
Why Corporate Governance Today?
I. Introduction
Corporate governance has become a powerful force in American business
over the short span of the past two decades. The movement may best be
described as the prudent exercise of ownership rights, toward the
goal of increased share value.
In both the national and international marketplace, the California
Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS) is recognized as a standard-bearer
for the movement. Indeed, CalPERS is generally credited as a founder of
shareholder activism stemming from its heightened proxy voting activity
at selected companies in the mid-1980s.[1]
Several years ago, CalPERS published a paper to explain its investment
objectives and fiduciary duties in connection with the corporate governance
movement.[2] In this paper, CalPERS
will revise its objectives, in light of the growing acceptance in attitude
by large companies nationwide; the new proxy voting and fiduciary duty
guidelines of federal regulators; and, the emerging importance of the
international marketplace.
A central thesis, then and now, is that shareholders must act like
owners and take an active interest in the performance of their stock portfolio.
It has been more than half a century since the founders of fundamental
stock analysis, Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, observed:[3]
"The choice of a common stock is a single act, its ownership is
a continuing process. Certainly there is just as much reason to exercise
care and judgment in being a shareholder as in becoming
one."[4]
Today, at the close of the century, corporate governance is still an
important tool for monitoring performance and enhancing value -- even
though the ultimate shape of this tool is in the process of being forged.
Overview of the System
CalPERS is the largest public pension plan in the United States and
the third largest in the world. It serves more than 1,050,000 members
and beneficiaries. Its diverse membership includes state, local government
and school district employees. Organized as an entity of state government,
CalPERS has headquarters in the capital city of Sacramento and eight "field
offices" statewide.
CalPERS' 13-member Board of Administration represents the interests
of public employees, public employers, and the taxpayers, in careful balance.[5]
Its composition is set in statute, and protected from political influence
by the state constitution.[6] Six
of the Board members are elected by various active or retired employee
groups, two serve by virtue of their elected statewide office and five
are appointed by the Governor and/or the Legislature.
Overview of the Fund
The CalPERS fund is a trust, administered under the Board's sole authority.
Although CalPERS is exempt from the federal oversight of private pension
funds, it turns to these standards and the "common law" of trusts for
guidance.
The CalPERS fund consists of employer and employee contributions, plus
earnings. CalPERS' investment portfolio is highly diversified between
fixed income, real estate, and an increasing allocation to equities, both
in the domestic and international markets. The domestic equity holdings
are all indexed; the international stock is managed by outside managers,
and is partially indexed.
Pension funds such as CalPERS are uniquely positioned in the market.
For one thing, they are trust funds and must be prudently invested in
accordance with standards of fiduciary duty. This results in a preference
for the indexed management of stock, which is deemed prudent by most financial
analysts.[7] For another, they are
designed to pay benefits based on actuarial projections of retirement
and mortality. These factors combine to shape a long-term investment horizon,
one that is well-suited to the ownership perspective of a corporate governance
campaign.[8]
Several large public pension funds have long been involved in the corporate
governance movement, along with CalPERS. The funds administered for employees
of the states of Wisconsin, New York and Florida, and the city of New
York, actively vote their proxies and have sponsored shareholder proposals.
Now, private funds are joining the ranks.[9]
Standards of Fiduciary Duty
The CalPERS Board members, along with System officers and employees,
function as fiduciaries. As fiduciaries, they must discharge their responsibilities
in accordance with the twin duties of loyalty and care. This is analogous
to the duties owed by the directors of a corporation to its shareholders.
The duty of loyalty is sometimes referred to as the "sole purpose"
doctrine. This means the Board and other CalPERS fiduciaries must act
solely in the interest of members and beneficiaries. For this reason,
CalPERS cannot base its corporate governance activities on social or political
causes. Instead, it must focus on the "bottom line" of enhanced shareholder
returns.
Under the duty of care, the Board and other CalPERS fiduciaries
must manage fund assets as a "prudent investor." Essentially, this means
with the care, skill and diligence that a prudent person, familiar with
the matters, would exercise under similar circumstances in managing a
pension fund of like size. Only the Board is authorized to invest the
fund, although it may delegate this authority to other fiduciaries.
The duty of care safeguards the payment objectives of the fund, to
ensure that the defined benefits can be paid when due at the time of retirement
or death. The Board also has a duty to maximize the value of its investments,
in order to avoid the increases in state and local government taxes that
might otherwise be needed to pay the employer's share of costs.
Duty to Monitor
There is no distinct fiduciary duty to monitor investment performance,
but CalPERS recognizes this duty as inherent in the concept of prudence.[10]
This is particularly true in regard to the performance of indexed stock,
which follows the public market.
By the time a company's poor performance is publicly known, it is generally
too late for an investor to take corrective action. Indeed, the underlying
strategy of an index is to replicate the market. Under this strategy,
if the market is in a downturn, then poor performers should not be sold.
It is presumed that the marketplace is efficient, and that all stock will
eventually be sold at the optimum trading price.
The history of indexing suggests special problems in monitoring. The
U.S. Department of Labor (DOL), entrusted with oversight of the Employee
Retirement Income and Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), has warned private
pension fiduciaries that they may be held accountable for screening
the performance of indexed holdings. An early DOL guideline, never rescinded,
assumed that pension funds are screening their indexed holdings as an
aspect of prudence.[11]
01 of 05
- "CalPERS has been and remains in
the forefront of shareholder activists. It has often set the terms for
debate and intervention in corporate matters. It is on the leading edge
of . . . 'the glorious oversight revolution'." James P. Hawley and Andrew
T. Williams with John U. Miller, Getting the Herd to Run: Shareholder
Activism at the California Employees' Retirement System, Business
and the Contemporary World (Fall 1994) at 11, 12.
01 of 05
|