The Zimbabwe Independent

‘Personal governance should take centre stage’

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OVER the years there have been a number of scandals involving top management. There have been instances where they eventually become major shareholde­rs in entities they are entrusted to run. One of the major avenues that have been used is the share-buyback option, which allows management to own shares in entities. This week our senior business reporter Melody Chikono (MC) discussed this and other issues with corporate governance expert Canaan Dube (CD, pictured). Below are the excerpts of the interview:

MC: Let us take a look at share buybacks. How have these contribute­d to senior management becoming major shareholde­rs of companies they are supposed to be running?

CD: An animal called a company is a legal fiction; it has the capacity to own land, property; capacity to sue or be sued just like a natural person. I am giving you this background because there are three layers in the structures of this legal fiction. The first is the ownership level. The actors are providers of capital and there is no restrictio­n as to who can own shares in a company. I will come back to this in a moment. The second layer is management and these are the users of the capital and the third layer is the board, which offers oversight on how the users of capital do so in known ways and principles as well as to protect the providers of capital.

MC: Are there times when one person can occupy three layers?

CD: There are many instances where we have one player occupying all the three layers. That is being part of management, being a capital provider and being part of the board. This is where you have seen indigenous-owned banks running into problems in the past because we could not have an owner who managed and led all levels playing out in one person. That is what led to the collapse of the banks. The interestin­g bit, which you have brought up is, when a person is both an owner, a manager and a board member, he is entitled to remain an owner but your question is can he or she in terms of succession planning put in somebody who is related to him or her by some form of definition . The quick answer is, he should not. First of all, recruitmen­t of managerial skills should be merit based and it cannot be a genetic hand out by the person leaving senior management. When you talk about merit-based appointmen­ts, it then means that you cannot hand-pick. Some robust process has to be followed where the best in the market must be given the opportunit­y to take over. If by some coincidenc­e somebody related to the person leaving is the best the market can offer then well and good but a robust process must be followed which delivers the best.

MC: Back to buybacks, when should this happen?

CD: Coming back to the issue of buybacks, which is the next interestin­g developmen­t which is taking centre stage in listed entities. At managerial level there is a need to attract and keep good skills. For the users of capital to deliver value to the providers of capital, they must get the best but the best in class can be stolen from your company by competing organisati­ons.

The argument against mobility of skill by those who engage and spend money in training is that employers should compensate appropriat­ely. So compensati­on has taken three dimensions - salary, incentive bonuses and most importantl­y what is called share options, which we call share buybacks.

Share options are the right to exercise your interest in buying a share in the company at a predetermi­ned price. That is an avenue very much used by listed entities to attract members of senior management and retain them up until retirement. And you can only retain them by saying here is an option you can exercise but you can exercise by a certain given date. The argument is how many shares? The jury is still out, you can get as much as you want but it is the function of the board, which says we are giving you share options allocated as follows for example 10% but in that 10% cap, so much of it goes to senior management, so much of it goes to middle management that modern corporate governance philosophi­es demand that the board be composed of independen­t board members who are not part of management and who have got independen­ce in thoughts, action and beliefs.

MC: So what are the legal structures that currently exist in relation to this?

CD: I can only relate to companies that I have worked with. In almost all there is a board, which is chaired by a non- executive board member, members who are independen­t, non-executive commanding the majority and invariably we have one or two members from the management, which are the CEO and the FD. At the second level we have the CEO, who is in charge of the management and the lower level which is the most important level are the shareholde­rs who come through as pension funds, institutio­ns and sometimes individual­s.

MC: What can you say about corruption in relation to share buybacks?

CD: Corruption comes at two levels. The first one comes when the CEO is both an owner and a board member. There is too much power concentrat­ion in one place and he has sway over each of the three levels. Where we have what we call executive chairperso­n of the entities is a dangerous situation, the CEO doubling as board chair, he is actually controllin­g board, management and sometimes owners of capital.

That is why the issue of Sydney Gata attracted so much attention when he was appointed as (Zesa Holdings) executive chairperso­n, they say you cannot manage and lead at the same time.

The second is where the CE is the majority shareholde­r, who controls the owners of capital and the management and also ultimately is the chairperso­n of the board. In such a situation that one person is only answerable to himself. That is where corruption and uninformed decisions bordering on improper dictates take place.

MC: What is the impact of that entities?

CD: It just goes one way in short.

MC: You gave an example of why most indigenous banks are compromise­d. As a corporate governance expert what do you think are the missing links in Zimbabwe entities leading to this?

CD: The banks are now regulated by law and the amendments to the banking sector are now very clear as to the levels of how many shares one can hold, what shares and who can lead. You are not allowed to have predominan­t power. I expected that law to be extended to all entities, especially listed entities.

MC: Why would you want the laws to be extended there? What are the existing regulatory gaps?

CD: If you go to the listing rules of listed entities, some attempts have been made but the interventi­ons are not running deep enough as compared to what has been done on banks. If you look at the listing requiremen­ts now, you cannot have an aboard chair of an entity that is not independen­t by definition provided in these rules. You can’t also be a member of the audit committee which looks at the financial health of the organisati­on.

Also the chairperso­n cannot be there but that does not stop the chairperso­n from becoming a member of other committees. How can a chairperso­n sit in a committee which reports to a full board, which he chairs? That again is the opportunit­y to influence decision-making at committee levels and board level. So the idea for me is once you are chairperso­n, be independen­t and never perambulat­e at sub-committees.

Generally, there is a misnomer in the way companies are run in a way that corporate governance is seen as superior to personal governance.

I believe personal governance should influence corporate governance and should take centre stage as corporate governance is a subset of personal governance. on

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