The annual general meeting (AGM) is the cornerstone of shareholder democracy and an essential part of sound corporate governance.
The annual general meeting (AGM)
is the cornerstone of shareholder democracy and an essential part of sound
corporate governance. Not only are AGMs the place where shareholders get to
vote on key decisions, it is also the only time board members and management
are held to account, having to answer directly to their shareholders and report
on their performance and decisions. In 2020 the Corona pandemic and the ensuing
stringent limitations to gatherings of people and freedom of movement, had a
dramatic impact on AGMs across Europe and the world.
Together with its German Member
organisation DSW, BETTER FINANCE investigated how selected EU Member States
reacted to the Corona pandemic with regard to the general meetings of listed
companies and how the measures taken in each case have been perceived by
shareholders.
Emergency laws in most EU member
states prohibited the physical attendance to general meetings. In response,
governments decided to relax the rules governing the participation in general
meetings, allowing companies to hold purely virtual general meetings, leading
to an unprecedented rise in virtual or totally closed-door AGMs across the EU.
In most cases this has resulted, one way or another, in an infringement of
shareholders’ rights.
A survey conducted among
individual shareholders and their representative organisations throughout the
EU indicates that shareholders had mixed experiences, citing both advantages
and weaknesses for both traditional on-site AGMs and their virtual
counterparts.
While shareholders shared
concerns that conventional on-site meetings are not easily accessible for non-residents,
involve costs and are time-consuming, they agreed that physical meetings give
individual, non-professional shareholders a unique opportunity for “in-person”
direct interaction with both management and other shareholders. Such meetings
are also very transparent, with questions from shareholders and answers from
the board being heard by everyone in the room.
Virtual-only meetings, on the
other hand, are not conducive to transparent and open discussions and, to some
extent, reduce shareholders’ rights to speak and ask questions, in particular
during the meetings. But they also have their advantages such as the fact that
they can be accessed from anywhere in the world, have a lower environmental
impact, are less costly and time-consuming for shareholders and can be recorded
for future reference.
It would seem, from the mixed
responses to the survey, that hybrid AGMs would be the best way forward,
combining the best of both worlds by incorporating the positive aspects of both
virtual and physical meetings and removing the barriers to the exercise of
shareholders’ rights that exist in both models. To achieve this, lessons from
the 2020 AGM season need to be drawn and the weaknesses of the respective
formats addressed.
One such weakness, reiterated by
many survey respondents, was the failure by many companies to provide the
necessary technical infrastructure to accommodate all shareholder rights in
good time, hampering constructive exchanges and their right to vote based on
appropriate information.
In some of the worst cases, such
as France, the process turned into sham shareholder meetings: all closed-door,
with the exercise of voting rights only possible until one day before the date
of the meeting, and with as only legal obligation, the requirement to broadcast
the closed-door meeting on the internet and not even in real time.
Guillaume Prache, Managing
Director of BETTER FINANCE, looks forward now: “Whereas the emergency laws
instated by member states in response to the health crisis have negatively impacted
fundamental shareholders’ rights, this was presented as temporary in nature in
response to an emergency. Going forward, the format of the AGMs needs to return
to one that acknowledges and ensures their deliberative function, and which
enables shareholders to exercise all of their rights regardless of their means
of participation, including the rights to ask questions during AGMs and to vote
after having heard the replies from the management and from the board.”
What shapes should future AGMs
take then? The view of shareholders and their representatives is very clear in
that respect: an overwhelming majority of both groups prefers to maintain
on-site annual general meetings, ideally, but not necessarily, coupled with
virtual components.
Better Finance
© Better Finance
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article