DealLawyers.com Blog

November 7, 2017

Activism: CEOs in the Cross-Hairs

This “Forbes” interview with Skadden’s Rich Grossman discusses the implications of an increasingly popular activist tactic – targeting CEOs for removal from the board through proxy contests. Here’s an excerpt from Rich’s comments:

I think most practitioners and governance experts would agree that one of the most important responsibilities of a board is the selection of the CEO, and the removal of the CEO from the board sends a very strong message, especially a board made up of a majority of independent directors.

While shareholders do not have the right to directly remove board-selected officers, if a CEO gets removed from the board in a contest, it’s a vote of no confidence. In those circumstances, I can’t imagine a board not looking at the situation and saying, “should we rethink our decision regarding the CEO?” It certainly makes for an awkward situation.

Why are CEOs being targeted?  The approach ISS takes toward proxy contests seeking minority board representation is a big part of the reason:

Under the current ISS analytical framework, recommendations are made depending on whether the dissident is seeking a minority or a majority position on the board, with the standard for a dissident seeking minority representation being significantly easier to meet than if control is sought. The ISS minority contest standard — what I’ll call the “what’s the harm” standard — for replacing directors seems to apply regardless of whether the CEO is targeted.

John Jenkins