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FINAL UPDATE: A Clever Way to Pursue Shareholder Proposals


Last week HCC hosted its AGM, and we saw how this interesting and promising idea worked out for the United Mine Workers. As a reminder, HCC shareholder UMW solicited its own proxies, instead of relying on the HCC proxy statement (below). This prompted HCC to include five UMW proposals, without limits, in the HCC proxy statement, rather than the single limited one that the SEC permits.


Four of the proposals addressed classic corp gov reforms, while the fifth concerned labor relations. Of the five, two won shareholder approval, the labor relations proposal came close, another did ok, and the fifth received negligible support.


In the weeks leading up to the AGM, we saw surprisingly little publicity. HCC released a fairly standard shareholder letter and presentation. UMW released one letter and a list of shareholder proposals that the AFL-CIO supports, including the labor relations proposal at HCC. We saw a couple of posts on social media. That's about it.


UMW noted ISS and Glass Lewis both advised shareholders vote for the labor relations proposal. We don't know how they advised on the others. Based on the voting results, we expect they supported only some of them.


HCC actually endorsed one, on proxy access. It of course opposed the others.


The AGM took place on April 25. 84% of the outstanding shares were represented at the AGM, about the same as in 2023 and 2022. The proxy contest didn't prompt greater turnout.


The labor relations proposal received 46% of the votes, which UMW called a "win". The proxy access proposal won 99% of the votes, after HCC endorsed it, and a proposal requiring shareholder approval of poison pills won 51% of the votes. The other two did not win a majority, for shareholder approval of preferred stock issuance (22%) and of golden parachutes (4%). After UMW submitted the latter proposal, HCC adopted limits on severance pay, which evidently satisfied shareholders and led to the low support.


We understand UMW really did solicit its own proxies and collected a substantial number. Earlier we pondered whether it would instead rely mostly or entirely on HCC. UMW sent postcards under notice-and-access to only the requisite 50% of the voting power and didn't retain a proxy solicitor.


UMW achieved significant results with creativity and effort at an absurdly low cost. It could easily add director nominations, bylaw amendments, and other proposals to the mix. Companies continue to seek to limit conventional shareholder proposals from the usual ESG shareholders. Other activists look to shareholder proposals, in addition to BoD elections, to influence portfolio companies. We're eager to see what else others do with this idea.

UPDATE: A Clever Way to Pursue Shareholder Proposals


Many followers commented on our account of using proxy solicitation under SEC Rule 14a-4 to promote shareholder proposals (below). Tulane law professor Ann Lipton called it "very cool", so that 1) made our day and 2) reminded us we didn't invent the idea, merely wanted others to know about it.


Anyway, here is further information about this fascinating situation and opportunity for activists based on those helpful and interesting comments.


Status of UMW-HCC

HCC scheduled the AGM for April 25, with a record date of March 4. (HCC had disclosed this when we first posted, we neglected to include these dates then.) It looks like proxy solicitation has started at a deliberate pace. HCC has not communicated with shareholders other than to release its definitive proxy statement.


UMW released a single letter encouraging HCC shareholders to support its five proposals. We haven't seen a website or other way for HCC shareholders to learn about the UMW proposals, ask questions, or link to a voting page. At this point UMW could let HCC collect all of the proxies, rather than spending time and money itself on that considerable job.


How did advance notice work?

We looked into how HCC requires notice of the UMW proposals. HCC bylaws provide for an interesting but ultimately unique notice term. It allowed UMW to submit five precatory proposals, which HCC included in its proxy statement.


For most companies, the timing of notice of a shareholder proposal under Rule 14a-4 differs from that under Rule 14a-8. The typical notice under 14a-8 is before 4-5 months before the AGM. Some companies prescribe a one-month period four or five months before the AGM. Under Rule 14a-4, the typical notice is a one-month period ending three months before the AGM.


Also, companies typically require much more information from a proposer under Rule 14a-4. This would include more information about the proposal and the shareholder, similar to what it requires for BoD nominations. Under Rule 14a-8, a shareholder mostly needs to confirm its identity and shareholding.


For this reason, notice under one rule does not necessarily qualify as notice under the other. Yet, HCC provides for this. At HCC, a shareholder that duly submits a proposal under Rule 14a-8 is deemed to have satisfied the notice requirements under Rule 14a-4 (Section 2.7(a)(iv) of the HCC bylaws).


A response to SEC no-action?

We thought this novel approach might allow a shareholder to overcome a no-action letter from the SEC. If the SEC allows a company to exclude a shareholder's proposal from the proxy statement, then the shareholder might solicit proxies itself. We discussed this with a few shareholders that saw their proposals so excluded this proxy season. Alas, the advance notice provisions probably don't allow this.


Unlike at HCC, notice to the company for inclusion in the proxy statement under Rule 14a-8 differs from the notice for inclusion on the AGM agenda and subsequent proxy solicitation under Rule 14a-4. As we noted above, most companies have different timing windows and information requirements for proposals under each rule. A shareholder that wants to preserve its options would need to submit two different notices.


Company bylaws prescribe these notice terms. Shareholders would do well to review these to understand how to proceed.


Previous 14a-4 proposal solicitations

Earlier, we identified two previous instances of this tactic. Helpful readers identified three more, all from 20 years ago or more.

Advantages and disadvantages

We also identified some other ways to think about this process. Advantages of a proposal under Rule 14a-4 include:

  • An activist can submit more than one proposal (UMW submitted five)
  • The company cannot exclude proposals on one of the numerous bases that the SEC allows, such as "ordinary business" or "violates laws".
  • The 500-word limit on a 14a-8 proposal does not apply, so an activist can make whatever case it wants for its proposals.
  • There are no minimum shareholding requirements, such as $25,000 for one year under Rule 14a-8, so a shareholder needs to own as little as a single share as of the date it submits the proposal.
  • An activist may control monitoring proxy votes and even whether a company has a quorum for the AGM.


Disadvantages include:

  • Additional cost relative to a Rule 14a-8 proposal, including whatever an activist wants to spend on proxy solicitation
  • More involved notice process, with different deadlines and a more information on the proposal and shareholder
  • Need to submit proposal(s) as a record shareholder, so you need to register one or more shares with the company, rather than send a copy of a brokerage statement or letter from a custodian.


We will continue to stay in touch on this one.

A Clever Way to Pursue Shareholder Proposals


We confess we have little experience with shareholder proposals, the precatory ESG resolutions that mounted in recent years. As it happens, this year for the first time we submitted one on director say-on-pay to about ten or so companies. We'll explain this in a future post.


Anyway, pursuing one of these at a portfolio company is a medium-to-enormous hassle, as many followers here know well. We recently learned of a resourceful activist that figured out how to overcome some of the obstacles that companies put up to not only winning support, but to also even getting it on the AGM agenda and in proxy materials.


The United Mine Workers submitted five proposals to Warrior Met Coal (HCC), including four on various corp gov matters (shareholder approval of poison pills, blank-check preferred stock, golden parachutes, and proxy access), and one on assessing labor relations. HCC included all five in its proxy materials, so shareholders will vote on all of them. HCC even endorsed the proxy access proposal.


The SEC permits companies to limit a shareholder to one proposal. It allows companies to reject proposals on a wide range of grounds ("ordinary business", "violates laws", etc.). It looks like HCC didn't or couldn't reject the UMW proposals through the onerous no-action letter process. UMW even asserted control over the proposals that it otherwise would not have. What's going on?


UMW bypassed the entire shareholder proposal process (SEC Rule 14a-8), which only two activists seem to have done in the past couple of decades. Instead, it will solicit proxies itself, as if it nominated director candidates. It will do so at a relatively low cost, maneuvering HCC into an interesting corner. And, the new universal proxy card (UPC) made all this feasible.


14a-4, not 14a-8

SEC Rule 14a-4 prescribes how companies and activists solicit proxies from shareholders. Activists usually do so only when they compete for BoD seats. Yet, 14a-4 applies to shareholder proposals, too.


UMW will not rely on HCC to distribute proxy materials to shareholders for its five proposals. Instead, UMW will itself send those materials to shareholders. It drafted proxy materials with its case for the five proposals, filed them with the SEC, hired a vendor to collect proxies (apparently not a proxy solicitor, though), and will distribute proxy materials using notice-and-access. It committed to soliciting shareholders representing a majority of HCC voting power, pursuant to SEC rules (Rule 14a-4(c)(2)). It will then collect its own proxy cards from shareholders, counting votes itself. It estimates this effort will cost $15,000, not much at all.


Thus, shareholders submit proxy cards to UMW, instead of to HCC. Shareholders can also vote for incumbent directors and the routine HCC proposals (say-on-pay and auditor appointment) on the UMW card.


HCC in a corner

UMW basically forced HCC to include all five proposals on the company proxy materials. Shareholders will now vote using either the HCC or the UMW proxy card. And, UMW grabbed some control over the solicitation process.


UMW demonstrated a credible solicitation effort with its own proxy materials. HCC surmised enough shareholders will agree with UMW to submit a proxy card to UMW, not to HCC. HCC won't see how those shareholder vote, including how much they support the UMW and HCC proposals. HCC can't track how those shareholders vote for directors.


If UMW collects enough proxy cards, then HCC won't even know if it has a quorum for the AGM. UMW could control whether the AGM even convenes.


If HCC wants to see as many proxy cards as possible, then it needs to accommodate shareholders that could support the UMW. It thus includes the UMW proposals in the company proxy materials. It need not include the UMW supporting statements, nor does UMW include the HCC opposition statements.


UPC makes it possible

UPC changed an important part of the proxy solicitation rules, the "bona fide nominee" rule. Before UPC, an activist needed consent from a company's incumbent directors to include their names on the activist's proxy card. UPC eliminated that rule, to allow companies and activists in a contested board election to include the others' nominees on their own proxy cards.


Yet, this change applies to all proxy solicitations, not just contested board elections. In this solicitation, UMW can now include the company incumbents, allowing shareholders to vote for them if they want. Without the chance to vote on those incumbents, shareholders might otherwise ignore the UMW proxy card.


UMW specifically said it will not solicit proxies for directors. Thus, it need not solicit shareholders representing two-thirds of HCC voting power, as UPC requires for director elections. It needs to solicit only a majority of voting power, pursuant to Rule 14a-4(c)(2).


Other advantages

This approach helps an activist like UMW in several ways.

  • Of course, it allows an activist to submit more than one proposal, as UMW submitted five of them
  • The company cannot exclude proposals on one of the numerous bases that the SEC allows, such as "ordinary business" or "violates laws".
  • The 500-word limit on a 14a-8 proposal does not apply, so an activist can make whatever case it wants for its proposals.
  • An activist may control monitoring proxy votes and even whether a company has a quorum for the AGM.


UMW looks like it will spend a relatively modest amount ($15,000 plus some attorney fees) to accomplish this. As noted above, it needs to solicit shareholders representing 50% of the voting power in HCC. BlackRock and Vanguard together account for 25%, and the top ten institutions account for almost 50%. UMW can likely meet the minimum solicitation by contacting a dozen or so shareholders. HCC will take care of the rest, since it will publish the proposals in the company proxy materials.


UMW has some flexibility, too. It can solicit a large number of shareholders itself, and hustle to collect and compile their proxy cards. Or, it can let HCC do all of that. For the former, it controls the proxies. It can even electioneer the process: contact shareholders as they submit cards, to persuade ones that support only some of their five proposals to change votes. For the latter, UMW saves the cost of chasing down shareholders who vote on the HCC proxy card.


We found only two previous examples of this. The AFL-CIO (the nominal shareholder for UMW-HCC) solicited proxies for an exec comp proposal at Pinnacle Entertainment in 2010. For the Pinnacle directors, it indicated it would vote "for all nominees" without naming individuals, presumably to avoid the bona fide nominee rule. Pinnacle included the proposal in its proxy materials. The proposal won about 43% of the votes cast.


Amalgamated Bank also solicited proxies for a proposal on options backdating at CVS in 2007. Amalgamated didn't mention how it would vote for CVS directors, so it solicited proxies only for its single proposal. CVS also included the proposal in its proxy materials. Interestingly, Amalgamated originally submitted four corp gov proposals. CVS quickly amended its bylaws and otherwise adopted reforms pertaining to three of them, leaving only the options backdating proposal. That proposal won about 48% of the votes cast.


If these two distant examples provide any guidance, HCC may want to get ahead of UMW on these proposals. It already supports one of them, on proxy access. Proxy advisors will likely recommend investors support at least all of the corp gov changes, and possibly the labor relations proposal. With all of them appearing on the company proxy, they should do at least as well as the ones at Pinnacle and CVS.


We admire this, a novel way to gain some of the leverage in an inherently unfair structure and process. Activists of all types should consider this in their efforts.

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For further information, or to discuss a specific activist situation, please contact:


Michael R. Levin

m.levin@theactivistinvestor.com

847.830.1479