BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Laurence Fink’s letter highlights yet another aspect of short term thinking and speculative spirits in today’s market. Investor activism or forcing companies to either increase dividends, institute buybacks or otherwise increase short-term value through mergers, acquisitions, spin offs, etc…While it might seem like a good idea at the time, leading to a short-term bounce in an underlying issue, over the long-term it’s a big negative. In fact, I already wrote about Share Buyback and its repercussions earlier today.
Mr. Fink is right on the money. For the most part, corporations should be left alone to manage their businesses over the long term by making necessary investments into capital expenditures, technology, new products and intellectual property. Not squeezing every cent out of their today’s stock market valuation. Yet, such short-term thinking in prevalent in today’s market environment. Just another sign of a market top? You bet.
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BlackRock Rings The Proverbial Market Bell Google
WSJ Reports: BlackRock’s Fink Sounds the Alert
In a shot across the bow of activist investors, BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Laurence Fink has privately warned big companies that dividends and buybacks that activists favor may create quick returns at the expense of long-term investment.
In so doing, the head of the world’s largest money manager by assets lent his voice to a popular criticism of activist investors, even as his firm sometimes aligns with and may benefit from their efforts.
“Many commentators lament the short-term demands of the capital markets,” Mr. Fink wrote in the letter reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, sent to the CEO of every S&P 500 company in recent days, according to BlackRock. “We share those concerns, and believe it is part of our collective role as actors in the global capital markets to challenge that trend.”
Mr. Fink doesn’t specifically mention in his letter activist hedge funds, which typically take stakes and push for corporate or financial changes, from management ousters to buybacks, dividends and spinoffs. Instead, he addresses a broader concern that markets and companies generally have become too vulnerable to short-term thinking.
But the increasing clout of activists contributed to Mr. Fink’s decision to write the letter, people familiar with the matter said. New York-based BlackRock itself votes about a third of the time with dissident shareholders seeking corporate board representation, according to data from D.F. King & Co., a proxy-solicitation firm.
Activists are attracting more assets and enjoying greater acceptance, even as the debate continues over whether they are good for all shareholders and, more broadly, economic growth.
Critics of activists contend that when companies use cash or new debt to buy back shares or pay cash dividends to shareholders they are forgoing the opportunities to invest in labor, production or other potential avenues of future growth.
This month, Leo E. Strine Jr., chief justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, argued that constant pressure from shareholders may distract company executives and hurt returns. “Giving managers some breathing space to do their primary job of developing and implementing profitable business plans would seem to be of great value to most ordinary investors,” he wrote in the Columbia Law Review.
Activists, who move in and out of stocks more quickly than long-term managers like BlackRock, have said their actions do more than cause short-term pops.
By better focusing management, shedding low-performing businesses and returning unused cash to investors, companies are on stronger footing for the future, they said.
“The critique that activists are short-termed focus is a red herring that typically comes from underperforming companies that have no choice but to promise bluer skies in days to come,” Jared L. Landaw, chief operating officer of Barington Capital Group LP, said in an email. His activist investing firm holds stakes three years, on average, he said.
Unlike activists, BlackRock can’t just sell out of most stocks, as about 85% of its $2.3 trillion in equity assets are held in index funds, which mirror collections of stocks. That long-term view drives the firm’s thinking, even when it supports activists, said Michelle Edkins, BlackRock’s head of corporate governance.
Activists themselves say a big driver of their success in recent years has been the willingness of institutional investors to side with them. Management has to pay more attention when its biggest shareholders echo complaints that others raise.
Dissident shareholders who challenge management scored outright or partial victories in about 60% of board fights in 2013, the highest on record, according to FactSet, whose data go back to 2001.
Of the 30 fights that went all the way to a vote last year, activists won 17.
“Institutional investors are looking at these situations much more on a case-by-case basis” than in the past, said Richard Grossman, a Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP lawyer who represents companies in activist fights. “That pendulum has swung, but it’s swung more to the middle.”
In 50 board fights from July 2009 through June 2013 that activist-nominated directors were up for election, BlackRock voted for dissident nominees 34% of the time, according to D.F. King.
That compares with 11% for Vanguard Group, one of its largest peers. But it is less than some other big investors, including T. Rowe Price Group Inc. and Fidelity Investments, which backed activists 52% and 44% of the time, respectively.
These types of situations can arise over different views on a number of issues, from buybacks to dividends to corporate breakups.
BlackRock voted for some dissident nominees of Jana Partners LLC in that hedge-fund firm’s fight to replace the board of Agrium Inc. last year, according to regulatory filings, a fight that Jana lost. It also supported some of TPG-Axon Capital Management LP’s nominees against SandRidge Energy Inc., in which TPG-Axon gained board seats.
BlackRock voted against Carl Icahn in campaigns against Forest Laboratories Inc. in 2011 and Oshkosh Corp. in 2012, filings show. Mr. Icahn lost both those votes, though in later years he gained board seats at Forest.
Ms. Edkins, BlackRock’s head of corporate governance, said votes are based on the quality of the nominees proposed by activists, which she said have generally improved. She said activist campaigns still represent a small minority of all situations in which BlackRock votes.