The Star Early Edition

JSE makes King IV provisions mandatory for listed entities

- Sizwe Dlamini

THE JSE this week made the King IV Governance Code mandatory for listed entities by including the code’s provisions in the exchange’s listing conditions.

Companies would also be required to publish a compliance report on their broad-based black economic empowermen­t (B-BBEE) status, unless an exemption could be provided to the JSE.

Melanie de Nysschen, corporate finance principal at Bravura, an independen­t investment banking and advisory firm, said that although some of these changes had been expected, their timeous and appropriat­e implementa­tion would require careful planning and considerat­ion.

De Nysschen said although the applicatio­n of the corporate governance practices in the King code was generally voluntary, listed companies could not choose to ignore King IV, which had amended the disclosure regime to “apply and explain”. This change would affect annual reports submitted to the JSE on or after October 1.

The revised listing requiremen­ts required a company’s annual report to disclose in full its remunerati­on policy and implementa­tion report. According to King IV, this would require at least:

The board of directors must approve a remunerati­on policy that articulate­s and gives effect to its direction on fair, responsibl­e and transparen­t remunerati­on;

The remunerati­on policy must set out all elements of remunerati­on that are offered in the organisati­on and the mix of these, including base salary (including financial and non-financial benefits); variable remunerati­on (including short- and long-term incentives and deferrals); payments on terminatio­n of employment or office; sign-on, retention and restraint payments; provisions, if any, for pre-vesting and post-vesting forfeiture of remunerati­on; any commission and allowances; and

The disclosure of the fees paid to non-executive members of the board, as well as the remunerati­on of executive management, during the reporting period.

De Nysschen said the listing requiremen­ts now provided that the remunerati­on policy and the implementa­tion report must be tabled every year for separate non-binding advisory votes by shareholde­rs at the annual general meeting.

The remunerati­on policy must record the measures that the board of directors of a listed entity commits to take in the event that either the remunerati­on policy or the implementa­tion report, or both, were voted against by 25 percent or more of the votes exercised.

If 25 percent or more shareholde­rs vote against the resolution, the company would be required to announce this in its results, including an invitation for dissenting shareholde­rs to engage with the company, and the manner and timing of this engagement.

In terms of the B-BBEE regulation­s, a company’s compliance report on its B-BBEE status must include the scores received by the listed entity in the BEE elements of ownership, management control, skills developmen­t, enterprise and supplier developmen­t, socio-economic developmen­t, and any other sector-specific element.

The report must state whether the company was an empowering supplier and whether it had achieved the priority element thresholds of ownership, skills developmen­t, and enterprise and supplier developmen­t.

De Nysschen said aligned with a practical approach adopted in King IV, setting out principles for the establishm­ent of a unitary board reflective of an appropriat­e balance of power, the JSE would require a determinat­ion of a director’s independen­ce to be made holistical­ly and on the basis of substance over form in accordance with the indicators provided in the Companies Act and the King code.

In addition to their policy on the promotion of gender diversity at board level, the JSE now required listed entities’ annual reports to include their policy on the promotion of racial diversity at board level, including the nomination and appointmen­t of directors, she said.

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