Monthly Archives: August 2023

EU Adopts Long-Awaited Mandatory ESG Reporting Standards

Beth Sasfai is a Partner, and Michael Mencher and Emma Bichet are Special Counsels at Cooley LLP. This post is based on a Cooley memorandum by Ms. Sasfai, Mr. Mencher, Ms. Bichet, Steven Holm, and Jack Eastwood. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance (discussed on the Forum here) by Lucian A. Bebchuk and Roberto TallaritaFor Whom Corporate Leaders Bargain (discussed on the Forum here) and Stakeholder Capitalism in the Time of COVID (discussed on the Forum here) both by Lucian Bebchuk, Kobi Kastiel, Roberto Tallarita; and Restoration: The Role Stakeholder Governance Must Play in Recreating a Fair and Sustainable American Economy—A Reply to Professor Rock (discussed on the Forum here) by Leo E. Strine, Jr.

On July 31, 2023, the European Commission adopted the first set of ESRS. The ESRS soon will become law and will apply directly in all 27 EU member states, but not in the UK. Companies will need to report in compliance with these new ESRS as early as the 2024 reporting period.The standards are notable for their breadth and granularity, going well beyond the reporting requirements in other mandatory and voluntary ESG reporting frameworks. It is clear that companies in scope need to start getting ready to report to these new ESRS now.For further details on the companies covered by the CSRD, see Cooley’s related October 2022 client alert. READ MORE »

2023 S&P 500 New Director and Diversity Snapshot

Julie Daum is a Leader, North American Boards Practice, and Ann Yerger is a Corporate Governance Advisor at Spencer Stuart. This post is based on their Spencer Stuart memorandum. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes Politics and Gender in the Executive Suite (discussed on the Forum here) by Alma Cohen, Moshe Hazan, and David Weiss; Will Nasdaq’s Diversity Rules Harm Investors? (discussed on the Forum here) by Jesse M. Fried; and Duty and Diversity (discussed on the Forum here) by Chris Brummer and Leo E. Strine, Jr.

Looking ahead: How are boards future-preparing themselves?

Today’s boards face an increasingly complex business environment, an intensifying regulatory environment and growing activism by investors and other stakeholders. In response, they are focusing on their own composition and taking a strategic approach to director appointments.

Here’s what the 2023 proxy statements, combined with our own 2023 survey of 141 nominating/governance committee chairs (“2023 survey”), reveal about forward-looking boards:

What’s top of mind for nominating/governance committee chairs?

56% say that board composition is their main focus in the coming years

Board composition is high on the agenda

  • Nominating/governance committees are scrutinizing board composition, rethinking boardroom needs and planning for refreshment. They are looking again at board matrices — disclosed by 68% of S&P 500 boards — and ensuring that the matrix categories are defined, relevant and specific to their future strategies and risks.

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Inside the IFRS S1 and S2 Sustainability Disclosure Standards

Susan H. Mac Cormac and Alfredo B. D. Silva are Partners  and Oluwabamise Onabanjo is an ESG Analyst at Morrison & Foerster LLP. This post is based on their Morrison & Foerster memorandum. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance (discussed on the Forum here) by Lucian A. Bebchuk and Roberto TallaritaFor Whom Corporate Leaders Bargain (discussed on the Forum here) and Stakeholder Capitalism in the Time of COVID (discussed on the Forum here) both by Lucian Bebchuk, Kobi Kastiel, Roberto Tallarita; and Restoration: The Role Stakeholder Governance Must Play in Recreating a Fair and Sustainable American Economy—A Reply to Professor Rock (discussed on the Forum here) by Leo E. Strine, Jr.

The International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB), established by the IFRS Foundation (IFRS), issued a comprehensive global baseline of disclosure standards to facilitate consistent and comparable disclosures on risks and opportunities related to sustainability and climate, referred to as IFRS S1 and IFRS S2, respectively. The standards address longstanding reporting challenges, equipping companies and investors to better understand performance and comply with ever‑evolving regulations. We believe the standards will prove particularly valuable for businesses and investors operating in jurisdictions like the United States, where regulations are anticipated but not yet adopted; because the standards are structured to apply for both voluntary and mandatory disclosures and integrate well with other established standards and standards under review, reporting entities can use these standards as a “roadmap” for eventual compliance.

For businesses, the IFRS standards will not only simplify the disclosure process, but also enable benchmarking and cost- and time-savings. Investors will benefit from these norms as a resource to guide investment decisions, assist in sustainability- and climate-related due diligence, and enable tracking and analysis of portfolio companies’ performance against peers.

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The SEC’s Money Market Fund Reforms

Brenden P. Carroll and Stephen T. Cohen are Partners and Devon M. Roberson is an Associate at Dechert LLP. This post is based on a Dechert memorandum by Mr. Carroll, Mr. Cohen, Mr. Roberson, Jonathan Blaha, Kathleen Hyer, and Austin G. McComb.

The Securities and Exchange Commission, by a vote of 3 to 2, approved significant changes to Rule 2a-7 and other rules that govern money market funds under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (Amendments) on July 12, 2023. [1] Among other things, the SEC:

  • adopted a new mandatory liquidity fee framework under Rule 2a-7 for institutional prime and institutional tax-exempt money market funds in lieu of the proposed swing pricing framework;
  • removed the redemption gate framework from Rule 2a-7, while preserving the discretion to impose liquidity fees for non-government money market funds (without regard to weekly liquid asset levels);
  • substantially increased the required minimum levels of daily and weekly liquid assets for all money market funds;
  • enabled stable net asset value (NAV) money market funds to institute a reverse distribution mechanism (RDM) or similar “share cancellation” mechanisms during a negative interest rate environment to maintain a stable $1.00 NAV per share; and
  • enhanced the reporting requirements of registered money market funds on Form N-MFP as well as SEC-registered investment advisers to private liquidity funds on Form PF

The Amendments represent the most notable effort by the SEC to reform the money market fund industry since the series of reforms it adopted following the 2007-2008 financial crisis. The SEC originally proposed the current reforms in December 2021 (Proposal) [2] in response to the stresses experienced by money market funds in March 2020, when the onset of the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic led to stresses in the broader short-term funding markets and substantial redemptions, primarily from institutional prime money market funds. Adopting money market fund reform became a more significant policy priority for financial regulators – both within and outside of the SEC – following the stresses in the banking sector in early 2023 that led to three regional bank failures. [3] Similar to the reforms following the 2007-2008 financial crisis, the Amendments attempt to respond to significant market events and reflect the SEC’s understanding of the roles of money market funds in the short-term funding markets and perception of their vulnerabilities during periods of market stress. In his opening remarks, SEC Chair Gensler stated that the Amendments “will make money market funds more resilient, liquid and transparent, including in times of stress.” Commissioners Hester M. Peirce and Mark T. Uyeda, who voted against the Amendments, expressed their disapproval of several aspects of the Amendments, including the mandatory liquidity fee framework, and suggested that the framework should have been re-proposed for additional public comment.

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Director Compensation: Increases Are Back Among the Largest US Companies

Dan Laddin and Matt Vnuk are Partners, and Kyle White is an Associate at Compensation Advisory Partners. This post is based on a CAP memorandum by Mr. Laddin Mr. Vnuk, Mr. White, and Patricia Kelley. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Growth of Executive Pay by Lucian Bebchuk and Yaniv Grinstein.

Each year CAP analyzes non-employee director compensation programs among the 100 largest US public companies. These companies are trendsetters and can provide early insights into evolving pay practices across the broader public company marketplace. This report reflects a summary of pay levels and pay practice trends based on 2023 proxy disclosures.

Key Takeaways

  • Median total board compensation increased 2.6% driven primarily by increases in equity grant value
  • Meeting fee prevalence continues to decline; only four companies now provide board meeting fees, down from eight last year
  • Additional compensation for the Lead Director role is now between 1.67x and 2.5x that provided to the Chairs of the Audit, Compensation and Nominating/Governance Committees, at median

Looking Ahead

  • We expect continued increases in 2023, in line with historical trend of approximately 2% to 4%
  • In addition, we also expect to see continued increases the additional retainers provided to Lead Directors and Committee Chairs

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Midyear Observations on the 2023 board agenda

John Rodi is a Leader and Patrick A. Lee is a Senior Advisor at KPMG LLP. This post is based on their KPMG memorandum.

In light of the high levels of ongoing disruption and uncertainty companies have faced in the first half of 2023—growing geopolitical risk and disruption, global economic volatility and inflation, a new phase of the Russia-Ukraine war, domestic polarization, risks posed by generative AI, regulatory developments, and more—we offer the following supplemental observations to our On the 2023 Board Agenda as boards and their committees continue to calibrate their 2023 agendas.

Generative artificial intelligence (AI)

In the early months of 2023, major advances in the development and use of generative AI made headlines—including the promises and perils of the technology and its ability to create new, original content, such as text, images, and videos. Indeed, generative AI is being discussed in most boardrooms, as companies and their boards are seeking to understand its associated opportunities and risks—a challenge given the pace of the technology’s evolution.

We hear three recurring themes:

  • The need for board education so that all directors have a basic understanding of generative AI, its potential benefits and risks, and how the company might use the technology.
  • The importance of establishing and updating governance structure and policies regarding the use of the technology by the company and its employees.
  • The need to reassess the governance structure for board and committee oversight of generative AI.

Board education. Many boards are asking management for a high-level training session—with third-party experts, as necessary—on generative AI and its potential benefits and risks.

The potential benefits of AI will vary by industry, but might include automating various business processes, such as customer service, content creation, product design, and marketing plan development, as well as improvements to healthcare, the creation of new drugs, etc.

The training session should include an overview of the major risks posed by generative AI—including additional reputational and legal risks to the company. For example:

  • Inaccurate results. The accuracy of generative AI depends on the quality of the data it uses, which may be inaccurate or biased, and come from the internet and other sources. It is essential that management closely scrutinize the data results. Even so, an explanation of AI results is a challenge, as generative AI results are built on correlations and not causality
  • Intellectual property risks may include unintended disclosure of sensitive or proprietary company information to an open generative AI system by an employee, as well as unintended access to third-party intellectual property (IP) when an employee’s prompt to an AI system generates the IP information.
  • Data privacy risk is a major concern with generative AI, since user data is often stored to improve the quality of data.
  • Compliance risks arising from the rapidly evolving global regulatory environment. Monitoring and complying with evolving AI legislation must be a priority for management.
  • Increased cybersecurity risks. Cybercriminals can use the technology to create more realistic and sophisticated phishing scams or credentials to hack into systems.
  • Finally, bad actors can create so-called deepfake images or videos with uncanny realism, which might negatively portray the company’s products, services, or executives.

Generative AI governance structure and policies Boards can begin to probe management as to what generative AI governance structure and policies are appropriate for the company. It’s important to develop a governance structure and policies regarding the use of this technology early on, while generative AI is still in its infancy.

Key questions to ask may include:

  • How and when is a generative AI system or model—including a third-party model—to be developed and deployed, and who makes that decision?
  • How is management mitigating these risks—and what generative AI risk management framework is used?
  • How is the company monitoring the legislative and regulatory proposals to govern the use of generative AI?
  • Does the organization have the necessary generative AI-related talent and resources?

Board and committee oversight of generative AI We hear from many directors that there is not necessarily one committee that has oversight responsibility for generative AI. Rather, given its strategic importance, oversight is often a responsibility for the full board. Board members also emphasize that director education is critical to help ensure that the board as a whole is up to speed on the topic. Whether the board has or seeks directors with generative AI expertise or uses outside experts is an issue for each board to consider. Some directors caution against bringing on a “specialist,” but acknowledge that having board members with significant business technology experience could be helpful.

Geopolitical and economic risks and uncertainty

Much has changed in the geopolitical and global economic environment. From our conversations with economists and geopolitical advisors, it’s clear that companies face an onslaught of risks. According to many advisors, at the macro level, the era of convergence has given way to one defined by fragmentation. From the end of World War II until a few years ago there was a “a coming together” on trade, capital flow, and accounting standards, but today is marked by divergence and de-risking. As one geopolitical observer noted during our June Board Leadership Conference, “China was expected to become more like the US, but that hasn’t happened.

Other geopolitical factors and hotspots highlighted in our discussions with economists and geopolitical advisors include:

  • The escalation of the Russia-Ukraine war, which is entering a dangerous phase with a Ukranian counteroffensive underway and the possibility for more escalatory outcomes. Conditions appear to be in place for Western support of Ukraine for the immediate future, but prospects for a diplomatic resolution appear to be off of the table for foreseeable future.
  • The continuing deterioration of the US–China relationship, described as one of “managed decline.” While it appears that neither side wants escalatory incidents, they cannot be entirely ruled out.
  • The disruptive potential of generative AI. From a political, social, and geopolitical perspective, there is potential for massive disruption caused by misinformation or disinformation.
  • The polarization of society. As one observer noted, “The geopolitical risk I worry most about is the polarization of our society, and our country’s vulnerability to misinformation.”

These and other risks, including supply chain disruptions, cybersecurity incidents, inflation, interest rates, market volatility, and the risk of a global recession—combined with the deterioration of international governance—will continue to drive global volatility and uncertainty.

Assessing the company’s geopolitical risk awareness. As we hear from geopolitical advisors, this environment calls for a realistic assessment of the company’s capabilities in managing global geopolitical and economic risk and uncertainty—and that includes

risk management, as well as business continuity and resilience. A continual updating of the company’s risk profile and more scenario planning, stress testing strategic assumptions, and analyzing downside scenarios will be essential to staying agile. Boards need to hear diverse perspectives from a variety of sources.

In assessing management’s processes for identifying and managing geopolitical risks and their impact on the company’s strategy and operations, boards may ask:

  • Is there an effective process to monitor changes in the external environment and provide early warning that adjustments to strategy might be necessary?
  • How has the company’s risk profile changed as its supply chain has been reshaped?
  • Is the company prepared to weather an economic downturn?

As one geopolitical advisor noted, risk events matter, but it’s much more important to think about the broader structural environment that raises and lowers the probability of each risk and to understand the different possibilities. Rather than reacting to events, taking a forward-looking approach—without trying to forecast specific risks—can be helpful.

Crisis readiness and resilience. Assessing management’s crisis response plans should be a board priority. Are crisis response plans robust, actively tested or war-gamed, and updated as needed? Do they include communications protocols to keep the board apprised of events and the company’s response, as well as to determine if and when to disclose matters internally and/or externally?

Make business continuity and resilience part of the discussion. Resilience is the ability to bounce back when something goes wrong and the ability to stand back up with viable strategic options for staying competitive and on the offense in the event of a crisis. “Focus on resilience and prepare for the idea of disruption and practice dealing with disruption.

Regulatory developments on climate, cybersecurity, HCM, and other ESG and sustainability disclosures

Demands for higher-quality climate and other ESG disclosures should be prompting boards and management teams to reassess and adjust their governance and oversight structure relating to climate and other ESG risks—and to closely monitor SEC and global regulatory developments in these areas.

SEC developments. In June, the SEC released its Spring 2023 Regulatory Agenda, which outlines the SEC’s rulemaking priorities over the next 12 months. Release of a final climate disclosure rule is now anticipated for October 2023. Significant questions about the final rule include the nature of the disclosures that might be required in the financial statements and the disclosure of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, in particular, Scope 3.

On July 26, the SEC adopted final cybersecurity rules. The rules require SEC registrants that are subject to the 1934 Act to disclose information about a material cybersecurity incident “within four business days after the registrant determines that it has experienced a material cybersecurity incident.” Also see “SEC finalizes cybersecurity rules” and “Public Company Cybersecurity Risk Management, Strategy, Governance and Incident Disclosure.

October is also listed as the anticipated release of proposed amendments to the human capital management (HCM) disclosures. The HCM proposal could include detailed quantitative and qualitative disclosures on workforce-related topics like diversity, turnover, compensation and benefits, and training. It is unclear whether the proposal will also require more expansive disclosures regarding a company’s governance, strategy, and risk management for its HCM.

Global regulatory developments. Companies doing business abroad will also want monitor and maintain compliance with other climate and ESG regimes. For example, on June 26, the International Sustainability Standards Board published its first two IFRS® Sustainability Disclosure Standards: general requirements (IFRS S1) and climate (IFRS S2). Subject to adoption by local jurisdictions, the effective date of the standards is January 1, 2024. However, companies can elect to disclose only climate-related information in the first year of application. And on June 9 the European Commission released a near-final set of European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRSs) for consultation; the comment period ended July 7. The final standards—which comprise just the first set of ESRSs—will be issued by the end of August and the first wave of companies will adopt them from January 1, 2024.

The anticipated SEC, ISSB, and EU climate-related disclosure requirements will differ in a number of ways; however, the disclosure of GHG emissions is expected to be common. We expect this reporting to be heavily informed by the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, which has emerged as a nexus in the climate reporting ecosystem.

The proliferation of new and complex disclosure mandates is challenging companies’ ability to update their disclosure processes and internal controls and adequately staff their finance functions to ensure compliance. For multinationals facing differing ESG reporting requirements around the world, there is even more complexity. At the same time, companies are being pressured by investors, employees, and customers for more disclosure. Given the scope of the undertaking, boards and audit committees should encourage management to prepare—as many companies are—by assessing management’s path to compliance, and closely monitoring the rulemaking process.

2023 proxy season results

On June 29th, Pamela Marcogliese, a partner at Freshfields, joined KPMG Board Leadership Center (BLC) Senior Advisor Stephen Brown to discuss 2023 proxy results and key takeaways for management teams and directors. During the recent proxy season, shareholders submitted more than 800 proposals, with S&P 500 companies receiving 80 percent of those proposals. Relatively few shareholder proposals received majority support. Highlights from the discussion included the following:

  • ESG proposals accounted for 90% of all shareholder proposals; however, only 1% of environmental proposals and 1.2% of social proposals received greater than majority support. Proposal topics continue to follow cultural trends, with increased attention on reproductive rights, workers’ rights, human rights, environmental considerations, and political contributions.
  • Anti-ESG proposals and “masked” ESG proposals were submitted on a variety of topics and a number of these proposals were submitted for effect (e.g., requesting companies rescind prior shareholder proposals).
  • Climate change proposals made up a quarter of all environmental and social proposals, with a number of proposals focused on adopting GHG emission targets in line with goals set by the Paris Agreement, but average support for these proposals is down year over year. Only two environmental proposals received majority support.
  • Universal proxy did not unleash an increased numbers of proxy fights; settlements increased, and hundreds of companies amended their advance notice bylaws in the wake of universal proxy rule effectiveness.

Looking behind this proxy season data, the webcast presenters highlighted important messages for directors, particularly regarding ESG. While support for voted ESG proposals decreased, investors and companies still view ESG as important—and as a risk. When the ESG movement started, neither side fully understood what ESG meant. Today when people say ESG, they are referring to material operational and business risks, and how the company is going to respond.

These material business risks should be the focus of shareholder engagement. And given the anti-ESG currents today, companies may need to refine their messaging around ESG concepts, including the “S” or social topics the country is grappling with.

View the webcast replay and presentation from Freshfields at boardleadership.kpmg.us.

Communication and coordination among board committees

As the issues and topics highlighted above suggest, the increasing complexity and fusion of risks unfolding simultaneously requires a more holistic approach to risk management and oversight. Rarely does a risk fit neatly into a single, siloed category, and risks are often interrelated. A siloed approach to managing risks—such as generative AI, environmental, social, and other ESG risks, compliance risks, and geopolitical risks—is no longer viable. Investors, regulators, ESG rating firms, and other stakeholders are demanding higher-quality disclosures about a variety of risks and how boards and their committees are overseeing their managements.

In this challenging environment, many boards are reassessing the risks assigned to each standing committee; in the process, they are often assigning oversight responsibility to multiple committees for various aspects of a particular risk. For example, in the oversight of climate, HCM, and other ESG risks, the nom/gov, compensation, and audit committees may have some overlapping oversight responsibilities. While cybersecurity and data governance oversight may reside in a technology committee (or other committee), the audit committee may also have oversight responsibilities. Other examples of risks for which multiple committees may have oversight responsibilities include culture, talent, and compliance.

Given these overlapping committee oversight responsibilities, a challenge for boards is to encourage more effective information sharing and coordination. We see boards taking various approaches:

  • Identify areas where committee oversight responsibilities may overlap and develop a process for frequent communication and discussion of activities in these areas.
  • Maintain overlapping committee memberships or informal cross-attendance at committee meetings.
  • Conduct joint committee meetings when an issue of strategic importance to multiple committees is on the agenda.
  • Hold periodic meetings of committee chairs to discuss oversight activities.
  • Insist on focused, appropriately detailed, and robust committee reports to the full board.

Shareholder Rights: Assessing the Threat Environment

Sanford Lewis is Director of the Shareholder Rights Group. This post is based on his Shareholder Rights Group piece. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance (discussed on the Forum here) by Lucian A. Bebchuk and Roberto TallaritaHow Much Do Investors Care about Social Responsibility? (discussed on the Forum here) by Scott Hirst, Kobi Kastiel, and Tamar Kricheli-Katz; Companies Should Maximize Shareholder Welfare Not Market Value (discussed on the Forum here) by Oliver Hart and Luigi Zingales; and Reconciling Fiduciary Duty and Social Conscience: The Law and Economics of ESG Investing by a Trustee (discussed on the Forum here) by Robert H. Sitkoff and Max M. Schanzenbach.

In July 2023, Republican members of the House Committee on Financial Services (the “Committee”) sponsored a series of hearings on ESG. While prior committee hearings and state level efforts to challenge the inclusion of ESG information into the investment process had focused on the large asset managers and Department of Labor ESG regulations, the July hearings shifted the focus onto the shareholder proposal process regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under Rule 14a-8, and on the support for shareholder proposals by proxy advisors, passive investors and registered investment advisors. This  culminated in  bills being voted out of committee that would significantly reduce the power of the SEC, change the shareholder proposal process to bar the presentation of  ESG proposals and alter  proxy voting on shareholder proposals to be more costly and cumbersome for many investors.

Overview of proposed legislation

The assault on shareholder rights proposed by the anti-ESG legislation is twofold – first, curtailing shareholders’ ability to file proposals and secondly, suppressing votes for those proposals.

The Protecting Americans’ Retirement Savings from Politics Act (“PARSPA”) (H.R. 4767) includes provisions to eliminate the ability of the SEC to require companies to publish in the corporate proxy statement environmental, social and political proposals (or proposals that raise a significant social policy issue). Other elements of the bill would steeply increase resubmission threshold and bar the SEC from adopting proposed amendments to the shareholder proposal rule refining the agency’s approach to exclusions based on duplication, resubmission or substantial implementation. A separate bill would eliminate the authority of the SEC to regulate shareholder proposals in their entirety, mirroring the objective of an ongoing lawsuit intervention by the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) in National Center for Public Policy Research v. Securities Exchange Commission, No. 23-60230 (5th Cir.)  In their intervention in that lawsuit, NAM contends alternately under First Amendment and statutory grounds that the SEC lacks the authorization to require companies to publish shareholder proposals.

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From cyber strategy to Implementation: what CEOs and boards need to Know

Matt Gorham is a Managing Director and Shawn Lonergan is a Partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. This post is based on their PwC memorandum.

The federal government on July 13 launched the implementation plan for its National Cybersecurity Strategy, just four months after releasing the strategy document — an unheard-of pace.

The swift, decisive follow-up indicates that the administration recognizes how serious the cyber threat is to national security and critical infrastructures. There’s been an onslaught of cybersecurity incidents in the US, including the exploitation of several zero-day vulnerabilities and ransomware perpetrated by nation-state actors and cybercriminals.

The 57-page National Cybersecurity Strategy Implementation Plan (NCSIP) calls for immediate action in some cases. It enlists 18 federal agencies in a coordinated effort to put in place controls, promulgate regulations and even take offensive action against attackers, all under the leadership of the Office of the National Cyber Director (ONCD).

The strategy’s vision is for government agencies to work together and with private enterprise toward a common objective — strong and resilient economic, geopolitical and personal security.

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Pressure on DEI Initiatives Continues to Mount

Martin Lipton is a founding partner of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, specializing in mergers and acquisitions and matters affecting corporate policy and strategy. This post is based on his Wachtell Lipton memorandum. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance (discussed on the Forum here) and Will Corporations Deliver Value to All Stakeholders? (discussed on the Forum here) both by Lucian A. Bebchuk and Roberto TallaritaStakeholder Capitalism in the Time of COVID (discussed on the Forum here) by Lucian Bebchuk, Kobi Kastiel, Roberto Tallarita; and Restoration: The Role Stakeholder Governance Must Play in Recreating a Fair and Sustainable American Economy—A Reply to Professor Rock (discussed on the Forum here) by Leo E. Strine, Jr.

This post is based on a Wachtell Lipton memorandum by Mr. Lipton, John F. SavareseAdam J. Shapiro, Kevin S. Schwartz, Erica E. BonnettNoah B. Yavitz, and Carmen X. W. Lu.

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision in SFFA v. Harvard (as discussed in our prior memos), diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs have attracted increased scrutiny from longtime critics. Many high-profile U.S. companies have already fielded letters addressed to boards, senior management and the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission questioning the legality of their DEI initiatives. Others have been named in lawsuits and federal civil rights complaints alleging violations of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, state civil rights laws, and federal securities laws in connection with their DEI initiatives.

This recent wave of litigation is focused on (1) corporate pledges seeking to increase diversity in the workforce and among suppliers, which plaintiffs analogize to illegal quotas, (2) claims that such actions constitute breaches of fiduciary duty, and (3) DEI programs that exclusively serve diverse groups, which plaintiffs characterize as reverse discrimination. Incentive compensation tied to DEI metrics has also attracted scrutiny, with plaintiffs claiming that such policies promote discriminatory practices. Some of these pending suits assert securities fraud, claiming share prices were impacted by misstatements related to DEI initiatives.

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Unveiling the Business Risk: Why Board and Executive Engagement in DE&I Matters

Anna Natapova is Principal at Semler Brossy LLC, Cynthia Soledad is Coleader of the Global Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Practice, and Chuck Gray is Coleader of the US CEO and Board Practice at Egon Zehnder. This post is based on a Semler Brossy memorandum by Ms. Natapova, Ms. Soledad, Mr. Gray, and Blair Jones. Related research from the Program on Corporate Governance includes The Illusory Promise of Stakeholder Governance (discussed on the Forum here) by Lucian A. Bebchuk and Roberto TallaritaFor Whom Corporate Leaders Bargain (discussed on the Forum here) and Stakeholder Capitalism in the Time of COVID (discussed on the Forum here) both by Lucian Bebchuk, Kobi Kastiel, Roberto Tallarita; and Restoration: The Role Stakeholder Governance Must Play in Recreating a Fair and Sustainable American Economy—A Reply to Professor Rock (discussed on the Forum here) by Leo E. Strine, Jr.

Many boards and executive leadership teams have already embraced the premise that diversity, equity, and inclusion (DE&I) initiatives when done well can yield many benefits, from improved talent attraction and retention rates to better decision-making by inviting in more diverse perspectives. What is less discussed is that the absence of well-run DE&I efforts is a business risk.

The absence or misalignment of well-executed DE&I initiatives can introduce unintended challenges, potentially derailing the achievement of objectives. For example, if your organization publicly signs on to a new DE&I initiative or takes a position on an issue, there will be reactions from stakeholders—some may be positive, but some could be negative. Companies may also face employee, customer, and public backlash to inaction or performative goal setting for goals that are never achieved.

Avoiding these types of risks and capturing the full potential of DE&I efforts make effective leadership imperative. What does effective DE&I engagement look like at the board and management level? Below, we explore three common missteps organizations make in their DE&I efforts and strategies to overcome them.

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