Georgeson Report

March 2, 2009

Proposed NYSE and Delaware Law Changes Could Facilitate Election of Activist Nominees to Boards of Directors

Changes would not be effective until at least 2010 proxy season

To Our Clients and Friends:

Last week, legal changes were proposed that have the potential to impact significantly the election of directors. The proposed changes, if adopted, would not be effective until at least the 2010 proxy season. 

In this report, Georgeson describes the proposed changes and their practical impact, as well certain questions raised by them. Their practical impact is identified throughout this report under the headings “HOW COULD THIS IMPACT YOU?”

Highlights

Two sets of changes are being proposed:

1. The New York Stock Exchange (the “NYSE”) has asked the Securities & Exchange Commission (the “SEC”) to approve a change to NYSE Rule 452 to eliminate broker discretionary voting in director elections; and

2. The Delaware State Bar Association will be asking the Delaware General Assembly to amend the Delaware General Corporation Law (the “DGCL”) with respect to, among other things, proxy access, reimbursement of shareholder expenses, and separate record dates for notice and voting at shareholder meetings.

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1. Proposed Elimination of Broker Discretionary Voting in Director Elections

On February 26, 2009, the NYSE proposed that the SEC approve an amendment to NYSE Rule 452 to eliminate broker discretionary voting in director elections. This amendment, an earlier version of which was first submitted to the SEC in October 2006, would eliminate the discretion that brokers currently have to vote their clients’ shares when their clients do not otherwise provide them with voting instructions for director elections. Depending on what occurs during and after the SEC’s comment period, this proposed change would affect shareholder meetings held some time on or after January 1, 2010.

Although, as of this report, the SEC has not published the proposed rule in the Federal Register, the proposed rule and its history can be found on the NYSE web site.

There has been general support for the proposition that director elections are important enough to make them a non-routine item for purposes of broker discretionary voting. However, there are several other regulatory and practical roadblocks that make this issue difficult to resolve in a vacuum. These include:

These issues are likely to be raised during the SEC’s comment period. Many interested parties hope that the SEC conducts an overall review of shareholder voting and communication issues, instead of considering this one issue in isolation. Such a review could help to develop a comprehensive framework that takes account of these disparate provisions.

Companies should be aware that over the past two years, as the proposed change to Rule 452 has been debated, several brokers have taken matters into their own hands.  Thirteen brokers have completely refused to vote if they have not received voting instructions from the beneficial owners of the shares held in their brokerage accounts. Another ten brokers have decided to vote all shares that remain without voting instructions in the same proportion as those shares for which the brokers have received voting instructions. This factor is already impacting companies, without any further change to Rule 452. As a result, it is crucial that companies work with their proxy solicitors now to identify what percentage of their retail shareholders hold shares at these brokerage firms, in order to plan effective and successful proxy solicitation campaigns.

HOW COULD THIS IMPACT YOU? The proposed change to NYSE Rule 452 could impact companies in the following ways:

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2. Proposed Amendments to the Delaware General Corporation Law Regarding Director Elections and Shareholder Voting

Each year the Delaware General Assembly generally reviews and amends portions of the DGCL. As part of this process, the Delaware State Bar Association proposes amendments for consideration to the Delaware legislature. This year, three of these proposed amendments, which (if enacted into law) would become effective August 1, 2009, concern director elections and shareholder voting. 

Click here to view all of the proposed Delaware State Bar Association amendments (as well as a synopsis of them). Only the three amendments that concern director elections and shareholder voting are discussed below.

Delaware companies would not be required to adopt any of the three proposed amendments. The first two proposals would permit, but not require, companies to include the applicable provisions in their by-laws. The third proposal would not appear in a company’s by-laws, but rather would be a choice that a company’s board would be entitled to make each year. The three proposals are:

HOW COULD THIS IMPACT YOU? The proposed changes to the DGCL would impact only companies incorporated in Delaware and only those that elect to take advantage of the proposed changes (assuming they are enacted).

At first glance, these proposals appear to make it easier for shareholders to nominate directors to Delaware company boards and to work toward the elimination of so-called “empty voting” (which occurs when shareholders who owned the shares on the record date have already sold their shares by the time of the meeting date). 

On closer review, however, these provisions raise several questions, which remain unanswered. For example, it appears likely that there will be a new federal law on shareholder access. Nevertheless, the proposed Delaware law could be used by companies to adopt by-laws that have more restrictive rules than the new federal law, such as a higher share ownership threshold for nominating persons as directors in a company’s proxy statement. In such a case, there would need to be a resolution between conflicting federal and state laws. 

In the case of the separate “notice” and “record” dates for a shareholders meeting, the logistics of obtaining votes from the shareholders owning shares on the later date could be quite cumbersome and costly. “Notice & Access” has already raised concerns about shareholders not having access to the necessary information to make informed voting decisions, as well as concerns regarding the ability to get retail and registered shareholders to vote at all. A later “record” date raises these issues again, as well as new questions as to (i) whether secondary notices and mailings would need to be sent to the “record” (versus “notice”) date shareholders and (ii) whether the “overvoting” and “undervoting” issues that have been raised in recent years would be exacerbated if there were to be a much shorter time period between the “record” and “meeting” dates, in which to reconcile actual share ownership and to determine which shareholders have the right to vote the shares in question

If Delaware law were to permit companies to adopt by-laws on proxy access and shareholder reimbursement of proxy expenses, this would likely cause shareholder activists to pressure Delaware companies to actually do so. If companies were then presented with the choice between a state and federal law version of proxy access, activists would also likely pressure companies to select the more shareholder-friendly version. All in all, by-law provisions on proxy access and shareholder reimbursement of proxy expenses could vastly expand an activist’s toolkit. When combined with the ongoing dismantling of company takeover defenses, some companies could become much more vulnerable to contested director elections and other forms of shareholder activism. 

As with the proposed amendment to NYSE Rule 452, it is hoped that when the proposed Delaware law changes are considered, both federal and state regulators take a holistic review of the many different issues raised by shareholder voting and communications. Such a review would consider the proposals discussed in this report, along with such issues as (i) the elimination of the NOBO/OBO distinction, so as to allow for greater communication with all shareholders; and (ii) improvements in the “Notice and Access” process, e.g., to permit proxy voting cards to be sent to shareholders along with the initial “notice” card, so as to make it easier for registered and retail shareholders to vote their shares. Finally, while all of these potential changes are being debated, companies should carefully consider making any governance changes that could weaken their defenses and make them a target of the current increase in shareholder activism.    

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Georgeson has a team of experts who will continue to monitor these regulatory developments for you and who are prepared to meet your needs in connection with preparing for the final rule changes. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact your Account Executive or any of the following Georgeson executives:
 
David Drake, President
212-440-9861, ddrake@georgeson.com

Rhonda Brauer, Senior Managing Director, Corporate Governance
212-805-7168, rbrauer@georgeson.com

Rachel Posner, Senior Managing Director & General Counsel
212-440-9921, rposner@georgeson.com

Rajeev Kumar, Senior Managing Director, Research
212-440-9812, rkumar@georgeson.com