Friday, October 17, 2008

A.I.G.: Code red governance disgrace

See what happens when a board of directors doesn't do their job? According to today's New York Times, New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo will now review pay packages and expenditures. That's normally a board working alongside management responsibility. See the story if you haven't already, http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/17/business/17aig.html?ref=business

American International Group (A.I.G.) is now officially a code red governance disgrace. Granted it's an extreme example. But this whole idea that governance is something that happens when no one is watching or listening needs rapid debunking. A little education might help too.

A.I.G. didn't have to be this way. And we're not talking about the implosion of their business that led to government seizure. We're referring to their inability to take the appropriate actions themselves since bailout money was directed their way. It's incredulous that not one leader or manager within the company or board didn't speak up and say, "hey, wait a second. We shouldn't be doing these types of things based on the situation we find ourselves in."

This tragic chapter isn't over. Next week we will learn just how much the insurer's credit default swaps have, well, defaulted. Attention CEO and board: Get out in front of this mess whatever way you can. Appear with Cuomo in public. If you're afraid of mounting lawsuits or shareholders, then you don't deserve to be leading this company. Second thought, maybe A.I.G. isn't a company that deserves to be led?



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Monday, October 13, 2008

Invisible Governance

Go ahead potential Flubbers in Chief. Whale away at "greedy CEOs" and Wall Street corruption. Congress, parade the villains in front of committees so the public can feel better. Or is it you, Congress, who needs to feel better? We can't tell anymore, nor do we care.

The outrage surrounding the financial crisis isn't about compensation. It's not even about incompetence or leadership failure although a good argument could be made on the latter.

The market crash heard around the world has many of the best and brightest looking pretty dumb these days. Cries of "failure in leadership" tend to ring hollow when something called an irrational market continues to destroy more value than a Category Five hurricane.

Don't let the revisionists mislead you. What preceded the eye of the current storm cuts to the issue's core. Invisible governance describes the raft of gutless boards and government regulators who allowed what amounts to stealing to ruin a free market system.

Pick your culprit: Merrill Lynch, Lehman Brothers, WaMu, Wachovia, AIG, Fannie, Freddie, etc. Each firm had an invisible slate of directors, and in Lehman's case, a former theatrical producer rounding out its membership ranks. Look over a few compositions, and you'll pick up on an over-abundance of "retired" or inactive executives. Not to mention a litany of money management and finance types when more value-driven business builders could have inserted more real world reality. But that's hindsight now.

Every day brings new damning revelations of how invisible these boards were leading up to the collapse, including clear evidence that AIG's board stood by while irrational risk was being taken on a complex derivative called credit default swaps (Wall Street Journal, October 11-12.) You don't have to be a Wall Street whiz to understand that credit default swaps are code for unregulated insurance with no required reserve.

Consider the intangibles, which have just as much consequence but rarely generate much debate. Boards, working with management not against it, are responsible for setting and enforcing shared values. The collective bodies that fill these board seats are accountable for firm culture, which has now been shot up more than the Godfather's Sonny Corleone riding through the toll booth.

In AIG's case, lack of enforcement provided the impetus for managers to take on unprecedented leveraged risk without anyone calling out the obvious. The fact that this type of behavior was allowed going back to the tenure of former AIG Chairman Hank Greenberg is the real culprit, not all the damaging byproducts that have surfaced over the past few weeks (yes, that includes the lavish St. Regis retreat approved after receiving public bailout money.)

Ironically boards also are the ones who set the terms of CEO pay, which is determined by market dynamics, pay consultants and, if anyone was being honest about the process, gamesmanship by recruiters and their firms, which are generally hired by boards to find a CEO. After all, everyone has to get paid their fair share. Recruiters, lawyers, consultants, secretaries, etc. Boards also lead the process known as CEO retention, which seems quaint right now with everyone trying to stem the tide.

What seems to be missing the most is a basic fundamental. It's a board member's primary responsibility to ask tough questions such as, "hey, wait a minute. What happens if risk on these derivatives blows up and we don't have any reserves to cover the investment?" Difficult questions are foregone when profits are going through the roof and only rarely asked during normal times. That's the real crime here, and the situation won't be corrected until more are held accountable for lack of fiduciary responsibility.

The worst part is banks have not been traditionally held to the same governance standards as corporations. We've heard our fair share of experts say, "oh, they're just banks." But that's just rationalization, which leads to denial, which leads to projection. Hence the current mess.

The buck has to stop somewhere, right?

While we're not holding our breath, an overhaul of governance in the banking and financial system will be essential if anyone wants to see real change. It's becoming abundantly clear that the government will be the ones calling the shots, not the smooth water sailors currently occupying their seats. Let's pray that it's not FASB, another stealth culprit in this shadowy systemic mess. There's also bound to be a few shareholder lawsuits aimed against individual board members. Especially at AIG, which has generated the most outrage.

No solution to combat invisible governance will be perfect. The blame game is still in the first quarter. But anyone that tells you the solution can't be found in the problem's root causes either isn't being intellectually honest or is trying to cover their tracks. We simply can't afford anymore disappearing acts at the highest decision-making levels.

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