Activists are taking on Hong Kong’s investor passivism. Hedge fund Elliott Management has mounted a legal challenge to Bank of East Asia, raising questions about the ease with which companies can issue slabs of stock to friendly shareholders. Investors can theoretically stop such deals from happening, but often don’t. That leaves little option but trying to embarrass companies into doing the right thing.
Elliott’s gripe is with BEA’s decision to use a “general mandate” to issue shares equivalent to almost 10 percent of the company to Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp without subjecting the deal to shareholder approval. That benign-sounding authority lets companies ask investors for permission to pump out a chunk of new stock long before actually doing so.
It’s not obvious that BEA needs the cash. The bank’s Tier 1 capital ratio at the end of June was a healthy 12.2 percent. The suspicion is that boosting SMBC’s stake to around 18 percent will shore up the ruling Li family, which owns just 7 percent of the stock but effectively runs the show. A rights issue, which all shareholders can participate in or vote down if they disagree, would have been fairer.
The case for general mandates is that they make it easier and cheaper for companies to raise money quickly, and that without them Chinese companies would stay away. Shareholders also have to renew the authority on a regular basis. Nevertheless, the effect is pretty undemocratic. Hong Kong companies often have large shareholders, making it a formality to reach the 50 percent threshold to award the mandate. In the United Kingdom, for example, that level is 75 percent.
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