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Environmental Greenwashing Rampant, Study Finds

by Rob Kellogg on February 27, 2009

fence Environmental Greenwashing Rampant, Study Finds

A recent study published by a doctoral student at the University of Arkansas finds that most companies either under-report or outright lie in their disclosures to SEC about environmental fines and liabilities. Public companies hit with environmental sanctions are required by law to disclose that information to investors but apparently many fail to do so.

The study reviewed the public filings of over 300 companies that received notice from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) between 1996 and 2005 and found that over 70% of these companies omitted information on their filing forms, a violation of federal law.

According to Andrea Romi, the author of the study, the likely reason for these material omissions is that the stock market regularly punishes public companies hit with EPA related fines. She found that negative announcements related to EPA fines and violations were followed by a decline in the value of a company’s share price by an average of 1.6%.

Why does this continue? According to Ms. Romi, those that omit the information are unlikely to suffer any consequences because the level of enforcement by the SEC is so negligible. This arrangement provides perverse incentives for corporations to game the system by not disclosing this important information to the market. It also perpetuates “greenwashing” – the practice of marketing positive environmental policies and news while obscuring negative news that might harm a company’s brand.

The findings of this study support a 1998 internal review by the EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance which found that 74% of corporations failed to comply with this requirement.

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Yes, More Worrisome Signs Ahead

by Rob Kellogg on February 10, 2009

I know, I know. The last thing readers want to hear about right now is more doom-and-gloom prognostication about the economy. But I can’t resist.

539w 300x209 Yes, More Worrisome Signs Ahead

Last week brought several pieces of bad news on the financial front which, really, is no different than the preceding weeks. I point them out not because they were the most distasteful or gluttonous news items of the bunch (oh, so much to choose from!) but rather because they highlight serious structural flaws in our regulatory oversight of financial actors. [click to continue...]

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Bush Regulators Screw the Pooch … Again

by John Richardson on December 22, 2008

bush madoff boom Bush Regulators Screw the Pooch … Again

As the Bernard Madoff scandal continues to implode, it’s becoming clear that he had help from all corners of the financial and regulatory worlds, intended or otherwise. An expert in the financial markets with extensive connections, Madoff was masterful in his fraud. Though it’s way too early to assess the full consequences of this mess and assess blame solely on the “Lone Ranger,” the ideology known as the “free market” will surely be a major determinant in this disaster. [click to continue...]

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Caroline Kennedy: I Can See New Jersey From My Kitchen!

by John Richardson on December 20, 2008

Andrew Sullivan and Ken Silverstein, along with many others, seem to delight in joining in the Caroline Kennedy Massacre. Ken’s reference to Kennedy as the Palin of the Left seems to typify the view that she is unqualified to serve as the junior senator from New York.

I disagree.

I believe that Ms. Kenedy has the capacity to serve in the position quite well. I don’t think that anybody questions her intellectual capacity and thus, Ken’s comparison to Sarah Palin is a bit of a stretch. Not only has Kennedy read a few things – magazines and the like – but she’s written a few things as well. Yes, yes, Sarah Palin has dashed off her share of emails, qualifying her as a “righter” but somehow, the comparison doesn’t work here.

The whole privileged-Kennedy argument rings very hollow to me. There has been not a peep about her carolinekennedy Caroline Kennedy: I Can See New Jersey From My Kitchen!predecessor, Hillary Clinton, who rolled into the Big Apple, carpetbag in hand and staked out her territory only a few years ago. Moreover, despite the whole privilege issue, I for one, have no complaint about the talent emerging from that family. John, Bobby, Edward, Robert Jr., Patrick – these guys have all shown remarkable ability as politicians.

No, what I think is going on here is that the Left can’t get over the fact that it didn’t screw up this election. It needs an enemy. It has been at war and has been losing badly to the Republicans for as long as many of us can remember. Now that the Republicans are bumping into themselves like a bunch of blind rats in a shoe box, the Democrats have nobody to feed on but themselves.Caroline Kennedy is the perfect foil for this collective immolation by the Left.  Today, we can add the howling from the gay community over Obama’s invitation to Rick Warren, elements in the labor community whining about Hilda Solis to the chorus of doom.  Now folks are just getting warmed up about Obama’s selection of the SEC and CFTC chairwomen.

I understand that debate is healthy but I am reminded of a recent experience I had with my 3 year old grandson. He threw a temper tantrum because he was denied a cookie. I gave him the cookie. He dropped it and continued to howl. Perhaps the Left needs to take a time out?

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It’s Time to Outlaw Hedge Funds Once and For All

by Rob Kellogg on December 17, 2008

images2 Its Time to Outlaw Hedge Funds Once and For All

Do we really need any more evidence that hedge funds should be regulated or even outlawed altogether? How many blowups does it take for us to realize that unregulated greed in the name of “free market” demagoguery does not work for working people and the broader economy.

The U.S. economy is failing for three main reasons. First, the increasing reliance on the use of leverage was a ticking time bomb that finally went off and decimated the balance sheets of banks and financial institutions, not just in the U.S. but around the world. Second, the invention of exotic securities, derivatives and other financial shenanigans by financial wizards at investment banks which bear zero correlation to economic value creation or worker productivity. And third, excessive influence of corporations and their lobbyists in the regulatory process. In all three cases, hedge funds have been the biggest culprits of these practices which not only put their investors at risk – like retiree savings and philanthropic foundations – but also taxpayers since it is they who end of having to foot the bill for the economic calamity that lies in the wake of the destruction.

Sure, the SEC may have missed the mark – perhaps on more than one occasion – in catching Bernard Madoff’s $50 billion ponzi scheme, but let’s not vilify the policeman for a crime committed by a criminal. For years, the SEC has been an underfunded agency devoid of real leadership (before Cox, there was the equally worthless Donaldson and Pitt) which has been unwilling to fully protect investors and instead ceded authority over and over again to the business community. It’s time to put a stop to these disastrous investment vehicles. Hedge funds are equal opportunity abusers; they hurt wealthy people, institutional investors, retirees and taxpayers and drain valuable resources from the government. Let’s take a stand and say enough is enough.

Solving this economic calamity will require efforts on many fronts. For starters, the Obama administration can help empower shareholders, the SEC and the DOJ to hold corporations and money managers accountable to society. Less regulation is not the solution; it’s the problem. I hope Summers, Rubin and other leftovers from the Clinton years who are now part of Obama’s inner circle have come to see the failure of their past aversion to responsible regulation of Wall Street. These luminaries can start on their road to redemption by cutting out the most cancerous tumor in our financial system. We will all be better for it.

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In this edition of 2N2, Rob Kellogg discusses the fallout from the Siemens bribery scandals and the U.S. regulators’ responses.

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11obama3 751 Investor Coalition Urges Obama to Protect Shareholder Rights

Yesterday, an investor coalition composed of 60 institutional investors and industry consultants sent a letter to Barack Obama asking him to protect and strengthen the rights of shareholders.

The letter urges the President-Elect to act within the first 100 days of his administration to reverse a five-year pattern at the SEC of blocking shareholders from using proxy resolutions to request better disclosure of identified financial risks at public companies in the U.S. These risks include marketplace, social, or environmental concerns.

The joint letter states:

“All investors need better tools to assess corporate risks and more effectively participate in corporate governance and we look to your administration and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to facilitate such reforms.  From the creation of the SEC in 1934, investors have been in a unique position to monitor the companies in their portfolios, and to guard against certain risks to stock price, and to society, by encouraging responsible decision-making by management.”

The investor coalition argues that safeguarding the ability of institutional investors to use the shareholder resolution process to probe public companies on certain areas of investment risk is an important step to begin restoring confidence in the capital markets. These include the kind of credit risks associated with the mortgage crisis, as well as an array of environmental and social issues which can have major financial implications on investment returns and firm value.

JMR Portfolio Intelligence, Inc., the sponsor of Global Investment Watch, was a signatory to the letter. For the full text of the joint letter and complete list of signatories, go to corporatedisclosurealert.blogspot.com.

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Farmer Paulson Slops the Hogs

by John Richardson on November 5, 2008

The Wall Street bailout legislation, formally known as the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, includes limits on compensation for executives of companies receiving taxpayer support.  So what does this mean for taxpayers who are footing the bill?

istock 000003742646xsmall Farmer Paulson Slops the Hogs

Not much.

Unfortunately, as drafted the provisions are practically meaningless and will do little to limit the gross payouts already available for these executives. Section 111 of the Act only restricts compensation paid to the top five executives at these companies. In addition, it provides for the recovery, or “claw back,” of ill gotten compensation, that is, performance pay received based upon materially inaccurate financial information.

The “big” provision that has both Republicans and Democrats squealing to their constituents is the provision in the Act that bans payments of “golden parachutes.” These are executive severance agreements that usually pay executives when there is some sort of change in control in the company or, as is often the case, when the executive is fired.  This later provision only applies as long as the federal government holds an equity or debt position in the company.

As noted in last week’s Wall Street Journal, the stakes are significant. The paper reported that executives of financial institutions receiving federal assistance are owed more than $40 billion for past years’ pay and pensions.  Deferred compensation coming due includes $11.8 billion at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., $8.5 billion at J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., and $10 billion at Morgan Stanley.

Since most of these firms haven’t set aside the cash required, they are a drag on current earnings and will be paid out of the corporate coffers.

The liabilities are an essentially a hidden obligation. Even when the debts to their executives total in the billions, most companies lump them into “other liabilities” and only a few of the companies identify amounts attributable to deferred pay.

In today’s Financial Times, it was noted that these Wall Street firms have promised not to use public support to pay these executives’ bonuses.  Bank of America, Bank of New York, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, State Street and Wells Fargo all promised to pay salaries and bonuses from existing cash resources.

So lets walk through this scenario and look at the situation at Morgan Stanley.

The company received a capital infusion of $10 billion from the federal government. They stick their newfound money in their corporate pocket (this is a really big pocket by the way) along with their other cash reserves. Let’s say that tomorrow is “bonus day” at the company.  Colm Kelleher, Morgan Stanley’s Chief Financial Officer reaches deep into the company “pocket” and pulls out $21,015,689, which he intends to use to pay himself (this is the total compensation that Mr. Kelleher received in 2007 according to company filings).

“Ooops! That looks like “government” money. Back in it goes,” he muses. Digging around for “loose change,” he eventually finds some “corporate” money and marches off to his bank in the Hamptons where he can console himself over the terrible financial crisis facing America.  This shell game would be laughable if it weren’t our money!

Meanwhile, our leaders in Congress are calling on the government to tighten restrictions on executive pay for these institutions receiving our money. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Leader Harry Reid are wringing their hands with concern.  If their last attempt at reining in executive compensation is any measure, we shouldn’t expect real reform anytime soon.

The task of holding corporations responsible for grossly excessive executive pay falls squarely on shareholders. The only problem is that, in years past, the Securities and Exchange Commission has prevented shareholders from raising compensation issues in the form of shareholder resolutions, arguing that such matters constitute “ordinary business” that is exempt from proper shareholder consideration. Let’s hope that, given the massive public policy issues raised by using public funds for executive compensation, the SEC will reconsider its policy in regard to this important matter.

Stay tuned.

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