Jamie
Dimon listens during a panel discussion on the opening day of the World
Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland.JPMorgan Chase shareholders
should vote against the re-election of three board members because they
failed to properly oversee risk-taking that led to $6.2 billion of
losses on the so-called "London Whale" trades, an influential proxy
advisory firm said.ISS Proxy Advisory Services said in a report released
late Friday that directors David Cote, James Crown and Ellen Flutter
should not be re-elected at the company's annual meeting this month
because of "material failures of stewardship and risk oversight.tyre equipments"The
report by ISS ratchets up pressure on directors to reduce Dimon's power
at JPMorgan, the biggest bank based in the United States, as some
stockholders push for more supervision of the outspoken executive.A
statement from JPMorgan spokeswoman Kristin Lemkau on Saturday said:
"The company strongly endorses the re-election of its current directors
and disagrees with ISS's position."ISS also renewed its recommendation
from a year ago that CEO and Chairman of the Board Jamie Dimon give up
one of those two titles. ISS said investigations of the derivatives
loss, which surfaced right before last year's shareholder meeting,
showed that JPMorgan executives need more independent oversight and that
the company is too big and too complex for one person to be able to do
both jobs.Shareholders will meet on May 21 in Tampa, Florida. They will
vote on the re-election of the company's 11 directors and on a
non-binding proposal from four institutional shareholders calling on the
board to have a chairman who is independent from management. A similar
advisory proposal failed to pass last year, receiving only 40 percent of
the vote.prepreg That vote was five percentage points more than similar proposals at other companies that year.
The
independent chair vote is developing into a major test for Dimon, 57.
It comes as criticism, and sanctions from regulators, over poor risk
management have piled up since the "London Whale" losses surfaced at the
bank, which has $2.39 trillion in assets, the most of any U.S. bank.The
trading debacle has picked up the same "London Whale" nickname that
hedge funds gave to a JPMorgan trader for the outsized derivatives bets
he plaAntique bath fixturesced
for the company.The ISS recommendations on the re-election of directors
shows the shareholder debate over governance of the company is
broadening beyond Dimon.The three directors who ISS singled out for
replacement were members of the board's risk policy committee in
December 2010 when the committee was shown a presentation by management
that highlighted large profits from trading strategies in the firm's
Chief Investment Office, where the derivative losses later occurred.The
presentation said the CIO strategies had contributed $2.8 billion of
"economic value" since inception, with an average annualized return of
100 percent, according to a report released earlier this year by the
board on its review of the matter.ISS said the large profits showed that
the CIO had changed from a unit that hedged risks to "what was
essentially a proprietary trading desk" and should have prompted the
committee to act against the practice.carbon fabricThe
company statement added: "While the company has acknowledged a number
of mistakes relating to its losses in CIO, an independent review
committee of the board determined that those mistakes were not
attributable to the risk committee."In its proxy statement for the
coming meeting, the board said that the actions taken by the company
after the "London Whale" debacle show it to be strong and
independent.After the loss, the board added a member to the risk policy
committee - new director Timothy Flynn, a retired chairman of auditor
KPMG International.ISS, Cast iron clawfoot tubswhich
researches proxy issues and makes voting recommendations to
institutional investors, praised the company for putting Flynn on the
panel and recommended that shareholders re-elect him as well as seven
other directors.Last year, ISS recommended that all director candidates
nominated by the board be elected.The advisory firm said the JPMorgan
board needs "refreshment" and the panel should search "for seasoned
directors with financial and risk expertise" to replace Cote, Crown and
Futter.Cote is chief executive and board chairman of technology and
aerospace company Honeywell International Inc ; Crown is president of
investment firm Henry Crown and Co, and Futter is president of the
American Museum of Natural History.The company's statement on Saturday
also said: "The members of the board's risk committee have a diversity
and breadth of experiences that have served the company well."ISS said
it had discussed the board's independence and the qualifications of the
risk policy committee members with the board's presiding director, Lee
Raymond, on April 26 before reaching its conclusions. Raymond is a
former CEO and chairman of the board of Exxon Mobil Corp.ISS criticized
the board for deferring to management and said the panel "appears to
have been largely reactive, making changes only when it was clear that
it could no longer maintain the status quo."
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