale price, amid concerns about the popular messaging platform's slowing
growth and competition from Facebook Inc. <FB.O>
Under Snap's unusual structure, most power on matters like executive pay
or board membership is concentrated with co-founders Evan Spiegel and
Robert Murphy.
MSCI and Snap declined to comment. Snap previously said its voting
structure would help it "remain a founder-led company" and that the
majority of its board is independent.
Index clients include big fund sponsors like BlackRock Inc and Vanguard
Group, who have been critical of the turn away from voting shares but
have also bought shares of Snap.
A BlackRock spokesman, Ed Sweeney, declined to comment on the index
reviews but pointed to its governance guidelines, which state that "BlackRock
supports the concept of equal voting rights for all shareholders."
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A woman photographs a
banner for Snap Inc. on the facade of the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) on the morning of the company's IPO in New York City, NY,
U.S. March 2, 2017. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
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A Vanguard spokeswoman, Arianna Stefanoni Sherlock, said while Vanguard has
concerns about Snap's structure, "We believe companies like Snap cannot be
excluded solely on the basis of voting limitations at this time."
In the paper sent to clients, also available on its website, MSCI proposes to
leave non-voting shares out of popular products like its U.S. equity indexes if
their voting power at a company is less than 25 percent for new constituents, or
less than 16.67 percent for existing constituents.
In the case of its All Country World Index (ACWI), the paper states, the
proposal would keep Snap out of the product, and six non-voting shares would be
deleted. The only U.S. company in the group is asset manager Eaton Vance, whose
publicly traded shares do not include voting rights, a structure in place since
1959.
Eaton Vance spokeswoman Robyn Tice said while it does not wish to be removed
from indexes, "we cannot control what they decide to do."
According to the MSCI paper, some companies with both voting and non-voting
listed share classes, such as Alphabet, could remain in the ACWI.
Ken Bertsch, executive director of the Council of Institutional Investors, a
trade group for pension funds and other big investors that has been critical of
unequal voting rights, said he was encouraged by the MSCI proposal.
Bertsch said the group could accept some concepts like allowing indexes to
retain big companies even with unequal voting rights. "We don't want to kick
Google or Facebook out of the indexes, it would be way too disruptive. Our
concern is to set a limit on this," he said.
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The council remains concerned more IPOs may follow Snap's example such as a
recent one by meal-kit service Blue Apron Holdings. A spokeswoman for Blue Apron
declined to comment.
(Reporting by Ross Kerber in Boston. Additional reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in
New York and David Ingram in San Francisco; Editing by Dan Burns and Tom Brown)
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