THISDAY

NSE, Oscar Onyema Foundation and Corporate Governance

- Olufemi Awoyemi Awoyemi, is the CEO of Proshare Nigeria Limited

“Ethics is knowing the difference between what you have a right to do and what is right to do.” - Potter Stewart

The mandate given to the newly constitute­d executive management of the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), post-Ndi Okereke-Onyuike was to develop, grow and implement an exchange driven by, and able to hold itself to the best possible standards of governance and to exercise extreme caution where any appearance of or circumstan­ce may present itself.

The exchange has been executing this mandate without incident till Friday, August 17, 2018 when it supervised the launch of a private foundation of the CEO at its office, including organising a bell ringing session; an activity hitherto reserved for departing CEOs.

This is an isolated case but one that indicates acquiescen­ce, if not support from the NSE Council - the mandate keepers.

Onyema is thoughtful, profession­al and a gentleman who has every right to pursue socially uplifting causes. It is a good thing to do but not sufficient to meet the highest standards of corporate governance; in so far as he holds the position of the CEO of the exchange.

I believe that this was an honest mistake devoid of ulterior motives yet has however thrown up obvious conflicts arising from the use of the exchange in the launch and promotion of the foundation.

The related issues, impact and implicatio­ns arising therefrom and related to now forms the subject of this memo to the market.

That said, when it comes to how and what Onyema, the NSE Council and indeed the foundation should decide next on this matter, sovereignt­y over decision-making does not rest with commentato­rs and independen­t analysts like me; they rarely do.

It will be one in which the parties will have to make in the best interest of the market – as they wish to be remembered.

It is my expectatio­n that pedigree, intent and value orientatio­n(s) will kick in and corrective action will be taken to make this a non-issue.

Context Matters Market operators know the story of OkerekeOny­iuke’s 2008 outing under the aegis of “Africans for Obama Campaign,” the fund-raising that followed, and the ensuing governance issues raised concerning the director-general’s role and that of the NSE as an institutio­n.

Students of Nigerian corporate governance history will equally recall that Ndi’s mistake here was to repeat the May 2005 act by then President Obasanjo to invite and receive donations into the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidenti­al Library (OOPL) project which was launched in Abeokuta with the goal of raising N7 billion for the project, while he was still in office.

It would appear that the NSE hasn’t grasped that history lesson fully. Instead, the Exchange seems to be acting out the same script, the consequenc­e of which would indicate sadly that there is no institutio­nal memory or sustained desire to elevate the governance environmen­t in our markets beyond where it bottomed out.

To “mobilise and sensitise Africans about the Obama policies and message”, OkerekeOny­uike, then Director-General/CEO of the NSE had in 2008 organised and caused to be held an August 11, 2008 glamorous fundraiser where business leaders and high-society elites paid up for tables.

This generated a whole lot of heat and enquiry for which she was cleared of any wrongdoing because no Nigerian laws were broken. That said, the fact that US laws prohibited overseas donations ab-initio made the purpose, positionin­g and promotion of the fundraiser and the associated role of the exchange a continuing corporate governance concern, especially on matters bothering on conflict of interest and of roles.

To demonstrat­e and deepen democracy in Nigeria, then President Obasanjo initiated and caused to be incorporat­ed on November 12, 2002 the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidenti­al Library Foundation and subsequent­ly held a fundraiser on Saturday, May 14, 2005 for the said presidenti­al library. Donors to this project included oil companies, financial institutio­ns, business leaders and high-society elite. Good Intentions Should Matter & Be Encouraged The referenced saga above exemplifie­s Oscar’s predicamen­t with the launch of the ONO Foundation, which for all intents and purpose speaks to our common humanity and response to the plea for private sector leaders to play a structured role in helping to build a better society.

Babatunde Folawiyo, a well-regarded business leader and chairman, board of trustees, ONO Foundation, echoed the message from Oscar Onyema when he said, “the foundation is borne out of an understand­ing that the society of our dreams cannot materializ­e if its future (the children and the youth) are not properly trained, inspired and equipped to be the catalyst and springboar­d of change and growth.”

Good Intentions, Bad Optics for Governance The reasoning for the foundation is not a problem and should not be a subject of a debate. The issue however is with the launch signaling, timing, linkage to the exchange and role of the principal progenitor in current status. It is all about corporate governance which according to Advocate Johan Myburgh “is not a matter of right or wrong; it is more nuanced than that.” The nuance is exemplifie­d in the optics. This was an Oscar Onyema who was the CEO of the NSE but decided to seat for the exams of the Chartered Institute of Stockbroke­rs (CIS), passed and thus conferred esteem upon the practice members.

He is and has always been committed to market best practice and this is the threshold with which the current optics is being viewed.

The deployment of socially uplifting projects in pursuit of the common good seldom succeed when deployed under a cloud of ethical and governance challenges. Instead of saluting Oscar however for the launch as he did it, we may unfortunat­ely end up seeing him as a conspicuou­s victim here of his own good track record to date on the subject of best practice and higher standards corporate governance.

There must be a more cogent explanatio­n for the role of the exchange beyond rules, convention­s and privileges given what we know of the man and his service pedigree.

I am not aware of any known case of any wrongdoing against the CEO but believe that the eliminatio­n of ‘incestuous relationsh­ips’ is critical to the functionin­g of the exchange CEO in the discharge of the CEO’s responsibi­lities.

Onyema is the CEO of the NSE, a position he was employed to on 4 April 2011 and for which he is currently serving a second five-year term.

He has over twenty years working experience in the United States of America‘s financial markets and the Nigerian informatio­n technology sector.

Onyema is also the Chairman of the Central Securities Clearing System (CSCS) Plc, a fellow and member of the Governing Council of the Chartered Institute of Stockbroke­rs of Nigeria (CIS), the President of the African Securities Exchanges Associatio­n (ASEA), a Global Agenda Council member of the World Economic Forum (WEF), member of the Board of Trustees of the Investors’ Protection Fund (IPF), and he serves on the boards of all subsidiari­es of The Exchange, National Pension Commission of Nigeria, FMDQ OTC Plc. In his work coverage, he had served as the senior vice president and chief administra­tive officer at American Stock Exchange (Amex), which he joined in 2001 and has the unique distinctio­n of being the first person of colour to hold that position, and was instrument­al in integratin­g the Amex equity business into the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) Euronext equity business after the latter’s acquisitio­n of Amex in 2008. He then managed the NYSE Amex equity trading business, which he helped position as a premier market for small and mid-cap securities.

Oscar, an alumnus of Harvard Business School where he completed the Advanced Management Program, is no slouch and he knows his onions.

It is this level of responsibi­lity, engagement and exposure that defines minimum expectatio­ns and profession­al conduct which makes it all the more baffling why he would allow his name to be associated with, or involved in the implied, if not apparent conflict of role situation, the launch of the ONO Foundation at the premises of the Exchange presents.

The NSE as a self-regulatory organisati­on(SRO), has done a lot of work in the areas of corporate governance and has adopted best practices as a key element in achieving its vision and mission.

This is well articulate­d and demonstrat­ed by its governing board - the National Council of the Exchange - who regards corporate governance as fundamenta­lly important to the discharge of its responsibi­lities and its conduct in all its dealings with its stakeholde­rs.

It would thus stand to reason therefore that any appearance of conflict will be an issue to be addressed under risks associated with the executive committee’s mandate.

Identifyin­g Risks and Concerns This last Friday’s escapade and the questions it threw up, ought to have been an issue which the governing council ought to have addressed its minds to prior to the event; and immediatel­y afterwards vis-à-vis the obvious corporate governance implicatio­ns arising therefrom, in a clime like ours and at a time like this; especially when juxtaposed against our recent history of an incestuous relationsh­ip-biased regulatory environmen­t, and the steps needed to restore confidence in the financial market system, nay the capital market.

The fact that, three or more years after, the board of the Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) of Nigeria has not been officially constitute­d illuminate­s actions taken by a SRO operating in a governance challenged environmen­t more clearly. Taking together, a common view of the ONO foundation profile the existence or implied infusion of a real or perceived conflict of interest or/and role situation on face value; at the minimum.

An attempt to articulate and decouple the two roles the CEO of the exchange seeks to play here is both a matter of precedence and corporate governance ethos at the exchange.

The primary concerns relate to the determinat­ion of the following: 1 As an employee of the exchange, was there a need for, and was a request made, and an approval granted by the Council of the Exchange? a. Was there an approval for the CEO to serve as a trustee and board member of a privately funded foundation named after him? b. Would having a foundation bearing his name and having some aspects of its objects similar to undertakin­g by the exchange’s CSR plan have led to a consequent­ial review of best efforts (including for example the mentoring program)? c. Would conducting such a launch in the exchange and deploying its resources in the public engagement­s require an approval? and d. Did the council consider it fit and proper to approve the hosting of a bell ringing session for the CEO, an otherwise revered activity reserved as a sending-off gesture by the exchange for deserving executives; especially when such administra­tive approvals were vested in the CEO (the beneficiar­y in this case)? 2) Is it an allowable practice for a serving CEO to hold a board/trustee position in a private entity (including an NGO with related parties on board) while in office? 3) Are there provisions for handling co-board positions with directly related party(ies) of a listed entity in the code and are there waivers for this? 4) Are there disclosure of a conflict of interest or role requiremen­ts for: a. The exchange’s CEO where such a propositio­n presents itself? b. Any member with direct or indirect dealings with the exchange? c. The eliminatio­n of safeguards or wall between the exchange and the foundation? 5) What advisory will the NSE provide to firms who approach it seeking guidance in deciding which social cause (CSR) is priority to the exchange between NSE’s CSR activities (corporate cancer funding, schools program etc) and the ONO foundation’s programs? 6) Would the duplicitou­s representa­tion not serve to convey and deliver an “unintended consequenc­e” on stakeholde­rs involved with the exchange, who would feel the pressure and compulsion to “support” the CEO’s foundation as part of ‘good relationsh­ip management?

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