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ICGN'15: A timely call to action
Robert AG (Bob) Monks is a experienced shareholder activist and pioneer in corporate governance. The tall octogenarian has spent a lifetime influencing boards and board performance, especially in corporate America. Monks was invited to deliver the keynote address the ICGN conference.
Monks, a gifted orator, spoke from the heart, and he had the gathered delegates enthralled as he did so. Reviving memories of the wartime leader Winston Churchill, Monks reminded delegates that, while they had come far, they were not at the end (ie. 'arrived') nor were they at the beginning of the end. They were, he said, "at the end of the beginning". He went on to suggest:
- Boards and shareholders (particularly institutional investors) had barely started on the journey of convincing management that an engaged shareholder more likely to be helpful than a hindrance. I suspect this was a wake-up call for many, particularly those that think they 'do' corporate governance well and that shareholders should be kept at arms' length.
- Too many chief executives and executive teams had autocratic control of the levers of power. They were feathering their own nest and allocating resources in favour of short-term outcomes—and boards were allowing chief executives to get away with such behaviours. Thus, chief executive accountability is largely a myth.
- Much of what actually happens in boardrooms is not corporate governance or even an approximation of corporate governance. Rather it is a shadow play, orchestrated to give he appearance of the board doing the things that it should be doing. The statement that corporate governance is a high-profile smokescreen was as telling as it was damning.
Monks continued by offering several recommendations to the audience (comprised largely of institutional investor representatives but also other participants in the corporate governance community including academics and advisors). He said that shareholders need to be genuinely engaged (by specifying what they want from their investment); that integrated reporting is crucial (to provide clarity around actual business performance); and, that all publicly-listed companies need to have real (identifiable) owners (to satisfy the engagement challenge.
Monks received a standing ovation from some of the delegates, such was the power of his oratory and the high esteem in which he is held. One surprise: neither value creation or strategy was mentioned. I wonder what Monks thinks about these activities and the board's role therein. Rather than guess, I'm going to ask him. Congratulations to the conference organisers for securing Bob Monks' contribution to the debate.
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