Shareholder rights a 'key reform' says Obama

23 April 2010

Sarah Wilson

Latest News

Australia narrows climate reporting scope mid‑rollout

Minerva Proxy Update

Follow This challenges Shell days before key vote

SRD III is Europe’s chance to fix proxy plumbing

SEC Steps Closer to Unwinding Climate Disclosure Rules

Minerva Proxy Update

Featured Briefings

Australia Proxy Season Review 2025

2026 Proxy Season Preview

Diversity Divergence: Shareholders Steadfast Amid Pervasive Political Posturing

US president Barack Obama took his fight for financial reform to the heart of Wall Street this week and described the role of shareholders as "the last key component".

As the US administration faces up to a tough fight in the Senate on Monday, Obama outlined his vision of a financial system that did not "have to choose between markets that are unfettered by even modest protections against crisis, or markets that are stymied by onerous rules that suppress enterprise and innovation."

President Obama currently has a 59-41 Democrat majority over Republicans in the Senate, one vote short of what is needed to take the Bill forward. Republicans, who see the proposals as federal interference, have signed a letter saying that they will not back the legislation as it stands.

The US administration acknowledges that shareholders by themselves cannot reign in a 'Too Big to Fail" banking sector but even leading Republicans, through Representative Darrell Issa, have admitted that "We need to empower the stockholders of public companies to better manage the package of pay and the incentive packages of their key executives."

Shareholder rights in the US have been significantly eroded since the introduction of the SEC after the 1930s crash. Proponents of reform will therefore be encouraged to hear that shareholder rights are a key ingredient. Here's what Obama said:

These Wall Street reforms will give shareholders new power in the financial system. They will get what we call a say on pay, a voice with respect to the salaries and bonuses awarded to top executives. And the SEC will have the authority to give shareholders more say in corporate elections, so that investors and pension holders have a stronger role in determining who manages the company in which they've placed their savings.

Opponents to increased shareholder rights in the US have long argued that such reforms smack of Federal interference in what has historically been left to the individual states to mandate. The argument over property rights becomes even more inflamed with suggestions that corporations will become prey to activist shareholders with deeply entrenched political agendas far removed from maximising shareholder return and board accountability.

The US is still a long way from getting a Shareholder Rights Directive or even a Comply or Explain governance framework owned by the market participants. Monday's vote will be just another small step in enhancing shareholder protections. In the meantime the SEC has its own shareholder reform agenda under consideration which will proceed irrespective of Monday's vote.

Links

Barack Obama's Full Speech >>

Failure of Responsibility - Video Coverage >>

Related Stories

Minerva Analytics Files Texas Public Information Act Request as State Escalates Campaign Against Proxy Advisors

September 18, 2025

home

Read More

From Super-Voting to Equal Voting: Lyft’s Class B Share Conversion

September 12, 2025

Editor

Read More

The White House Loyalty Scorecard: Blurring the Lines Between State and Market

September 11, 2025

Editor

Read More

Stewardship Under Siege: Minerva CEO Criticises Regulatory Attacks on Proxy Advisors

June 24, 2025

Jack Grogan-Fenn

Read More

Climate Cutback: US EPA to Scrap GHG Emission Limits

June 13, 2025

Jack Grogan-Fenn

Read More

Congressional Democrats criticise banks for exiting climate coalitions

May 23, 2025

Elizabeth Pfeuti

Read More