CA nixes request for minutes
Tells investor group that transcripts of its board of directors
meetings are off limits because of regulations
BY MARK HARRINGTON
STAFF WRITER
August 26, 2005
After indicating it would "amicably" comply with a request by a
shareholder group seeking to review minutes of meetings of its board of
directors, Computer Associates International Inc. has hit the brakes on
the effort, citing securities regulations.
"We're not making them available," Shannon Lapierre, a company
spokeswoman, said Wednesday. In calling off cooperation, CA said it was
complying with securities regulations that prevent companies from
selectively disclosing information to only certain shareholders.
The response didn't sit well with the leader of the shareholder forum.
"CA seems to be either confused or deliberately distorting the securities
law," investment banker Gary Lutin said yesterday. "We have asked for
information that any shareholder has a right to demand and that CA has an
obligation to provide. In fact, we had initiated the suggestions to assure
compliance with the securities laws, and their own outside lawyers have
executed the suggested agreement."
Governance expert Gregory Taxin, chief executive of the firm Glass, Lewis
& Co. in San Francisco, suggested CA's citing of securities laws "may be
an excuse for not doing something they'd prefer not to do." Noting that
disclosure rules prevent companies from selectively disclosing
market-moving information, he said, "It's unclear to me how 1998 board
minutes are material information when it comes to valuing CA stock today."
CA, Lutin said, provided about 150 pages of minutes to the shareholder
forum, which is attempting to determine how board members responded to
signals of accounting fraud beginning in the late 1990s. The forum had
sought board minutes up to 2004.
But the 150 pages didn't address the request. "Shareholders have a right
to all the minutes," Lutin said.
The request for minutes came in a letter last month from Peter Brennan, a
former chairman of the New York Society of Security Analysts' committee
for corporate governance.
Brennan, acting as a delegate for shareholder Leonard Rosenthal, a
professor of finance at Bentley College in Waltham, Mass., wrote that he
sought "to determine specifically how each director conducted his or her
oversight responsibilities during the period of acknowledged management
misconduct from 1998 to 2004."
The shareholder group said a response from an outside attorney for CA
indicated that the company would "amicably" comply with the request.
That changed in a letter sent to Lutin last week in which CA's general
counsel, Kenneth Handal, asserted that "such an open-ended obligation of
disclosure is not ... in the best interests of CA and its shareholders."
Separately, CA officials met in recent weeks with the son of Walter
Haefner, the Swiss billionaire who owns 21 percent of CA stock, an
official said Wednesday. It's unclear what they discussed. Top CA
officials have also met with Haefner himself during the past year, the
official said.
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