After the board of Korea Zinc (KRX:010130) proposed various
resolutions that give priority to shareholder values and
protections for the rights of shareholders to discuss at next
month’s extraordinary general meeting (EGM), MBK Partners and Young
Poong have intensified vicious slanders on the board’s resolutions.
Such a move rather proves the significance of these resolutions
proposed by the board to the extent that they could disrupt the
consortium’s attempt to take control of the board at the upcoming
session, the only purpose of the consortium throughout its takeover
bid. The consortium’s frustration at the resolutions is clearly
shown in its contradictory stance on the adoption of cumulative
voting, an iconic means of protecting minority shareholders and
board diversity.
The consortium asserts that cumulative voting cannot be
discussed at the upcoming extraordinary session it had demanded to
convene despite its consent to the system itself. That clearly
discloses what lies behind the consortium’s attempt. Its emphasis
on governance improvements, including greater shareholder values
and better financial structure, is just empty rhetoric to cover up
the genuine purpose—taking over Korea Zinc.
Even in its press release, the consortium has defined cumulative
voting as a means of protecting minority shareholders. Minority
shareholder advocacy groups, civic groups, and political circles
are seeking to make cumulative voting a legal obligation. However,
the consortium opposes the adoption of this protection for minority
shareholders in the upcoming session only because the means is
disadvantageous to itself. The opposition indicates that the
consortium is turning a blind eye to nothing but its resolution for
nominating a group of 14 candidates to take control of the board,
showing no sign of giving priority to protections for minority
shareholders.
Cumulative voting provides protection for minority
shareholders as agreed by the consortium
Cumulative voting is an election system where a shareholder has
one vote per share, multiplied by the number of directors. As the
consortium said in its statement, the method is regarded as a
symbolic means of protecting minority shareholders. It ensures
board diversity by allowing shareholders to hold the controlling
shareholder in check and, if they are united, nominate their
favorable candidate as a director.
Minority shareholder advocacy groups and even the market welcome
the adoption of cumulative voting. Recently, political circles are
making legislative efforts to amend the commercial law to
strengthen the rights of minority shareholders.
In the respective annual general meetings (AGM) at KT&G and
JB Financial Group in March this year, activist funds successfully
took a seat in the boardroom thanks to cumulative voting. It is
virtually the only method for shareholders with a minority stake to
take a seat in the board controlled by the largest shareholder.
That is why no one can disagree that cumulative voting is a
symbolic measure to protect the rights of minority
shareholders.
If the method is adopted, not only the consortium but also
pension funds, institutional investors, and a group of minority
shareholders can appoint their preferred candidate as board
directors, enhancing diversity in the boardroom. The adoption of
this method also represents the willingness of the current board
and Chairman Yun B. Choi to surrender their vested rights to a
significant degree.
In addition, the resolution for cumulative voting has been
proposed in the same way that the consortium made the shareholder
resolution. Therefore, it is an issue that deserves discussions and
judgments of all shareholders at the upcoming extraordinary
session.
Adoption of cumulative voting conditional to amendment to
articles of incorporation is proven legitimate by various
cases
The consortium asserts that the adoption of cumulative voting
could deprive other shareholders of their rights to nominate
candidates simply because they were not aware of the adoption. It
is a simple objection: it wants to refuse the resolution because it
did not expect or failed to predict it.
Article 542-7 of the Commercial Act states that a proposal for
cumulative voting should be filed six weeks before a shareholders’
meeting. The law specifies a sufficient period of time given to
both a corporation and shareholders for preparation.
Also, when a listed company rules out cumulative voting in the
articles of incorporation, shareholders are entitled to propose an
amendment to the articles of incorporation for the adoption of
cumulative voting as the purpose of a general meeting under the
commercial law. Legal circles agree that a shareholder resolution
for cumulative voting can be proposed on condition that an
amendment to the articles of incorporation is approved, and
therefore that the company can propose such a resolution at a
shareholders’ meeting.
According to legal interpretations and previous cases, an
amendment to the articles of incorporation comes into effect
immediately after it is approved by shareholders at a general
meeting. Therefore, there is no procedural problem in proposing a
follow-up resolution on condition that an amendment to the articles
of association is approved. However, the consortium claims that
this process is procedurally erroneous. This claim reminds of its
two past attempts to seek an injunction against the Company’s
tender offer, which have all been dismissed by the court. Legal
assertions made by the consortium have been all proven wrong.
In fact, there are many cases where a shareholder resolution was
proposed six weeks before a general meeting of shareholders on
condition that an amendment to the articles of incorporation is
approved at the same meeting. At Hanmi Science’s EGM last month,
where nine out of 10 board members were appointed already, a
shareholder resolution for appointment of two more directors was
proposed on condition that an amendment to the articles of
incorporation for an increase in the number of board seats is
approved. Moreover, at Hanjin’s AGM in March 2021, a shareholder
resolution for two more directors was proposed on condition that
the articles of incorporation are amended to increase the number of
directors. An extraordinary session at Sambu Engineering in
November 2018 is also another similar case of a shareholder
resolution conditional upon an amendment to the articles of
incorporation. These cases clearly prove the legitimacy of a
shareholder resolution proposed as a follow-up to an approved
amendment to the articles of association.
Legal circles conclude that a shareholder resolution for
cumulative voting is not different from these conditional cases,
because the commercial act does not limit a proposal for cumulative
voting only to a company that does not rule out cumulative voting
in the articles of incorporation.
A company’s growth and future value should take
precedence
The board reaffirms its positive stance on executive officer
system, proposed by the consortium, irrespective of intention, as
they can bring in benefits, such as greater accountability and
expertise of the executive function as well as enhanced oversight
capabilities of the board. However, it is the consortium who
opposes the adoption of the reasonable method because of its
obsessive attempt to take control of the board that dwarfs the
consistent growth and development of Korea Zinc and protections for
the rights of shareholders.
The consortium seems to pay no attention to the fact that
cumulative voting and optimal board size – proposed by the board of
Korea Zinc – are recommended by global proxy advisers like Glass
Lewis and the Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), as well as
other advisory firms, both local and international.
If a group of 14 candidates proposed by the consortium are all
appointed, the board will have nearly 30 directors, an
unprecedently large and inefficient board that is hardly seen not
only in Korea but also across the world. The board has proposed to
set the number of directors to 19 to actively reflect
recommendations from global proxy advisory firms.
The board of Korea Zinc also proposed drastic measures to
improve shareholder values, such as new protections for minority
shareholders, quarterly dividend declaration and stock split. The
proposals are intended to set the company’s policy to be much
friendlier to shareholders by demanding management to respect
individual and minority shareholders, offering important
information on decisions made by management to minority
shareholders upon request, declaring quarterly dividend in addition
to current interim dividend, and announcing par-value stock splits
to improve access of investors, including minority
shareholders.
Chairman Yun B. Choi stated, “The board and management of Korea
Zinc are willing to accept any ideas that could be helpful to the
company and shareholders.” He added, “It seems that wild
accusations made by the MBK-Young Poong consortium against the
resolutions proposed by the board are based on its strong belief
that the resolution would disrupt its attempt to take control of
the board at the upcoming shareholders’ meeting. It is our sincere
hope that the upcoming meeting could serve as an opportunity for
the consortium to work as partners to discuss the growth and
development of Korea Zinc.”
View source
version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241225402693/en/
Korea Zinc Jongwon Lee +82-2-6947-2467 jwon@koreazinc.co.kr