April 18, 2024

Fair Game: Shareholders Are Speaking Up, but Who’s Listening?

Consider what happened after the May 14 annual meeting of the CommonWealth Real Estate Investment Trust. Joseph L. Morea, a CommonWealth trustee, was up for re-election, and more than three quarters of the shares voted were cast against him. Under the company’s guidelines, this meant that he had to resign. CommonWealth, as is typical at many companies, requires that its independent directors resign if they don’t receive majority support from shareholders for their re-election.

Mr. Morea dutifully stepped down. But that was not the end of it. The next day, CommonWealth said its board determined that Mr. Morea’s loss seemed related to its battle with outside shareholders hoping to oust the trustees, rather than to any personal failings. As a result, it said, the board had “requested that Mr. Morea accept appointment to the vacancy created by his resignation.” So he returned to the board and will serve on three of its committees: those relating to audit, compensation — and nominating and governance.

You’d never know that the shareholders, a majority of whom voted against Mr. Morea, were the actual owners of CommonWealth. As a point of reference, the trustees who reappointed him to the board own only one-quarter of 1 percent of the company’s shares. CommonWealth declined to comment further.

Flouting its own trustee-election policies, as CommonWealth did, was brassy. But its board is by no means the only one that has thumbed its nose at concerned shareholders. A recent maneuver by Urban Outfitters, the retailer of youthful casual clothing, accessories and housewares, brings a new twist to the concept of good shareholder relations.

A vocal band of institutional investors in Urban Outfitters is concerned about board diversity. In the last three years, these investors have argued that the company’s all-male board is too homogeneous. They have mounted shareholder proposals requesting that the board focus on nominating at least one female or minority director. Shareholders will vote on the third such proposal on Tuesday at Urban Outfitters’ annual meeting in Philadelphia, where Richard Hayne, the chairman, C.E.O. and a co-founder, will preside.

To support their argument, these shareholders, including Calvert Investment Management, the Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds and the New York State Common Retirement Fund, cite research showing that companies with some heterogeneity among directors outperform those with none.

Studies done in 2007 and 2011 by Catalyst, a nonprofit organization that promotes opportunities for women in business, found that in two measures — return on sales and return on invested capital — companies with more women as directors significantly outperformed those with fewer.

“We’ve taken a very strong position that diversity on boards better positions a company to understand what’s going on in an increasingly diverse marketplace,” said Thomas P. DiNapoli, the New York state comptroller, who oversees the retirement fund.

Given that so many of Urban Outfitters’ customers are women, you might expect its directors to embrace the idea of adding a woman to its six-member board. But over the years that the diversity proposals have appeared on Urban Outfitters’ proxies, the company has urged shareholders to reject them. In this year’s filing, for example, the company said that imposing gender and minority requirements on the board selection process would be unduly restrictive and “would undermine the company’s holistic evaluation of candidates.”

Shareholder endorsement of the diversity proposal has been rising, though. It reached 39 percent in 2012, up from 23 percent of shares voted in favor of it in 2011.

And this support grows even larger if you remove from the calculation the shares owned by company insiders, who presumably voted their shares against the proposals according to the board’s recommendation. Subtracting the more than 30 million shares held by Mr. Hayne and his wife would bring the outside shareholder support for last year’s diversity proposal to 52.3 percent.

WITH that as a backdrop, let’s turn to this year’s proxy statement. In that document, in which companies describe the directors up for election, Urban Outfitters announced that it was — drum roll, please — nominating a woman to its board. It asked shareholders to support her at the coming meeting.

So who is the holistically evaluated candidate? Margaret Hayne, the wife of the chairman. Ms. Hayne, who is president of Urban Outfitters’ Free People division, joined the company in 1982.

Talk about poking your shareholders in the eye with a stick.

I asked Urban Outfitters about its nomination of Ms. Hayne, and whether it thought that would satisfy shareholders who were concerned about diversity. Neither the company’s director of investor relations nor Mr. Hayne responded to multiple requests for comment. Ms. Hayne could not be reached.

But Mr. DiNapoli took a dim view of the move. “To nominate someone who is also a long-term employee, an insider and married to the C.E.O. and chairman,” he said, “doesn’t pass the smell test of really trying to find someone that adds to diversity and is going to be an independent voice.”

Board diversity is not the only matter irking Urban Outfitters’ shareholders. Until this year, for example, its directors served for staggered terms, making it harder for shareholders to oust a group of them at once.

At the annual meeting in 2012, however, a majority of shareholders voted to declassify Urban Outfitters’ board, which would require directors to stand for election each year. The company’s directors again advised shareholders to vote against this proposal, but were unpersuasive. Instead of eliminating the staggered terms immediately, though, Urban Outfitters is making the change over the next few years.

Note well: Urban Outfitters is an extremely successful company. Over the last 12 months, its shares have risen 49 percent, and, last week, it posted record sales and a 39 percent earnings jump for its most recent quarter.

Perhaps the company’s directors think that superlative performance means that they can brush off shareholders’ concerns. Still, it hardly seems likely that adding an independent woman to the board would damage Urban Outfitters’ performance. And who knows? It might even enhance it.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/26/business/shareholders-are-speaking-up-but-whos-listening.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Disney Gambles on Box-Office Wizardry of ‘Oz’

On Friday, when this wizard and his hot air balloon land in theaters, the Walt Disney Company hopes ticket buyers won’t think the same thing.

No movie studio would have the nerve to remake “The Wizard of Oz,” the beloved 1939 musical ranked by the Library of Congress as the most-watched film in history. But “Oz the Great and Powerful,” a Disney-produced prequel, is nearly as intrepid. The company is betting that a new twist on a story moviegoers already love will result in a hit on par with “Alice in Wonderland,” which took in more than $1 billion in 2010.

It’s a breathtaking gamble. “Oz,” at turns goofy and dark (and not a musical), cost about $325 million to make and market, according to people who worked on the movie who spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid conflict with Disney. Mr. Franco has never anchored a mainstream movie before. Because of copyright constraints Disney was not able to reproduce certain iconic imagery from the “The Wizard of Oz,” which is owned by Warner Brothers.

And audiences have already rallied around a “Wizard of Oz” prequel: “Wicked” has been a Broadway hit for nearly 10 years.

Disney’s marketers have not been cowed by the huge shadow cast by the original “Oz” — indeed, their ads for the new film invite comparisons to the classic. But the popularity of the original may ultimately represent the studio’s biggest challenge. Is there room for a new cinematic vision of Oz, as Disney believes? Or will movie audiences (and critics) be reluctant to embrace an Oz that does not look a certain way, have a certain tone and feature a certain set of slippers?

Hollywood is confronting issues like these with greater regularity. Studios, ever-desperate for source material that is both familiar and comfortable to consumers, have leaned more heavily toward sequels and prequels.

But nostalgic properties are tricky. There are liberties you can take and ones you cannot, producers say, and the lines are blurry.

Sean Bailey, Disney’s president of movie production, said in an interview that he was “cautiously optimistic” about the box-office prospects for “Oz the Great and Powerful,” which was loosely based on the novels of L. Frank Baum.

“Going in, we certainly talked a lot about these iconic books, the iconic movie and the iconic musical,” Mr. Bailey said. “We felt there was room for a new story. We felt this great land was worthy of exploration and that it could be creatively exciting.”

Mr. Bailey and Alan F. Horn, Disney’s new studio chairman, are under pressure to deliver a hit. “John Carter,” which opened a year ago, forced the company to take a $200 million write-down, one of the largest in movie history. Since “John Carter,” releases on the Disney label have included “The Odd Life of Timothy Green,” which took in a ho-hum $51.9 million, and “Frankenweenie,” a critical success but a box office failure, which sold just $35.3 million in tickets in North America.

Disney is betting that going big is the key to a turnaround — hiring marquee directors and stars with serious acting credentials for pictures with giant budgets. After “Oz” comes “The Lone Ranger,” a comedic Western starring Johnny Depp as Tonto. In July 2014 Disney plans to release “Maleficent,” starring Angelina Jolie as the evil sorceress from “Sleeping Beauty.”

Tackling such well-known material risks stepping on memories, however. Oz itself has proved difficult in that regard over the years. Audiences recoiled from “The Wiz,” a 1978 adaptation of the stage musical. The response to “Return to Oz,” a 1985 Disney effort that found Dorothy in an asylum, was equally dismal.

For “Oz the Great and Powerful,” directed by Sam Raimi, Batman offers one positive point of comparison; that character, which coincidentally first appeared in a 1939 comic book, has been successfully reincarnated at the multiplex for several generations, noted Bob Gazzale, president of the American Film Institute.

The 2005 remake “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” is a more cautionary example. What seemed like a good idea on paper — Johnny Depp as Willy Wonka, with lots of digital imagery — was ultimately a disappointment, with a fey Mr. Depp and his computer-generated Oompa Loompas striking moviegoers as a tad creepy.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/04/business/media/disney-gambles-on-box-office-wizardry-of-oz.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

For Some Black Friday Novices, Not a Night of Conversion

The shoppers found good deals, like a $14.88 waffle iron and 40 percent off Ann Taylor Loft apparel. But assessing their initial Black Friday excursions later, many first-timers did not seem to think it was worth braving the crowds.

And while most malls and stores were packed but relatively calm, in California, a woman pepper-sprayed fellow Wal-Mart shoppers, apparently to keep them from grabbing an Xbox she wanted. Two other Wal-Mart shoppers, in San Leandro, Calif., and Myrtle Beach, S.C., were shot in the stores’ parking lots, while police arrested shoppers who were fighting over products in Wal-Mart stores in Milford, Conn., Rome, N.Y. and Kissimmee, Fla.

One first-time Black Friday shopper, Debra Banks, 48, was jostled by crowds when she entered a Toys “R” Us in New Jersey and missed out on the limited-edition coupon books. She left the store with nothing. “Well, I can’t say this is fun,” she said. “Enlightening, maybe.”

Shopping on the Friday after Thanksgiving, a custom that is tradition to some and puzzling to others, got a new twist this year with several stores opening as early as 9 p.m. on Thanksgiving Day. Analysts said that retailers were aiming for customers who might have limited budgets and trying to appeal to people who would rather stay awake late than awaken for a 4 a.m. opening.

The first numbers on Friday’s sales results are not available until Sunday, but many malls and stores said they were seeing more visitors than last year. Macy’s Herald Square estimated that 9,000 people were waiting for its midnight opening, versus 7,000 when it opened at 5 a.m. last year. The earlier starting times seemed to bring out younger consumers who wanted to extend their Thanksgiving Day revelry by checking out the bargains. But many first-time Black Friday shoppers seemed puzzled by the fuss.

Ms. Banks, a nurse from Beech Island, S.C., was in New Jersey visiting relatives, and left their house at 7:40 Thursday evening to go shopping with her daughter-in-law and granddaughter.

“This year is different because the stores are opening up earlier,” she said. “I think it’s going to be great fun.”

So Ms. Banks climbed into the front seat of her daughter-in-law Kylie’s Chevrolet Impala, with her granddaughter Cora, 11, sitting in the back. The three of them planned their route. Cora, whose nickname at school is “Coupon Cora,” had particularly strong ideas about what deals they should focus on. They decided to start at a Lawrenceville, N.J., Toys “R” Us in time for its 9 p.m. opening.

The drive was quick, but when they arrived at 8, the line was already halfway around the building.

“Look at that line!” Ms. Banks said. “I just never expected there would be so many people here. And they don’t even open for another hour. C’mon, grab your bags, because we’re getting in!”

Outside the store, employees, along with two Pinkerton detectives, tried to keep the crowds calm. “So let’s just have everybody be respectful of everybody and it’ll all be O.K.,” a store worker told the crowd on the sidewalk.

As the doors opened, customers broke into jogs and Ms. Banks was left empty-handed and a little discouraged. The group then headed to the Lawrenceville Wal-Mart, where shoppers were polite, with a lot of “excuse me’s” as people bumped into one another.

“At least we’re not part of all those people going back for electronics,” Ms. Banks said. “That looks scary. This is a little crazy.”

The women walked out with a play kitchen for $49, a desk chair for $39 and the $14.88 waffle iron. As Ms. Banks wheeled the shopping cart out to the car, she could barely see around the big box containing the kitchen play set.

But while she got some bargains, Ms. Banks said she would not go back to a big-box store next year. “This is fun, but it’s a little too much for me,” she said.

Some first-time Black Friday shoppers said the tough economy had made getting deals a necessary part of buying Christmas gifts and for everyday staples.

Reporting was contributed by Julie Creswell in New Jersey, Steven Yaccino in Illinois, Rebecca Fairley Raney in California and Robbie Brown in Georgia.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=80438cc26bcfc5d059dd40e6146e83d1