Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; Order Approving Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 4, To Amend NYSE Rule 452 and Corresponding Listed Company Manual Section 402.08 To Eliminate Broker Discretionary Voting for the Election of Directors, Except for Companies Registered Under the Investment Company Act of 1940, and To Codify Two Previously Published Interpretations That Do Not Permit Broker Discretionary Voting for Material Amendments to Investment Advisory Contracts With an Investment Company, 33293-33307 [E9-16318]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
the principal office of Nasdaq. All
comments received will be posted
without change; the Commission does
not edit personal identifying
information from submissions. You
should submit only information that
you wish to make available publicly. All
submissions should refer to File
Number SR–NASDAQ–2009–064 and
should be submitted on or before July
31, 2009.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.17
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E9–16315 Filed 7–9–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–60215; File No. SR–NYSE–
2006–92]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New
York Stock Exchange LLC; Order
Approving Proposed Rule Change, as
Modified by Amendment No. 4, To
Amend NYSE Rule 452 and
Corresponding Listed Company
Manual Section 402.08 To Eliminate
Broker Discretionary Voting for the
Election of Directors, Except for
Companies Registered Under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, and
To Codify Two Previously Published
Interpretations That Do Not Permit
Broker Discretionary Voting for
Material Amendments to Investment
Advisory Contracts With an Investment
Company
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
July 1, 2009.
I. Introduction
On October 24, 2006, the New York
Stock Exchange LLC (‘‘Exchange’’ or
‘‘NYSE’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’),
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder,2 a
proposed rule change to amend NYSE
Rule 452 and corresponding Section
402.08 of the Listed Company Manual
(‘‘Manual’’) to eliminate broker
discretionary voting for the election of
directors. On May 23, 2007, the
Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the
proposed rule change to exempt
companies registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940
(‘‘1940 Act’’) from the ban on broker
discretionary voting for the election of
17 17
CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
1 15
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
directors. On June 28, 2007, the
Exchange filed Amendment No. 2 to the
proposed rule change, to codify two
previously published interpretations 3
that do not permit broker discretionary
voting for material amendments to
investment advisory contracts with an
investment company. On February 26,
2009, the Exchange filed and withdrew
Amendment No. 3 to the proposed rule
change for technical reasons. On
February 26, 2009, the Exchange filed
Amendment No. 4 to the proposed rule
change. Amendment No. 4 superseded
and replaced the proposal in its entirety.
The Commission published the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 4, for comment in the
Federal Register on March 6, 2009.4 The
Commission received 153 comments
from 137 commenters on the proposal.5
This order approves the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No.
4.
II. Description of the Proposal and
Background
A. Description of the Proposal
The Exchange proposes amending
NYSE Rule 452 and Section 402.08 of
the Manual (together, ‘‘NYSE Rule 452’’)
to eliminate broker discretionary voting
for all elections of directors at
shareholder meetings held on or after
January 1, 2010,6 whether contested or
not, except for companies registered
under the 1940 Act. Currently, NYSE
Rule 452 permits brokers to vote
without voting instructions from the
beneficial owner on uncontested
elections of directors.7 Specifically, the
3 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 30697
(May 13, 1992), 57 FR 21434 (May 20, 1992) (SR–
NYSE–92–05) (approval order) and 52569 (October
6, 2005), 70 FR 60118 (October 14, 2005) (SR–
NYSE–2005–61) (notice of filing and immediate
effectiveness).
4 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59464
(February 26, 2009), 74 FR 9864 (March 6, 2009)
(‘‘Notice’’).
5 See Comment letters in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room or on the Commission’s Web site
at https://www.sec.gov. For a complete list of
comment letters and the short cites to letters used
here, see Appendix A, attached hereto.
6 The proposed change to NYSE Rule 452 would
not apply to a meeting that was originally
scheduled to be held prior to January 1, 2010, but
was properly adjourned to a date on or after the
effective date.
7 As discussed in more detail below, under
current NYSE Rule 452 a broker can vote without
instruction from the beneficial owner provided ‘‘the
person in the member organization giving or
authorizing the giving of the proxy has no
knowledge of any contest as to the action to be
taken at the meeting and provided such action is
adequately disclosed to stockholders and does not
include authorization for a merger, consolidation or
any matter which may affect substantially the rights
or privileges of such stock.’’ See current NYSE Rule
452.10(3). Items where a broker is allowed to vote
without specific instructions from the beneficial
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33293
NYSE proposal would add to the list of
enumerated items for which a member
generally may not give a proxy to vote
without instructions from the beneficial
owner, the ‘‘election of directors.’’ The
proposal contains a specific exception,
however, for companies registered
under the 1940 Act.
In addition, the Exchange proposes
amending NYSE Rule 452 to codify two
previously published interpretations.8
First, the NYSE proposes codifying that
NYSE Rule 452 would preclude broker
discretionary voting on a matter that
materially amends an investment
advisory contract with an investment
company. Second, the NYSE proposes
codifying that a material amendment to
an investment advisory contract would
include any proposal to obtain
shareholder approval of an investment
company’s investment advisory contract
with a new investment adviser for
which shareholder approval is required
by the 1940 Act and the rules
thereunder.
B. Background
A shareholder of a public company
may hold shares either directly, as the
record holder, or indirectly, as the
beneficial holder, with the shares held
in the name of the beneficial
shareholder’s broker-dealer, bank
nominee, or custodian (‘‘securities
intermediary’’), which is the record
holder. The latter generally is referred to
as holding securities in ‘‘street name.’’
The NYSE’s discretionary voting rule
dates back to 1937. Historically, the
majority of shareholders held their
shares directly as record holders. In
1976, for example, shareholders held
approximately 71% of securities of
record (in their own name), while only
approximately 29% of securities were
held by securities intermediaries in
street name.9 The number of beneficial
owners holding securities in street
name, however, has increased
significantly since 1976,10 with the
result that securities intermediaries, on
behalf of beneficial owners, now hold a
substantial majority of exchange traded
owner under Rule 452 are often referred to as
‘‘routine’’ matters. NYSE Rule 452 also currently
contains a list of eighteen enumerated items where
the broker may not vote without specific voting
instructions from the beneficial owner. See Notice,
supra note 4 and infra note 14.
8 The codification will place the interpretations
into the rule text of Rule 452.
9 Final Report of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission on the Practice of Recording the
Ownership of Securities in the Records of the Issuer
in Other Than the Name of the Beneficial Owner
of Such Securities (December 3, 1976), at 54.
10 This is due, among other things, to the advent
of margin accounts, technological developments,
and clearing efficiencies.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
33294
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
securities.11 As a result, NYSE’s
discretionary voting rule has taken on
increased significance in the voting of
corporate shares at annual meetings.
Under Rule 451, when a public
company furnishes proxy materials to
its record shareholders, securities
intermediaries that hold securities in
street name must deliver the proxy
materials to the beneficial shareholders
within a certain time frame and request
voting instructions from the beneficial
shareholders.12 If beneficial
shareholders return voting instructions,
the securities intermediaries vote their
shares accordingly. However, if
beneficial shareholders do not return
voting instructions, securities
intermediaries may, in certain
situations, vote their shares at the
intermediaries’ discretion. Specifically,
if voting instructions have not been
received by the tenth day preceding the
meeting date, under current NYSE Rule
452, brokers may vote on behalf of the
beneficial shareholders on certain
matters where there is no contest and
the item does not include authorization
for a merger, consolidation, or any
matter which may substantially affect
the rights or privileges of the stock.13
The rule also contains eighteen specific
items on which the broker generally
may not vote without instructions from
the beneficial owner.14 Items where the
11 It has been estimated that approximately 85%
of exchange traded shares are held by securities
intermediaries in street name. See Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 50758 (November 30,
2004), 69 FR 70852 (December 7, 2004) (noting that,
at the end of 2002, the Depository Trust Company
(‘‘DTC’’) had on deposit approximately 84% of the
shares issued by domestic companies listed on the
NYSE and approximately 88% of the shares issued
by domestic companies listed on the Nasdaq Stock
Exchange). Securities held in ‘‘street name’’ by
securities intermediaries are deposited at the DTC.
12 See NYSE Rule 451(b)(1) (providing, in part,
that for matters which may be voted without
instructions under Rule 452, if voting instructions
‘‘are not received by the tenth day before the
meeting, the proxy may be given at discretion by
the owner of record of the stock; provided * * *
the proxy soliciting material is transmitted to the
beneficial owner of the stock * * * at least fifteen
days before the meeting.’’); see also Rule 14b–1, 17
CFR 240.14b–1. Rule 14b–1 under the Act does not
require brokers or dealers to request voting
instructions from beneficial owners, but they are
required under that Rule to forward the proxy
materials to the beneficial owners within a certain
timeframe. However, Rule 14b–2, 17 CFR 240.14b–
2, which applies to banks that exercise fiduciary
powers, requires banks to forward proxy materials
to beneficial owners within a certain timeframe, as
well as an executed proxy or a request for voting
instructions.
13 See supra note 7.
14 See Notice, supra note 4. Presently, NYSE Rule
452 lists 18 specific matters that cannot be voted
by the broker without instructions and are often
referred to as ‘‘non-routine’’ matters. These 18
categories are a matter that: (1) Is not submitted to
stockholders by means of a proxy statement
comparable to that specified in Schedule 14–A of
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
broker can vote without instructions are
referred to as ‘‘routine’’ matters. Among
other matters, the ‘‘uncontested’’
election of directors is considered a
‘‘routine’’ matter under current NYSE
Rule 452, and thus can be voted by the
broker in its discretion if the beneficial
owner has not returned voting
instructions within the required time
period.
With the large proportion of shares
now held in street name, the impact of
the Commission; (2) is the subject of a countersolicitation, or is part of a proposal made by a
stockholder which is being opposed by
management (i.e., a contest); (3) relates to a merger
or consolidation (except when the company’s
proposal is to merge with its own wholly owned
subsidiary, provided its shareholders dissenting
thereto do not have rights of appraisal); (4) involves
right of appraisal; (5) authorizes mortgaging of
property; (6) authorizes or creates indebtedness or
increases the authorized amount of indebtedness;
(7) authorizes or creates a preferred stock or
increases the authorized amount of an existing
preferred stock; (8) alters the terms or conditions of
existing stock or indebtedness; (9) involves waiver
or modification of preemptive rights (except when
the company’s proposal is to waive such rights with
respect to shares being offered pursuant to stock
option or purchase plans involving the additional
issuance of not more than 5% of the company’s
outstanding common shares); (10) changes existing
quorum requirements with respect to stockholder
meetings; (11) alters voting provisions or the
proportionate voting power of a stock, or the
number of its votes per share (except where
cumulative voting provisions govern the number of
votes per share for election of directors and the
company’s proposal involves a change in the
number of its directors by not more than 10% or
not more than one); (12) authorizes the
implementation of any equity compensation plan,
or any material revision to the terms of any existing
equity compensation plan (whether or not
stockholder approval of such plan is required by
subsection 8 of Section 303A of the Exchange’s
Listed Company Manual); (13) authorizes (a) a new
profit-sharing or special remuneration plan, or a
new retirement plan, the annual cost of which will
amount to more than 10% of average annual income
before taxes for the preceding five years, or (b) the
amendment of an existing plan which would bring
its cost above 10% of such average annual income
before taxes, but exceptions may be made in cases
of (a) retirement plans based on agreement or
negotiations with labor unions (or which have been
or are to be approved by such unions), and (b) any
related retirement plan for benefit of non-union
employees having terms substantially equivalent to
the terms of such union-negotiated plan, which is
submitted for action of stockholders concurrently
with such union-negotiated plan; (14) changes the
purposes or powers of a company to an extent
which would permit it to change to a materially
different line of business and it is the company’s
stated intention to make such a change; (15)
authorizes the acquisition of property, assets, or a
company, where the consideration to be given has
a fair value approximating 20% or more of the
market value of the previously outstanding shares;
(16) authorizes the sale or other disposition of
assets or earning power approximating 20% or more
of those existing prior to the transaction; (17)
authorizes a transaction not in the ordinary course
of business in which an officer, director or
substantial security holder has a direct or indirect
interest; and (18) reduces earned surplus by 51%
or more, or reduces earned surplus to an amount
less than the aggregate of three years’ common stock
dividends computed at the current dividend rate.
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
the broker vote on the election of
directors has become increasingly
significant.15 In the view of some
commenters, brokers tend to vote in
accordance with management’s
recommendation.16 According to the
NYSE, in recent years its interpretation
of a ‘‘contested election’’ has been
questioned by a variety of persons,17 as
an increasing number of proxy
campaigns have targeted the election of
directors without a formal contest.
These campaigns generally do not
involve a competing slate of directors or
a formal counter-solicitation opposed by
management, and hence, are not
considered ‘‘contests’’ by the NYSE
under NYSE Rule 452.18 Examples of
these campaigns include ‘‘just vote no’’
or ‘‘withhold’’ campaigns, where one or
more investors express dissatisfaction
with the performance of the company or
its management, and urge shareholders
to withhold their votes for one or more
of management’s nominees for director.
NYSE views director elections subject to
these campaigns as eligible for broker
discretionary voting under current Rule
452.19 Concerns have been expressed
that, in certain ‘‘just vote no’’ or
‘‘withhold’’ campaigns, the broker vote
for management has made the difference
and allowed directors subject to these
campaigns to be elected, which would
not have happened but for NYSE’s
discretionary voting rule.20
15 See e.g., FSBA 2 Letter; see generally AFSCME
Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; CTW
Letter; CTW 2 Letter; and FSBA Letter.
16 See CFA 2 Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter;
Colorado PERA Letter; Cox Letter; CTW Letter;
CTW 2 Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis Letter;
Hermes Equity Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter;
OPERS Letter; Relational Investors Letter; TIAA–
CREF Letter; and Trillium Letter; see also Notice,
supra note 4; Report and Recommendation of the
Proxy Working Group, dated June 5, 2006 (‘‘PWG
Report’’), at 9.
17 See Notice, supra note 4.
18 See NYSE Rule 452.11(2).
19 See Notice, supra note 4.
20 See AFSCME Letter; CalPERS 3 Letter; CtW
Letter; CtW 2 Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter;
and Glass Lewis Letter; see also PWG Report, infra
note 16, at 9. Several commenters stated that rather
than eliminating the broker vote for all elections of
directors the Commission should address the
problem by making NYSE redefine what constitutes
a contested election, see ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC
Letter; Alston Letter; BB&T Letter; see also
Suburban Letter (urging further consideration of
this alternative), and make alternative proxy contest
strategies such as ‘‘just vote no’’ campaigns a
contest that is not subject to broker discretionary
voting under NYSE Rule 452. See ABC Letter; ABC
2 Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Alston Letter; Broadridge
Letter (suggesting that the NYSE rules be defined to
eliminate broker votes where there is a controversy,
such as a ‘‘just vote no’’ campaign); see also ABA
Fed. Reg. Letter. The Commission notes that the
Proxy Working Group, see infra note 21, considered
this approach but noted that expanding the
definition of contest to include ‘‘just vote no’’
campaigns, especially in light of the increased use
of the internet to run proxy contests, could raise
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
In April 2005, the NYSE formed a
working group to review its rules
regarding the proxy voting process
(‘‘Proxy Working Group’’). The Proxy
Working Group was composed of
representatives from listed companies,
NYSE member organizations, lawyers,
institutional investors, and individual
investors.21 The Proxy Working Group
reviewed applicable NYSE rules relating
to the proxy process and proxy fees,
with a particular focus on NYSE Rule
452.22 The Proxy Working Group
ultimately issued a report
recommending that the election of
directors be ineligible for broker
discretionary voting under NYSE Rule
452, with the result that brokers holding
shares in street name could not vote on
the election of directors, whether the
election is contested or uncontested,
without specific voting instructions
from the beneficial owners. The Proxy
Working Group believed that the
election of directors could no longer be
viewed as a ‘‘routine’’ matter in the life
significant practical difficulties, such as defining
what is a campaign or whether there are any
limitations or other minimal requirements for a
contest. See PWG Report, infra note 16, at 20.
Moreover, the Commission notes that merely
redefining what constitutes a contested election
would still allow brokers who do not have an
economic interest in the company to vote in
director elections that are uncontested and would
not further the goals of the proposed rule change.
See infra notes 21 through 23 and accompanying
text. Finally, the Commission notes that the NYSE,
in making its proposal, reviewed the PWG Report,
as well as comments submitted to the NYSE on the
PWG recommendation. The NYSE states in its rule
filing that its proposal on Rule 452 was being made
in light of the recommendations of the Proxy
Working Group and its own conclusions that the
election of directors should no longer be deemed a
‘‘routine matter’’ under its rules.
21 Members of the Proxy Working Group at the
time of the PWG Report were: Larry W. Sonsini,
Chairman, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati;
Rosemary Berkery, Executive Vice President and
General Counsel, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.,
represented by Kevin Moynihan of Merrill Lynch &
Co.; Glenn Booraem, Principal and Assistant Fund
Controller, Vanguard Group; Peter Clapman, Senior
Vice President and Chief Counsel for Corporate
Governance, TIAA–CREF; Margaret Foran, Vice
President-Corporate Governance & Corporate
Secretary, Pfizer, Inc.; Gary Glynn, President, US.
Steel Pension Fund; Amy Goodman, Partner,
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP; Richard H. Koppes,
Of Counsel, Jones Day; Jeffrey L. McWaters,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Amerigroup
Corporation; Stephen P. Norman, Corporate
Secretary, American Express Company; James E.
Parsons, Corporate and Securities Counsel, Exxon
Mobil Corporation; Judith Smith, Managing
Director, Morgan Stanley & Co.; Esta Stecher,
Executive Vice President and General Counsel,
Goldman Sachs & Co., represented by Beverly
O’Toole of Goldman Sachs & Co.; and Kurt Stocker,
Professor, Northwestern University, Medill School
of Journalism. See PWG Report, supra note 16. The
Exchange attached the PWG Report as part of the
proposal. In August 2007, the Proxy Working Group
issued an addendum to its report (‘‘Addendum’’),
available as part of the Exchange’s proposal.
22 In particular, the Proxy Working Group looked
at NYSE Rules 450 to 460 and 465.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
of a corporation. According to the Proxy
Working Group, it ‘‘is well established
under law * * * [that] ‘the business and
affairs of every corporation * * * shall
be managed by or under the direction of’
the board of directors. Investors, courts,
regulators and others expect directors to
be accountable for the corporate
decision-making process, and the
primary way that accountability is
expressed is through the director
election process.’’ 23 The Proxy Working
Group concluded that ‘‘[d]irectors are
simply too important to the corporation
for their election to ever be considered
routine.’’ 24 Although the Proxy
Working Group recognized that the
proposed change to Rule 452 may result
in increased costs, it believed that ‘‘it is
a cost required to be paid for better
corporate governance * * *.’’ 25
In August 2007, the Proxy Working
Group issued an Addendum to its
report, recommending that the proposed
change to NYSE Rule 452 should not
apply to investment companies
registered under the 1940 Act. The
Proxy Working Group concluded that an
exception for registered investment
companies was appropriate given the
fact, among other things, that they are
subject to a unique regulatory regime.26
III. Summary of Comments
The Commission received 153
comment letters from 137
commenters.27 Twenty-eight
commenters explicitly supported the
proposal,28 and twelve commenters
23 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21 (citing
Del. Code tit. 8, Section 141(b) (2005)).
24 See id.
25 See id.
26 See Addendum, supra note 21, at 3.
27 See supra note 5. NYSE also received 39 letters
on the PWG Report and Recommendation related to
amending Rule 452. NYSE submitted these letters
as part of the proposal. See discussion in Notice,
supra note 4, and Exhibit 2 to the NYSE’s proposed
rule change.
28 See AFSCME Letter; BCIMC Letter; CalPERS
Letter; CalPERS 2 Letter; CalPERS 3 Letter; CalSTRS
Letter; CCGG Letter; CCGG 2 Letter; CFA Letter;
CFA 2 Letter; City of London Letter; CII Letter; CII
2 Letter; CII 3 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA
Letter; Corporate Governance Letter; Cox Letter;
CtW Letter; CtW 2 Letter; Dobkin Letter; FSBA
Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis Letter;
GovernanceMetrics Letter; Gratzer Letter
(‘‘[e]liminate the rule’’); Hagberg Letter; Hermes
Equity Letter; ICI 4 Letter (supporting the proposal
as amended); Newground Letter; OPERS Letter;
PWG Letter (while the PWG continued to believe
that the election of directors could no longer be
considered a routine event in the life of a
corporation, it also believed that the Commission
should consider using the opportunity created by
the NYSE’s proposal to review the broader proxy
process) (see discussion at Section IV.F,
Commission Consideration of the Entire Proxy
Process, further below); Railpen Letter; Relational
Investors Letter; Sod’ali Letter; TIAA–CREF Letter;
and Trillium Letter.
PO 00000
Frm 00095
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33295
explicitly opposed the proposal.29
Ninety-seven of the commenters neither
explicitly supported nor opposed the
proposal.30 Ninety-five of these ninetyseven commenters expressed concerns
with the proposal,31 and ninety-three
urged that the Commission not take
29 See ABC Letter; ABC 2 Letter; ABC 3 Letter;
Altman Letter; AmEx Letter; Astoria Financial
Letter; BB&T Letter; Corning Letter; FedEx Letter;
FPL Letter; NIRI Letter; Stanton Letter; Suffolk
Letter; and UQM Letter.
30 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent
Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Broadridge Letter; Boeing Letter;
Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal
Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Ceridian Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Chevron Letter;
Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter;
Computershare Letter; Connecticut Water Letter;
ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon
Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter;
First Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; GE
Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance
Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter; Harman Letter;
Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock
Letter; International Paper Letter; Intel Letter;
Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan
Letter; Manifest Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco
Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor
Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Office Depot Letter;
OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody
Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter;
Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest
Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold
Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter; SCC Letter; Schwab
Letter; Securities Transfer Letter; SIFMA Letter;
STA Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter;
Suburban Letter; Superlattice Letter; Sutherland
Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter;
Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon Letter;
Wachtell Letter; Washington Banking Letter;
Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and
YRC Letter.
31 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent
Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable
Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Central Vermont
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter; Chevron Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati
Financial Letter; Computershare Letter; Connecticut
Water Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental
Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter;
DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter;
Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American
Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter;
Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter;
Illinois Stock; Intel Letter; International Paper
Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P.
Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter; McKesson Letter;
Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS
Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Office
Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G
Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum
Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh
Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter;
SCC Letter; SCC 2 Letter; Schwab Letter; Securities
Transfer Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter;
StockTrans Letter; Suburban Letter; Superlattice
Letter; Sutherland Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron
Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter;
Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter; Washington
Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
33296
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
action on the proposal at this time.32
One commenter stated that the proposal
raised sufficient issues to warrant
consideration by the full Commission at
a public meeting, and that consideration
of the proposal by delegated authority
was inappropriate.33
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
IV. Discussion and Analysis of
Comment Letters
After careful review and
consideration of the comment letters,
the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change, as modified by Amendment
No. 4, is consistent with the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to a national securities
exchange.34 In particular, the
32 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent
Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable
Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Central Vermont
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter; Chevron Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati
Financial Letter; Computershare Letter; Connecticut
Water Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental
Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter;
DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter;
Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American
Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter;
Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter;
Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter; International
Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P.
Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter; McKesson Letter;
Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS
Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Office
Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G
Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum
Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh
Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter;
SCC Letter; Schwab Letter; Securities Transfer
Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans
Letter; Superlattice Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron
Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter;
Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter; Washington
Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
33 See SCC 2 Letter.
34 In approving the proposed rule change, the
Commission considered the proposed rule change’s
impact on efficiency, competition, and capital
formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f). The Commission notes
that several commenters believed that the NYSE’s
proposal would make the proxy voting system less
efficient. See Central Vermont Letter; Connecticut
Water Letter; First Financial Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor
Letter; Provident Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy
Letter; and Veeco Letter; see also Astoria Financial
Letter (‘‘[F]or many public companies, broker voting
remains the most efficient means to obtain a
quorum for shareholder meetings’’); BB&T Letter
(cost of obtaining quorum absent broker
discretionary voting would ‘‘be an enormous loss to
investors,’’ and that ‘‘redefinition of what
constitutes a ‘contested’ election is the most
efficient manner to address the real corporate
governance concerns implied by the Amendment’’);
and Governance Professionals Letter (‘‘The focus
should be on solutions that contain costs and make
the proxy voting system more efficient, rather than
on increased costs and inefficiency.’’); but see
Relational Investors Letter (‘‘The new
administrative burdens created by this amendment
are far outweighed by the benefits to efficient and
effective corporate governance.’’); see also PWG
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act,35 which provides that the rules of
the exchange must be designed to
prevent fraudulent and manipulative
acts and practices, to promote just and
equitable principles of trade, to foster
cooperation and coordination with
persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with
respect to, and facilitating transactions
in securities, to remove impediments to
and perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and a national market
system, and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest; and
are not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Commission, Congress, states,
investors and other market participants
have long recognized the critical role
that directors play in a corporation. The
board of directors has ultimate
responsibility for the management of the
business and the affairs of the
company.36 Shareholders, through their
vote, vest with the directors they elect
this critical duty to manage the
company with which they have
entrusted their resources.37 The board of
directors generally does not participate
in the daily business affairs of the
company. It delegates these
responsibilities to management the
board selects and supervises. The board,
Report, supra note 16. As discussed further below,
the Commission believes that the NYSE’s proposed
rule change should better enfranchise shareholders,
and thereby enhance corporate governance and
accountability, by assuring that voting is
determined by those with an economic interest in
the company on matters as critical as the election
of directors, rather than permitting brokers to cast
votes without instructions for shares beneficially
owned by their customers, when the broker has no
economic interest in those shares. Therefore, the
Commission believes the NYSE’s proposed rule
change should protect investors and the public
interest. Further, the Commission does not believe
that the proposed change will necessarily make the
voting process materially less efficient. The
mechanics of the proxy voting procedure as to how
beneficial owners return voting instructions to their
brokers are not changing. NYSE Rule 452 would
continue to allow the broker to vote on other
routine matters, such as the ratification of
independent auditors, which will help companies
meet quorum requirements, and therefore alleviate
the efficiency concerns raised by commenters. As
discussed further below, pursuant to Section 19(b)
and after reviewing the comments, the Commission
believes the proposed rule change should be
approved.
35 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
36 See, e.g., Del. Code Ann. Tit. 8, Section 141(a)
(‘‘The business and affairs of every corporation
organized under this chapter shall be managed by
or under the direction of a board of directors, except
as may be otherwise provided in this chapter or in
its certificate of incorporation.’’).
37 See e.g., PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21; see
also Bruce A. Toth and Jason L. Booth, The Board
of Directors, Corp. Prac. Series (BNA), at A–3.
PO 00000
Frm 00096
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
however, ultimately is accountable to
shareholders for corporate decisions.38
The most fundamental way in which
shareholders can ensure that directors
remain accountable to them for the
directors’ performance of these critical
duties is through the director election
process.39
As discussed below, the Commission
believes that it is reasonable and
consistent with the Act for NYSE to
determine that the election of directors
should no longer be an item eligible for
broker discretionary voting, particularly
given the large proportion of shares that
today are held in street name, the
importance of corporate governance and
accountability expressed through the
election process, and the concern that
the broker vote could potentially distort
election results.40 As the Proxy Working
Group also concluded, the election of
directors is not a ‘‘routine’’ issue for
either the corporation or the
shareholders; it is a key event in the
operation and direction of the
corporation and the shareholders’
exercise of their rights and interests as
the owners of the corporation.41 As
such, the Commission believes that
NYSE’s proposal should better
enfranchise shareholders by helping
assure that votes on matters as critical
as the election of directors are
determined by those with an economic
interest in the company,42 rather than
the broker who has no such economic
interest, and also should enhance
corporate governance and accountability
to shareholders.
The Commission also believes that the
NYSE’s proposed change codifying
existing NYSE interpretations of NYSE
Rule 452 is consistent with the
38 See Toth and Booth, The Board of Directors,
Corp. Prac. Series, at A–3.
39 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21.
40 Broker votes can distort election results both by
changing the outcome of an election and by creating
a perception that a candidate (or group of
candidates) has greater support than would be the
case considering only the votes of beneficial
owners. That perception, and in particular an
understanding of the lack of substantial support for
a director, even if he or she receives enough votes
to be elected, can affect the decisions of the board
and shareholders. See e.g., PWG Report, supra note
16, at 9 and n. 12.
41 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21.
42 The Commission recognizes that, even under
the NYSE’s proposal, certain situations will
continue to exist where a person with an economic
interest in a company may not be able to vote the
shares, such as when shares are purchased after the
record date for a shareholder meeting. Nevertheless,
the NYSE’s proposal should make substantial
strides in aligning a securityholder’s voting
decision on director elections with the economic
interest in the shares, as it will prohibit a broker
holding shares in street name, who does not have
an economic interest in the company, from voting
on behalf of the beneficial owner in director
elections.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
requirements of the Act. As discussed
below, these proposed amendments will
codify two previous interpretations that
were adopted by the NYSE to help
ensure the full and effective voting
rights of investment company
shareholders on material matters.43 The
Commission believes that these changes
are consistent with the requirements
under Section 6(b)(5) of the Act44 that
the rules of the Exchange be designed to
promote just and equitable principles of
trade, to remove impediments to and
perfect the mechanism of a free and
open market and, in general, to protect
investors and the public interest.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
A. Increased Costs for Companies To
Achieve Quorum
Several commenters believed that the
NYSE’s proposal to eliminate the broker
discretionary vote would make it more
difficult for companies to obtain a
quorum45 and elect directors.46 Some
commenters believed that the relatively
low retail shareholder participation rate
in corporate elections would increase
the difficulty of obtaining a quorum
under NYSE’s proposal.47 Commenters
also stated that the proposal would
increase the cost to a company of
obtaining a quorum,48 by requiring them
to incur higher proxy solicitation
costs 49 in order to communicate with
43 See supra note 3. Two commenters supported
the proposal regarding investment advisory
contracts. See CFA 2 Letter and ICI 4 Letter.
44 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
45 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Alston
Letter; Altman Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable
Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter;
Chamber of Commerce Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter; Computershare
Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX
Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly
Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; FPL Letter; General
Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; ICI Letter;
ICI 2 Letter; ICI 3 Letter; ICI 4 Letter; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P.
Morgan Letter; Medco Letter; NS Letter; NYSBA
Sec. Reg. Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter;
Pfizer Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C
Letter; Schwab Letter; Securities Transfer Letter;
STA Letter; Suburban Letter; Textron Letter; TI
Letter; Unitrin Letter; UQM Letter; Verizon Letter;
Wachtell Letter; Washington Banking Letter;
Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; YRC
Letter; see also CII Letter; and CII 2 Letter; see also
Sutherland Letter.
46 See ICI Letter; ICI 2 Letter; ICI 3, and ICI 4
Letter.
47 See Alston Letter; Intel Letter; S&C Letter;
Suburban Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
48 See ABC Letter; Agilent Letter; Astoria
Financial Letter; Central Vermont Letter;
Connecticut Water Letter; First Financial Letter; ICI
3 Letter; Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter;
Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident Letter;
Quest Letter; Schwab Letter; Suburban Letter;
Suffolk Bank Letter; Synalloy Letter; Veeco Letter;
and Wachtell Letter; see also Sutherland Letter.
49 See ABC Letter; Chamber of Commerce Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Governance
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
shareholders, urge them to participate in
director elections 50 and support boardnominated candidates.51 For example,
one commenter believed that it would
need ‘‘to retain a proxy solicitor even in
the absence of a ‘contest’ * * * just to
attempt to achieve a quorum.’’ 52 Several
commenters noted that smaller issuers,
in particular, would be negatively
affected by the NYSE proposal, given
their tendency to have a higher
proportion of retail shareholders,53 so
that smaller issuers would have to
expend a disproportionate amount of
additional resources to solicit
shareholder votes, and obtain a
quorum.54
Some commenters also expressed
concern with, or noted the shortcomings
of, the current system of communicating
with shareholders,55 and stated that the
Professionals Letter; ICI 2 Letter; ICI 3 Letter; ICI 4
Letter; NIRI Letter; Praxair Letter; Quest Letter;
Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter; Schwab Letter; STA
Letter; Suburban Letter; Suffolk Bank Letter;
Textron Letter; and YRC Letter; see also ABC Letter.
50 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC Letter; Aetna
Letter; Aglient Letter; Alston Letter; Altman Letter;
AmEx Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BB&T Letter; BNSF Letter;
Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter; ConocoPhillips
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter;
Eli Lilly Letter; FPL Letter; General Mills Letter; GM
Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; Harman
Letter; International Paper Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; Johnson Letter; Medco Letter; MGE Letter;
Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor Letter; Office
Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Praxair
Letter; Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter; SCC Letter;
Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; UQM Letter,
Whirlpool Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
51 See FedEx Letter.
52 See Suburban Letter; see also ABC Letter
(stating that in ‘‘2004, had the broker vote not been
in effect, 85 percent of NYSE companies would
have been working to reach quorum in the final
nine days before their meetings while 23 percent
would not have reached quorum by the meeting
date. * * * [C]ompanies uncertain of their ability
to reach quorum * * * would be forced to hire
proxy solicitors. * * * ’’).
53 See ABC 3 Letter; Agilent Letter; Alston Letter;
AmEx Letter; Central Vermont Letter;
Computershare Letter; Connecticut Water Letter;
First Financial Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter;
Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident Letter;
Quest Letter; SCC Letter; and Synalloy Letter; see
also Sutherland Letter (stating that the exemption
should also apply to business development
companies).
54 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Agilent
Letter; Alston Letter; AmEx Letter; Astoria
Financial Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chamber
of Commerce 2 Letter; Computershare Letter;
Connecticut Water Letter; Crescent Letter; First
Financial Letter; Governance Professionals Letter;
Helmerich Letter; Jacksonville Letter; McKesson
Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident
Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; and
Washington Banking Letter; see also Sutherland
Letter.
55 See Alcoa Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA
Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chevron
Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare
PO 00000
Frm 00097
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33297
proposal should be evaluated in
connection with a review of shareholder
communication rules.56 Three
commenters expressed concern that the
proposed rule change could magnify the
difficulties issuers have in
communicating with shareholders,
especially with objecting beneficial
owners (‘‘OBOs’’).57 Commenters
recommended that Commission rules be
revised to facilitate the ability of issuers
to contact shareholders directly.58
According to one commenter,
‘‘[p]ermitting issuers to communicate
with their shareholders * * * will
enable them to ‘get out the vote,’
enhancing their ability to obtain needed
quorums and successfully re-solicit
shareholders, if necessary.’’ 59
Other commenters believed that
quorum concerns were not a valid
reason for allowing brokers to continue
to vote uninstructed shares in the
Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental Letter;
Corning Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter;
Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV
Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First
American Letter; FPL Letter; GE Letter; General
Mills Letter; GM Letter; Gulf Letter; Helmerich
Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; Manifest
Letter; Medco Letter; MGE Letter; NIRI Letter; NS
Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail
Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum
Letter; Praxair Letter; PWG Letter; Realogy Letter;
Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; STA
Letter; Securities Transfer Letter; Standard Letter;
StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter; Textron
Letter; Unitrin Letter; Verizon Letter; Washington
Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
56 See Aetna Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable
Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter;
Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare Letter;
ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental Letter; Corning
Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon
Mobil Letter; FedEx Letter; Fidelity Letter; First
American Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter;
GM Letter; Gulf Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell
Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; NS
Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail
Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter;
Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter; Realogy Letter;
Routh Letter; Ryder Letter; STA Letter; Securities
Transfer Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter;
Superlattice Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter;
Unitrin Letter; Verizon Letter; Washington Banking
Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter;
and YRC Letter.
57 See Alcoa Letter; Corning Letter; and NIRI
Letter.
OBOs are shareholders who object to having their
names and addresses disclosed to companies whose
shares they own.
58 See Alcoa Letter; Computershare Letter;
Corning Letter; ICI Letter; ICI 2 Letter; NIRI Letter;
PWG Letter; STA Letter; and TI Letter; see also
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter (stating that any
amendment to Rule 452 should be accompanied by
an improved shareholder communication system).
59 See ICI 2 Letter.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
33298
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
election of directors.60 For example, one
commenter believed that the
participation of institutional investors
would assure a quorum for most issuers,
except for a limited number of small
companies.61 Moreover, several
commenters believed that quorum
concerns could be addressed simply by
including a ‘‘routine’’ item on the
ballot,62 such as the ratification of
auditors,63 or with appropriate changes
in state law to permit shares held by
brokers to count solely for purposes of
establishing quorum.64 Also, another
commenter believed that ‘‘issuers can
communicate effectively to shareholders
through established, robust and efficient
systems currently in place.’’ 65
The Commission acknowledges
commenters’ concerns regarding the
potential for the proposed rule change
to impact the ability of some companies
to achieve quorum. For example, the
Proxy Working Group recognized that
smaller issuers may have certain
increased costs in obtaining quorum due
to the high percentage of shares held by
retail investors.66 However, as noted by
several commenters, issuers with a large
institutional shareholder base or with
another routine matter on their proxies,
such as ratification of independent
auditors, should not face material
additional difficulties in achieving a
quorum.67 The Commission notes that a
majority of companies other than
registered investment companies
include the ratification of independent
auditors as a matter for shareholders to
approve, even though such approval is
not required by law,68 so that these
companies should not, as a practical
matter, encounter the quorum issue as
articulated by the commenters. Quorum
concerns for other companies, including
small companies, may be addressed to
the extent that these companies include
an item on their ballot that may be
considered a routine matter. The
Commission also notes a report showing
that, if NYSE’s proposal were
implemented, most companies would
nevertheless achieve quorum, albeit at a
date closer to their annual meetings
than previously.69 More fundamentally,
however, although issuers may incur
increased proxy solicitation costs under
the NYSE’s proposal, the Commission
agrees with the NYSE and the Proxy
Working Group that these costs are
justified by, among other things,
assuring voting on matters as critical as
the election of directors can no longer
be determined by brokers without
instructions from the beneficial owner,
thereby enhancing corporate governance
and accountability.70 Moreover, to the
extent there are issues regarding
establishing a quorum, we do not
believe having uninstructed votes cast
on the election of a director by brokerdealers who lack the shareholders’
economic interests in the corporation is
the appropriate way to address the
issue.
As discussed further below,71 the
Commission believes that shareholder
education is important for encouraging
retail shareholders to vote, and could
play a key role both in reducing any
additional proxy solicitation costs
incurred by companies, as well as
60 See CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; FSBA
Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg
Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter; see also CCGG Letter
(elimination of U.S. broker non-votes would not
adversely impact the ability of Canadian issuers to
obtain quorum).
61 See Glass Lewis Letter.
62 See Hagberg Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; and
TIAA–CREF Letter.
63 See CII Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter;
Colorado PERA Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg
Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter; contra ICI 3 Letter
(stating that ‘‘[a]sking funds to take this action for
the sole purpose of achieving a quorum’’ is
unacceptable since funds have not been required to
ratify the selection of fund auditors since 2001.).
64 See CalPERS Letter; Computershare Letter;
FSBA 2 Letter; ICI 2 Letter; S&C Letter; Sod’ali
Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter; see also Suburban
Letter (urging further consideration of this
alternative).
65 See SIFMA Letter.
66 See Addendum, supra note 21, at 3; see also
PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21.
67 See CII Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter;
Colorado PERA Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg
Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter.
68 See CII 4 Letter (stating that including an
auditor ratification ‘‘resolution on the proxy is a
step that many corporations already take on their
own and one that the Council believes is a best
practice for all public companies’’).
69 See Broadridge Letter and attached report,
Updated Analysis of the Broker Vote, dated
February 3, 2009. Moreover, the Commission notes
that NYSE’s proposed rule change is consistent
with the rules of other self-regulatory organizations.
For example, the Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, Inc. (‘‘FINRA’’) and The NASDAQ Stock
Market LLC (‘‘Nasdaq’’) do not permit broker
discretionary voting for their members, unless they
do so pursuant to the rules of another national
securities exchange of which they are also a
member and the member clearly indicates which
rule it is following. See National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. (‘‘NASD’’) Rule 2260 and
Nasdaq Rule 2260. We note that NYSE Rule 452 is
a member rule. Accordingly, NYSE members would
follow the NYSE rule regardless of where a security
is listed. Further, while other self-regulatory
organizations currently allow discretionary voting,
we would expect these markets to make changes to
conform to the NYSE’s new rules to eliminate any
disparities involving voting depending on where
shares are held. See NYSE Amex Equities Rule 452
and Chicago Board Options Exchange, Incorporated
Rule 31.74.
70 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21 and
Notice, supra note 4. With respect to concerns
raised by commenters regarding communications
with shareholders, the Commission notes that the
proposed rule change would not alter the existing
system of shareholder communications, which is
outside the scope of NYSE’s proposed rule change.
71 See infra Section IV.D., Shareholder Education.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00098
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
achieving the policy goal of fostering
investor participation in corporate
governance. The Commission notes that
the Proxy Working Group has
established an Investor Education SubCommittee. The Commission supports
the Proxy Working Group’s efforts to
develop, and encourages the NYSE and
its member firms to implement, an
investor education effort to inform
investors about the amendments to
NYSE Rule 452, the proxy voting
process, and the importance of voting.
B. Disenfranchising Retail Shareholders
and Growing Influence of Third Parties
Several commenters stated that the
proposal could disenfranchise
individual shareholders,72 because
eliminating broker discretionary voting
may be counter to shareholders’
assumptions that their brokers would
vote on their behalf if they did not
vote.73 Other commenters believed that
the proposed rule change would shift
voting power toward small blocks of
voters 74 and special interest groups
wishing to use minority stock positions
to pursue their own special interests,75
and non-investment objectives.76
Moreover, several commenters
72 See Aetna Letter; Alcoa Letter; Altman Letter;
AmEx Letter; Andarko Letter; Arvin Meritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing
Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter;
Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; Chevron Letter; Cigna Letter;
Cincinnati Financial Letter; Continental Letter;
ConocoPhillips Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Fidelity
Letter; First Financial Letter; FPL Letter; Furniture
Brands Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Gulf
Letter; Harman Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel
Letter; International Paper Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson
Letter; Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter;
NS Letter; Nucor Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC
Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident
Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter;
Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Ryder Letter; SCC
Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter; Stanton Letter;
StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter; Synalloy
Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter; Veeco Letter;
Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter; Whirlpool Letter;
Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
73 See Aetna Letter; Alcoa Letter; AmEx Letter;
Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter;
Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business
Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter;
Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter;
Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton
Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; FPL Letter; General Mills
Letter; GM Letter; Harman Letter; International
Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; Medco Letter; NS
Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Praxair Letter; Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter;
STA Letter; Textron Letter; Verizon Letter; Wachtell
Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter;
and YRC Letter.
74 See UQM Letter.
75 See Astoria Financial Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; and S&C Letter.
76 See Chamber of Commerce Letter and Chamber
of Commerce 2 Letter.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
expressed concern that retail
shareholder participation in company
elections has decreased in recent
years,77 especially under e-proxy,78 so
that the NYSE’s proposal would shift
disproportionate weight to institutional
investors,79 and increase power in the
hands of the few shareholders who
vote.80
Several commenters also believed that
eliminating broker discretionary voting
could increase the influence of proxy
advisory firms, which provide, among
other things, voting recommendations to
their institutional investor clients.81 A
number of commenters expressed
concerns about the degree of influence
that proxy advisory firms have in
corporate elections.82 Other commenters
77 See Agilent Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter;
Altman Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chevron
Letter; Computershare Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; Corporate Governance Letter; DTE Letter; Eli
Lilly Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; First Financial
Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; Governance
Professionals Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco
Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec.
Reg. Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial
Letter; Quest Letter; S&C Letter; Synalloy Letter;
Veeco Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
78 See AFSCME Letter; Agilent Letter; Alcoa
Letter; Alston Letter; Altman Letter; Central
Vermont Letter; Chevron Letter; CII 4 Letter;
Colorado PERA Letter; Connecticut Water Letter;
Corporate Governance Letter; DTE Letter; Exxon
Mobil Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture
Brands Letter; Governance Professionals Letter;
McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter;
NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; S&C Letter; Synalloy
Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
79 See Agilent Letter; Altman Letter; AmEx Letter;
BB&T Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chevron
Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; Corning Letter;
DTE Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; Intel Letter;
Jacksonville Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson
Letter; Medco Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter;
Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest
Letter; Stanton Letter; Synalloy Letter; Veeco Letter;
and Wachtell Letter.
80 See Alston Letter and NIRI Letter. Another
commenter opined that the proposal confuses civic
governance with corporate governance. See Suffolk
Bank Letter.
81 See Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter; Alcoa Letter;
Altman Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor
Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter; Boeing Letter;
Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Central
Vermont Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins
Letter; DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter;
First Financial Letter; FPL Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance
Professionals Letter; Harman Letter; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter;
Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson Letter;
Medco Letter; Monster Letter; NIRI Letter; NS
Letter; Nucor Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody
Letter; Pfizer Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter;
Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Ryder
Letter; SCC Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter;
Veeco Letter; Wachtell Letter; Whirlpool Letter;
Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter. Another
commenter stated that the proposal might result in
a conflict of interest for proxy advisory firms. See
Cardinal Letter.
82 See Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare
Letter; Continental Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
expressed concern that stock lending
and financial derivatives,83 as well as
the impact of over-voting and undervoting,84 distort the shareholder voting
process. Commenters urged the
Commission to consider these issues in
conjunction with the proposal.85
However, other commenters believed
that the proposal would ensure that
voting results were not distorted by
broker votes 86 and that the true owners
of corporations were not
Letter; EV Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity
Letter; First American Letter; Gulf Letter; Helmerich
Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock Letter;
Manifest Letter; MGE Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail
Letter; Platinum Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold
Letter; S&C Letter; Securities Transfer Letter;
Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice
Letter; TI Letter; and Washington Banking Letter.
Other commenters noted the lack of competition
in the current proxy distribution process. See SCC
Letter; and STA Letter. Some commenters suggested
that the role of proxy service providers be evaluated
in conjunction with the proposal. See Cincinnati
Financial Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter;
EV Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter;
Gulf Letter, Illinois Stock Letter; MGE Letter; OTC
Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Platinum Letter; Routh
Letter; S&C Letter; Securities Transfer Letter;
Standard Letter; StockTrans letter; and Superlattice
Letter. The Commission notes that these issues are
outside the scope of NYSE’s proposal.
83 See Alcoa Letter; Cardinal Letter; Cincinnati
Financial Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter;
EV Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter;
Gulf Letter; Helmerich Letter; Illinois Stock Letter;
MGE Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Platinum
Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Securities
Transfer Letter; SCC Letter; STA Letter; Standard
Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter;
Unitrin Letter; and Washington Banking Letter.
84 See Cardinal Letter; Cincinnati Financial
Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter; EV
Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; Gulf
Letter; Helmerich Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; MGE
Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Platinum
Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Securities
Transfer Letter; SCC Letter; STA Letter; Standard
Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter;
Unitrin Letter; and Washington Banking Letter;
contra SIFMA Letter. Over-voting occurs when a
broker-dealer casts more votes on behalf of itself
and its customers than it is entitled to cast. An
under-vote occurs when the broker-dealer casts less
votes on behalf of itself and its customers than it
is entitled to cast.
85 See Cardinal Letter; Cincinnati Financial
Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter; EV
Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; Gulf
Letter; Helmerich Letter; Illinois Stock Letter;
Manifest Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter;
Platinum Letter, Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter;
Securities Transfer Letter; STA Letter; Standard
Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter;
Unitrin Letter; and Washington Banking Letter. One
commenter, however, stated that brokers are able to
accurately calculate the number of equity shares
eligible for voting, as ‘‘broker-dealers are required
to have robust and precise accounting systems in
place to ensure the integrity of their records of share
ownership.’’ See SIFMA Letter.
86 See AFSCME Letter; CCGG Letter; CCGG 2
Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA
Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis
Letter; Hagberg Letter; OPERS Letter; Railpen Letter;
see also CalPERS Letter (proposal would ‘‘increase
the credibility and fairness of the election
process’’); CtW Letter; CtW 2 Letter; and Trillium
Letter.
PO 00000
Frm 00099
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33299
disenfranchised.87 For example, one
commenter stated that ‘‘eliminating the
ability of brokers to vote uninstructed
client shares for the election of directors
is an important first step in improving
shareholder democracy and enhancing
the integrity of the proxy voting
system.’’ 88 Several commenters opined
that continuing to count broker votes
would diminish the strides being made
toward more effective corporate
governance, and stressed the importance
of shareholder participation as more
issuers move towards majority voting
standards for the election of directors.89
Commenters also suggested that the
broker vote may have impacted the
result in some recent corporate
elections.90
The Commission does not believe that
the proposal would disenfranchise retail
shareholders, but would instead be
enfranchising since it helps assure that
only those with an economic interest in
a company may vote on matters as
critical as the election of directors.
Moreover, the Commission notes that
research conducted on behalf of the
Proxy Working Group indicates that the
NYSE’s proposal may, in fact, be
consistent with an assumption of many
shareholders that only they can vote
their shares.91 As noted above, the
Commission also encourages the efforts
of the Proxy Working Group to develop
an investor education effort to inform
investors about the amendments to
NYSE Rule 452, the proxy voting
process, and the importance of voting.
As to the concerns that the proposal
could increase the impact of special
interest groups holding minority share
87 See CtW Letter; CtW 2 Letter; FSBA Letter;
FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Railpen Letter;
Relational Investors Letter (also noting that brokers
do not have direct economic interest); and Trillium
Letter.
88 See CCGG 2 Letter.
89 See CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; CtW
Letter; Hermes Equity Letter; Railpen Letter; and
TIAA–CREF Letter.
90 See AFSCME Letter; CalPERS 3 Letter; CtW
Letter; CtW 2 Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter;
and Glass Lewis Letter.
91 See Investor Attitudes Study, attached as
Exhibit B to the NYSE’s proposal, at page 18
(‘‘Investor Attitudes Study’’). The Investor Attitudes
Study showed that while 37 percent of stockholders
believed that if they did not vote their proxy on
routine matters their shares may be voted by their
brokers; 30 percent of stockholders believed that if
they did not vote their proxy, their shares would
not be voted. The Investor Attitudes Study showed
that even those stockholders who understood that
their broker may vote their shares failed to
completely understand how those shares could be
voted. Out of the 37 percent cited to in the Investor
Attitudes Study, 10 percent of stockholders
believed that their shares would be voted by their
brokerage firm based on the firm’s preference; while
27 percent believed that their brokerage firm would
vote in accordance with the Board of Director’s or
the company’s recommendations. See Investor
Attitudes Study at 18.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
33300
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
positions, the Commission believes that
it is not a basis for not approving the
proposed rule change. Even if this is the
result in some cases, it remains
consistent with the purposes of the
proposed rule change, including
assuring that investors with an
economic interest in the company vote
on matters as critical as the election of
directors, thereby enhancing corporate
governance and accountability.
With regard to the concern that proxy
advisory firm recommendations could
have increased influence on director
elections,92 the Commission notes that
issues relating to the use of proxy
advisory services by institutions and
others, and whether that use should be
further regulated, is a matter that will be
considered by the Commission as it
examines broader proxy issues. It is not,
however, germane to, and does not need
to be resolved to approve, the NYSE’s
proposal. While the Commission
acknowledges the possibility that, with
the elimination of the broker vote, the
vote of institutions or others that use
proxy advisory services may, at least in
the short term, represent a larger
percentage of the votes returned in
director elections, the Commission
believes the goals of the NYSE’s
proposal, as described above, are
consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act 93 in that the proposal should
protect investors and the public interest
by barring brokers from voting on behalf
of investors in uncontested elections of
directors when they have no economic
interest in the corporation or the
outcome. The Commission further notes
that institutional investors, whether
relying on proxy advisory firms or not,
must vote the institutions’ own shares
and, in so doing, must discharge their
fiduciary duties to act in the best
interest of their investors and avoid
conflicts of interest; institutions are not
relieved of their fiduciary
responsibilities simply by following the
recommendations of a proxy advisor.94
The Commission has also considered
the various other concerns raised by
commenters about the broader proxy
process, including the impact of stock
lending and financial derivatives, and
over-voting and under-voting issues.95
While the Commission will separately
address issues such as these as it
examines proxy and voting matters
generally, they do not directly implicate
92 See
notes supra 81 and 82 and accompanying
text.
93 15
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
e.g., 29 U.S.C. 1104 (setting forth the
fiduciary duties under the Employee Retirement
Income Security Act).
95 See supra notes 83, 84, 85 and accompanying
text.
94 See,
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
the NYSE’s proposal. The fact that there
may be more to be done in these areas
is not a reason for disapproving the
NYSE’s proposal if, as the Commission
believes, the NYSE’s proposed rule
change is consistent with Section 6(b)(5)
of the Act.96
C. Impact on Companies With Majority
Vote Standards for Election of Directors
Several commenters raised concerns
about the particular impact the proposal
could have on companies that have
adopted a majority vote standard for the
election of directors.97 Typically,
companies that have adopted a majority
vote standard require each director to
receive a majority of the votes cast in
order to be elected.98 Historically, most
public companies elected directors
under a plurality vote standard,
meaning that the person(s) receiving the
most votes would serve as a director
regardless of whether the shares voted
for that person constituted a majority of
the shares cast.99
Several commenters believed that
companies employing a majority vote
standard for director elections may have
particular difficulty in obtaining
majority support for director nominees
were NYSE’s proposal to be
approved.100 Specifically, commenters
noted that the elimination of broker
also supra note 42.
Aetna Letter; Alcoa Letter; Anadarko
Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Astoria Financial Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BB&T Letter; BNSF Letter;
Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter; ConocoPhillips
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter;
Eli Lilly Letter; FedEx Letter; FPL Letter; GE Letter;
General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Harman Letter;
Helmerich Letter; International Paper Letter;
Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; Medco Letter; NS
Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Praxair Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder
Letter; S&C Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin
Letter; Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool
Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
98 Some companies have also adopted a policy
that requires a director to resign if not elected by
a majority of the votes cast, since under the laws
of certain states, if an incumbent director is not
elected, he or she continues to serve as a holdover
director until a successor is duly elected and
qualified. See generally S&C Letter. See also
Delaware General Corporation Law Section 141(b)
(‘‘Each director shall hold office until such
director’s successor is elected and qualified or until
such director’s earlier resignation or removal.’’) and
California Corporation Code Section 301(b) (‘‘Each
director, including a director elected to fill a
vacancy, shall hold office until the expiration of the
term for which elected and until a successor has
been elected and qualified.’’).
99 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 12–13. Many
companies with a majority vote standard for
election of directors retain a plurality vote standard
in the event of a contested election of directors. As
noted by commenters, in recent years, a trend
toward majority voting has emerged. See text
accompanying note 89, supra.
100 See FedEx Letter; Helmerich Letter; Royal
Gold Letter; Unitrin Letter; Wachtell Letter; and
Washington Banking Letter.
PO 00000
96 See
97 See
Frm 00100
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
discretionary voting, coupled with
majority voting, would make it more
difficult for these companies to obtain
adequate votes to overcome a ‘‘vote no’’
campaign by activist shareholders,101
and thus would disproportionately
empower minority shareholder
groups.102 Two commenters suggested
that the difficulty of obtaining a
majority vote without broker
discretionary voting might discourage
issuers from adopting a majority vote
standard.103
According to an analysis submitted by
one commenter, however, in calendar
year 2007, 373 NYSE-listed companies
had majority vote standard for the
election of directors.104 Analyzing the
elections of those majority vote
companies, the analysis found that only
eight out of 2,718 directors received at
least 50 percent withhold votes based
on actual votes from returned proxy
cards by shareholders, while six
directors received at least 50 percent
withhold votes using broker voting.105
Thus, according to the commenter, only
two more directors out of 2,718 failed to
receive a majority without broker votes.
While NYSE’s proposal may make it
somewhat more difficult for a director
in a majority vote company to survive
a ‘‘just vote no’’ or similar campaign, the
Commission continues to believe the
proposal is consistent with the
requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act, which requires that the rules of an
exchange be designed to protect
investors and the public interest, by
assuring that voting on matters as
critical as the election of directors can
no longer be determined by brokers
without instructions from the beneficial
owner, thereby enhancing corporate
101 See
Alcoa Letter and S&C Letter.
BB&T Letter.
103 See NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter and Wachtell
Letter.
104 See Broadridge Letter and attached analysis.
The Corporate Library reports that as of December
2008, 49.5 percent of companies in the S&P 500 had
made the switch to majority voting for director
elections and another 18.4 percent had, while
retaining a plurality standard, adopted a policy
requiring that a director who does not receive
majority support must submit his or her resignation.
On the other hand, the plurality voting standard is
still the standard at the majority of smaller
companies in the Russell 1000 and 3000 indices,
with 54.5 percent of companies in the Russell 1000
and 74.9 percent of the companies in the Russell
3000 still using a straight plurality voting standard.
See The Corporate Library Analyst Alert, December
2008. As noted earlier, under a plurality vote
standard, the person receiving the most votes will
serve as the director. Thus, companies that elect
directors under a plurality vote standard would
have less difficulty in obtaining votes to overcome
a ‘‘just vote no’’ or ‘‘withhold’’ campaign.
105 Broadridge also found that seven directors out
of 2,718 directors received greater than or equal to
50 percent withhold votes based on proportional
voting. See id.
102 See
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
governance and accountability. In
making this determination, the
Commission recognizes that the
increasing percentage of shares held in
street name, in conjunction with the
greater use of just vote no or withhold
vote campaigns may have resulted in
broker voting under Rule 452 affecting
voting on certain non-contested director
elections in ways not contemplated in
1937. Accordingly, in light of these
developments and concerns, we believe
it is consistent with Section 6(b)(5) of
the Act for the NYSE to determine that
their member brokers should no longer
be voting without instructions on behalf
of their customers in director elections.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
D. Shareholder Education
Several commenters believed that
shareholder education was a critical
component to making NYSE’s proposal
workable,106 and shareholders would
need to be educated about the proxy
process and the importance of voting
before the proposal could be
implemented.107 One commenter stated
that the ‘‘potential adverse effects’’ of
the proposal were increased if the
proposal were adopted without
shareholder education.108 Another
commenter believed that director
elections should only become ineligible
for broker voting when the NYSE and
other constituents were satisfied that
shareholders would exercise their
voting rights.109 Commenters
emphasized the importance of
shareholder education with respect to
voting rights and director elections,110
and some commenters urged the
Commission (either alone or in
conjunction with others) to undertake
educational efforts designed to increase
voting participation by retail
shareholders.111 One commenter stated
that shareholders would generally
benefit from shareholder education
about broker discretionary voting,112
while other commenters indicated that
approval of the proposal should be in
conjunction with a shareholder
education initiative.113
106 See Business Roundtable Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; Crescent Letter; GE Letter; and
PWG Letter. But see Suburban Letter.
107 See Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; ICI Letter; and ICI
2 Letter.
108 See NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter.
109 See ICI Letter and ICI 2 Letter.
110 See Sod’ali Letter; and Verizon Letter.
111 See Corporate Governance Letter (also
encouraging the Commission to encourage
institutional investors to announce their proxy
votes in advance of meetings and facilitating the
development of systems like the Investor Suffrage
Movement and ProxyDemocracy) and NIRI Letter.
112 See Broadridge Letter.
113 See Computershare Letter; Newground Letter;
and S&C Letter.
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
As noted above, the Commission
supports the Proxy Working Group’s
efforts to develop, and encourages NYSE
and its member firms to implement, an
investor education effort to inform
investors about the amendments to
NYSE Rule 452, the proxy voting
process, and the importance of voting.
The Commission believes the proposal
offers substantial investor benefits, as
noted above, so that its implementation
should not be delayed. In addition,
because implementation of the proposal
will not occur until January 2010, there
should be sufficient time for NYSE to
inform market participants of the
changes to its rules on broker
discretionary voting.
E. Alternatives of Proportional Voting
and Client Directed Voting
While not part of the NYSE’s
proposal, several commenters discussed
proportional voting in their letters. In
general, under proportional voting, a
broker would vote shares held by it in
street name, for which voting
instructions for directors have not been
received, in proportion to the votes cast
by other retail clients of that broker.114
Some commenters endorsed the concept
of proportional voting in general,115 and
several supported proportional voting as
an alternative to the NYSE’s
proposal.116 Other commenters stated
that proportional voting should be
voting may be implemented in
two ways. Each broker would vote based on the
proportion of the votes cast: (1) Held by such broker
or (2) held by all brokers. Proportional voting also
could reflect the entirety of votes cast, not just the
retail vote.
115 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC Letter; ABC 3
Letter; Agilent Letter; AmEx Letter; Connecticut
Water Letter; DTE Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; First
Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Honeywell Letter;
ICI Letter; ICI 2 Letter; Jacksonville Letter; J.P.
Morgan Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco Letter;
Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg.
Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter;
Quest Letter; S&C Letter; Schwab Letter; SIFMA
Letter; Synalloy Letter; TI Letter; Veeco Letter; and
Wachtell Letter; see also PWG Letter (no objection
to members of SIFMA implementing proportional
voting).
116 See ABA Sec. Reg. Letter; ABC Letter
(supporting proportional voting on a broker-bybroker basis); ABC 2 Letter (supporting proportional
voting on a broker-by-broker basis); ABC 3 Letter;
Agilent Letter; Alston Letter; BB&T Letter;
Broadridge Letter; Business Roundtable Letter;
Connecticut Water Letter; DTE Letter; First
Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; ICI Letter;
ICI 2 Letter (recommending proportional voting
only in instances where a minimum number of
beneficial owners vote, or alternatively, a minimum
percentage of shares outstanding are voted);
Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster
Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; S&C Letter; Schwab
Letter (proportional voting is a ‘‘better first step’’
than eliminating discretionary broker voting);
Synalloy Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; and Veeco
Letter.
PO 00000
114 Proportional
Frm 00101
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33301
considered as part of a comprehensive
review of the proxy voting system.117
Several commenters were concerned
that proportional voting, although
potentially effective, would be
eliminated under the proposal.118
Commenters stated that proportional
voting could provide an even more
accurate reflection of the sentiment of
retail shareholders than eliminating
broker discretionary voting.119
Several commenters also discussed
client directed voting as an alternative
to the proposal,120 or believed that
client directed voting should be
considered in conjunction with the
proposal.121 Under client directed
voting, for those elections where the
beneficial owners fail to return specific
voting instructions, brokers would vote
the shares according to the beneficial
owners’ standing directions. These
standing directions could be given by
beneficial owners at the time they sign
their brokerage agreements, or
periodically thereafter. Some
commenters believed that client
directed voting had merit, either to
complement the NYSE’s proposal or as
an alternative.122
On the other hand, several
commenters stated that eliminating
broker discretionary voting is preferable
to these alternative approaches,
including proportional voting.123 Some
117 See AmEx Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; and
Honeywell Letter. Other commenters believed that
proportional voting and/or client directed voting
should be considered in conjunction with any
change to NYSE Rule 452. See Exxon Mobil Letter;
and J.P. Morgan Letter.
118 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Agilent Letter;
Business Roundtable Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; DTE Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture
Brands Letter; GE Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Jacksonville Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter;
McKesson Letter; Medco Letter; Monster Letter;
Nucor Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial
Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; Veeco Letter;
and Wachtell Letter; see also Intel Letter.
119 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 3 Letter;
Chevron Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; First
Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter;
Jacksonville Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson
Letter; Medco Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter;
NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; and
Veeco Letter.
120 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 2 Letter; ABC
3 Letter; Agilent Letter; Business Roundtable Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; DTE Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture
Brands Letter; GE Letter; Intel Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor
Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter;
Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; and Veeco Letter.
121 See AmEx Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Honeywell Letter; and J.P. Morgan Letter;
and SCC Letter.
122 See ABC 2 Letter; ABC 3 Letter; GE Letter; and
Jacksonville Letter.
123 See CalSTRS Letter, CCGG 2 Letter; CII Letter;
CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter;
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
Continued
10JYN1
33302
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
commenters believed that proportional
voting could complicate the proxy
voting process and result in abuses,124
continue to compromise the integrity of
proxy voting,125 or provide ‘‘a
disproportionate weight to the votes of
disaffected shareholders.’’ 126 Other
commenters stated that proportional
voting violates the ‘‘one share, one vote’’
principle.127 Still other commenters
recommended further research and
consideration on this alternative.128
For the reasons discussed above, the
Commission continues to believe that it
is consistent with the requirements of
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act to protect
investors and the public interest for
NYSE to eliminate broker discretionary
voting in director elections. While
several commenters believed that
proportional voting would most
accurately represent the retail vote, the
Commission notes that proportional
voting could have a distortive impact,
depending on how it is implemented.129
In addition, proportional voting would
allow votes to be cast by someone other
than the person with an economic
interest in the security.130 With respect
to client directed voting, the
Commission notes that it raises a variety
of questions and concerns, such as
requiring shareholders to make a voting
determination in advance of receiving a
proxy statement with the disclosures
mandated under the federal securities
laws and without consideration of the
issues to be voted upon. Finally, the
Commission notes that the fact that
there may be other reasonable
alternatives does not mean that the rule
change proposed by the NYSE is
inconsistent with Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act.131 For the reasons discussed above,
FSBA 2 Letter; Hagberg Letter; Sod’ali Letter; and
TIAA–CREF Letter.
124 See CII Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter;
Colorado PERA Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter.
125 See CCGG 2 Letter.
126 See Hagberg Letter.
127 See CalSTRS Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado
PERA Letter; Sod’ali Letter; and TIAA–CREF Letter.
128 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Alston Letter;
CalPERS Letter (recommending proportional voting
for those matters requiring a majority or more to
pass); Suburban Letter.
129 For example, of the 11 largest brokerage firms
using proportional voting, only five of these firms
used only the votes of retail account holders when
‘‘mirroring’’ votes for uninstructed retail shares. See
Broadridge Letter. According to Broadridge, for
purposes of its analysis, all uninstructed brokerage
shares were voted on the basis of the instructions
received from all brokerage account holders,
including those of ‘‘professional’’ investors. Id.
130 See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 17–18.
131 15 U.S.C. 78(f)(b)(5). The Commission notes
that, in this regard, Section 19(b) of the Act
requires, among other things, that ‘‘[t]he
Commission shall approve a proposed rule change
of a self-regulatory organization if it finds that such
proposed rule change is consistent with the
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
the Commission finds the proposed rule
change consistent with the requirements
of the Act.
F. Commission Consideration of the
Entire Proxy Process
Many commenters believed that
NYSE’s proposal to amend NYSE Rule
452 should not be viewed in isolation,
but should be considered by the
Commission as part of a comprehensive
review of the proxy voting and
shareholder communication system.132
Certain commenters also raised
concerns regarding the efficiency of
shareholder communications and the
proxy voting process as a whole, as well
as the merits of other possible
alternatives.133 Commenters stated that
the proposal should be examined in
light of current circumstances,134 such
as the rapidly shifting corporate
governance environment,135 and in
conjunction with alternatives.136
Commenters urged the Commission not
to take action on the proposal until the
Commission completed its
comprehensive review.137 For example,
requirements of this title and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to such
organizations.’’ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
132 See Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko
Letter; Arvin Letter; Avery Letter; BNSF Letter;
Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA
Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter;
Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare Letter;
Continental Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent Letter;
CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter; Eaton
Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon Mobil
Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; First
Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter;
General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Gulf Letter;
Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter;
Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter; International
Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P.
Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter; Medco Letter; MGE
Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor Letter;
Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter;
P&G Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum
Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh
Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter; SCC Letter;
Securities Transfer Letter; STA Letter; Standard
Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter;
Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin
Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon Letter; Washington
Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
133 See e.g., Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter; GE
Letter; and McKesson Letter.
134 See NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter and Wachtell
Letter.
135 See Wachtell Letter.
136 See Central Vermont Letter; and Chevron
Letter.
137 See Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter; Anadarko
Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis
Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business
Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Ceridian Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter;
Cincinnati Financial Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; Conoco Phillips Letter; Continental Letter;
Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE
Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter;
Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American
Letter; First Financial Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter;
PO 00000
Frm 00102
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
one commenter believed that the
implementation of the NYSE’s proposal
without other changes to the proxy
system could have ‘‘unintended and
devastating consequences’’ in the form
of increased costs to public companies
to ensure quorum, undue influence of
minority shareholders, and the like.138
Moreover, another commenter noted
that the Commission may be
considering two proposals that relate to
the proxy system: requiring companies
to include shareholder-selected
nominees in the company’s proxy
materials and allowing shareholders to
vote on executive compensation (‘‘sayon-pay’’).139 This commenter believed
that the Commission should consider
NYSE’s proposal at the same time as
these two proposals, because the issues
they raise are intertwined.140
In contrast, other commenters saw no
reason to delay NYSE’s proposal until
other issues relating to the proxy voting
system had been considered, as
sufficient time and resources have been
spent on the proposal’s development,
and it is justifiable as a stand-alone
initiative.141
The Commission has analyzed and
reviewed NYSE’s proposal in light of
the current proxy process, and with full
knowledge that a variety of proxy and
shareholder communication issues are
under review. Given the benefits to
investors of the proposal as discussed
above, including assuring that voting on
matters as critical as the election of
directors can no longer be determined
by brokers without instructions from the
beneficial owner, thereby enhancing
corporate governance and
accountability, the Commission does
Gulf Letter; Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter;
Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter;
Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter;
Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS
Letter; Nucor Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC
Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody Letter;
Pfizer Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter;
Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest
Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Ryder Letter;
S&C Letter; SCC Letter; Securities Transfer Letter;
STA Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter;
Superlattice Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter;
TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon
Letter; Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool
Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
138 See NIRI Letter (‘‘Some of these consequences
include the potential for increased costs to public
companies to ensure a quorum is achieved, an
increased influence of proxy advisory firms through
their voting recommendations, additional power in
the hands of the few shareholders who vote, and a
magnification of the shareholder communications
limitations associated with objecting beneficial
owners (OBO) who may be unsure of the meaning
of this status and are unable to receive direct
corporate communications.’’).
139 See Computershare Letter.
140 Id.
141 See Dobkin Letter and Hagberg Letter.
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
not believe it is appropriate to delay
action on the NYSE’s proposal pending
consideration of the myriad important
and difficult issues relating to
shareholder director nominations, proxy
voting, and shareholder communication,
which are outside the scope of NYSE’s
proposed rule change.142 The
Commission believes that approval of
the proposal is warranted pursuant to
Section 19(b) of the Act 143 even as it
considers broader proxy issues in the
near future. We do not believe that
action on those issues will undermine
the fundamental concept that decisions
as significant as the election of the
board of directors should be made by
those with an economic interest in the
company, rather than the brokers who
have no such economic interest.
Further, as noted earlier, under Section
19(b)(2) of the Act, the Commission
must approve the proposal presented by
NYSE if it finds the proposed rule
change consistent with the Act and
applicable rules and regulations
thereunder.144
G. Exemptions for Registered Investment
Companies Under the Investment
Company Act of 1940 and Requests for
Additional Exemptions
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
Seven commenters either supported
or did not oppose the exemption for
registered investment companies.145
However, some of these commenters,
who support the exemption,
recommended that it be reconsidered at
a later date.146
In addition, three commenters
requested the exemption also include
business development companies
(‘‘BDCs’’) 147 or smaller issuers, which
tend to have a high percentage of retail
ownership.148 Another commenter
142 See Securities Act Release No. 9046 (June 10,
2009) (File No. S7–10–09).
143 15 U.S.C. 78s(b). See also supra note 131.
144 See 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2); see also supra note
131.
145 See Altman Letter; CalPERS Letter; CFA 2
Letter; CII Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; ICI
4 Letter (supporting amended proposal); and
Sutherland Letter.
146 See CalPERS Letter (‘‘CalPERS is not opposed
to exempting investment companies from this
proposed rule change in the short term’’); CII Letter
(‘‘Given the corporate governance concerns
surrounding mutual funds, we believe the proposed
change should also apply to investment companies
at some point in the not-too-distant future.’’); FSBA
Letter (proposed exemption for investment
companies ‘‘poses no problem, but this should be
re-evaluated at some point’’); and FSBA 2 Letter
(proposed exemption ‘‘is currently warranted, but
this should be re-evaluated in the future’’).
147 See ICI 4 Letter and Sutherland Letter.
148 See Altman Letter (requesting an exemption
for issuers with similar circumstances to those of
investment companies, such as those ‘‘with a high
percentage of retail ownership and burdensome cost
concerns’’); see also Suburban Letter (requesting an
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
believed the exemption favored
registered investment companies over
other issuers that face similar increased
proxy solicitation costs and an
increased risk of failed elections.149 Yet
another commenter stated that the
proposed exemption was over-broad, as
it included closed-end funds.150 That
commenter argued that unlike open-end
funds, closed-end funds typically have
institutional bases, and do not have the
same issues establishing quorum at
shareholder meetings.151
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable and consistent with the Act
for the Exchange to exempt registered
investment companies from the
prohibition in NYSE Rule 452 on broker
discretionary voting in director
elections. NYSE relied on the Proxy
Working Group’s conclusion that the
unique regulatory regime governing
registered investment companies
differentiated them from operating
companies. In recommending the
exemption for registered investment
companies, the Proxy Working Group
considered the heightened problems
that registered investment companies
face because of their disproportionately
large retail shareholder base, that they
often do not include other routine
matters on the ballot,152 which would
allow a broker vote to count for quorum
purposes, and that they are subject to
the 1940 Act, which, among other
things, also regulates shareholder
participation in key decisions. The 1940
Act, for example, requires that a
registered investment company obtain
exemption for Master Limited Partnerships because
of the ‘‘disparate impact that such amendment
would have on MLPs’’).
However, one commenter did not support
approval of NYSE’s proposal under any
circumstances and questioned NYSE’s rationale for
letting ‘‘investment companies off the hook.’’ See
ABC 2 Letter (stating that it ‘‘does not support an
expansion of the ‘carve out’ to include smaller
public companies. By and large, we believe that
‘carve outs’ are bad public policy.’’); see also ABC
3 Letter (stating opposition to NYSE’s proposal).
This commenter noted that ‘‘the predicament of
small and midsize public companies is identical to
that of small and midsize investment companies
* * * . It is hard to see, on the merits, why the
NYSE provides relief to one group and not to the
other.’’ See ABC 2 Letter.
149 See Alcoa Letter.
150 See City of London Letter. The commenter
noted that closed-end funds typically trade at a
discount to net asset value, and suggested that
investors in closed-end funds do not view
themselves as having the option of ‘‘voting with
[their] feet.’’ Id.
151 Id. But see ICI 2 Letter, which states that retail
investors own ninety-eight percent of the value of
closed-end funds. See also further discussion below
on the basis for exempting registered investment
companies under the 1940 Act from the NYSE’s
proposal.
152 See Rule 32a–4 under the 1940 Act, 17 CFR
270.32a–4, and infra note 156 and accompanying
text.
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33303
the approval of a majority of its voting
securities before changing the nature of
its business so as to cease to be an
investment company, deviating from its
concentration policy with respect to
investments in any particular industry
or group of industries, or changing its
subclassification as an open-end
company or closed-end company. The
Commission believes that the different
regulatory regime for registered
investment companies supports the
exemption, and finds the exemption
should, among other things, further the
public interest and the protection of
investors, consistent with Section
6(b)(5) of the Act.153
While the Commission understands
the concerns raised by commenters
urging NYSE to broaden the exemption,
the Commission believes that there are
sufficient differences between registered
investment companies and other entities
to conclude that NYSE’s proposal is
consistent with the Act.154 For example,
the regulation of BDCs and registered
investment companies under the 1940
Act differs significantly. Particularly
relevant here, the 1940 Act requires a
BDC to seek ratification of the
independent auditor, which is a routine
item under NYSE Rule 452, at each
annual meeting.155 Adoption of the
amendment will therefore have no effect
on a BDC’s ability to obtain a quorum,
and expansion of the exemption for
registered investment companies to
include BDCs is unnecessary. A
registered investment company,
however, is exempt from the 1940 Act’s
auditor ratification requirement if it
relies on a conditional exemptive rule
under the 1940 Act.156 That exemptive
rule is not available to BDCs.
The Commission finds it reasonable
for the NYSE to distinguish between
registered investment companies and
smaller issuers that may have a large
retail shareholder base for purposes of
allowing broker discretionary voting on
director elections. While the
Commission recognizes that small
issuers could face similar concerns as
registered investment companies as a
result of the proposed changes to Rule
452, there are significant differences
between small issuers and registered
investment companies. For example, as
noted by the Proxy Working Group, ‘‘the
unique regulatory regime governing
investment companies made such
companies sufficiently different from
153 15
U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
Altman Group Letter; ICI 4 Letter; and
Sutherland Letter.
155 See 15 U.S.C. 80a–31(a) and 15 U.S.C. 80a–59.
See 17 CFR 270.32a–4.
156 Rule 32a–4 under the 1940 Act. See 17 CFR
270.32a–4.
154 See
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
33304
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
operating companies (regardless of size)
that it was appropriate to treat such
companies differently.’’ 157 Further,
operating companies frequently place an
item that permits broker discretionary
voting, such as the ratification of
independent auditors, on the ballot,
which will help them obtain quorum.158
In contrast, pursuant to NYSE Rule 452,
for registered investment companies,
only the election of directors would
qualify as a routine matter on their
ballot for purposes of establishing
quorum.
Because of these differences, the
Commission believes that it is
reasonable for the NYSE to distinguish
between registered investment
companies and other entities in defining
the scope of the exemption, and
therefore, believes the proposal is
consistent with the requirements of
Section 6(b)(5) of the Act, which, among
other things, requires that the rules of an
exchange be designed to protect
investors and the public interest and are
not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
H. Implementation Date
The NYSE’s proposal to eliminate
broker discretionary voting for the
election of directors would apply to
shareholder meetings held on or after
January 1, 2010, except to the extent
that a meeting was originally scheduled
to be held prior to that date but was
properly adjourned to a date on or after
it.159 The Commission received several
comments relating to the NYSE’s
proposed implementation date. One
commenter recommended that, if the
Commission approved the proposal, it
should initially make the proposal
applicable only to large accelerated
filers, so as to not ‘‘unfairly burden
smaller public companies and to
provide time to observe the effect of the
proposed amendments in operation.’’ 160
However, other commenters
recommended that the proposed rule
change be implemented earlier.161
157 See
Addendum, supra note 21, at 3.
supra Section IV.A, Increased Costs for
Companies to Achieve Quorum.
159 NYSE also stated that in the event the
proposal is not approved by the Commission on or
before August 31, 2009, NYSE would delay the
effective date to a date which is at least four months
after the approval date, and which does not fall
within the first six months of the calendar year. See
Notice, supra note 4.
160 See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter.
161 See AFSCME Letter (recommending
immediate implementation); CII 4 Letter
(recommending immediate implementation);
Colorado PERA Letter (requesting that the proposal
become effective upon final approval); FSBA 2
Letter (recommending that the proposal be
implemented earlier than 2010); Hermes Equity
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
158 See
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
The Commission believes that the
NYSE’s proposed implementation date
is reasonable and consistent with the
Act. The Commission believes that it is
reasonable for the NYSE to implement
the proposed rule to apply to all affected
issuers at the same time because the
NYSE appears to have provided
sufficient time for these issuers to adjust
to the proposed rule change. The
Commission also believes that it is
reasonable for the NYSE to delay the
effective date of the proposed rule to
shareholder meetings held on or after
January 1, 2010. The Commission
recognizes that, given the significance of
the NYSE’s proposed rule change,
issuers may need additional time to
prepare their proxy materials and
inform investors of the changes
resulting from the NYSE’s proposal.
Accordingly, the Commission believes
that the NYSE’s proposal to apply the
proposed rule change to shareholder
meetings held on or after January 1,
2010 is consistent with the Act.
I. Prior Interpretations to Rule 452
The Exchange proposes amending
NYSE Rule 452 to codify two previously
published interpretations, which were
filed with the Commission pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act.162 First, the
NYSE proposes codifying that NYSE
Rule 452 would preclude broker
discretionary voting on a matter that
materially amends an investment
advisory contract with an investment
company. Second, the NYSE proposes
codifying that a material amendment to
an investment advisory contract would
include any proposal to obtain
shareholder approval of an investment
company’s investment advisory contract
with a new investment adviser, which
approval is required by the 1940 Act
and the rules thereunder.
The Commission received two
comment letters on NYSE’s codification
Letter (requesting that the Commission ‘‘allow the
amendment to take effect as soon as possible’’);
OPERS Letter (recommending that the proposal be
implemented earlier than 2010); and Sod’ali Letter
(recommending that the proposal be immediately
effective).
162 See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos.
30697, supra note 3 (interpreting Rule 452 to allow
members organizations to give a proxy on the initial
approval of an investment advisory contract if the
beneficial holder does not exercise his right to vote,
but precluding members organizations from giving
proxies on material amendments to the investment
advisory contracts without specific client
instructions) and 52569, supra note 3 (interpreting
Rule 452 to preclude member organizations from
giving proxies on any proposal to obtain
shareholder approval of an investment company’s
investment advisory contract with a new
investment adviser, which approval is required by
the 1940 Act, without specific beneficial owners’
voting instructions).
PO 00000
Frm 00104
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
of its prior interpretations.163 Both
commenters supported this proposal.164
For example, ICI stated that ‘‘[w]e agree
that these matters are the types of nonroutine matters on which investment
company shareholders should be
required to vote * * *. When investors
become shareholders of an investment
company, they already have chosen the
adviser in the context of the disclosures
in the investment company’s prospectus
and other documents * * *. Given the
importance of the identity of the adviser
and the services it provides to
investment company shareholders, we
believe the benefits of shareholders’
voting on material amendment to an
advisory contract or an advisory
contract with a new investment adviser
outweigh the costs associated with such
a requirement.’’ 165
The Commission believes that the
NYSE’s codification of previously
published interpretations is consistent
with the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder. As the
Commission has previously stated,
‘‘[f]ull and effective voting rights of
investment company shareholders are
an important aspect of the investment
company structure.’’ 166 The
Commission believes that the NYSE, by
codifying its prior interpretations to
Rule 452, is providing greater
transparency and ensuring the
consistent application of its
interpretations. Further, the proposed
amendments codify existing NYSE
interpretations, which were the subject
of two prior rule filings.167 Accordingly,
these changes raise no new regulatory
issues, and are consistent with the Act.
J. Conclusion
The Commission finds, for the reasons
set forth above, that the Exchange’s
proposal, as modified by Amendment
No. 4, is consistent with the
requirements of the Act. In particular,
the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the
requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of the
Act,168 which provides that the rules of
the exchange must be designed to
protect investors and the public interest,
and are not designed to permit unfair
discrimination between customers,
issuers, brokers, or dealers.
The Commission believes that it is
reasonable and consistent with the Act
for the NYSE to determine that the
election of directors should no longer be
163 See
CFA 2 Letter and ICI 4 Letter.
164 Id.
165 See
ICI 4 Letter.
Release No. 30697, supra note 3.
167 See supra note 3.
168 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
166 See
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
an item eligible for broker discretionary
voting. As noted above, the most
fundamental way for shareholders to
hold directors accountable for their
performance of critical corporate duties
is through the director election process.
Given the large proportion of shares that
today are held in street name, the
importance of corporate governance
matters, and the concern that the broker
vote can distort election results, the
Commission believes it is appropriate
for the NYSE to eliminate broker
discretionary voting in director
elections.169 In making this
determination, the Commission believes
that the NYSE’s proposal, among other
things, furthers the protection of
investors and the public interest by
assuring that voting on matters as
critical as the election of directors can
no longer be determined by brokers
without instructions from the beneficial
owner, and thus should enhance
corporate governance and accountability
to shareholders.
The Commission also believes that the
NYSE’s proposed change codifying prior
NYSE interpretations of NYSE Rule 452
is consistent with the requirements of
the Act. These proposed amendments
help to ensure the full and effective
voting rights of investment company
shareholders on material matters, and
further, codify existing NYSE
interpretations.
V. Conclusion
It is therefore ordered, that pursuant
to Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,170 the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 4, is hereby approved.
By the Commission.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
Appendix A
List of comment letters received:
Letter from Keith F. Higgins, Chair,
Committee on Federal Regulation of
Securities, American Bar Association, dated
April 3, 2009 (‘‘ABA Fed. Reg. Letter’’); John
Endean, President, American Business
Conference, dated January 16, 2007 (‘‘ABC
Letter’’); John Endean, President, American
Business Conference, dated June 25, 2007
(‘‘ABC 2 Letter’’); John Endean, President,
American Business Conference, dated March
31, 2009 (‘‘ABC 3 Letter’’); Judith H. Jones,
Vice President and Corporate Secretary,
Aetna Inc., dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘Aetna
Letter’’); Charles Jurgonis, Plan Secretary,
American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employees, AFL–CIO, dated
March 26, 2009 (‘‘AFSCME Letter’’); D. Craig
169 As discussed above, NYSE does not propose
to eliminate broker discretionary voting for
registered investment companies under the 1940
Act.
170 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
Nordlund, Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Secretary, Agilent Technologies,
Inc., dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Agilent Letter’’);
Donna Dabney, Vice-President, Secretary,
and Corporate Governance Counsel, Alcoa,
Inc., dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Alcoa Letter’’);
David E. Brown, Mark F. McElreath, Justin R.
Howard, and William S. Ortwein, Alston &
Bird LLP, dated April 1, 2009 (‘‘Alston
Letter’’); Kenneth L. Altman, President, The
Altman Group, Inc., dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Altman Letter’’); Stephen P. Norman,
Secretary, American Express Company, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘AmEx Letter’’); David L.
Siddall, Vice President, Deputy General
Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Anadarko
Petroleum Corporation, dated March 25, 2009
(‘‘Anadarko Letter’’); Charles G. McClure,
Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and
President, ArvinMeritor, Inc., dated March
17, 2009 (‘‘ArvinMeritor Letter’’); Peter M.
Finn, First Vice President, Regulatory Affairs,
Astoria Financial Corporation, dated March
25, 2009 (‘‘Astoria Financial Letter’’); Dean
A. Scarborough, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Avery Dennison, dated
March 16, 2009 (‘‘Avery Letter’’); Ronald L.
Nelson, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Avis Budget Group, Inc., dated
March 23, 2009 (‘‘Avis Letter’’); Frances B.
Jones, Executive Vice President, Secretary,
General Counsel and Chief Corporate
Governance Officer, BB&T Corporation, dated
March 26, 2009 (‘‘BB&T Letter’’); Doug
Pearce, Chief Executive Officer and Chief
Investment Officer, British Columbia
Investment Management Corporation, dated
March 31, 2009 (‘‘BCIMC Letter’’); Matthew
K. Rose, Chairman, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Burlington Northern Santa
Fe Corporation, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘BNSF Letter’’); Robert Schifellite,
President, Investor Communication
Solutions, Broadridge Financial Solutions,
Inc., dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Broadridge
Letter’’); W. James McNerney, Jr., Chairman
of the Board, President and Chief Executive
Officer, The Boeing Company, dated March
26, 2009 (‘‘Boeing Letter’’); Anne M.
Mulcahy, Chair, Corporate Leadership
Initiative, Business Roundtable, dated March
25, 2009 (Business Roundtable Letter’’);
Clifford DuPree, Vice President, Corporate
Governance and Corporate Secretary, CA,
Inc., dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘CA Letter’’);
Peter H. Mixon, General Counsel, CalPERS,
dated June 25, 2007 (‘‘CalPERS Letter’’); Peter
H. Mixon, General Counsel, CalPERS, dated
October 26, 2007 (‘‘CalPERS 2 Letter’’);
Dennis A. Johnson, Senior Portfolio Manager,
CalPERS Corporate Governance, dated April
29, 2008 (‘‘CalPERS 3 Letter’’); Anne
Sheehan, Director, Corporate Governance,
California State Teacher’s Retirement System,
dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘CalSTRS Letter’’);
Sally J. Curley, Senior Vice President,
Cardinal Health, Inc., dated March 30, 2009
(‘‘Cardinal Letter’’); Doug Pearce, Chairman,
Canadian Coalition for Good Governance,
dated January 19, 2009 (‘‘CCGG Letter’’);
Stephen Griggs, Executive Director, Canadian
Coalition for Good Governance, dated March
27, 2009 (‘‘CCGG 2 Letter’’); Dale A.
Rocheleau, Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Corporate Secretary, Central
Vermont Public Service Corporation, dated
PO 00000
Frm 00105
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33305
March 27, 2009 (‘‘Central Vermont Letter’’);
Kathryn V. Marinello, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer; Ceridian Corporation,
dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘Ceridian Letter’’);
Kurt N. Schacht, Executive Director, CFA
Institute Centre for Financial Market
Integrity, dated March 31, 2008 (‘‘CFA
Letter’’); Kurt N. Schacht, Managing Director,
and James C. Allen, Director, CFA Institute
Centre for Financial Market Integrity, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘CFA 2 Letter’’); David
Chavern, Senior Vice President and Chief
Legal Officer, Chamber of Commerce of the
United States of America, dated November
13, 2006 (‘‘Chamber of Commerce Letter’’);
David T. Hirshmann, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Center for Capital Markets
Competitiveness, United States Chamber of
Commerce, dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Chamber
of Commerce 2 Letter’’); Lydia I. Beebe,
Corporate Secretary and Chief Governance
Officer, Chevron, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Chevron Letter’’); H. Edward Hanway,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Cigna
Corporation, dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘Cigna
Letter’’); Ann Yerger, Executive Director,
Council of Institutional Investors, dated June
5, 2007 (‘‘CII Letter’’); Amy Borrus, Deputy
Director, Council of Institutional Investors,
dated November 5, 2007 (‘‘CII 2 Letter’’); Ann
Yerger, Executive Director, Council of
Institutional Investors, dated April 17, 2008
(‘‘CII 3 Letter’’); Jonathan D. Urick, Research
Analyst, Council of Institutional Investors,
dated March 19, 2009 (‘‘CII 4 Letter’’); Steven
J. Johnston, Chief Financial Officer, Secretary
and Treasurer, Cincinnati Financial
Corporation, dated March 25, 2009
(‘‘Cincinnati Financial Letter’’); Barry M.
Olliff, Chief Investment Officer, City of
London Investment Company Limited, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘City of London Letter’’)
(also requesting that the proposal not exempt
closed-end funds registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940); Gregory
W. Smith, General Counsel, Colorado Public
Employees’ Retirement Association, dated
March 26, 2009 (‘‘Colorado PERA Letter’’);
Paul Conn, President, Global Capital Markets,
Computershare Limited, and David Drake,
President, Georgeson Inc., dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘Computershare Letter’’); Daniel J.
Meaney, Corporate Secretary, Connecticut
Water Company, dated March 25, 2009
(‘‘Connecticut Water Letter’’); J.J. Mulva,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
ConocoPhillips, dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘ConocoPhillips Letter’’); Steven G. Nelson,
President and Chairman of the Board,
Continental Stock Transfer and Trust
Company, dated March 24, 2009
(‘‘Continental Letter’’); James B. Flaws, Vice
Chairman and Chief Financial Officer,
Corning Incorporated, dated March 24, 2009
(‘‘Corning Letter’’); James McRitchie,
Publisher, Corporate Governance, dated
March 13, 2009 (‘‘Corporate Governance
Letter’’); Marc Cox, dated April 26, 2009
(‘‘Cox Letter’’); Barbara Trivedi, Shareholder
Services Manager, Crescent Banking
Company, dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘Crescent
Letter’’); Ellen M. Fitzsimmons, Senior Vice
President—Law and Public Affairs and
General Counsel, CSX Corporation, dated
March 18, 2009 (‘‘CSX Letter’’); William B.
Patterson, Executive Director, CtW
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
33306
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
Investment Group, dated June 6, 2007 (‘‘CtW
Letter’’); William B. Patterson, Executive
Director, CtW Investment Group, dated April
17, 2008 (‘‘CtW 2 Letter’’); Tim Solso,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
Cummins Inc., dated March 25, 2009
(‘‘Cummins Letter’’); David M. Dobkin, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘Dobkin Letter’’); Patrick B.
Carey, Associate General Counsel & Assistant
Corporate Secretary, DTE Energy, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘DTE Letter’’); Alexander M.
Cutler, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Eaton Corporation, dated March 13,
2009 (‘‘Eaton Letter’’); Bronwen L Mantlo,
Associate General Counsel and Assistant
Secretary, dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘Eli Lilly
Letter’’); Holly Roseberry, President, EV
Innovations, Inc., dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘EV
Letter’’); David S. Rosenthal, Vice President,
Investor Relations and Secretary, Exxon
Mobil Corporation, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Exxon Mobil Letter’’); Christine P.
Richards, Executive Vice President, General
Counsel and Secretary, FedEx Corporation,
dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘FedEx Letter’’);
Kevin Kopaunik, President, Fidelity Transfer
Company, dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Fidelity
Letter’’); Salli Marinov, President and Chief
Executive Officer, First American Stock
Transfer, Inc., dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘First
American Letter’’); Dorothy B. Wright, Vice
President and Corporate Secretary, First
Financial Holdings, Inc., dated March 24,
2009 (‘‘First Financial Letter’’); Alissa E.
Ballot, Vice President and Corporate
Secretary, FPL Group, Inc., dated March 23,
2009 (‘‘FPL Letter’’); Michael McCauley,
Director, Office of Corporate Governance,
State Board of Administration of Florida,
dated June 13, 2007 (‘‘FSBA Letter’’); Ashbel
C. Williams, Executive Director and Chief
Executive Officer, State Board of
Administration of Florida, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘FSBA 2 Letter’’); Jon D. Botsford,
Senior Vice President, General Counsel and
Secretary, Furniture Brands International,
dated March 23, 2009 (‘‘Furniture Brands
Letter’’); Michael R. McAlevey, Vice
President and Chief Corporate, Securities and
Finance Counsel, General Electric Company,
dated April 13, 2009 (‘‘GE Letter’’); Roderick
A. Palmore, Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Chief Compliance and
Risk Management Officer, General Mills,
dated March 17, 2009 (‘‘General Mills
Letter’’); Robert McCormick, Chief Policy
Officer, Glass Lewis & Co., dated March 13,
2009 (‘‘Glass Lewis Letter’’); G. Richard
Wagoner, Jr., Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, General Motors Corporation, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘GM Letter’’); Brian
Connolly, Director of Sales,
GovernanceMetrics International
(‘‘GovernanceMetrics Letter’’); Neila B.
Radin, Chair, Securities Law Committee, The
Society of Corporate Secretaries and
Governance Professionals, dated March 20,
2009 (‘‘Governance Professionals Letter’’);
Steven Gratzer, dated April 27, 2009
(‘‘Gratzer Letter’’); William A. Little III,
President, Gulf Registrar and Transfer
Corporation, dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Gulf
Letter’’); Carl T. Hagberg, Chairman and CEO,
Carl T. Hagberg and Associates, dated March
27, 2009 (‘‘Hagberg Letter’’); Dinesh C.
Paliwal, Chairman and Chief Executive
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
Officer, Harman International, dated March
26, 2009 (‘‘Harman Letter’’); Steven R.
Mackey, Executive Vice President, Secretary
and General Counsel, Helmerich & Payne,
Inc., dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Helmerich
Letter’’); Bess Joffe, Associate Director,
Hermes Equity Ownership Services Limited,
dated March 20, 2009 (‘‘Hermes Equity
Letter’’); Thomas F. Larkins, Vice President,
Corporate Secretary and General Counsel,
Honeywell, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Honeywell Letter’’); Paul Schott Stevens,
President, Investment Company Institute,
dated November 20, 2006 (‘‘ICI Letter’’); Paul
Schott Stevens, President, Investment
Company Institute, dated December 18, 2006
(‘‘ICI 2 Letter’’); Paul Schott Stevens,
President, Investment Company Institute,
dated February 20, 2007 (‘‘ICI 3 Letter’’);
Karrie McMillian, General Counsel,
Investment Company Institute, dated March
27, 2009 (‘‘ICI 4 Letter’’) (supporting the
proposal, as amended to exempt investment
companies); Robert G. Pearson, President and
Chief Executive Officer, Illinois Stock
Transfer Company, dated March 24, 2009
(‘‘Illinois Stock Letter’’); Maura Abelin
Smith, Senior Vice President, General
Counsel and Corporate Secretary,
International Paper Company, dated March
24, 2009 (‘‘International Paper Letter’’); Cary
Klafter, Vice President, Legal and Corporate
Affairs, Intel Corporation, dated March 26,
2009 (‘‘Intel Letter’’); Gilbert J. Pomar, III,
President and Chief Executive Officer, and
Valerie A. Kendall, EVP and Chief Financial
Officer, Jacksonville Bancorp Inc., dated
March 26, 2009 (‘‘Jacksonville Letter’’);
Stephen A. Roell, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Johnson Controls, Inc.,
dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘Johnson Letter’’);
Anthony J. Horan, Corporate Secretary,
J.P.Morgan Chase & Co., dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘J.P. Morgan Letter’’); Sarah Wilson,
Chief Executive, Manifest, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘Manifest Letter’’); McKesson
Corporation, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘McKesson Letter’’); Thomas M. Moriaty,
General Counsel, Secretary and SVP, Medco
Health Solutions, Inc., dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘Medco Letter’’); Kenneth G. Frassetto,
Director—Treasury Management and
Shareholder Services, MGE Energy, Inc.,
dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘MGE Letter’’);
Michael C. Miller, Executive Vice President,
General Counsel and Secretary, Monster
Worldwide, Inc., dated March 24, 2009
(‘‘Monster Letter’’); Larry S. Dohrs, Vice
President, Newground Social Investment,
dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Newground Letter’’);
Jeffrey D. Morgan, CAE, President & CEO,
National Investor Relations Institute, dated
March 16, 2009 (‘‘NIRI Letter’’); C.W.
Moorman, Chairman, President and Chief
Executive Officer, Norfolk Southern
Corporation, dated March 23, 2009 (‘‘NS
Letter’’); Daniel R. DiMicco, Chairman,
President and Chief Executive Officer, Nucor
Corporation, dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘Nucor
Letter’’); Jeffrey W. Rubin, Chair, Business
Law Section, Committee on Securities
Regulation, New York State Bar Association,
dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘NYSBA Sec. Reg.
Letter’’); Elisa D. Garcia, Executive Vice
President and General Counsel, Office Depot,
Inc., dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Office Depot
PO 00000
Frm 00106
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Letter’’); Chris DeRose, Chief Executive
Officer, Ohio Public Employees Retirement
System, dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘OPERS
Letter’’); Toni Zaks, President, OTC
Corporate Transfer Service, dated March 24,
2009 (‘‘OTC Letter’’); Loren K. Hanson,
Assistant Secretary, Otter Tail Corporation,
dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Otter Tail Letter’’); E.
J. Wunsch, Assistant Secretary and Associate
General Counsel, The Procter & Gamble
Company, dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘P&G
Letter’’); Alexander C. Schoch, Executive
Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and
Secretary, Peabody Energy, dated March 17,
2009 (‘‘Peabody Letter’’); Matthew Lepore,
Vice President, Chief President-Corporate
Governance, Pfizer, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Pfizer Letter’’); Laura J. Cataldo, President
and Chief Executive Officer, Platinum Stock
Transfer, dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Platinum
Letter’’); James T. Breedlove, Senior Vice
President, General Counsel and Secretary,
Praxair, dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Praxair
Letter’’); Daniel Rothstein, Executive Vice
President, Provident Bank, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘Provident Letter’’); John F. Kuntz,
General Counsel and Corporate Secretary,
Provident Financial Services, Inc.
(‘‘Provident Financial Letter’’); Larry W.
Sonsini, Chairman, Proxy Working Group,
dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘PWG Letter’’);
William J. O’Shaughnessy, Jr., Assistant
General Counsel and Corporate Secretary,
Quest Diagnostics Incorporated, dated March
25, 2009 (‘‘Quest Letter’’); Frank Curtiss,
Head of Corporate Governance, Railways
Pension Trustee Company Limited, dated
April 15, 2009 (‘‘Railpen Letter’’); Marilyn
Wasser, Executive Vice President and
General Counsel, Realogy Corporation, dated
April 2, 2009 (‘‘Realogy Letter’’); Ralph V.
Whitworth, Principal, Relational Investors
LLC, dated March 12, 2009 (‘‘Relational
Investors Letter’’); Jason Freeman, President,
Routh Stock Transfer, Inc., dated March 24,
2009 (‘‘Routh Letter’’); Karen Gross, Vice
President and Secretary, Royal Gold, Inc.,
dated March 23, 2009 (‘‘Royal Gold Letter’’);
Robert D. Fatovic, Executive Vice President,
Chief Legal Officer and Corporate Secretary,
Ryder, dated March 26, 2009 (‘‘Ryder
Letter’’); Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, dated
March 27, 2009 (‘‘S&C Letter’’); Niels Holch,
Executive Director, Shareholder
Communications Coalition, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘SCC Letter’’); Niels Holch, Executive
Director, Shareholder Communications
Coalition, dated April 24, 2009 (‘‘SCC 2
Letter’’); R. Scott McMillen, Vice President
and Associate General Counsel, The Charles
Schwab Corporation, dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Schwab Letter’’); George Johnson, Vice
President, Securities Transfer Corporation,
dated March 24, 2009 (‘‘Securities Transfer
Letter’’); Thomas F. Price, Managing Director,
Securities Industry and Financial Markets
Association (‘‘SIFMA Letter’’) (noting that
some of the assertions made by other
commenters were ‘‘inaccurate and promote
confusion,’’ and presenting its own
observations on those issues); John C.
Wilcox, Chairman, Sod’ali, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘Sod’ali Letter’’); Charles V. Rossi,
President, The Securities Transfer
Association, Inc., dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘STA Letter’’); Mary Cleo Fernandez,
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
sroberts on DSKD5P82C1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 131 / Friday, July 10, 2009 / Notices
Transfer Agent, Standard Registrar Transfer
Agency, Inc., dated March 24, 2009
(‘‘Standard Letter’’); Robert M. Stanton, dated
March 25, 2009 (‘‘Stanton Letter’’); Jonathan
Miller, President, StockTrans, Inc., dated
March 24, 2009 (‘‘StockTrans Letter’’); Paul
Abel, General Counsel and Secretary,
Suburban Propane Partners, L.P., dated
November 16, 2006 (‘‘Suburban Letter’’)
(resubmitted on March 3, 2009); Douglas Ian
Shaw, Senior Vice President and Corporate
Secretary, Suffolk County National Bank,
Suffolk Bancorp, dated March 13, 2009
(‘‘Suffolk Letter’’); Holly Roseberry, Director,
Superlattice Power, Inc., dated March 25,
2009 (‘‘Superlattice Letter’’); Steven B.
Boehm and Cynthia M. Krus, Sutherland
Asbill and Brennan LLP, dated March 31,
2009 (‘‘Sutherland Letter’’); Cheryl C. Carter,
Corporate Secretary, Synalloy Corporation,
dated March 25, 2009 (‘‘Synalloy Letter’’);
Lewis B. Campbell, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Textron Inc., dated March
30, 2009 (‘‘Textron Letter’’); Cynthia H.
Haynes, Vice President, Assistant Secretary
and Assistant General Counsel, Texas
Instruments Incorporated, dated March 26,
2009 (‘‘TI Letter’’); Hye-Won Choi, Senior
Vice President and Head of Corporate
Governance, TIAA–CREF, dated March 27,
2009 (‘‘TIAA–CREF Letter’’); Jonas Kron,
Senior Social Research Analyst, Trillium
Asset Management, dated March 17, 2009
(‘‘Trillium Letter’’); Scott Renwick, Senior
Vice President and General Counsel, Unitrin,
dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Unitrin Letter’’);
Donald A. French, Treasurer, UQM
Technologies, Inc., dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘UQM Letter’’); Gregory A. Robbins, Senior
Vice President and General Counsel, Veeco
Instruments Inc., dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘Veeco Letter’’); Marianne Drost, Senior
Vice President, Deputy General Counsel and
Corporate Secretary, Verizon
Communications Inc., dated March 27, 2009
(‘‘Verizon Letter’’); David A. Katz, Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen & Katz, dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘Wachtell Letter’’); Shelly L. Angus, Senior
Vice President, Investor Relations,
Washington Banking Company, dated March
23, 2009 (‘‘Washington Banking Letter’’);
Robert J. LaForest, Vice President and
Associate General Counsel, Whirlpool
Corporation, dated March 26, 2009
(‘‘Whirlpool Letter’’); Michael C. Connelly,
Vice President and General Counsel, Xcel
Energy, dated March 27, 2009 (‘‘Xcel Letter’’);
Anne M. Mulcahy, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, Xerox Corporation, dated
March 25, 2009 (‘‘Xerox Letter’’); and
William D. Zollars, Chairman of the Board,
President and Chief Executive Officer, and
YRC Worldwide Inc., dated March 25, 2009
(‘‘YRC Letter’’).
[FR Doc. E9–16318 Filed 7–9–09; 8:45 am]
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–60234; File No. SR–NSCC–
2009–04]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
National Securities Clearing
Corporation; Notice of Filing and
Immediate Effectiveness of Proposed
Rule Change Relating to Addendum O
July 2, 2009.
Pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’),1 notice is hereby given that on
June 19, 2009, the National Securities
Clearing Corporation (‘‘NSCC’’) filed
with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) the
proposed rule change as described in
Items I, II, and III below, which Items
have been prepared primarily by NSCC.
NSCC filed the proposed rule change
pursuant to Section 19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of
the Act 2 and Rule 19b–4(f)(4)
thereunder 3 so that the proposal was
effective upon filing with the
Commission. The Commission is
publishing this notice to solicit
comments on the proposed rule change
from interested persons.
I. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Terms of Substance of
the Proposed Rule Change
The proposed rule change amends
Addendum O to NSCC’s rules to correct
Footnote 1 to make the footnote
consistent with recently filed and
effective changes to Addendum O.
II. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
In its filing with the Commission,
NSCC included statements concerning
the purpose of and basis for the
proposed rule change and discussed any
comments it received on the proposed
rule change. The text of these statements
may be examined at the places specified
in Item IV below. NSCC has prepared
summaries, set forth in sections A, B,
and C below, of the most significant
aspects of such statements.
A. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement of the Purpose of, and
Statutory Basis for, the Proposed Rule
Change
The proposed rule change amends
Footnote 1 of Addendum O
(‘‘Admission of Non-US Entities as
Direct NSCC Members’’) to NSCC’s
BILLING CODE 8010–01–P
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(iii).
3 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(4).
2 15
VerDate Nov<24>2008
22:16 Jul 09, 2009
Jkt 217001
PO 00000
Frm 00107
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
33307
rules. The new footnote will state that
Addendum O is not applicable to nonU.S. insurance companies.
NSCC inadvertently failed to update
Footnote 1 when it amended Addendum
O earlier this year to permit non-U.S.
entities to apply to be Mutual Fund/
Insurance Services Members, Fund
Members, and Insurance Carrier/
Retirement Services Members.4 Those
changes had the effect of making
Addendum O inapplicable only to nonU.S. insurance companies since NSCC
did not establish membership standards
for non-U.S. insurance companies. This
current rule change updates Footnote 1.
NSCC states that the proposed rule
change is consistent with the
requirements of Section 17A of the Act 5
and the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder by making
technical corrections to NSCC’s rules for
internal consistency.
B. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Burden on Competition
NSCC does not believe that the
proposed rule change will have any
impact or impose any burden on
competition.
C. Self-Regulatory Organization’s
Statement on Comments on the
Proposed Rule Change Received From
Members, Participants, or Others
NSCC has not solicited or received
written comments relating to the
proposed rule change. NSCC will notify
the Commission of any written
comments it receives.
III. Date of Effectiveness of the
Proposed Rule Change and Timing for
Commission Action
The foregoing rule change has become
effective pursuant to Section
19(b)(3)(A)(iii) of the Act 6 and Rule
19b–4(f)(4) 7 thereunder because it
effects a change in an existing service of
a registered clearing agency that does
not adversely affect the safeguarding of
securities and funds in the custody or
control of the clearing agency or for
which it is responsible and does not
significantly affect the respective rights
or obligations of the clearing agency or
persons using the service. At any time
within 60 days of the filing of the
proposed rule change, the Commission
may summarily abrogate such rule
change if it appears to the Commission
that such action is necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for
the protection of investors, or otherwise
4 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59413 (Feb.
18, 2009), 74 FR 8298 (Feb. 24, 2009).
5 15 U.S.C. 78q–1.
6 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(3)(A)(ii).
7 17 CFR 240.19b–4(f)(2).
E:\FR\FM\10JYN1.SGM
10JYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 131 (Friday, July 10, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33293-33307]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-16318]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-60215; File No. SR-NYSE-2006-92]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; New York Stock Exchange LLC; Order
Approving Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 4, To
Amend NYSE Rule 452 and Corresponding Listed Company Manual Section
402.08 To Eliminate Broker Discretionary Voting for the Election of
Directors, Except for Companies Registered Under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, and To Codify Two Previously Published Interpretations
That Do Not Permit Broker Discretionary Voting for Material Amendments
to Investment Advisory Contracts With an Investment Company
July 1, 2009.
I. Introduction
On October 24, 2006, the New York Stock Exchange LLC (``Exchange''
or ``NYSE'') filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission
(``Commission''), pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder,\2\ a
proposed rule change to amend NYSE Rule 452 and corresponding Section
402.08 of the Listed Company Manual (``Manual'') to eliminate broker
discretionary voting for the election of directors. On May 23, 2007,
the Exchange filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change to
exempt companies registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940
(``1940 Act'') from the ban on broker discretionary voting for the
election of directors. On June 28, 2007, the Exchange filed Amendment
No. 2 to the proposed rule change, to codify two previously published
interpretations \3\ that do not permit broker discretionary voting for
material amendments to investment advisory contracts with an investment
company. On February 26, 2009, the Exchange filed and withdrew
Amendment No. 3 to the proposed rule change for technical reasons. On
February 26, 2009, the Exchange filed Amendment No. 4 to the proposed
rule change. Amendment No. 4 superseded and replaced the proposal in
its entirety. The Commission published the proposed rule change, as
modified by Amendment No. 4, for comment in the Federal Register on
March 6, 2009.\4\ The Commission received 153 comments from 137
commenters on the proposal.\5\ This order approves the proposed rule
change, as modified by Amendment No. 4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ See Securities Exchange Act Release Nos. 30697 (May 13,
1992), 57 FR 21434 (May 20, 1992) (SR-NYSE-92-05) (approval order)
and 52569 (October 6, 2005), 70 FR 60118 (October 14, 2005) (SR-
NYSE-2005-61) (notice of filing and immediate effectiveness).
\4\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 59464 (February 26,
2009), 74 FR 9864 (March 6, 2009) (``Notice'').
\5\ See Comment letters in the Commission's Public Reference
Room or on the Commission's Web site at https://www.sec.gov. For a
complete list of comment letters and the short cites to letters used
here, see Appendix A, attached hereto.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Description of the Proposal and Background
A. Description of the Proposal
The Exchange proposes amending NYSE Rule 452 and Section 402.08 of
the Manual (together, ``NYSE Rule 452'') to eliminate broker
discretionary voting for all elections of directors at shareholder
meetings held on or after January 1, 2010,\6\ whether contested or not,
except for companies registered under the 1940 Act. Currently, NYSE
Rule 452 permits brokers to vote without voting instructions from the
beneficial owner on uncontested elections of directors.\7\
Specifically, the NYSE proposal would add to the list of enumerated
items for which a member generally may not give a proxy to vote without
instructions from the beneficial owner, the ``election of directors.''
The proposal contains a specific exception, however, for companies
registered under the 1940 Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The proposed change to NYSE Rule 452 would not apply to a
meeting that was originally scheduled to be held prior to January 1,
2010, but was properly adjourned to a date on or after the effective
date.
\7\ As discussed in more detail below, under current NYSE Rule
452 a broker can vote without instruction from the beneficial owner
provided ``the person in the member organization giving or
authorizing the giving of the proxy has no knowledge of any contest
as to the action to be taken at the meeting and provided such action
is adequately disclosed to stockholders and does not include
authorization for a merger, consolidation or any matter which may
affect substantially the rights or privileges of such stock.'' See
current NYSE Rule 452.10(3). Items where a broker is allowed to vote
without specific instructions from the beneficial owner under Rule
452 are often referred to as ``routine'' matters. NYSE Rule 452 also
currently contains a list of eighteen enumerated items where the
broker may not vote without specific voting instructions from the
beneficial owner. See Notice, supra note 4 and infra note 14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, the Exchange proposes amending NYSE Rule 452 to codify
two previously published interpretations.\8\ First, the NYSE proposes
codifying that NYSE Rule 452 would preclude broker discretionary voting
on a matter that materially amends an investment advisory contract with
an investment company. Second, the NYSE proposes codifying that a
material amendment to an investment advisory contract would include any
proposal to obtain shareholder approval of an investment company's
investment advisory contract with a new investment adviser for which
shareholder approval is required by the 1940 Act and the rules
thereunder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The codification will place the interpretations into the
rule text of Rule 452.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Background
A shareholder of a public company may hold shares either directly,
as the record holder, or indirectly, as the beneficial holder, with the
shares held in the name of the beneficial shareholder's broker-dealer,
bank nominee, or custodian (``securities intermediary''), which is the
record holder. The latter generally is referred to as holding
securities in ``street name.''
The NYSE's discretionary voting rule dates back to 1937.
Historically, the majority of shareholders held their shares directly
as record holders. In 1976, for example, shareholders held
approximately 71% of securities of record (in their own name), while
only approximately 29% of securities were held by securities
intermediaries in street name.\9\ The number of beneficial owners
holding securities in street name, however, has increased significantly
since 1976,\10\ with the result that securities intermediaries, on
behalf of beneficial owners, now hold a substantial majority of
exchange traded
[[Page 33294]]
securities.\11\ As a result, NYSE's discretionary voting rule has taken
on increased significance in the voting of corporate shares at annual
meetings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ Final Report of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
on the Practice of Recording the Ownership of Securities in the
Records of the Issuer in Other Than the Name of the Beneficial Owner
of Such Securities (December 3, 1976), at 54.
\10\ This is due, among other things, to the advent of margin
accounts, technological developments, and clearing efficiencies.
\11\ It has been estimated that approximately 85% of exchange
traded shares are held by securities intermediaries in street name.
See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 50758 (November 30, 2004),
69 FR 70852 (December 7, 2004) (noting that, at the end of 2002, the
Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') had on deposit approximately 84%
of the shares issued by domestic companies listed on the NYSE and
approximately 88% of the shares issued by domestic companies listed
on the Nasdaq Stock Exchange). Securities held in ``street name'' by
securities intermediaries are deposited at the DTC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under Rule 451, when a public company furnishes proxy materials to
its record shareholders, securities intermediaries that hold securities
in street name must deliver the proxy materials to the beneficial
shareholders within a certain time frame and request voting
instructions from the beneficial shareholders.\12\ If beneficial
shareholders return voting instructions, the securities intermediaries
vote their shares accordingly. However, if beneficial shareholders do
not return voting instructions, securities intermediaries may, in
certain situations, vote their shares at the intermediaries'
discretion. Specifically, if voting instructions have not been received
by the tenth day preceding the meeting date, under current NYSE Rule
452, brokers may vote on behalf of the beneficial shareholders on
certain matters where there is no contest and the item does not include
authorization for a merger, consolidation, or any matter which may
substantially affect the rights or privileges of the stock.\13\ The
rule also contains eighteen specific items on which the broker
generally may not vote without instructions from the beneficial
owner.\14\ Items where the broker can vote without instructions are
referred to as ``routine'' matters. Among other matters, the
``uncontested'' election of directors is considered a ``routine''
matter under current NYSE Rule 452, and thus can be voted by the broker
in its discretion if the beneficial owner has not returned voting
instructions within the required time period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See NYSE Rule 451(b)(1) (providing, in part, that for
matters which may be voted without instructions under Rule 452, if
voting instructions ``are not received by the tenth day before the
meeting, the proxy may be given at discretion by the owner of record
of the stock; provided * * * the proxy soliciting material is
transmitted to the beneficial owner of the stock * * * at least
fifteen days before the meeting.''); see also Rule 14b-1, 17 CFR
240.14b-1. Rule 14b-1 under the Act does not require brokers or
dealers to request voting instructions from beneficial owners, but
they are required under that Rule to forward the proxy materials to
the beneficial owners within a certain timeframe. However, Rule 14b-
2, 17 CFR 240.14b-2, which applies to banks that exercise fiduciary
powers, requires banks to forward proxy materials to beneficial
owners within a certain timeframe, as well as an executed proxy or a
request for voting instructions.
\13\ See supra note 7.
\14\ See Notice, supra note 4. Presently, NYSE Rule 452 lists 18
specific matters that cannot be voted by the broker without
instructions and are often referred to as ``non-routine'' matters.
These 18 categories are a matter that: (1) Is not submitted to
stockholders by means of a proxy statement comparable to that
specified in Schedule 14-A of the Commission; (2) is the subject of
a counter-solicitation, or is part of a proposal made by a
stockholder which is being opposed by management (i.e., a contest);
(3) relates to a merger or consolidation (except when the company's
proposal is to merge with its own wholly owned subsidiary, provided
its shareholders dissenting thereto do not have rights of
appraisal); (4) involves right of appraisal; (5) authorizes
mortgaging of property; (6) authorizes or creates indebtedness or
increases the authorized amount of indebtedness; (7) authorizes or
creates a preferred stock or increases the authorized amount of an
existing preferred stock; (8) alters the terms or conditions of
existing stock or indebtedness; (9) involves waiver or modification
of preemptive rights (except when the company's proposal is to waive
such rights with respect to shares being offered pursuant to stock
option or purchase plans involving the additional issuance of not
more than 5% of the company's outstanding common shares); (10)
changes existing quorum requirements with respect to stockholder
meetings; (11) alters voting provisions or the proportionate voting
power of a stock, or the number of its votes per share (except where
cumulative voting provisions govern the number of votes per share
for election of directors and the company's proposal involves a
change in the number of its directors by not more than 10% or not
more than one); (12) authorizes the implementation of any equity
compensation plan, or any material revision to the terms of any
existing equity compensation plan (whether or not stockholder
approval of such plan is required by subsection 8 of Section 303A of
the Exchange's Listed Company Manual); (13) authorizes (a) a new
profit-sharing or special remuneration plan, or a new retirement
plan, the annual cost of which will amount to more than 10% of
average annual income before taxes for the preceding five years, or
(b) the amendment of an existing plan which would bring its cost
above 10% of such average annual income before taxes, but exceptions
may be made in cases of (a) retirement plans based on agreement or
negotiations with labor unions (or which have been or are to be
approved by such unions), and (b) any related retirement plan for
benefit of non-union employees having terms substantially equivalent
to the terms of such union-negotiated plan, which is submitted for
action of stockholders concurrently with such union-negotiated plan;
(14) changes the purposes or powers of a company to an extent which
would permit it to change to a materially different line of business
and it is the company's stated intention to make such a change; (15)
authorizes the acquisition of property, assets, or a company, where
the consideration to be given has a fair value approximating 20% or
more of the market value of the previously outstanding shares; (16)
authorizes the sale or other disposition of assets or earning power
approximating 20% or more of those existing prior to the
transaction; (17) authorizes a transaction not in the ordinary
course of business in which an officer, director or substantial
security holder has a direct or indirect interest; and (18) reduces
earned surplus by 51% or more, or reduces earned surplus to an
amount less than the aggregate of three years' common stock
dividends computed at the current dividend rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With the large proportion of shares now held in street name, the
impact of the broker vote on the election of directors has become
increasingly significant.\15\ In the view of some commenters, brokers
tend to vote in accordance with management's recommendation.\16\
According to the NYSE, in recent years its interpretation of a
``contested election'' has been questioned by a variety of persons,\17\
as an increasing number of proxy campaigns have targeted the election
of directors without a formal contest. These campaigns generally do not
involve a competing slate of directors or a formal counter-solicitation
opposed by management, and hence, are not considered ``contests'' by
the NYSE under NYSE Rule 452.\18\ Examples of these campaigns include
``just vote no'' or ``withhold'' campaigns, where one or more investors
express dissatisfaction with the performance of the company or its
management, and urge shareholders to withhold their votes for one or
more of management's nominees for director. NYSE views director
elections subject to these campaigns as eligible for broker
discretionary voting under current Rule 452.\19\ Concerns have been
expressed that, in certain ``just vote no'' or ``withhold'' campaigns,
the broker vote for management has made the difference and allowed
directors subject to these campaigns to be elected, which would not
have happened but for NYSE's discretionary voting rule.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See e.g., FSBA 2 Letter; see generally AFSCME Letter; CII 4
Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; CTW Letter; CTW 2 Letter; and FSBA
Letter.
\16\ See CFA 2 Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA
Letter; Cox Letter; CTW Letter; CTW 2 Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass
Lewis Letter; Hermes Equity Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; OPERS
Letter; Relational Investors Letter; TIAA-CREF Letter; and Trillium
Letter; see also Notice, supra note 4; Report and Recommendation of
the Proxy Working Group, dated June 5, 2006 (``PWG Report''), at 9.
\17\ See Notice, supra note 4.
\18\ See NYSE Rule 452.11(2).
\19\ See Notice, supra note 4.
\20\ See AFSCME Letter; CalPERS 3 Letter; CtW Letter; CtW 2
Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; and Glass Lewis Letter; see also
PWG Report, infra note 16, at 9. Several commenters stated that
rather than eliminating the broker vote for all elections of
directors the Commission should address the problem by making NYSE
redefine what constitutes a contested election, see ABA Fed. Reg.
Letter; ABC Letter; Alston Letter; BB&T Letter; see also Suburban
Letter (urging further consideration of this alternative), and make
alternative proxy contest strategies such as ``just vote no''
campaigns a contest that is not subject to broker discretionary
voting under NYSE Rule 452. See ABC Letter; ABC 2 Letter; ABC 3
Letter; Alston Letter; Broadridge Letter (suggesting that the NYSE
rules be defined to eliminate broker votes where there is a
controversy, such as a ``just vote no'' campaign); see also ABA Fed.
Reg. Letter. The Commission notes that the Proxy Working Group, see
infra note 21, considered this approach but noted that expanding the
definition of contest to include ``just vote no'' campaigns,
especially in light of the increased use of the internet to run
proxy contests, could raise significant practical difficulties, such
as defining what is a campaign or whether there are any limitations
or other minimal requirements for a contest. See PWG Report, infra
note 16, at 20. Moreover, the Commission notes that merely
redefining what constitutes a contested election would still allow
brokers who do not have an economic interest in the company to vote
in director elections that are uncontested and would not further the
goals of the proposed rule change. See infra notes 21 through 23 and
accompanying text. Finally, the Commission notes that the NYSE, in
making its proposal, reviewed the PWG Report, as well as comments
submitted to the NYSE on the PWG recommendation. The NYSE states in
its rule filing that its proposal on Rule 452 was being made in
light of the recommendations of the Proxy Working Group and its own
conclusions that the election of directors should no longer be
deemed a ``routine matter'' under its rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 33295]]
In April 2005, the NYSE formed a working group to review its rules
regarding the proxy voting process (``Proxy Working Group''). The Proxy
Working Group was composed of representatives from listed companies,
NYSE member organizations, lawyers, institutional investors, and
individual investors.\21\ The Proxy Working Group reviewed applicable
NYSE rules relating to the proxy process and proxy fees, with a
particular focus on NYSE Rule 452.\22\ The Proxy Working Group
ultimately issued a report recommending that the election of directors
be ineligible for broker discretionary voting under NYSE Rule 452, with
the result that brokers holding shares in street name could not vote on
the election of directors, whether the election is contested or
uncontested, without specific voting instructions from the beneficial
owners. The Proxy Working Group believed that the election of directors
could no longer be viewed as a ``routine'' matter in the life of a
corporation. According to the Proxy Working Group, it ``is well
established under law * * * [that] `the business and affairs of every
corporation * * * shall be managed by or under the direction of' the
board of directors. Investors, courts, regulators and others expect
directors to be accountable for the corporate decision-making process,
and the primary way that accountability is expressed is through the
director election process.'' \23\ The Proxy Working Group concluded
that ``[d]irectors are simply too important to the corporation for
their election to ever be considered routine.'' \24\ Although the Proxy
Working Group recognized that the proposed change to Rule 452 may
result in increased costs, it believed that ``it is a cost required to
be paid for better corporate governance * * *.'' \25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Members of the Proxy Working Group at the time of the PWG
Report were: Larry W. Sonsini, Chairman, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich &
Rosati; Rosemary Berkery, Executive Vice President and General
Counsel, Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc., represented by Kevin Moynihan of
Merrill Lynch & Co.; Glenn Booraem, Principal and Assistant Fund
Controller, Vanguard Group; Peter Clapman, Senior Vice President and
Chief Counsel for Corporate Governance, TIAA-CREF; Margaret Foran,
Vice President-Corporate Governance & Corporate Secretary, Pfizer,
Inc.; Gary Glynn, President, US. Steel Pension Fund; Amy Goodman,
Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP; Richard H. Koppes, Of Counsel,
Jones Day; Jeffrey L. McWaters, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Amerigroup Corporation; Stephen P. Norman, Corporate
Secretary, American Express Company; James E. Parsons, Corporate and
Securities Counsel, Exxon Mobil Corporation; Judith Smith, Managing
Director, Morgan Stanley & Co.; Esta Stecher, Executive Vice
President and General Counsel, Goldman Sachs & Co., represented by
Beverly O'Toole of Goldman Sachs & Co.; and Kurt Stocker, Professor,
Northwestern University, Medill School of Journalism. See PWG
Report, supra note 16. The Exchange attached the PWG Report as part
of the proposal. In August 2007, the Proxy Working Group issued an
addendum to its report (``Addendum''), available as part of the
Exchange's proposal.
\22\ In particular, the Proxy Working Group looked at NYSE Rules
450 to 460 and 465.
\23\ See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21 (citing Del. Code tit.
8, Section 141(b) (2005)).
\24\ See id.
\25\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In August 2007, the Proxy Working Group issued an Addendum to its
report, recommending that the proposed change to NYSE Rule 452 should
not apply to investment companies registered under the 1940 Act. The
Proxy Working Group concluded that an exception for registered
investment companies was appropriate given the fact, among other
things, that they are subject to a unique regulatory regime.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ See Addendum, supra note 21, at 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Summary of Comments
The Commission received 153 comment letters from 137
commenters.\27\ Twenty-eight commenters explicitly supported the
proposal,\28\ and twelve commenters explicitly opposed the
proposal.\29\ Ninety-seven of the commenters neither explicitly
supported nor opposed the proposal.\30\ Ninety-five of these ninety-
seven commenters expressed concerns with the proposal,\31\ and ninety-
three urged that the Commission not take
[[Page 33296]]
action on the proposal at this time.\32\ One commenter stated that the
proposal raised sufficient issues to warrant consideration by the full
Commission at a public meeting, and that consideration of the proposal
by delegated authority was inappropriate.\33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ See supra note 5. NYSE also received 39 letters on the PWG
Report and Recommendation related to amending Rule 452. NYSE
submitted these letters as part of the proposal. See discussion in
Notice, supra note 4, and Exhibit 2 to the NYSE's proposed rule
change.
\28\ See AFSCME Letter; BCIMC Letter; CalPERS Letter; CalPERS 2
Letter; CalPERS 3 Letter; CalSTRS Letter; CCGG Letter; CCGG 2
Letter; CFA Letter; CFA 2 Letter; City of London Letter; CII Letter;
CII 2 Letter; CII 3 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter;
Corporate Governance Letter; Cox Letter; CtW Letter; CtW 2 Letter;
Dobkin Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2 Letter; Glass Lewis Letter;
GovernanceMetrics Letter; Gratzer Letter (``[e]liminate the rule'');
Hagberg Letter; Hermes Equity Letter; ICI 4 Letter (supporting the
proposal as amended); Newground Letter; OPERS Letter; PWG Letter
(while the PWG continued to believe that the election of directors
could no longer be considered a routine event in the life of a
corporation, it also believed that the Commission should consider
using the opportunity created by the NYSE's proposal to review the
broader proxy process) (see discussion at Section IV.F, Commission
Consideration of the Entire Proxy Process, further below); Railpen
Letter; Relational Investors Letter; Sod'ali Letter; TIAA-CREF
Letter; and Trillium Letter.
\29\ See ABC Letter; ABC 2 Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Altman Letter;
AmEx Letter; Astoria Financial Letter; BB&T Letter; Corning Letter;
FedEx Letter; FPL Letter; NIRI Letter; Stanton Letter; Suffolk
Letter; and UQM Letter.
\30\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter;
Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Broadridge Letter; Boeing
Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter;
Central Vermont Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter; Chevron Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter;
Computershare Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; ConocoPhillips
Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins
Letter; DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon
Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; First
Financial Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter; General Mills
Letter; GM Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter;
Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock
Letter; International Paper Letter; Intel Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter;
McKesson Letter; Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS
Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Office Depot Letter;
OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Royal
Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter; SCC Letter; Schwab Letter;
Securities Transfer Letter; SIFMA Letter; STA Letter; Standard
Letter; StockTrans Letter; Suburban Letter; Superlattice Letter;
Sutherland Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter;
Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter;
Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
\31\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter;
Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business
Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Central Vermont
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Chevron
Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare
Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental
Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter;
Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; First Financial Letter;
Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter; Harman Letter;
Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock; Intel Letter;
International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter;
J.P. Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco Letter;
MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg.
Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; P&G
Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair
Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter;
Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C
Letter; SCC Letter; SCC 2 Letter; Schwab Letter; Securities Transfer
Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter; Suburban
Letter; Superlattice Letter; Sutherland Letter; Synalloy Letter;
Textron Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon
Letter; Wachtell Letter; Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool
Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
\32\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter;
Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business
Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Central Vermont
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Chevron
Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare
Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental
Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter;
Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; First Financial Letter;
Furniture Brands Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Gulf Letter; Harman Letter;
Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel
Letter; International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson
Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; Manifest Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco
Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA
Sec. Reg. Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail
Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum Letter;
Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest
Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder
Letter; S&C Letter; SCC Letter; Schwab Letter; Securities Transfer
Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice
Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter;
Veeco Letter; Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter; Washington Banking
Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
\33\ See SCC 2 Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Discussion and Analysis of Comment Letters
After careful review and consideration of the comment letters, the
Commission finds that the proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 4, is consistent with the Act and the rules and
regulations thereunder applicable to a national securities
exchange.\34\ In particular, the Commission finds that the proposed
rule change is consistent with the requirements of Section 6(b)(5) of
the Act,\35\ which provides that the rules of the exchange must be
designed to prevent fraudulent and manipulative acts and practices, to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to foster cooperation
and coordination with persons engaged in regulating, clearing,
settling, processing information with respect to, and facilitating
transactions in securities, to remove impediments to and perfect the
mechanism of a free and open market and a national market system, and,
in general, to protect investors and the public interest; and are not
designed to permit unfair discrimination between customers, issuers,
brokers, or dealers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ In approving the proposed rule change, the Commission
considered the proposed rule change's impact on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. 15 U.S.C. 78c(f). The Commission
notes that several commenters believed that the NYSE's proposal
would make the proxy voting system less efficient. See Central
Vermont Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; First Financial Letter;
Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter;
Provident Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; and Veeco Letter;
see also Astoria Financial Letter (``[F]or many public companies,
broker voting remains the most efficient means to obtain a quorum
for shareholder meetings''); BB&T Letter (cost of obtaining quorum
absent broker discretionary voting would ``be an enormous loss to
investors,'' and that ``redefinition of what constitutes a
`contested' election is the most efficient manner to address the
real corporate governance concerns implied by the Amendment''); and
Governance Professionals Letter (``The focus should be on solutions
that contain costs and make the proxy voting system more efficient,
rather than on increased costs and inefficiency.''); but see
Relational Investors Letter (``The new administrative burdens
created by this amendment are far outweighed by the benefits to
efficient and effective corporate governance.''); see also PWG
Report, supra note 16. As discussed further below, the Commission
believes that the NYSE's proposed rule change should better
enfranchise shareholders, and thereby enhance corporate governance
and accountability, by assuring that voting is determined by those
with an economic interest in the company on matters as critical as
the election of directors, rather than permitting brokers to cast
votes without instructions for shares beneficially owned by their
customers, when the broker has no economic interest in those shares.
Therefore, the Commission believes the NYSE's proposed rule change
should protect investors and the public interest. Further, the
Commission does not believe that the proposed change will
necessarily make the voting process materially less efficient. The
mechanics of the proxy voting procedure as to how beneficial owners
return voting instructions to their brokers are not changing. NYSE
Rule 452 would continue to allow the broker to vote on other routine
matters, such as the ratification of independent auditors, which
will help companies meet quorum requirements, and therefore
alleviate the efficiency concerns raised by commenters. As discussed
further below, pursuant to Section 19(b) and after reviewing the
comments, the Commission believes the proposed rule change should be
approved.
\35\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission, Congress, states, investors and other market
participants have long recognized the critical role that directors play
in a corporation. The board of directors has ultimate responsibility
for the management of the business and the affairs of the company.\36\
Shareholders, through their vote, vest with the directors they elect
this critical duty to manage the company with which they have entrusted
their resources.\37\ The board of directors generally does not
participate in the daily business affairs of the company. It delegates
these responsibilities to management the board selects and supervises.
The board, however, ultimately is accountable to shareholders for
corporate decisions.\38\ The most fundamental way in which shareholders
can ensure that directors remain accountable to them for the directors'
performance of these critical duties is through the director election
process.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See, e.g., Del. Code Ann. Tit. 8, Section 141(a) (``The
business and affairs of every corporation organized under this
chapter shall be managed by or under the direction of a board of
directors, except as may be otherwise provided in this chapter or in
its certificate of incorporation.'').
\37\ See e.g., PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21; see also Bruce
A. Toth and Jason L. Booth, The Board of Directors, Corp. Prac.
Series (BNA), at A-3.
\38\ See Toth and Booth, The Board of Directors, Corp. Prac.
Series, at A-3.
\39\ See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed below, the Commission believes that it is reasonable
and consistent with the Act for NYSE to determine that the election of
directors should no longer be an item eligible for broker discretionary
voting, particularly given the large proportion of shares that today
are held in street name, the importance of corporate governance and
accountability expressed through the election process, and the concern
that the broker vote could potentially distort election results.\40\ As
the Proxy Working Group also concluded, the election of directors is
not a ``routine'' issue for either the corporation or the shareholders;
it is a key event in the operation and direction of the corporation and
the shareholders' exercise of their rights and interests as the owners
of the corporation.\41\ As such, the Commission believes that NYSE's
proposal should better enfranchise shareholders by helping assure that
votes on matters as critical as the election of directors are
determined by those with an economic interest in the company,\42\
rather than the broker who has no such economic interest, and also
should enhance corporate governance and accountability to shareholders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ Broker votes can distort election results both by changing
the outcome of an election and by creating a perception that a
candidate (or group of candidates) has greater support than would be
the case considering only the votes of beneficial owners. That
perception, and in particular an understanding of the lack of
substantial support for a director, even if he or she receives
enough votes to be elected, can affect the decisions of the board
and shareholders. See e.g., PWG Report, supra note 16, at 9 and n.
12.
\41\ See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21.
\42\ The Commission recognizes that, even under the NYSE's
proposal, certain situations will continue to exist where a person
with an economic interest in a company may not be able to vote the
shares, such as when shares are purchased after the record date for
a shareholder meeting. Nevertheless, the NYSE's proposal should make
substantial strides in aligning a securityholder's voting decision
on director elections with the economic interest in the shares, as
it will prohibit a broker holding shares in street name, who does
not have an economic interest in the company, from voting on behalf
of the beneficial owner in director elections.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission also believes that the NYSE's proposed change
codifying existing NYSE interpretations of NYSE Rule 452 is consistent
with the
[[Page 33297]]
requirements of the Act. As discussed below, these proposed amendments
will codify two previous interpretations that were adopted by the NYSE
to help ensure the full and effective voting rights of investment
company shareholders on material matters.\43\ The Commission believes
that these changes are consistent with the requirements under Section
6(b)(5) of the Act\44\ that the rules of the Exchange be designed to
promote just and equitable principles of trade, to remove impediments
to and perfect the mechanism of a free and open market and, in general,
to protect investors and the public interest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ See supra note 3. Two commenters supported the proposal
regarding investment advisory contracts. See CFA 2 Letter and ICI 4
Letter.
\44\ 15 U.S.C. 78f(b)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Increased Costs for Companies To Achieve Quorum
Several commenters believed that the NYSE's proposal to eliminate
the broker discretionary vote would make it more difficult for
companies to obtain a quorum\45\ and elect directors.\46\ Some
commenters believed that the relatively low retail shareholder
participation rate in corporate elections would increase the difficulty
of obtaining a quorum under NYSE's proposal.\47\ Commenters also stated
that the proposal would increase the cost to a company of obtaining a
quorum,\48\ by requiring them to incur higher proxy solicitation costs
\49\ in order to communicate with shareholders, urge them to
participate in director elections \50\ and support board-nominated
candidates.\51\ For example, one commenter believed that it would need
``to retain a proxy solicitor even in the absence of a `contest' * * *
just to attempt to achieve a quorum.'' \52\ Several commenters noted
that smaller issuers, in particular, would be negatively affected by
the NYSE proposal, given their tendency to have a higher proportion of
retail shareholders,\53\ so that smaller issuers would have to expend a
disproportionate amount of additional resources to solicit shareholder
votes, and obtain a quorum.\54\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Alston Letter;
Altman Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter;
Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter;
CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce
Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter; Computershare
Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins
Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; FPL
Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Harman Letter; Helmerich Letter; ICI Letter; ICI 2 Letter;
ICI 3 Letter; ICI 4 Letter; Intel Letter; International Paper
Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; Medco Letter; NS Letter;
NYSBA Sec. Reg. Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Royal Gold Letter; Ryder Letter; S&C Letter; Schwab Letter;
Securities Transfer Letter; STA Letter; Suburban Letter; Textron
Letter; TI Letter; Unitrin Letter; UQM Letter; Verizon Letter;
Wachtell Letter; Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel
Letter; Xerox Letter; YRC Letter; see also CII Letter; and CII 2
Letter; see also Sutherland Letter.
\46\ See ICI Letter; ICI 2 Letter; ICI 3, and ICI 4 Letter.
\47\ See Alston Letter; Intel Letter; S&C Letter; Suburban
Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
\48\ See ABC Letter; Agilent Letter; Astoria Financial Letter;
Central Vermont Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; First Financial
Letter; ICI 3 Letter; Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster
Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident Letter; Quest Letter; Schwab Letter;
Suburban Letter; Suffolk Bank Letter; Synalloy Letter; Veeco Letter;
and Wachtell Letter; see also Sutherland Letter.
\49\ See ABC Letter; Chamber of Commerce Letter; Chamber of
Commerce 2 Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; ICI 2 Letter;
ICI 3 Letter; ICI 4 Letter; NIRI Letter; Praxair Letter; Quest
Letter; Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter; Schwab Letter; STA Letter;
Suburban Letter; Suffolk Bank Letter; Textron Letter; and YRC
Letter; see also ABC Letter.
\50\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC Letter; Aetna Letter; Aglient
Letter; Alston Letter; Altman Letter; AmEx Letter; Anadarko Letter;
ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BB&T Letter; BNSF
Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter;
Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; CSX Letter;
Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; FPL Letter; General
Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; Harman
Letter; International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson
Letter; Medco Letter; MGE Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor
Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Praxair
Letter; Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter; SCC Letter; Synalloy Letter;
Textron Letter; UQM Letter, Whirlpool Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC
Letter.
\51\ See FedEx Letter.
\52\ See Suburban Letter; see also ABC Letter (stating that in
``2004, had the broker vote not been in effect, 85 percent of NYSE
companies would have been working to reach quorum in the final nine
days before their meetings while 23 percent would not have reached
quorum by the meeting date. * * * [C]ompanies uncertain of their
ability to reach quorum * * * would be forced to hire proxy
solicitors. * * * '').
\53\ See ABC 3 Letter; Agilent Letter; Alston Letter; AmEx
Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Computershare Letter; Connecticut
Water Letter; First Financial Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Jacksonville Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor
Letter; Provident Letter; Quest Letter; SCC Letter; and Synalloy
Letter; see also Sutherland Letter (stating that the exemption
should also apply to business development companies).
\54\ See ABA Fed. Reg. Letter; ABC 3 Letter; Agilent Letter;
Alston Letter; AmEx Letter; Astoria Financial Letter; Central
Vermont Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Computershare Letter;
Connecticut Water Letter; Crescent Letter; First Financial Letter;
Governance Professionals Letter; Helmerich Letter; Jacksonville
Letter; McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident
Letter; Quest Letter; Synalloy Letter; and Washington Banking
Letter; see also Sutherland Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters also expressed concern with, or noted the
shortcomings of, the current system of communicating with
shareholders,\55\ and stated that the proposal should be evaluated in
connection with a review of shareholder communication rules.\56\ Three
commenters expressed concern that the proposed rule change could
magnify the difficulties issuers have in communicating with
shareholders, especially with objecting beneficial owners
(``OBOs'').\57\ Commenters recommended that Commission rules be revised
to facilitate the ability of issuers to contact shareholders
directly.\58\ According to one commenter, ``[p]ermitting issuers to
communicate with their shareholders * * * will enable them to `get out
the vote,' enhancing their ability to obtain needed quorums and
successfully re-solicit shareholders, if necessary.'' \59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\55\ See Alcoa Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable
Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chevron Letter;
Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare Letter; ConocoPhillips
Letter; Continental Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX
Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter;
Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; FPL
Letter; GE Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Gulf Letter;
Helmerich Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter; International
Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; Manifest Letter; Medco Letter; MGE
Letter; NIRI Letter; NS Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter;
Otter Tail Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Platinum Letter;
Praxair Letter; PWG Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold
Letter; Ryder Letter; STA Letter; Securities Transfer Letter;
Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter; Textron
Letter; Unitrin Letter; Verizon Letter; Washington Banking Letter;
Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
\56\ See Aetna Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter;
Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business
Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter;
Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial
Letter; Computershare Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Continental
Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter;
Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; FedEx
Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; GE Letter; General
Mills Letter; GM Letter; Gulf Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell
Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel Letter; International Paper
Letter; Johnson Letter; NS Letter; Office Depot Letter; OTC Letter;
Otter Tail Letter; P&G Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter;
Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Ryder
Letter; STA Letter; Securities Transfer Letter; Standard Letter;
StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter; Textron Letter; TI Letter;
Unitrin Letter; Verizon Letter; Washington Banking Letter; Whirlpool
Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
\57\ See Alcoa Letter; Corning Letter; and NIRI Letter.
OBOs are shareholders who object to having their names and
addresses disclosed to companies whose shares they own.
\58\ See Alcoa Letter; Computershare Letter; Corning Letter; ICI
Letter; ICI 2 Letter; NIRI Letter; PWG Letter; STA Letter; and TI
Letter; see also Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter (stating that any
amendment to Rule 452 should be accompanied by an improved
shareholder communication system).
\59\ See ICI 2 Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters believed that quorum concerns were not a valid
reason for allowing brokers to continue to vote uninstructed shares in
the
[[Page 33298]]
election of directors.\60\ For example, one commenter believed that the
participation of institutional investors would assure a quorum for most
issuers, except for a limited number of small companies.\61\ Moreover,
several commenters believed that quorum concerns could be addressed
simply by including a ``routine'' item on the ballot,\62\ such as the
ratification of auditors,\63\ or with appropriate changes in state law
to permit shares held by brokers to count solely for purposes of
establishing quorum.\64\ Also, another commenter believed that
``issuers can communicate effectively to shareholders through
established, robust and efficient systems currently in place.'' \65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ See CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; FSBA Letter; FSBA 2
Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg Letter; and TIAA-CREF Letter;
see also CCGG Letter (elimination of U.S. broker non-votes would not
adversely impact the ability of Canadian issuers to obtain quorum).
\61\ See Glass Lewis Letter.
\62\ See Hagberg Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; and TIAA-CREF
Letter.
\63\ See CII Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA
Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg Letter; and TIAA-CREF Letter;
contra ICI 3 Letter (stating that ``[a]sking funds to take this
action for the sole purpose of achieving a quorum'' is unacceptable
since funds have not been required to ratify the selection of fund
auditors since 2001.).
\64\ See CalPERS Letter; Computershare Letter; FSBA 2 Letter;
ICI 2 Letter; S&C Letter; Sod'ali Letter; and TIAA-CREF Letter; see
also Suburban Letter (urging further consideration of this
alternative).
\65\ See SIFMA Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Commission acknowledges commenters' concerns regarding the
potential for the proposed rule change to impact the ability of some
companies to achieve quorum. For example, the Proxy Working Group
recognized that smaller issuers may have certain increased costs in
obtaining quorum due to the high percentage of shares held by retail
investors.\66\ However, as noted by several commenters, issuers with a
large institutional shareholder base or with another routine matter on
their proxies, such as ratification of independent auditors, should not
face material additional difficulties in achieving a quorum.\67\ The
Commission notes that a majority of companies other than registered
investment companies include the ratification of independent auditors
as a matter for shareholders to approve, even though such approval is
not required by law,\68\ so that these companies should not, as a
practical matter, encounter the quorum issue as articulated by the
commenters. Quorum concerns for other companies, including small
companies, may be addressed to the extent that these companies include
an item on their ballot that may be considered a routine matter. The
Commission also notes a report showing that, if NYSE's proposal were
implemented, most companies would nevertheless achieve quorum, albeit
at a date closer to their annual meetings than previously.\69\ More
fundamentally, however, although issuers may incur increased proxy
solicitation costs under the NYSE's proposal, the Commission agrees
with the NYSE and the Proxy Working Group that these costs are
justified by, among other things, assuring voting on matters as
critical as the election of directors can no longer be determined by
brokers without instructions from the beneficial owner, thereby
enhancing corporate governance and accountability.\70\ Moreover, to the
extent there are issues regarding establishing a quorum, we do not
believe having uninstructed votes cast on the election of a director by
broker-dealers who lack the shareholders' economic interests in the
corporation is the appropriate way to address the issue.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\66\ See Addendum, supra note 21, at 3; see also PWG Report,
supra note 16, at 21.
\67\ See CII Letter; CII 2 Letter; CII 4 Letter; Colorado PERA
Letter; Glass Lewis Letter; Hagberg Letter; and TIAA-CREF Letter.
\68\ See CII 4 Letter (stating that including an auditor
ratification ``resolution on the proxy is a step that many
corporations already take on their own and one that the Council
believes is a best practice for all public companies'').
\69\ See Broadridge Letter and attached report, Updated Analysis
of the Broker Vote, dated February 3, 2009. Moreover, the Commission
notes that NYSE's proposed rule change is consistent with the rules
of other self-regulatory organizations. For example, the Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. (``FINRA'') and The NASDAQ Stock
Market LLC (``Nasdaq'') do not permit broker discretionary voting
for their members, unless they do so pursuant to the rules of
another national securities exchange of which they are also a member
and the member clearly indicates which rule it is following. See
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (``NASD'') Rule
2260 and Nasdaq Rule 2260. We note that NYSE Rule 452 is a member
rule. Accordingly, NYSE members would follow the NYSE rule
regardless of where a security is listed. Further, while other self-
regulatory organizations currently allow discretionary voting, we
would expect these markets to make changes to conform to the NYSE's
new rules to eliminate any disparities involving voting depending on
where shares are held. See NYSE Amex Equities Rule 452 and Chicago
Board Options Exchange, Incorporated Rule 31.74.
\70\ See PWG Report, supra note 16, at 21 and Notice, supra note
4. With respect to concerns raised by commenters regarding
communications with shareholders, the Commission notes that the
proposed rule change would not alter the existing system of
shareholder communications, which is outside the scope of NYSE's
proposed rule change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed further below,\71\ the Commission believes that
shareholder education is important for encouraging retail shareholders
to vote, and could play a key role both in reducing any additional
proxy solicitation costs incurred by companies, as well as achieving
the policy goal of fostering investor participation in corporate
governance. The Commission notes that the Proxy Working Group has
established an Investor Education Sub-Committee. The Commission
supports the Proxy Working Group's efforts to develop, and encourages
the NYSE and its member firms to implement, an investor education
effort to inform investors about the amendments to NYSE Rule 452, the
proxy voting process, and the importance of voting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\71\ See infra Section IV.D., Shareholder Education.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Disenfranchising Retail Shareholders and Growing Influence of Third
Parties
Several commenters stated that the proposal could disenfranchise
individual shareholders,\72\ because eliminating broker discretionary
voting may be counter to shareholders' assumptions that their brokers
would vote on their behalf if they did not vote.\73\ Other commenters
believed that the proposed rule change would shift voting power toward
small blocks of voters \74\ and special interest groups wishing to use
minority stock positions to pursue their own special interests,\75\ and
non-investment objectives.\76\ Moreover, several commenters
[[Page 33299]]
expressed concern that retail shareholder participation in company
elections has decreased in recent years,\77\ especially under e-
proxy,\78\ so that the NYSE's proposal would shift disproportionate
weight to institutional investors,\79\ and increase power in the hands
of the few shareholders who vote.\80\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ See Aetna Letter; Alcoa Letter; Altman Letter; AmEx Letter;
Andarko Letter; Arvin Meritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter;
BNSF Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter;
Cardinal Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter;
Chevron Letter; Cigna Letter; Cincinnati Financial Letter;
Continental Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli
Lilly Letter; EV Letter; Fidelity Letter; First Financial Letter;
FPL Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; General Mills Letter; GM
Letter; Gulf Letter; Harman Letter; Illinois Stock Letter; Intel
Letter; International Paper Letter; Jacksonville Letter; Johnson
Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson Letter; Medco Letter; MGE
Letter; Monster Letter; NS Letter; Nucor Letter; Office Depot
Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer
Letter; Platinum Letter; Praxair Letter; Provident Letter; Provident
Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Realogy Letter; Routh Letter; Ryder
Letter; SCC Letter; STA Letter; Standard Letter; Stanton Letter;
StockTrans Letter; Superlattice Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron
Letter; TI Letter; Veeco Letter; Verizon Letter; Wachtell Letter;
Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox Letter; and YRC Letter.
\73\ See Aetna Letter; Alcoa Letter; AmEx Letter; Anadarko
Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis Letter; BNSF Letter;
Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter; Cardinal
Letter; Ceridian Letter; Cigna Letter; ConocoPhillips Letter;
Crescent Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli Lilly
Letter; FPL Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Harman Letter;
International Paper Letter; Johnson Letter; Medco Letter; NS Letter;
Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Praxair Letter;
Realogy Letter; Ryder Letter; STA Letter; Textron Letter; Verizon
Letter; Wachtell Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter.
\74\ See UQM Letter.
\75\ See Astoria Financial Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2 Letter;
and S&C Letter.
\76\ See Chamber of Commerce Letter and Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter.
\77\ See Agilent Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston Letter; Altman
Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chevron Letter; Computershare
Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; Corporate Governance Letter; DTE
Letter; Eli Lilly Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; First Financial
Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; Governance Professionals Letter;
McKesson Letter; Medco Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA
Sec. Reg. Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter;
Quest Letter; S&C Letter; Synalloy Letter; Veeco Letter; and
Wachtell Letter.
\78\ See AFSCME Letter; Agilent Letter; Alcoa Letter; Alston
Letter; Altman Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chevron Letter; CII 4
Letter; Colorado PERA Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; Corporate
Governance Letter; DTE Letter; Exxon Mobil Letter; First Financial
Letter; Furniture Brands Letter; Governance Professionals Letter;
McKesson Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; NYSBA Sec. Reg.
Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter;
S&C Letter; Synalloy Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
\79\ See Agilent Letter; Altman Letter; AmEx Letter; BB&T
Letter; Central Vermont Letter; Chevron Letter; Connecticut Water
Letter; Corning Letter; DTE Letter; First Financial Letter;
Furniture Brands Letter; Governance Professionals Letter; Intel
Letter; Jacksonville Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson Letter;
Medco Letter; Monster Letter; Nucor Letter; Provident Letter;
Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter; Stanton Letter; Synalloy
Letter; Veeco Letter; and Wachtell Letter.
\80\ See Alston Letter and NIRI Letter. Another commenter opined
that the proposal confuses civic governance with corporate
governance. See Suffolk Bank Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters also believed that eliminating broker
discretionary voting could increase the influence of proxy advisory
firms, which provide, among other things, voting recommendations to
their institutional investor clients.\81\ A number of commenters
expressed concerns about the degree of influence that proxy advisory
firms have in corporate elections.\82\ Other commenters expressed
concern that stock lending and financial derivatives,\83\ as well as
the impact of over-voting and under-voting,\84\ distort the shareholder
voting process. Commenters urged the Commission to consider these
issues in conjunction with the proposal.\85\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\81\ See Aetna Letter; Agilent Letter; Alcoa Letter; Altman
Letter; Anadarko Letter; ArvinMeritor Letter; Avery Letter; Avis
Letter; Boeing Letter; Business Roundtable Letter; CA Letter;
Central Vermont Letter; Ceridian Letter; Chamber of Commerce 2
Letter; Cigna Letter; Connecticut Water Letter; ConocoPhillips
Letter; CSX Letter; Cummins Letter; DTE Letter; Eaton Letter; Eli
Lilly Letter; First Financial Letter; FPL Letter; Furniture Brands
Letter; General Mills Letter; GM Letter; Governance Professionals
Letter; Harman Letter; Intel Letter; International Paper Letter;
Jacksonville Letter; Johnson Letter; J.P. Morgan Letter; McKesson
Letter; Medco Letter; Monster Letter; NIRI Letter; NS Letter; Nucor
Letter; Office Depot Letter; Peabody Letter; Pfizer Letter; Praxair
Letter; Provident Letter; Provident Financial Letter; Quest Letter;
Ryder Letter; SCC Letter; Synalloy Letter; Textron Letter; Veeco
Letter; Wachtell Letter; Whirlpool Letter; Xcel Letter; Xerox
Letter; and YRC Letter. Another commenter stated that the proposal
might result in a conflict of interest for proxy advisory firms. See
Cardinal Letter.
\82\ See Cincinnati Financial Letter; Computershare Letter;
Continental Letter; Corning Letter; Crescent Letter; EV Letter;
Exxon Mobil Letter; Fidelity Letter; First American Letter; Gulf
Letter; Helmerich Letter; Honeywell Letter; Illinois Stock Letter;
Manifest Letter; MGE Letter; OTC Letter; Otter Tail Letter; Platinum
Letter; Routh Letter; Royal Gold Letter; S&C Letter; Securities
Transfer Letter; Standard Letter; StockTrans Letter; Superlattice
Letter; TI Letter; and Washington Banking Letter.
Other commenters noted the lack of competition in the current
proxy distribution process. See SCC Letter; and STA Letter. Some
commenters suggested that the role of proxy service providers be
evaluated in conjunction with the proposal. See Cincinnati Financial
Letter; Continental Letter; Crescent Letter; EV Letter; Fidelity
Letter; First American