December 4, 2012
Stock Plan Leftovers
By now, you are probably finishing off any remaining leftovers from Thanksgiving. On that theme, I have a few leftover items for the blog and now seems like a good time to use them up. Sort of like making a casserole out of turkey, mashed potatoes and stuffing, but not quite as tasty.
Update on Proxy Disclosure Lawsuits
On November 6, I blogged about plaintiffs’ attorneys that are now bringing lawsuits alleging that companies’ disclosures related to their stock plan or Say-on-Pay proposals are inadequate (“Martha Stewart and Your Proxy Statement“). The lawsuits seek an injunction to delay the shareholder votes on these proposals (which, in effect, delays the annual meetings); companies targeted by these attorneys are faced with settling and paying out plaintiffs’ attorney fees in the six figures (up to $625K) to avoid a delay.
Last week, Mike Melbinger provided an update on this issue in his Compensation Blog on CompensationStandards.com. To date, 20 companies have been targeted and at least six have settled, meaning that they agreed to make additional disclosures and pay fees to the plaintiffs’ attorneys. At least one company (Brocade Communications) also had to delay the vote on their stock plan proposal (although they did hold their annual meeting on time). At least three companies (Clorox, Globecomm Systems, and Hain Celestial) got courts to reject the injunction. And Microsoft got the law firm that filed the complaint (Faruqi & Faruqi, which has initiated most of these suits) to withdraw it. The article “Insight: Lawyers Gain from Say-on-Pay” Suits Targeting U.S. Firms,” published by Reuters on November 30, has a good summary of the various suits.
This is an opportunity for you, as a stock plan administrator, to demonstrate the value that you bring to the table. Make sure that your legal department is aware of the potential for these lawsuits, so that if your company is targeted, they aren’t caught offguard. You also might want to forward the memo we’ve posted from Orrick to legal (“New Wave of Proxy Statement Injunctive Lawsuits: How to Win & Prevent Them“), which include thoughts on strengthening your disclosure so they will be more likely to withstand one of these lawsuits.
IFRS: Hot or Not?
An article published on November 13 in Accounting Today (“SEC Still Has Reservations about IFRS” by Michael Cohn) reports on comments by SEC officials at FEI’s 31st Annual Current Financial Reporting Issues conference on where the SEC stands on IFRS. The upshot is that SEC researchers have identified a number of concerns with adopting IFRS in the US and that the SEC is still taking a wait and see approach. Some of the areas the researchers looked at were the cost of conversion, whether or not IFRS makes sense for US capital markets, the interpretative process, the impact on private companies, investor understanding, and what our exit strategy might be if the US adopts IFRS and it backfires. Based on this report, I’d say we still have a long ways to go before we are under IFRS (or some sort of equivalent) here in the US.
Of course, things may change now that there will be a new chair at the SEC.
Even the SEC Makes Mistakes
The next time someone finds a typo in something you’ve written, you can point out that you are in good company. In his blog for Allen Matkins, Keith Bishop notes a number of errors on the Form 10-K posted to the SEC website (“The SEC’s Form 10-K: ‘In Endless Error Hurled,'” April 11, 2012), including cites to regulations that don’t exist and outdated instructions. I feel a lot better now about the myriad typos I’m sure can be found in my blogs. If the SEC isn’t perfect, how can the rest of us be expected to be error-free?
More Than You Ever Want to Know About Stock-for-Stock Exercises
I spent an hour or so today drafting a 1,200-word essay in response to a question in the NASPP Discussion Forum about stock-for-stock exercises. I’m so pleased with my response that I wish I had another use for it. But I don’t, so I’m mentioning it here in the hopes that a few more people will read it. If you want to understand what a tax-free exchange of property is (and what it isn’t), check out Topic #7391.
Shout-Out
Finally, a shout-out to Sara Spengler at Facebook for suggesting the Thanksgiving tie-in for today’s blog entry.
– Barbara
Tags: disclosures, Form 10-K, IFRS, plaintiff attorneys, shareholder approval, shareholder vote, stock plan proposals, stock-for-stock exercises