Chapter 11 Corporate Performance, Governance and Business Ethics
1. Stakeholders
Individuals or groups with an interest, claim or stake in the company
A. Internal
Stockholders, employees including executive officers, managers and BOD
B. External
All other individuals and groups that have some claim on the company.
Eg. Customers, suppliers, creditors, governments, unions, local communities
and general public
2. Steps in stakeholder impact analysis
I. Identify stakeholders along with their interest and concerns
II. Identify the probable claims of stakeholders on the organization
III. Identify important stakeholders from the orgn’s perspective
IV. Identify the resulting strategic challenges
3. Profitability, profit growth and stakeholder claims
Stockholders receive a return on investment from dividend payments and capital
appreciation in the market value of a share
Ways to grow profits:
Participating in a market that is growing
Taking market share from competitors
Consolidating the industry through horizontal integration
Development of new markets through international expansion, vertical
integration or diversification
4. Agency Theory
Deals with business relationship problems when decision-making authority is
delegated from one person to another
Relationship btw stockholders and senior managers:
o Stockholders = Principal
o Senior managers = Agent
Agency Problem
Agents are not serving the best interest of the principal.
Information asymmetry (Factor causing agency problem)
Agent has more information about the resources being managed than the
principal. (Managers have greater access to information and control as they
are the ones running the business)
Law for monitoring agents:
▫ Codetermination law (Minbestimmungsgesetz in German law)
▫ Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
▫ Generally agreed-upon accounting principles (GAAP)
▫ International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS)
▫ Malaysian Code on Corporate Governance
On-the-job consumption (Factors)
Describe the behaviour of senior mgt’s use of company funds to acquire
perks/ for personal interest
Empire building (Factors)
Buying new businesses to increase the size of the company through
diversification (Make aggressive decisions to boost share price then sell
those they are holding to benefit from it)
Challenges for Principals
Shaping the agent’s behaviour to act in accordance with the goals set
Reducing the information asymmetry
Developing mechanisms for removing agents who do not act in accordance
with the goals
Governance Mechanisms
Used by principals to align incentives with the agents; monitor and control agents.
Types:
A. BOD
▫ Inside directors: Senior employees of the company
▫ Outside directors: Not full-time employees of the company.
Eg. Independent Non-Executive directors
B. Stock-Based Compensation
▫ Stock options: Right to purchase company stock at a
predetermined price at some point in the future
▫ Strike price: Stock’s trading price when the option was
originally granted
▫ Motivates managers to adopt strategies that increase the
share price of the company
▫ Has become increasingly controversial
▫ Aligns mgt and stockholder interest
C. Financial Statements and Auditors
▫ Quarterly and annual reports of publicly traded companies
are filed with the SEC to give accurate information about
the way the agents run the company
▫ SEC requires that the accounts be audited by an
independent and accredited accounting firm to make sure
managers do not misrepresent the financial information
D. Takeover Constraints
▫ Risk of being acquired by another company
▫ Corporate raiders: Purchase large blocks of shared in
companies that appear to be pursuing strategies inconsistent
with maximizing stockholder wealth. Eg. Carl Icahn (Create
pressure and problems to the BOD)
▫ Greenmail: The practice of buying enough shares in a
company to threaten a takeover to push companies to either
change their strategy to benefit stockholders or charging a
premium for the stocks when the company wants to buy
them back to retain control
Governance Mechanism Inside a Company
Strategic control systems
Formal target-setting measurement and feedback systems. Eg. Balanced
Scorecard (Financial, Internal Business Process, Learning and Growth,
Customer)
o Establish standards and targets against which performance can be
measured
o Create systems for measuring and monitoring performance on a
regular basis
o Compare actual performance against the establishes targets
o Evaluate results and take corrective action if necessary
Employee incentives
Motivate employees to work toward goals central to maximizing long-term
profitability
ESOPs
Stock-option grants
Bonus pay
5. Ethics
Ethics
Accepted principles of right or wrong that govern the conduct of a person, the
members of a profession or the actions of an orgn
Business Ethics
Accepted principles of right or wrong governing the conduct of business
people (Make everyone/ stakeholders internally and externally happy)
Ethical dilemma
Situations where there is no agreement over exactly what the accepted
principles of right and wrong are
Ethical Issues in Strategy
Due to potential conflict between:
▫ Goals of the enterprise
▫ Goals of individual managers
▫ Fundamental rights of important stakeholders
Rights of Stakeholders / Claims
i. Stakeholders
Timely and accurate information about their investments (Good returns)
ii. Customers
Be fully informed about the products and services they purchase
iii. Employees
Safe working conditions
Fair compensation for the work they perform
Just treatment by managers
iv. Suppliers
Expect contracts to be respected
v. Competitors
Expect that the firm will abide by the rules of competition and not violate
the basic principles of antitrust laws
vi. Communities and the general public
Expect that a firm will not violate the basic expectations that society places
on enterprises
Unethical Behaviour Arising from Agency Problems
I. Self-dealing
Managers using company funds for personal use
II. Information manipulation
Managers use their control over corporate data to distort or hide
information to enhance their own financial situation or the competitive
position of the firm
III. Anticompetitive behaviour
Aimed at harming actual or potential competitors to enhance the long-run
prospects of the firm
IV. Opportunistic exploitation
Managers rewriting the terms of a contract to make it favourable to the
firm
V. Substandard working conditions
Managers underinvest in working conditions or pay employees below-
market rates to reduce their production costs
VI. Environmental degradation
Occurs when a company’s actions directly or indirectly result in pollution
or other forms of environmental harm
VII. Corruption
Can arise when managers pay bribes to gain access to lucrative business
contracts
Roots of Unethical Behaviour
Personal ethics
Generally accepted principles of right and wrong governing the conduct of
individuals
Failing to ask oneself if a decision is ethical
Some organizational cultures de-emphasize business ethics
Pressure to meet unrealistic performance goals
Unethical leadership
Behaving Ethically
Favour hiring and promotion with a well-grounded sense of personal ethics
Build an organizational culture that places a high value on ethical
behaviour
Code of Ethics: Formal statement of the ethical priorities to which a
business adheres
Ensure that leaders practice and preach ethical behaviour
Ensure people consider the ethical dimension of business decisions
Use ethics officers
Put strong governance processes in place
Act with moral courage