Proxy statement
A proxy statement is a statement provided by a firm soliciting shareholder votes. This statement is useful in assessing how management is paid and potential conflict of interest issues with auditors.
The statement includes voting procedure and information, background information about the company's nominated directors, board compensation, executive compensation, and audit fees and committee members. Regulation may govern the requirements of proxy statements.
Contents
The statement includes:- Voting procedure and information.
- Background information about the company's nominated directors including relevant history in the company or industry, positions on other corporate boards, and potential conflicts of interest.
- Board compensation.
- Executive compensation, including salary, bonus, non-equity compensation, stock awards, options, and deferred compensation. Also, information is included about perks such as personal use of company aircraft, travel, and tax gross-ups. Many companies will also include pre-determined payout packages for if an executive leaves the company.
- Who is on the audit committee, as well as a breakdown of audit and non-audit fees paid to the auditor.
Regulation
US regulation
In the US, Regulation 14A is the set of rules around proxy solicitations and Schedule 14A sets rules for the proxy statement. A proxy statement is required of a firm when soliciting shareholder votes. This statement is filed in advance of the annual meeting. The firm needs to file a proxy statement—otherwise known as a Form DEF 14A —with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Per SEC proxy rules, the term proxy statement means the statement required by Section 240.14a-3 whether or not contained in a single document.Proxy access
The Securities Exchange Act of 1934 also gave the SEC the power to regulate the solicitation of proxies, though some of the rules the SEC has since proposed have been controversial.' There has been some controversy over "proxy access" which is a method to allow certain shareholders to nominate candidates which appear on the proxy statement.' Historically, only the nominating board can place candidates on the proxy statement. Activist investors typically had mailed their own ballots when running competing candidates. The United States Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act specifically allowed the SEC to rule on this issue. In 2010, the SEC passed a rule which allowed certain shareholders to place candidates on the proxy statement; however, in Business Roundtable v. SEC the rule was struck down by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in 2011.Beginning in 2015, proxy access rules began to spread driven by initiatives from major institutional investors, and as of 2018, 71% of S&P 500 companies had a proxy access rule.