The Advisors' Blog

This blog features wisdom from respected compensation consultants and lawyers

June 17, 2010

The Latest Compensation Disclosures: A Proxy Season Post-Mortem

Broc Romanek, CompensationStandards.com

Tune in today for the webcast – “The Latest Compensation Disclosures: A Proxy Season Post-Mortem” – to hear Mark Borges of Compensia, Dave Lynn of CompensationStandards.com and Morrison & Foerster and Ron Mueller of Gibson Dunn analyze what was disclosed (and what was not disclosed) during the proxy season.

A Lot of House-Senate Reconciliation Action on Governance Provisions: A Partial Skinny

Ted Allen of ISS does a great job of recapping the results of yesterday’s marathon negotiations over the regulatory reform bill’s governance provisions in this blog that he wrote at 12:30 am. Bravo to him on his stamina! The negotiations will continue today in this area and are still being televised on C-SPAN.

Here is a recap based on what Ted wrote and what others have written to me (note that it’s hard to know for certain what is going on and it could all change):

– Mandatory majority voting has been dropped from the bill as Senate conferees have agreed to eliminate it; this was not in House bill

– Proxy access provision could become more detailed as Senate conferees agreed to impose a 5% ownership standard and a two-year holding period on shareholders who wish to nominate directors (under Base Text, details would have been left up to the SEC); uncertain if House conferees will accept this change

– Say-on-pay could be altered to allow companies to hold them on a biannual or triennial basis rather than be forced to do so annually; not certain whether this will be accepted by either Senate or House conferees

– Senate conferees accepted a House provision to permanently exempt small issuers from SOX’s auditor attestation requirements – even though the Dodd bill didn’t have this provision in it

– Senate conferees didn’t accept House conferees’ proposal to mandate votes on “golden parachute” packages

– Senate conferees accepted House conferees’ proposal to require large institutional investment managers to disclose their say-on-pay votes

– Senate conferees accepted House conferees’ proposal to ensure that the SEC’s independence standards for compensation consultants are competitively neutral

– House conferees voted to add a new provision to permit private rights of action for aiding and abetting (overturning Stoneridge and Central Bank) even though there was no similar provision in Base Text (but this provision did exist in an older version of a House bill from last December); not likely that Senate conferees will accept this

– House conferees accepted SEC self-funding, as well as creation of new SEC offices for whistleblowers and ombudsman; Senate had already approved this in Dodd bill – but now some Senators are trying to strip the SEC’s self-funding. Proving my note at the beginning about how this all could change…

It’s interesting how some blogs have sprung to assist folks in contacting members of Congress to pressure them on these negotiations even as they happen – see this blog as an example. And it’s also interesting to note that even regulators are willing to express their view on the future of the reform bill, check out this “thumbs up and down” chart from NASAA…