Title: International Corporate Governance
1International Corporate Governance
- Reading Chapter 1 (pages 3-21)
2Lecture Outline
- What is Corporate Governance?
- Internal Mechanisms
- External Mechanisms
- Convergence
- Measuring Corporate Governance
- Benefits of Good Governance
- What you need to remember
3Introduction
Stage 1
Company founded (owned and managed) by
individual, family, partnership, government or
company.
Stage 2
Voting Rights
Voting Rights
Company expands by issuing more equity and debt.
New equity holders also get voting rights as to
who manages the company.
4Introduction
Company founder must now choose between keeping
control of the company or allowing the company to
be managed by professional managers.
Voting Rights
Voting Rights
If they keep control there is a potential
conflict between the founders and other
shareholders. If they pass management to
professional managers there is a potential
conflict between owners and managers.
5What is Corporate Governance?
- Corporate governance is about minimizing the loss
of value that results from the separation of
ownership and control. - It deals with the ways in which suppliers of
finance to corporations assure themselves of
getting a return on their investment. - While corporate governance has been a hot issue
in recent years (Enron, Worldcomm, HIH and
One.Tel) it is a problem that has been around for
hundreds of years Adam Smith (1776).
6What is Corporate Governance?
- Good corporate governance practices involve
- The corporate governance framework should protect
shareholders rights. - The corporate governance framework should ensure
the equitable treatment of all shareholders. - Stakeholders should be involved in corporate
governance. - Disclosure and transparency is critical.
- The board of directors should be monitored and
held accountable for what guidance it gives.
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8Internal Mechanisms
- Board of Directors
- Board Size Independence
- Chairman/CEO Positions
- Board Committees
- Executive Compensation
- Ownership Structure
- Concentrated versus Dispersed Ownership
- Identity of Owners
- Other Blockholders
9External Mechanisms
- External Auditors
- Debt Equity Markets
- Monitoring by debt holders
- Analysts
- Mergers Acquisitions
- Legal/Regulatory System
- Common versus Civil Law
- Extent of Law Enforcement
- Recent Regulations Sarbanes Oxley Act, ASX Good
Corporate Governance Principles
10International Differences
11Board of Directors
- The board of directors is responsible for
overseeing management and representing
shareholders interests. - US and Australia have single-tiered boards,
headed by a Chairman of the Board. The CEO and
other executives usually also sit on the board. - Some other countries (Germany, Indonesia) have
two-tiered boards. The roles and composition of
the two boards can differ.
12Board Size
- Boards should be an appropriate size not too
big not too small. - Depending on the size of the company within the
range of 5-15 is normal. - If the board is too small, there is a lack of
monitoring. - If the board is too big, there are problems
reaching a consensus for decision making.
13Board Independence
- Boards should have a majority/high proportion of
outside/independent directors. - Outside/independent directors should have no
personal interest in the company and therefore
are more effective monitors. - But, it is also a good idea to have some company
insiders (CEO, executives) on the board to
provide the board with a better understanding of
the companys operations.
14Chairman/CEO Positions
- The Chairman of the Board is responsible for
overseeing the board of directors. - The CEO is responsible for the day-to-day running
of the company. - In family-controlled companies it is common for
the same person or relatives to hold both of
these positions. But, this concentrates power and
reduces monitoring. - Therefore, the positions of Chairman and CEO
should be separated.
15Board Committees
- The board of directors can delegate certain
duties to board committees this can provide
increased monitoring on specific issues. - Audit committee responsible for internal audit
function and appointment of external auditor. - Remuneration committee responsible for setting
appropriate compensation for directors and
executives. - Nomination committee responsible for finding
appropriate directors and executives.
16Executive Compensation
- Compensation of top executives can be used to tie
the interests of the executives to those of
shareholders. - Variable performance packages are preferred
- If they perform well, they are rewarded.
- If they perform poorly, they are not rewarded or
fired. - Alignment of interests is usually achieved
through - Stock ownership
- Stock options
17Ownership Structure
- Australian and US companies are usually owned by
widely-dispersed shareholders and controlled by
professional managers. This means that no single
party is in control of the company. - However, in other nations around the world,
ownership is usually concentrated in the hands of
family groups or government entities. This means
that one group is in control of the company and
there is very little you can do (other than sell)
if you dont like what theyre doing.
18Ownership Structure
19Ownership Structure
- The identity of the controlling owner can also
have corporate governance implications. - Family-controlled companies use cross-holdings
and pyramidal structures to gain effective
control of the company with the least cash
ownership. The market recognizes this and prices
the increased risk of expropriation into the
share price. - Government-owned and widely-held companies are
more likely to follow the rules.
20Ownership Structure
- The presence of an non-management related
blockholder of shares can increase monitoring of
the firm. - A blockholder usually holds at least 5 of the
outstanding shares, therefore has a significant
interest in the future performance of the
company. - Blockholders can be governments, financial
institutions, individuals or other companies.
21External Auditors
- Stock exchange listing requirements usually make
it mandatory for companies to employ an external
auditor to audit their financial statements (and
internal controls). - External auditor should be independent of
management, but . - Tenure of auditor
- Tenure of audit partner
22Monitoring by Debt holders
- Debt holders provide capital to the company
usually with conditions - Debt covenants
- Secured on assets
- Therefore debt holders actively monitor
management to ensure that companies are meeting
debt conditions and that they wont default.
23Analysts
- Securities analysts are professionals employed by
investment banks / brokers / asset managers to
monitor companies and provide stock
recommendations (buy/sell), earnings forecasts,
long-term growth forecasts, target prices etc. - Provides an extra level of monitoring for
investors. - But, analysts incentives/conflicts of interest
mean that not all of their output is trustworthy.
24Takeover Market
- The merger and acquisition (MA) market stands as
a court of last resort for assets that are not
being utilized to their full potential. - If management are underperforming there is a good
chance that this will be noticed by the market
and other players will want to take control of
the company. - There are active takeover markets in Australia,
US, UK, New Zealand, but few other countries.
25Intervening Variables
- Measures put in place by companies that restrict
shareholder rights and the effectiveness of
takeover markets - Staggered boards
- Limits to by-law/charter changes
- Supermajority requirements for mergers
- Poison pills
- Golden parachutes
26Legal Systems
- Each countrys legal system has built in a
certain degree of investor protection. However,
there is a wide variation in protection and
enforcement of these rules around the world. - Common law countries provide highest protection
and French civil law countries provide the least
protection. - Low investor protection seems to result in
concentrated ownership and underdeveloped equity
markets.
27Legal Systems
28Recent Regulations
- In response to the Enron crisis in the US, the
Sarbanes Oxley Act was passed in 2002. This has
significantly increased governance practices and
the personal liability of directors in the US. - Most other nations have issued Corporate
Governance Best Practice Guidelines to assist
companies in improving their governance ASX
Corporate Governance Guidelines Best Practice
Guide (on OLT site). But these are voluntary! - BHP website BHP Annual report
29Convergence?
- Originally there were market-based, family-based,
bank-based, government-affiliated systems. - In recent years, most nations have started to
promote US and UK best practice corporate
governance guidelines. But not all companies are
adopting these measures. - There is evidence that family-controlled
companies in particular are refusing to improve
their corporate governance practices. - Asian Corporate Governance Association
30Measuring Corporate Governance
- Understanding what good corporate governance is
about is quite easy. However, it is difficult to
measure whether companies are really committed to
good governance. - All we can do is measure if they have certain
corporate governance mechanisms in place we
dont know if they are effective or not! - Organizations such as Standard and Poors and
Credit Lyonnais Securities Asia have started
providing corporate governance ratings in recent
years. - SP
31Benefits of Good Governance
- Researchers have shown that companies with good
corporate governance practices are valued more
highly and run more effectively. - So the benefits of good governance include
- Higher share price
- Lower cost of funds
- Greater international following
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33What you need to remember
- When investing it is worthwhile keeping in mind
whether a company has committed to good corporate
governance or not. You can use the mechanisms
highlighted in this lecture or corporate
governance ratings as a guide. - Corporate governance becomes most important
during stock market crashes and bad economic
times. - But, it is not a perfect science. Managers will
always find a way to circumvent monitoring to
achieve their own goals!