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Shareholder initiated Enforcement: Derivative Suit and Class-Action Lawsuits

Shareholder initiated Enforcement: Derivative Suit and Class-Action Lawsuits. Policy Dialogue on Corporate Governance in China Shanghai February 26, 2004 Hasung Jang Professor, Korea University Business School Director, Asian Institute of Corporate Governance Chair, PEC-PSPD.

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Shareholder initiated Enforcement: Derivative Suit and Class-Action Lawsuits

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  1. Shareholder initiated Enforcement:Derivative Suit and Class-Action Lawsuits Policy Dialogue on Corporate Governance in China Shanghai February 26, 2004 Hasung Jang Professor, Korea University Business School Director, Asian Institute of Corporate Governance Chair, PEC-PSPD

  2. Why Empowering Shareholders? • In many emerging market countries, weak or lack of enforcement is the problem, not the regulation itself. • Shareholder’s legal action can complement weak enforcements of regulations and laws • “…private rights of action are not only fundamental to the success of our securities markets, they are an essential complement to the SEC's own enforcement program" Remarks by Arthur Levitt, former chairman of the SEC

  3. How to Empower Shareholders • Strengthen shareholder’s rights • Attending shareholder meetings • Inspecting financial record • Making shareholder proposal • Seeking injunction against illegal acts • Action to remove directors and auditors • Convening special shareholders’ meeting • Requesting cumulative voting • Filing lawsuits

  4. Minority Shareholder RightsKorean Case 1997 2002 • Bringing shareholder derivative actions 1% (0.5%) 0.01% • Seeking injunctive action against illegal acts 1% (0.5%) 0.05% (0.025%) • Convening a special shareholders’ meeting 3% (1.5%) 3% (1.5%) • Making a shareholder proposal 1% (0.5%) 1% (0.5%) • Requesting cumulative voting -- 3% • Requesting removal of directors & auditors 1% (0.5%) 0.5% (0.25%) • Compelling inspection of financial records 3% (1.5%) 0.1% (0.05%) • Appointing inspector to examine records 3% (1.5%) 3% (1.5%) The numbers in parentheses apply to companies with at least 100 bil won in paid-in capital. All rights are subject to ownership more than six months

  5. Minority Shareholders’ RightsKorea and Japan

  6. Minority Shareholders’ RightsKorea and Japan

  7. Why Shareholders are not Active? • Individual Shareholders • Information access is limited • High cost and complicated legal procedures • Short term investment horizon • Reward and incentive is limited • Institutional Shareholders • Lack of corporate governance risk management • Lack of internal Chinese wall • Lack of long-term commitments

  8. How to Empower Shareholders • Lower barriers in exercising rights • Procedural complication • High cost • Provide incentives to be active • Private benefits • Enhance accessibility to information • More disclosures • Board activities, compensations etc.

  9. Derivative Lawsuit • Shareholders file a suit against directors on behalf of the company • Burden of proof lies with plaintiff (shareholders) • Reward paid to the company, not to shareholder • Ruling applies only to shareholders participated the lawsuit • Legal cost should be paid by the shareholders. • If shareholders win, the cost can be claimed against the company. If shareholders lose, shareholders pay • Management is friendly to director defendant • No action taken even when plaintiff wins

  10. Class-Action Lawsuit • Shareholder files suit against directors to recover his/her loss • Burden of proof is on the defendant (directors) • Reward paid to plaintiff, not to company • Ruling applies to all shareholders unless opted out • Legal cost paid by plaintiff • Lawyer's fee is usually contingent on outcome • Possibility of lawsuit is a credible threat to directors

  11. Why Security Class Action Suit? • Private litigations and derivative lawsuits are not effective means for minority shareholders in recovering loss from illegal and fraudulent acts • Legal cost far exceeds loss for small minority shareholders in private litigations • Discovery of facts is difficult • Loss for each shareholders is small,but the sum of loss is large. • Illegal transactions such as ‘stock price manipulation’ is the easiest way to make a big money • Government’s enforcements of laws is weak

  12. Potential Problems with Class Action Lawsuits • Abusive Litigation • Professional plaintiff: lawyer’s lawsuit, not shareholder’s • Out of court settlement: lawsuit can be used as “green mail” • Limited disclosure in a fear of litigation • Passive projections by the management on business perspectives

  13. US Class-Action Lawsuit • Federal Rules of Civil Procedure of 1938 • Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 • Liability exemptions on forward looking statement or projections if meaningful cautionary warning is stated • Restriction on professional plaintiff • Most representative lead plaintiff. • Limit lead plaintiff to 5 times in 3 years • Sanctions for abusive litigation by levying legal cost on plaintiff • Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 • Covered securities class action suits under Federal jurisdiction

  14. Number Securities Related Class Action Suit Filed in US

  15. Number of Class-Action Lawsuits Filed in US

  16. Derivative and Class-Action LawsuitsKorean Case • Derivative Lawsuit • Allowed by Commercial Code and Security Transaction Act • No suit filed before the crisis even if it had been allowed • Only NGO has filed derivative lawsuits since the crisis in 1998 • Securities Class-Action Lawsuit • It was adopted in December 2003 • It will go in effect from January 2005

  17. Derivative Suits: Korean Case • Shareholder or group of shareholders should have at least 0.01% of outstanding number of shares • Shares should have been held for more than six months at the time that suit is filed. • Shareholder should ask the company to file a suit. If the management does not file a suit in a month, then shareholder has a right to file it. • Suit stands as long as there is at least one shareholder remains • Three derivatives lawsuits filed since 1997

  18. Derivative Lawsuits:Korea First Bank • The first derivative lawsuit filed in Korea • Court ruled in favor of defendant • $33.3 million awarded • Bank lowered the amount to $3 million due to legal fee • Suit filed in May 1997 • District court ruling in July 1998 • Higher court ruling in January 2000 • Supreme court’s final decision in March 2002

  19. Derivative Lawsuits:Korea First Bank • Plaintiff • Small number of minority shareholders with an assistance from civil activists group, PSPD. • Defendants • Two former presidents and two directors • Case • Illegal loans to failed company • Taking bribery in return for loans • Successful in enhancing public awareness on corporate governance, but the bank failed.

  20. Derivative Lawsuit Samsung Electronics • The second derivative lawsuit filed in Korea • Suit filed in October 1998 • Court ruled in favor of plaintiff • District court: $72.4 mil awarded, Dec. 2001 • Higher court: $16 mil awarded, Nov. 2003 • Both plaintiff and defendant appealed to supreme court • Plaintiff: Small number of shareholders (PSPD) • Defendant: Chairman Lee and 10 directors

  21. Derivative Lawsuit Samsung Electronics • Illegal political contribution • Chairman KH Lee: $5.6 mil / $5.4mil • Related party transaction at transferring price • 6 directors: $46.4 mil / 11.6 mil • purchased at 10,000 won/share sold at 2,600 won/share • Investment “without business judgments” • 8 directors: $20.4 mil / rejected • Purchase of equities and provide debt guarantee to failed company

  22. Derivative LawsuitsDaewoo Corporation • The third derivative lawsuit filed in Korea • Suit filed in September 1999 • Court hearing is in pending due to an absence of defendant • Plaintiff: Small number of shareholders (PSPD) • Defendant: former chairman WJ Kim • $19.7 million claimed • Illegal subsidies from Daewoo corporation to private companies owned by the family

  23. Lessons Learned from Derivative Lawsuits in Korea • No private incentive neither to plaintiff shareholders nor to lawyer • Award paid to company, not the plaintiff • Plaintiff should pay for legal fee and claim it to company when they win the case • Lawyer has to file another lawsuit to collect legal fee from the company • Management is reluctant to collect award even when shareholders won the suit • Only three suits are filed by NGO due to lack of incentives for shareholder and lawyers

  24. Unlawful Transaction Monitored by Korea Stock Exchange

  25. Securities Class-Action LawsuitKorean Case • The law was passed in December, 2003 • Subject cases • Accounting manipulation and failed audit • Price manipulation, insider trading • Fraudulent and failed disclosure • annual/semi-annul/quarterly reports • prospectus

  26. Securities Class-Action LawsuitKorean Case • The law will go in effect from • Stock price manipulation: Jan. 2005 • Other case : Jan. 2005 for large firms Jan. 2007 for small and medium firms • Companies with asset size over $1.7 billion (2 trillion KRW) • Eligibility • Fifty or more shareholders • The class as a whole hold 0.01% or more shares

  27. Securities Class-Action LawsuitKorean Case • Features to prevent abusive litigation • Court sets pre-hearing and approve on commencement • Court’s approval should be obtained on • Settlement • Cancellation of Suit • Give-up of appeal to higher court • Give-up of collection of award • Features to prevent ‘professional plaintiff’ • Limit lead plaintiff and attorney participation to 3 times in 3 years

  28. Minority Shareholder Activism in Korea: PSPD • People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy • Independent civil rights advocacy NGO • Watchdog on government, legislator, judiciary, business • Activities • Anti-Corruption • Advocacy of civil rights • Reform legislation • Participatory Economy Committee (PEC) • Minority shareholder activism under PSPD • Since January 1997

  29. Minority Shareholder Activism in Korea: PSPD • Who are PSPD-PEC activists? • 2 full time staff • 25 professional volunteers: professors, lawyers, CPAs • How is it funded? • 100% individual donations • No government, no invitational fund • How does it maintain independence • Does not represent any interested party • Members do not hold outside directorship or government related positions

  30. PSPD: Target Companies • Conglomerates: Chaebols • Samsung Electronics Samsung Group • SK Telecom SK Group • Hyundai Heavy Industry Hyundai Group • Dacom LG Group • Daewoo Corp. Daewoo Group (dissolved) • Financial Institutions • Korea First Bank • Hyundai Investment Trust Co • Hyundai Securities Co.

  31. PSPD Activities • Monitoring and reporting corporate activities • Constructive talks with management • Attending shareholder meetings • Exercise shareholder rights • Legal actions • Lawsuit • Filing criminal investigation • Legislative proposals • Corporate governance information service

  32. PSPD: Legal Actions • Lawsuits • Derivative Lawsuits • Nullify agenda un-lawfully adopted at shareholder meetings • Cancellation of CB & BW issued to controlling family • Injunction to stop debt guarantee to affiliated company • Injunction to prohibit listing of new equity issued to controlling family • Lawsuit against auditing accounting firm for manipulation

  33. PSPD: Legal Actions • Filing Criminal Investigation • Stock price manipulation • Fund embezzlement • Off-shore paper company operation • Off-shore off balance sheet debt • Asset stripping using convertible bond, bond with warrant • Unfair related party transactions • Falsified minutes of board • Illegal political contribution

  34. PSPD: Legal Actions • Requesting Investigation on Accounting Firm • FSC: Financial Supervisory Commission • Accounting manipulation, False disclosure • Failed audit by accounting firms • No report on off-shore option contact • Delayed disclosure on correction of Net Income • Inspection of financial records • Record of in-house asset transactions: Hyundai ITC

  35. PSPD: Proposal of Legislation • Strengthen minority shareholder rights • Amendment of Commercial Code & Security Exchange Law • Lowering legal requirements on shareholder rights • Mandatory cumulative voting (not succeeded) • Regulation on related party transaction • Amendment of Fair Trade Act • Corporate governance guideline • Governance on financial institutions • Regulation on bank ownership • Disclosure and voting of investment trust company • Securities Class Action Suit

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