The tyranny of the shareholders
6:40pmWhat does AIG have in common with the auto industry? Beyond bailouts, of course. One answer is that public shareholders are really part of the problem, rather than part of the solution.
In a publicly-listed company, management works, first and foremost, for shareholders. At AIG, the incentives are even more skewed: the CEO, Edward Liddy, is working for $1 a year -- plus a large slug of equity.
And so we end up with a situation where Liddy wants yet another AIG bailout, this one to reduce the amount of interest that the company is paying to the government, leaving more money for shareholders. It's similar to GM's protestations that bankruptcy is not an option -- but management would say that, because they work for shareholders, and shareholders would get wiped out under any bankruptcy proceedings.
The problem is that these companies are insolvent, and shareholders should be wiped out, sooner rather than later. But because they're still hanging on by their fingertips, they're refusing to accede to the inevitable. The value of their shares is minuscule, but because they control the management of these multi-billion-dollar companies, they're a massive obstacle to any sensible reorganization.
At AIG, Treasury is at least the single largest shareholder, and should tell Liddy to shut up: his job is to manage the company, and if he doesn't want to do that for $1 a year, he should resign, or renegotiate his contract. His job should not be to try to maximize the value of the rump equity held by himself and other shareholders: this is just another situation where minority shareholders really don't have much in the way of rights, and have to go along with whatever the majority shareholder wants -- even if the majority shareholder is getting lots of interest on preferred stock investments and the minority shareholders aren't.
At GM, Congress should provide financing within a Chapter 11 bankruptcy, and get the shareholders out of the way that way. Once it's already in Chapter 11, management can hardly continue to say that bankruptcy is not an option. And shareholders won't have a significant seat at the table any more, which will reduce the number of stakeholders who need to be placated.
The WSJ reports:
In the past several days, congressional representatives have met with bankers and bankruptcy experts to discuss the possibility of a so-called prearranged bankruptcy for either GM or Chrysler, these people said.
One idea that emerged from the talks would have the U.S. government put up as much as $40 billion to fund reorganizations under bankruptcy for GM and Chrysler, these people said.
Let's do it, and end the tyranny of the shareholders, and of the managers who work for them.
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Ian C
December 4th, 2008 10:59am Report this commentAbsolutely right. The presence of Gov't on the shareholder register is a wasteful distraction because it has dual responsibilties - to the taxpayer and the company who have incompatible conflicting interests. It results in a distortion in the market in the shares further distorts corporate and executive behaviour, as descibed.
The taxpayer should not become shareholder.
Gov't shd be providing solutions, including taxpayer money, that benefit the country as a whole - freed up banking system, less recession and unemployment, bankruptcy etc - and not be seeking a direct financial reward through ownership, because of these inherent conflicts.
The Gov't will get its reward by being elected or ousted by the voter. That is Govt's role. It shd be constitutionally banned from anything else.
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