Trump hands power back to the CEO - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT观点

Trump hands power back to the CEO

The president and the SEC chair should beware of setting back shareholder rights

Donald Trump’s endorsement this week of a six-monthly reporting cycle for US-listed companies is far from his worst idea. Switching from quarterly earnings could encourage more strategic thinking by removing the three-monthly temptation for companies to “beat” analysts’ expectations. Unfortunately, it is exactly this strategic mindset that the US president lacks.

His preference for twice-yearly reporting is one of a series of deregulatory measures that he or his officials have announced, threatened or hinted at recently. Together they would work against corporate transparency, set back shareholder rights, push the balance of boardroom power too far towards chief executives and, at worst, open the door to self-dealing or fraud.

Since taking over in January, Securities and Exchange Commission chair Paul Atkins has aimed to cut “compliance burdens” on companies. Last week, on a visit to Europe, he told the FT the SEC would in future alert businesses about technical violations rather than first sending regulators to “bash down their door”.

Atkins has also taken issue with EU corporate sustainability directives and threatened to ban non-US companies from using International Financial Reporting Standards if rulemakers continue to press for disclosures on issues such as climate impact. In a speech last week, he urged the International Accounting Standards Board to “promote high-quality accounting standards that are focused solely on driving reliable financial reporting and are not used as a backdoor to achieve political or social agendas”.

Other measures include the SEC’s decision to let oil company Exxon automate voting by retail investors so their shares are counted in favour of management unless they opt out. On Wednesday, the SEC said it would no longer block companies from public markets if they banned shareholders from filing class-action lawsuits. Atkins, a crypto advocate, has also dropped investigations against cryptocurrency platforms.

The Financial Times favours, as far as possible, common and predictable corporate standards that allow investors to compare companies in different jurisdictions and that keep the cost of capital down. Where different regulators choose different paths — for instance, in corporate governance guidelines — a live-and-let-live approach should prevail, allowing investors to choose where to deploy their capital.

A shift to six-monthly reporting would bring the US in line with other large capital markets including the UK, EU and Singapore. But a firm mandate is not essential. Setting six months as the maximum reporting period would give companies a choice of whether to report more frequently, following their investors’ preference for quarterly or even more radical and frequent financial transparency, as the technology allows.

When it comes to sustainability, many investors and companies, particularly in Europe, are already edging towards greater disclosure of climate risks. What is damaging for the environment is also potentially ruinous for companies and their investors. Europe’s “agenda” is no more political than the one Trump and his officials are pursuing to sweep sustainability considerations from corporate reporting. Their repeated message that non-US watchdogs and companies must choose the American way smacks of extraterritorial over-reach.

As for activism, many executives would welcome a reduction in pressure. But lessening overall investor and regulatory scrutiny and removing tools such as lawsuits, which US shareholders can use to hold boards to account, would give chief executives too much leeway.

In his speech last week, Atkins set out a creditable goal: to “provide clear, predictable rules of the road so that [US] innovators can thrive”. But tearing up established measures for investor protection is no way to entice long-term capital.  

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

杨立昆的AI初创公司瞄准30亿欧元估值

从Meta离职的图灵奖得主正就筹集5亿欧元进行初步洽谈,计划于1月启动。

关于AI与大型科技公司的两种观点

AI带来的改变究竟有多大?

石头科技押注AI“清扫”扫地机器人市场

石头科技负责人称,机械臂和宠物狗粪识别等创新是生存关键。

卫星影像追踪特朗普对委内瑞拉施压的行动

照片、数据与视频显示,对尼古拉斯•马杜罗的军事压力不断升级,此前美国总统拒绝排除动武的可能。

预测市场与2025年的赌场心态

金融游戏化颠覆了传统的信任与监管格局。

体育赛事门票为何高得离谱?

围绕国际足联世界杯票价引发的喧嚣,最鲜明地凸显了疫情后“体验型”需求激增所带来的紧张关系。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×