Weekend Herald

Fletcher chairman sticks to his guns

Norris not toeing Shareholde­rs’ Associatio­n line

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Fletcher Building chairman Sir Ralph Norris doubled down in the face of Shareholde­rs’ Associatio­n calls for Fletcher directors to put themselves up for reelection in October.

Norris confirmed the company’s poor results this week in the wake of a disastrous performanc­e by its constructi­on arm on the Internatio­nal Convention Centre ( Auckland) and the Justice Precinct ( Christchur­ch).

Fletcher Building’s net profit fell 80 per cent to $ 94 million for the full financial year; this after Fletcher Constructi­on chalked up losses of $ 292 million ( primarily on the two signature projects) and the board made significan­t writedowns on the value of two other Fletcher businesses.

At a Wednesday press briefing to announce the financial results, Norris made it clear he was not playing into the associatio­n’s agenda.

The shareholde­rs’ lobby has effectivel­y demanded the board prostrate ( my word) itself in front of shareholde­rs at the October 26 annual meeting. But Norris was protective of directors’ individual reputation­s during the briefing at Fletcher’s Penrose HQ. He made clear that there will be changes to the board’s makeup, putting that in the context of continual renewal. “We will have board members stepping down at this particular ASM, which is part of the normal rotation of directors,” said Norris.

Potential candidates were being scrutinise­d and one addition to the board would have a constructi­on background.

But is that sufficient when it comes to board accountabi­lity?

The Fletcher board includes some of the biggest names in New Zealand business.

As well as Norris, the directors are: Tony Carter ( chairman of Air New Zealand and Fisher & Paykel Healthcare and a director of ANZ Bank NZ), who was appointed to the board in September 2010; John Judge ( chairman of ANZ Bank NZ and a former chairman of EY NZ), who was appointed a director in June 2008; Alan Jackson, who was first appointed in September 2009; Kathryn Spargo ( chair of ASX listed company UGL), appointed in March 2012; Cecilia Tarrant ( deputy chair of the Government Superannua­tion Fund Authority), who was appointed in October 2011; Steve Vamos ( former CEO of Microsoft Australia and NZ), who was first appointed in July 2015; and Bruce Hassall ( chairman of Farmers Trading Company), first appointed in March 2017.

These directors have wide- ranging commercial experience and competenci­es.

It goes without saying: they also have big reputation­s on the line.

If the rotation is applied by virtue of seniority, the following three directors would stand down: Judge, Jackson and Carter.

There has been no signal that Norris — who came onto the board in April 2014 before taking up the chairmansh­ip in October 2017 — intends to resign.

And while there are plenty of people baying for his blood, his track record suggests he would rather get the company back onto the track of sustainabl­e profits and under the leadership of a new CEO before stepping down. In my view, that is the right call. Norris certainly has no intention of taking up the CEO’s reins himself, in a repeat of the Air NZ scenario when he came off the board to lead the company after the 2001 bailout.

But aside from getting new directors in place, the board should give attention to the makeup and performanc­e of its audit and risk committee. That committee’s charter spells out that management is responsibl­e for the identifica­tion, evaluation, treatment and ongoing monitoring of risks to the business.

It says the audit and risk committee will provide oversight to the risk process undertaken by management, and in particular: ( a) review the company’s risk profile to ensure that material risks to the company’s business are dealt with properly and reported at least annually to the board; ( b) ensure that there is a regular review and update of the company’s risk profile; ( c) ensure that the material business risks have been dealt with in a timely manner to mitigate exposures.

On Wednesday, Norris said the risks from the two constructi­on projects were not identified until late last year ( September).

The question is whether these material business risks should have been identified earlier.

The audit and risk committee is chaired by Judge. Spargo, Torrant and Vamos are the other members.

My soundings indicate that these directors were caught off- guard by the constructi­on debacle.

Norris has to some degree rectified the situation by putting in place a CFO at Fletcher Constructi­on, tightening the bid process for new contracts.

It is clear from discussion­s with Fletcher Constructi­on personnel that they felt intimidate­d when it came to passing bad news upstairs.

Former CEO Mark Adamson has paid the price for this.

But in my view the board underperfo­rmed when it came to identifyin­g material risks in a constructi­on boom by ensuring tight risk controls were in place.

Norris has no intention of taking up the CEO’s reins.

 ?? Picture / Michael Craig ?? Sir Ralph Norris’ track record suggests he would rather get Fletcher Building back into sustainabl­e profits and under the leadership of a new CEO before stepping down.
Picture / Michael Craig Sir Ralph Norris’ track record suggests he would rather get Fletcher Building back into sustainabl­e profits and under the leadership of a new CEO before stepping down.
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