Governance Center Blog

Jun
02
2010

Worth Reading … Financial Reform (the Final Chapter?)

Numerous law firms and at least one stock exchange are telling their clients and issuers to prepare for new corporate governance rules as early as this summer and do what they can to shore up communications with shareholders.

“Everybody knows it’s [proxy access] coming; we just don’t know what it will look like,” David Huntingdon, a partner with Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP, said during Corporate Board Member’s This Week in the Boardroom Webcast last week. “We’ll just have to wait until later this summer when the SEC takes action.” [To view Board Member Webcast, click here.] Read the rest of this entry »

Apr
20
2010

Goldman Sachs Suit May be Start of Derivative Reform

If you are a director on a public company that relies on the derivatives market (i.e. credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, synthetic CDOs) to manage risk or a financial services company that is a player in that market, your world is about to change drastically.

It probably is not too surprising that on the same day the SEC charged Goldman Sachs in a civil suit for fraud in structuring and marketing a synthetic CDO tied to subprime mortgages, the head of the Senate Agriculture Committee, which oversees futures trading, proposed regulation of the derivatives market. My point is that just as the Obama Administration didn’t give up on health care reform it will do the same with financial regulatory reform. It seems that whatever financial reform is finally passed, regulation of the derivatives market will be included.

As you all know, the Dodd financial regulatory reform bill, due to hit the Senate floor in the next couple of weeks, also calls for derivative transactions to go through a clearinghouse and be traded on an exchange while the SEC and the Commodities and Futures Trading Commission would oversee them. [Read my March 15 blog post.] Read the rest of this entry »

Apr
13
2010

Worth Reading … Say on Pay

Sen. Chris Dodd has added an amendment to the proposed financial regulatory reform bill that could be problematic for company boards seeking approval of Say on Play proposals. Meanwhile, at least one company has a compelling argument for not allowing Say on Pay.

Dodd’s amendment would deem all votes regarding executive compensation plans, policies and procedures to be non-routine. If approved, that would mean that under the change in the broker voting Rule 452 (which went into effect earlier this year) brokers holding “uninstructed” shares (mostly retail investors) could not vote those shares. Instead, each investor would have to. Under the revised Rule 452, brokers can only vote uninstructed shares if the matter is routine.

Eric W. Hilfers, who blogs The Tally Sheet for Boardmember.com and who is a partner and the head of the executive compensation practice at Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, wrote, “With the change in broker voting rules, however, it will be harder to obtain that majority support because the retail vote will essentially not exist (the SEC would like the outcome to be that retail investors spend the time to instruct their brokers, but many observers think this is unlikely.” Read the rest of this entry »

Nov
17
2009

Clearing Houses Key to Cleaning Up Derivatives Market

Now that the debate over healthcare reform is at a lull, some focus is finally being placed on one of the causes of the financial crisis: the derivatives market. From the United States to the European Commission to the G-20, regulators and government officials agree there is a need for transparency, central clearing houses and open exchanges.

In the past week U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd, chair of the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs introduced the Restoring American Financial Stability Act, which among many things addresses closing loopholes for over-the-counter derivatives, asset-backed securities and hedge funds. Many naysayers believe the Dodd bill doesn’t stand much of a chance. That includes Ron Insana, a senior analyst at CNBC, who spoke at Financial Executives International (FEI) Current Financial Reporting Issues conference in New York City Monday.

“Financial regulatory reform may be far from a done deal,” Insana said, although he did admit the Dodd bill was one of the most comprehensive bills that addresses systemic risk. That may be true, but only because there is a plethora of proposals. At last check, there are Dodd’s proposal, House Financial Services Committee Chair Barney Frank’s OTC Derivatives Market Act, the Federal Reserve’s plan to OTC credit and interest rate derivatives and the U.S. Treasury’s plans for regulating hedge funds, private equity and derivatives.

The Dodd bill would do a lot of what Frank’s proposal calls for. Regarding derivatives, Dodd’s bill would give the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) authority to regulate OTC derivatives to rein in excessive risk-taking, require central clearing and exchange trading for derivatives where both regulators and clearing houses would have a role in determining which contracts should be cleared (the SEC and CFTC would control which contracts get cleared), requires traders to post margin and capital on uncleared trades, and requires data collection and publication through clearing houses or swap repositories to improve transparency.

It seems as though there has been some collaboration between the House and the Senate on this since the language on who has the power to determine which contracts must be cleared reflects CFTC Chair Gary Gensler’s (See Gensler speech posted on Harvard Law School Forum) change of heart. Originally, he wanted clearing houses to be in charge of those decisions.

“I appreciate Chairman Gensler’s agreeing that we should change the provision of the derivatives bill that he requested that would have put the clearing houses in charge of determining that a trade is clearable.” Frank said on Nov. 6. Four days later, Dodd introduces his legislation with similar language.

Additionally, in a joint Oct. 16 report on regulatory harmonization the SEC and CFTC recommended legislation to enhance CFTC authority over exchange and clearing house compliance with the Commodity Exchange Act. “The CEA should be amended to provide the CFTC with clear authority with respect to exchange and clearing house rules that the CFTC determines are necessary for them to comply with the CEA,” according to the report.

Earlier in September, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced it received commitments from 15 major OTC derivatives dealers that they would set specific target levels to expand central clearing for derivatives.  The commitments were a follow-up to a June 2, 2009 letter from market participants to regulators. That letter set a Dec. 15, 2009 deadline to begin clearing such contracts, which market participants hope to meet, according to the Fed letter.

For additional information on OTC derivatives markets, Goodwin Procter and The Conference Board Governance Center have some helpful thought leadership. Goodwin Procter has issued a Client Alert analyzing separate bills approved by the House Financial Services Committee and the House Agriculture Committee, each of which would create a new regulatory regime for derivatives trading. The Client Alert also compares these bills to the U.S. Treasury’s proposed OTC derivatives legislation issued in August 2009 (discussed in Goodwin Procter’s  August 27, 2009 Client Alert.

The Conference Board’s Corporate Governance Handbook: Legal Standards and Board Practices (Third Edition) addresses the derivatives market in light of the financial crisis. On page 147 in The Role of the Board in Turbulent Times: Assessing Corporate Strategy, states: “The evolving credit crisis is having an impact not only on the capital markets, but also across the general economy. The board of directors should first take the opportunity to re-evaluate the company’s business plan for the coming 12 months. Specifically, it should assess the impact on the business plan of projected cash flow, the limited availability of bank debt, the potential restrictions to the company’s ability to raise equity or debt through the capital markets, and the fixed component of the company’s cost structure.”

Regarding derivatives, it states: “Based on this preliminary review, board members should: Identify the factors that could contribute to an adverse action by rating agencies and design preventive measures. If an adverse ratings action should occur, what implications would there be under the company’s credit facilities, derivatives positions, or other instruments?”

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