Bebchuck & Tallarita also looked at the corporate
governance guidelines of the companies whose CEOs signed the BRT
statement – and found that most of them reflect a “shareholder
primacy” approach – e.g., stating that the business judgment of the
board must be exercised in the long-term interest of shareholders.
I haven’t been in any of these c-suites or boardrooms, but I’d venture
a guess that many had already been discussing long-termism and
stakeholder governance prior to the BRT’s statement (even if they
weren’t using those specific catchphrases) – with a view towards
maximizing long-term shareholder value. Were the BRT commitments
illusory, or just within the scope of those prior discussions? Either
way, the absence of board involvement seems to indicate that no change
to director fiduciary duties was intended.
This
article from UCLA Law Prof Stephen Bainbridge agrees that the
evidence is that most BRT members remain committed to shareholder
value maximization – and suggests two possible reasons why the BRT
publicly shifted its position
First, the members may be engaged in puffery intended to attract certain stakeholders for the long-term benefit of the shareholders. Specifically, they may be looking to lower the company’s cost of labor by responding to perceived shifts in labor, lower the cost of capital by attracting certain investors, and increase sales by responding to perceived shifts in consumer market sentiment. They may also be trying to fend off regulation by progressive politicians. Second, some BRT members may crave a return to the days of imperial CEOS.
Corporate Purpose: Take 2 for the “Takeover Titans”?
Last month, I blogged about some back & forth between Skadden and Wachtell on the ongoing “corporate purpose” debate. One member pointed out that this is a revival of the old 1980s Skadden v. Wachtel debates when Joe Flom (now deceased) and Marty Lipton (clearly alive) made themselves famous in the hot times of corporate raiding by touring with show about their rival forms of takeovers and defenses.
Here’s an old University of Michigan newsletter that recounts a panel discussion including these two giants. And here’s a recent interview of Marty Lipton in “Business Law Today,” in which he comments that those touring days might have been the point when he knew he was a leader in the field:
JP: Was getting attacked by the folks from the Chicago School the time that you felt like, “OK—I’ve made it on the national stage”? When did you realize that you’re a leader in this field?
ML: I don’t know whether that’s possible to answer. I would say mid-’80s with the poison pill more than anything else. I certainly wasn’t an intellectual leader. From 1976, when Steve Brill wrote an article (“Two Tough Lawyers in the Tender-Offer Game,” NY Mag., 1976) about Flom and myself being the two lawyers on opposite sides in tender offers, I was a known quantity, and people were calling who didn’t know me but just from reputation were seeking representation in takeover situations. So it’s hard to say.
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– Liz Dunshee
Posted by Liz Dunshee