January 22, 2014
Another Grab Bag
I have another grab bag of topics for you this week.
2013 Say-on-Pay Results
Just in time for the 2014 proxy season, Steven Hall & Partners has published a quick summary of the Say-on-Pay vote results for last year’s proxy season. Here are a few facts of interest.
73 companies failed (out of a total of 3,363 companies that held votes. This seems to be up from 2012. Oddly, even with a Google search, I could not find an apples-to-apples comparison, but it seems like just over 60 companies had failing votes in 2012. It’s possible the increase is partly due to more companies having held Say-on-Pay votes.
In the category of “Not Getting the Message,” 15 of the companies with failing votes had failures in prior years.
At one company, Looksmart, 100% of the votes on their Say-on-Pay proposal were against it (which makes them look not so smart). That’s right, even the board voted against their own Say-on-Pay proposal. Apparently there was a complete board turnover, all the executives were fired, and the new execs didn’t own any stock.
New HSR Act Filing Thresholds
New HSR Act filing thresholds have been announced for 2014. Under the new thresholds, executives can own up to $75.9 million of stock before potentially having to make the HSR filings. See this memo from Morrison & Foerster for more information. If you have no idea what the HSR Act is, see the NASPP’s excellent HSR Act Portal.
NASDAQ Amends Rules on Compensation Committee Independence
NASDAQ has amended its rules on compensation committee independence to provide that compensatory fees (consulting, advisory, et. al.) paid by the company to board members should be considered when evaluating eligibility to serve on this committee, rather than prohibiting these fees outright. The NYSE has always imposed the more lenient standard and apparently NASDAQ received feedback that their more stringent standard might make them less popular. This alert from Cooley has more information.
– Barbara