Title:
1The costs/benefits of disclosing beneficial
ownership OECD, Russian corporate governance
roundtable meeting 11th-12th November 2004
All financial and other information contained in
this presentation has been obtained from and
prepared on the basis of publicly available data
which has not been verified by Vostok Nafta
Investment Ltd. for its completeness or accuracy
Vostok Nafta Investment Limited does not make any
representation or warranty (whether express or
implied), nor does it assume any liability, as
regards completeness or accuracy of financial or
other information which has been obtained from
such publicly available sources.
2Contents
- The need for disclosure of beneficial ownership.
- Examples of how Sibneft and TNK hide true
ownership. - Related parties masquerading as independent
shareholders. - The UK regulatory environment.
- Other problems related to the enforcement of
Corporate Law and Securities Market laws in
Russia.
3Policy framework
- The Russian equity market has a number of unique
features which are relevant to framing policy.
The single most important factor is that many
shareholdings have been created as a direct, or
indirect result of voucher privatisation, as
opposed to entrepreneurs looking to access equity
capital. This fact has two critical
implications - Having completed voucher privatisation, the
Government should protect the interests of
shareholders as an extension of its privatisation
policy.
- The negative consequences of poor corporate
governance a low share price and/or a lack of
access to equity funding is an entirely
counter-productive disincentive. In many
companies a dominant shareholder whose is
extracting cash flows is actually interested in
lowering the share price in order to deter
minority investors. - In summary, market mechanisms on their own are
not an adequate disincentive to stop bad
corporate governance in Russia legislation and
penalties to stop self-dealing are also vitally
important.
4The case for shareholder activism
- Vostok Nafta is involved in a major legal
challenge to the way in which a Russian oil
company (OAO Slavneft-Megionneftegaz) is run.
Part of that challenge involves uncovering the
beneficial ownership of a multitude of Russian,
Cypriot and BVI companies.
- We believe that this work is important not only
because it helps secure our assets, but also
helps in the wider context of improving property
rights and frustrating the pernicious practice of
transfer pricing.
5Beneficial ownership why is it important?
- The key concern for minority shareholders is to
understand the nature and extent of any related
party transactions that can only be determined
if a companys ownership structure is clear. - This issue is particularly relevant in Russia
where financial industrial groups tend to own
numerous companies in various sectors which trade
with each other thereby creating conditions for
transfer pricing.
- An understanding of who owns what generates a
number of related benefits in the areas of - Competition policy
- Takeover code
- Fighting corruption and fraud.
- These latter areas are not the concern of
minority shareholders but we briefly touch on
them.
6Ownership structures in Russia
- Financial Industrial Groups control multiple
enterprises, accordingly the potential for
related party transactions are infinitely greater
than in the UK where companies are 70 owned by
financial institutions.
7Existing disclosure of beneficial ownership and
related parties
- Ownership disclosure in Russia is improving,
however it still focuses on the owner of record
rather than the ultimate beneficial owner.
- The existing Russian disclosure can be combined
with GAAP accounts, international company
searches and press statements to build up a
fairly accurate picture of ultimate ownership.
However this exercise requires time, money and
effort. This data should be voluntarily
disclosed, there is no valid reason to hide such
data. - By combing different data sources it is possible
to work out what has not been disclosed.
8Risks arising from non-disclosure of beneficial
ownership
- The key risk relating to non-disclosure is that
related party transactions will be carried out
between entities under common ownership or
control without shareholders being aware of any
relationship. In addition to this obvious
threat, we identified two related risks
Majority shareholders masquerade as minorities In the case of Megionneftegaz three Cypriot companies (Edie, Select and Hassla) voted for all related party transactions our investigation showed that these entities were ultimately owned and controlled by majority shareholders. By participating in voting they rendered article 83 of Corporate Law nugatory.
Majority shareholders influence professional advisors/market participants Any securities market requires strong and independent professional participants notably auditors, valuers and registrars. In the case of Megion, we believe that the registrar (OAO Registrar R.O.S.T.) was not independent and that it failed to execute its responsibilities with adequate care.
9Beneficial ownership the majority masquerades
as a minority
- Based on the results of various extraordinary
shareholder meetings, we understood that three
Cypriot entities (Edie, Select and Hassla
Holdings) consistently voted for related party
transactions. - By voting on those issues, the Cypriot entities
were representing themselves as being independent
(within the meaning of Russian law). Further the
registrar (OAO Registrator R.O.S.T.) was
similarly certifying that the Cypriot entities
were allowed to vote by including them in the
quorum.
- We spent many months uncovering the ownership of
those entities in order to determine that three
Cypriot individuals apparently owned the three
Cypriot entities, implying that those individuals
owned some USD 480 million worth of
Megionneftegaz ordinary shares. - Further one of the independent companies
nominated 3 members of TNKs management to the
Board of Megionneftegaz in March 2002. - Our investigation showed that the Cyprus
companies were ultimately owned (via a trust
agreement) by OAO Sibneft and OAO TNK (acting
jointly).
10Related party voting patterns
- Megionneftegaz failed to even ask shareholder
approval for most of its related party
transactions and sold oil to related parties in
contravention of the requirements of article 83
of corporate law. - For those transactions where the Board did
actually bother to invite allegedly independent
shareholders to vote, 27.5 of independent
shareholders consistently voted in favour of
related party transactions.
11Mechanisms used to hide TNK/Sibneft ownership in
Megionneftegaz
Source Company searches, TNK and Sibneft GAAP
accounts, NGK Slavneft and Megionneftegaz Federal
Securities Market filings.
12Related parties what is not disclosed is often
the most relevant
13The independent shareholder registrar ROST
Source Website ROST (www.rrost.ru), Federal
Securities Market filings NGK Slavneft and
Megionneftegaz.
14How independent is ROST?
- 4 out of 5 members of the Board work for
Millhouse Capital the manager of a majority
stake in Sibneft. One of those Board members was
also a Board member of NGK Slavneft. - Via its management of a dominant stake in AO
Siberian Oil Company, Millhouse Capital can
indirectly control an estimated 27 in Megion
plus a further 12.6 through various trust
arrangements, Millhouse apparently manages a
significant stake in ROST.
- Independent shareholders who are ultimately
owned by TNK/Sibneft appear to have no trouble in
receiving and returning voting papers for the
29th January 2004.
Source website ROST (www.rrost.ru), information
on Board of Directors of NGK Slavneft from FSC
quarterly filings. Rost ownership data from
website Bankpress.ru
15ROSTs role as Megionneftegazs registrar
- The following events took place whilst ROST acted
as registrar for Megionneftegaz - Austro (Cyprus) Limiteds voting papers for
Megionneftegazs EGM held 29th January 2004 were
sent by post to Austro (Cyprus) Limited using ZAO
Brunswick UBS Nominees postal address. The
combination of a foreign recipient with a Russian
entitys postal address rendered the envelope
undeliverable.
- Related parties (Edie, Select and Hassla) are
inappropriately included in the quorum for voting
on related party transactions, thus rendering the
safeguards in article 83 of Corporate Law useless.
16ROSTs role as Megionneftegazs registrar
- Vostok Nafta identified and received confirmation
that some 40 individuals received voting papers
for Megionneftegazs annual general shareholders
meeting (25th June 2004) on or after the deadline
for the return of voting bulletins to
Megionneftegaz (22nd June 2004).
- The explanations provided to date such as
problems with the post, mistakes by the
nominees and inaction on the part of the issuer
simply lack credibility.
17The costs/benefits of disclosure
- The costs of disclosure are essentially zero
the costs of non-disclosure are extremely high.
The complex web of trusts/offshore ownership
companies utilised by TNK/Sibneft to hide their
ownership in Megionneftegaz are both expensive to
set up and costly to maintain.
- In terms of benefits of disclosure the obvious
benefits are - To allow minority shareholders to understand and
quantify the risks of related party transactions - To build up a factual case to pursue corporate
malpractice suits via the court system - To understand whether key market participants
such as the auditor, valuer and/or registrar are
really independent.
18The costs/benefits of disclosure
- There are other benefits of disclosure, not
strictly relevant to minority shareholders, but
none the less useful such as making it harder for
politicians to hide ownership of substantial
assets.
19Ownership disclosure UK experience
- The UK recognises (as does Russia) that it is
important to disclose information on significant
shareholders. - The UK regulatory regime is robust and sets out
very clear responsibilities and mechanisms for
disclosure, the UK regime - Clearly defines ownership arrangements and
specifies in detail what type of ownership does
and does not need disclosure
- Clearly defines the various thresholds for
ownership disclosure (both increases and
decreases) - Clearly defines responsibilities for disclosure
(and information dissemination) - Clearly defines penalties for non-disclosure, or
inaccurate disclosure.
20Ownership concepts
- UK disclosure requirements are worded in such a
way that it is impossible to evade the spirit of
the law. The regulatory regime includes
disclosure requirements related to a number of
key concepts including
- direct or indirect ownership
- Interest or right conferred under an agreement
- The nature of pooled investments
- An obligation to disclose the steps taken to
ensure independence between an entity and its
largest shareholder - The use of negative representations.
21Summary of UK regulatory regime on ownership
notifications
Companies Act 1985 (as amended)
Disclosure of information on controlling
shareholder (30 or more) or who controls
majority of Board. A statement explaining how the
issuer is able to carry out business
independently of the controlling shareholder and
that any transactions with the controlling
shareholder will be on an arms length basis.
Listing requirements UK Listing Authority
(Financial Services Authority)
Shareholder disclosure of all interest above 3
(and subsequent increases of 1) Company
discloses all information received from major
shareholders within 1 day of the receipt of such
information.
Continuing Obligations UK Listing Authority
(Financial Services Authority)
Takeover code Substantial Acquisition
Rules Panel on takeovers and mergers
Shareholders acquiring more than 15 of a
companys capital are required to inform a
regulatory information service.
22Summary of penalties relating to failure to
disclosure
- In the event that a company requests a
shareholder to disclose ownership (pursuant to
212) and that shareholder fails to do so and/or
makes a materially misleading statement the
person is liable to imprisonment or a fine, or
both. Further a company can request a court to
freeze the non-disclosing persons shares.
- Directors (without exception) are responsible for
ensuring that all necessary information included
in listing particulars. Directors of a company
(individually and collectively) are responsible
for a companys compliance with listing rules.
23Closing words on enforcement
24Main enforcement issues
- The OECD is right to focus on enforcement issues
(Chapter 5 of the White Paper). We have
distributed a separate paper which details key
issues of policy enforcement in summary these
are - Excessively literal interpretation of legislation
which allows Russian courts to ignore and/or
contradict the clear intention of legislation in
order to achieve the required outcome
- A total lack of realistic penalties to deter
corporate wrong doers. - A total lack of interest and activity on the part
of the market regulator the Federal Service for
the Financial Markets. - These factors mean that even well intentioned
legislation can be usurped and that confidence in
the Russian legal system and securities market
remains low.
25Specific examples of poor enforcement
- We have posted a number of lower court decisions
on our website (described in our paper) which
highlight the ways in which legislation is
deliberately misinterpreted, here we summarise
the following important decisions
- The Federal Service for the Financial Market
letter from 17th July 2004 - The Tyumen court of cassation decision on the
disclosure of information. - Court decisions on declaring related party
transactions invalid.
26The FSFM decision on related party transactions
- In response to various complaints (most of which
remain unanswered to this day), the FSFM sent us
a letter (04-BC-04-1/2912). This particular
complaint centred around the fact that numerous
related party transactions had never been
approved (or even voted upon in general meeting),
the FSFR concluded
- it can be confirmed that the transactions with
them the related parties are executed in the
ordinary course of business and in accordance
with point 5 of article 83 of the Law on joint
stock companies do not require approval prior to
their execution, and information on such
transactions does not require disclosure in
accordance with the Decision on information
disclosure... - This conclusions effectively even denies the
existence of article 83 of corporate law, which
clearly sets out that related party transactions
should be approved.
27Russian court decisions on disclosure of
information concerning related party transactions
- The lower court refused to force Megionneftegaz
to disclosure information pursuant to the Federal
Law on the Securities Market, Russian accounting
legislation and Instructions of FSFM (No.32,
superseded by 03-35/ps). The reasoning includes
the following statement1 - Only a 25 shareholder can have access to
accounting records - The data being requested is confidential
- The court of appeal maintained this position, the
court of cassation in Tyumen2 further added that - The data subject to disclosure in accordance with
the ongoing disclosure requirements (Article 30
of the Federal Law on the Securities Market) is
not actually ongoing disclosure but disclosure
required at the time of listing. This decision
seeks to deny the need for ongoing disclosure.
1 - A75-1738-?/04 decision 26th May 2005. 2
Tyumen Court of cassation, 12th October 2004.
28Court decisions relating to declaring related
party transactions invalid
- In none of the cases we brought did the court
ever declare a related party transaction to be
void even though the fact that the transaction
took place was finally acknowledged, the fact
that the parties were related was acknowledged
and the fact that the shareholders never approved
the transactions was also acknowledged.
- The reasoning includes the following concepts
- In the absence of the actual related party
contracts (which the courts refused to request
and the defendants refused to provide) the
claimant cannot particularise its case1 - Even if such documents were available a
shareholders primary right is to have a
representative on the Board of a company and that
right is not affected by the conclusion of
related party transactions2.
1 case A75-1598-?/04. 2 case A75-1936-?/04
Judge Oparinas decision dated 2nd September 2004.
29Court decisions relating to declaring related
party transactions invalid
- Even if the related party transactions reduced
the companys profit there is no direct link
between profits and dividends and therefore no
impact on a shareholders financial interests3. - This reasoning can only be described as bizarre,
the net effect is to make it impossible to
prevent below market related party transactions
thereby rendering section 83 of Corporate Law
meaningless.
3 case A75-1936-?/04 Judge Oparinas decision
dated 2nd September 2004.
30A final word on enforcement
- The OECD correctly identifies a lack of
meaningful sanctions as further reason why
corporate law is not adhered to. The table
highlights the laughable nature of many Russian
sanctions
Nature of violation Liability under Russian law Closest equivalent liability under English law
Serious breaches of accounting legislation in preparation and presentation of accounts. From USD 69 up to USD 104 (20 to 30 Minimum Wages) payable by the responsible corporate officers (Article 15.11 of the Administrative Code) Unlimited fine on directors.
Issuers failure to disclose information or disclosure of misleading information in response to a shareholders query From USD 690 to USD 1,035 (200 to 300 Minimum Wages) payable by the company (Article 15.19(1) of the Administrative Code) Unlimited fine on directors.
Failure to present evidence upon a court order Up to USD 175 (up to 50 Minimum Wages) payable by the responsible corporate officers and up to USD 3,500 (up to 1,000 Minimum Wages) payable by the company (Articles 66, 119 of the Arbitration Procedure Code) Contempt of court leading to sanctions ranging from sequestration of assets to imprisonment.
31Further information
- Most of the court decisions referred to in this
presentation have been posted on Vostok Naftas
website (www.vostoknafta.com). Further questions
on legal issues should be addressed to
Questions on Russian law should be addressed
to Mr. Yuri E Monastrsky Managing
Partner Novinsky Boulevard, Moscow 121099, Russia
Telephone 7 095 231 4222Â Fax 7 095 231
4223 Tel 7 095 231 4222 www.mzs.ru
Questions on international law and applying
Russian law in foreign courts should be addressed
to Mr. Richard Gwynne Partner Litigation
Department Stephenson Harwood One, St.Pauls
Churchyard London EC4M 8SH Tel 44 (0) 20 7329
4422 www.shlegal.com