Normes d’encadrement | Page 8

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Une incorporation aux Pays-Bas vous tente ?

Plusieurs entreprises européennes ont choisi de s’immatriculer aux Pays-Bas plutôt que dans leur pays d’origine. Pourquoi ce choix ? Mme Laurence Boisseau fournit un bel éclairage dans l’article suivant : « Siège social aux Pays-Bas : les risques pour les actionnaires » (Les Échos.fr, novembre 2019).

Extrait :

Actions à droit de vote multiple

La différence la plus sensible réside dans les actions à droit de vote multiple, qui sont autorisées aux Pays-Bas et pas en France. Dans l’Hexagone, seuls des droits de vote double sont possibles. Aux Pays-Bas existent différentes catégories d’actions, sans aucune limite sur les droits de vote. Cela permet de verrouiller un capital et donc de protéger une entreprise contre une tentative de prise de contrôle.

Autre point, moins favorable aux actionnaires, le seuil à partir duquel il est possible de déposer des résolutions aux assemblées générales. Aux Pays-Bas, il faut avoir rassemblé 3 % du capital, en France, seulement 0,5 %. Et c’est déjà beaucoup, se plaignent certains représentants de fonds. Pour déposer une résolution chez Total, cela suppose d’avoir investi plusieurs centaines de millions d’euros. En revanche, les résolutions sont votées avec les mêmes majorités, simples la plupart du temps. La majorité qualifiée, soit 66 %, concerne des modifications de statuts.

Salaires des patrons

Les salaires des patrons sont en revanche scrutés de plus près en France. Pour l’instant, seule la politique de rémunération est soumise au vote des actionnaires néerlandais. Mais, en 2020, la donne sera différente car les Pays-Bas auront transposé la directive des actionnaires. L’assemblée générale votera donc les rémunérations individuelles des dirigeants, avec un vote consultatif. En France, ce vote est devenu contraignant avec la loi Sapin II suite à l’affaire Renault.

Les minoritaires sont mieux traités aux Pays-Bas en matière de retrait de la cote : le seuil à partir duquel une société peut être retirée est de 95 % aux Pays-Bas contre 90 % en France depuis la loi Pacte. Il est donc plus favorable aux minoritaires dans le premier cas.

Enfin, les Pays Bas offrent un cadre plus accueillant aux « class actions », ces actions collectives en justice par lesquelles des actionnaires peuvent demander des comptes à des entreprises. Dans certaines affaires, des plaignants ont obtenu des sommes importantes. En 2007, la justice a accordé 1,37 milliard d’euros à près de 300.000 actionnaires de la banque franco-belge Dexia, en lien avec l’effondrement du cours de Bourse en 2001. En France, les « class actions » n’existent pas pour les affaires concernant la Bourse.

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actualités internationales Gouvernance Normes d'encadrement parties prenantes place des salariés Responsabilité sociale des entreprises

COVID-19 : le test de la RSE

Bel article publié le 1er avril 2020 dans la Harvard Business Review intitulé : « Coronavirus Is Putting Corporate Social Responsibility to the Test ». La RSE passera-t-elle le texte de l’empirique ?

Extrait :

A great many large companies talk about having a social purpose and set of values, or about how much they care for their employees and other stakeholders. Now is the time for them to make good on that commitment. Research suggests that people only truly believe that their company has a purpose and clear values when they see management making a decision that sacrifices short-term profitability for the sake of adhering to those values.

(…) Here are some things that companies can do to help their employees, small suppliers, health care providers, and communities.

Employees. What companies do to help their laid-off employees  — above and beyond what is required or expected — will be remembered and repaid in increased loyalty, higher productivity, and a lasting reputational benefit for many years to come.

Continuing to pay wages, even at less than full pay, is one option. Walmart, Microsoft, Apple, and Lyft have all made commitments to continue payments to hourly workers for at least the first two weeks of lockdown. This is essential not only as a matter of corporate responsibility; it will also substantially reduce the costs of rehiring employees when the economy returns to normal.

Lending money to employees is another option. Left on their own, many employees will turn to the exorbitant charges of credit card debt and payday lenders who will levy a 20%-plus interest rate at a time when corporations can borrow at 2% or 3%. That difference in interest rates can be the difference between bankruptcy and economic survival. Corporations should use their corporate credit and collateral to arrange low- or no-interest loans to their employees. They should calculate employees’ take-home pay after payroll deductions, and ask their banks to make loans available equal to a month of net wages at 3% interest, guaranteed by the corporation. Employees can pay the loans back over the next year out of their salaries when they return to work.

In all likelihood, very few of a company’s employees will actually require medical care, but if they have no insurance, that too can bankrupt them. Companies should offer to cover the medical expenses of all non-insured employees — probably somewhere between 2% and 5% will actually incur significant bills, and companies can negotiate with their insurer an additional premium to cover them. Sadly, employees may also need help to cover funeral costs for the few who succumb.

Small suppliers. Companies should offer advance payments to their small suppliers, giving them cash today for goods that they will need when they return to production. It’s the corporate equivalent of buying gift cards to keep your local store in business.

Health care providers. Some parts of the world face severe shortages in basic medical supplies, but as a global company you have access to resources everywhere. The need for masks in China and South Korea has waned while it is still growing in the United States and Europe. Companies should purchase and ship supplies from where they are available to where they are needed. They should tap their inventory of whatever they have that might help, send it where it will do the most good, and take the loss.

Communities. Major corporations should use their foundations to aid food pantries, free clinics, and other nonprofits in addressing immediate needs of the communities where they have operations.

Pour rappel, j’ai publié récemment un billet de blogue sur Contact partageant mes réflexions sur les liens entre COVID-19, entreprises et RSE : « La RSE à l’heure de la COVID-19 » (26 mars 2020).

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actualités internationales devoir de vigilance Normes d'encadrement normes de marché Responsabilité sociale des entreprises

Devoir de vigilancve : bilan en France

Les Cahiers de Droit de l’Entreprise (Lexisnexis) (avril 2020) viennent de publier un numéro consacré à la loi française sur le devoir de vigilance. C’est à lire ! Merci à tous les auteurs pour leur éclairage : Elsa Savourey, Stéphane Brabant, Ophélia Claude, Antonin Lévy, Sandra Cossart, Lucie Chatelain, Mathilde Frapard, Frédérique Lellouche

Résumé :

Loi sur le devoir de vigilance – les premières mises en demeure et contentieux : notre table-ronde sur les enjeux juridiques et regards des parties prenantes !

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actualités internationales Gouvernance Normes d'encadrement normes de droit Nouvelles diverses

Espagne : un droit des sociétés modifié aussi

Comme d’autres pays, l’Espagne vient de modifier son droit des sociétés par actions pour donner plus de souplesse notamment dans la tenue des assemblées annuelles : « Coronavirus Spain · Royal Decree-Law 8/2020 of 17 March – Measures Applicable to Companies » (20 mars 2020).

Extrait :

On 18 March, Royal Decree-Law 8/2020, of 17 March, on urgent, extraordinary measures to deal with the economic and social impact of Covid-19 was published. Below we briefly explain the extraordinary measures applicable to companies and other legal persons in private law (associations, cooperatives and foundations).

These measures can be broken down into three categories depending on their scope of application: (i) measures relative to the adoption of resolutions, (ii) measures relative to the annual accounts and (iii) other measures.

i. Measures relative to the adoption of resolutions:

Although no specific regulation exists in the bylaws, during the state of alarm the following is permitted:

• The holding of meetings by videoconference of:

 -The General Shareholders’ Meeting and the governing body of mercantile companies;
 -The General Assembly and the Governing Board (Junta Directiva) of associations;
 -The Governing Council (Consejo Rector) of cooperatives;
 -The Governing Council (Patronato) of foundations;
 -The delegate committees, whether obligatory or voluntary, that the above bodies have established.

The videoconference must be carried out by some means that ensures the authenticity and the real-time connection with image and sound of those in attendance.

• The adoption of resolutions by the abovementioned bodies by written vote and without a meeting, if so decided by the President or when requested by at least two of the members of the body.

ii. Measures relative to the annual accounts:

• The term for the governing or management body to prepare the annual accounts is suspended. From the date on which the state of alarm ends, a new term of three months is granted for their preparation.

• If the annual accounts have already been prepared and when the audit of said accounts is mandatory, entities will have two months from the end of the state of alarm to audit the accounts.

• The meeting of the Ordinary General Shareholders’ Meeting to approve the annual accounts shall be held obligatorily within three months of the end of the period in which to prepare the accounts. Consequently, the General Shareholders’ Meeting must meet within six months of the end of the state of alarm to approve the annual accounts.

• If the call to a meeting of the General Shareholders’ Meeting was published prior to the declaration of the state of alarm, and the meeting should be held after said declaration, the governing body may choose between the following two options (i) change the place and time of the meeting or (ii) revoke the resolution to call the meeting; in either case, it must be done at least 48 hours before the meeting is held. Furthermore, if the call to a meeting is revoked, a new call must be made within a month of the end of the state of alarm.

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actualités internationales Gouvernance Normes d'encadrement Nouvelles diverses parties prenantes Responsabilité sociale des entreprises

Le Forum économique mondial envoie un message

En ce début d’avril 2020, le Forum Économique Mondial vient de publier une déclaration sur les principes parties prenantes qu’il entend promouvoir durant la crise du COVID-19 : « Stakeholder Principles in the COVID Era ».

Extrait :

To this end, we endorse the following Stakeholder Principles in the COVID Era:

− To employees, our principle is to keep you safe: We will continue do everything we can to protect your workplace, and to help you to adapt to the new working conditions

− To our ecosystem of suppliers and customers, our principle is to secure our shared business continuity: We will continue to work to keep supply chains open and integrate you into our business response

− To our end consumers, our principle is to maintain fair prices and commercial terms for essential supplies

− To governments and society, our principle is to offer our full support: We stand ready and will continue to complement public action with our resources, capabilities and know-how

− To our shareholders, our principle remains the long-term viability of the company and its potential to create sustained value

Finally, we also maintain the principle that we must continue our sustainability efforts unabated, to bring our world closer to achieving shared goals, including the Paris climate agreement and the United Nations Sustainable Development Agenda. We will continue to focus on those long-term goals.

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actualités internationales Gouvernance Normes d'encadrement rémunération Responsabilité sociale des entreprises

Des rémunérations à la baisse ?

Très intéressant article du Financial Times au titre très clair : « Investors and politicians demand coronavirus pay cuts » (4 avril 2020). L’Angleterre démontre un changement de perspective dans le domaine de la rémunération de la haute direction… Un exemple à suivre ?

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actualités internationales engagement et activisme actionnarial Gouvernance Normes d'encadrement Nouvelles diverses Responsabilité sociale des entreprises

COVID-19 : l’ICGN prend position sur ce qui devrait être fait

L’influent ICGN a pris récemment position sur les conséquences du COVID-19 pour la gouvernance d’entreprise, sachant que ce réseau international fait de cette pandémie un risque systémique (rien de moins !). Vous pourrez lire les préconisation de l’ICGN dans le document suivant : ICGN Viewpoint, « Coronavirus as a new systemic risk: implications for corporate governance and investor stewardship », 12 mars 2020.

Extrait concernant les investisseurs

Despite these negative economic events investors should avoid focusing on the crisis in terms of its short-term shareholder value implications. It is here where a long-term perspective, and perhaps a grounding ethics and values more generally, should also guide investor responses. In the language of modern finance, this may be less an opportunity for investors seeking alpha generation in individual companies than it is a question of addressing ‘beta’ issues—the volatility/stability of the markets and financial system as a whole. This may be fiendishly complicated, but an important guiding principle for investors relates to their fundamental fiduciary duty of care to their beneficiaries. This confirms the importance of taking a long-term perspective, since most ICGN Members, and large institutional investors more generally, are managing assets for pension plans or retirement saving plans, where the investment horizon is intrinsically long-term, or in theory infinite.

It is beyond the scope of this Viewpoint to suggest specific investment or trading strategies for investors in addressing the impacts of COVID-19. There is no generic solution. These will differ depending on individual investor mandates and beneficiary requirements. But from the perspective of investor stewardship and fiduciary duty — and consistent with ICGN’s Global Stewardship Principles and Policy Priorities3 — it is fair to suggest that in reacting to this crisis investors should generally seek to maintain an approach that promotes long-term investment horizons and sustainable value creation for individual companies and markets.

As a practical matter this requires investors to appreciate that companies will be facing difficult questions in response to the impacts of COVID-19. The first priority for managers and boards will be to ensure the company’s own financial sustainability. Investors must also understand that capital allocation questions may surface where compromise is required. Companies may have to choose between cutting dividend payments, cutting capital spending or cutting costs, possibly leading to redundancies. Investors should demonstrate support for companies as they navigate potentially acute financial threats and market pressures. Investors should also avoid encouraging companies to undertake undue risks that might provide a short-term investor benefit but could also jeopardise a company’s financial stability or the sustainability of its business model. This reflects not only some level of enlightened self-interest, but also the moral imperative to contribute positively to the broader threats to public health and social stability.

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