CIPC clarification on virtual AGMs should encourage active shareholder participation
Thursday, 11 May 2023
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An Annual General Meeting (AGM) of a company that restricts shareholders to
use only text-based communication does not constitute an AGM for the purposes
of the Companies Act 71 of 2008. This is according to the legal opinion
of the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) on holding AGMs
via electronic means.
According to the opinion, a company holding an AGM with shareholders
attending online must allow those shareholders to verbally ask questions in
real time and without an intermediary. This aligns with the IoDSA’s
previous comments on this matter, in which we noted that whilst the section
does not specifically state that verbal communication is required, the spirit
of the section should be interpreted to allow sufficient engagement at the AGM,
as would have taken place had the meeting taken place in-person.
The Institute of Directors in South Africa (IoDSA) welcomes this
clarification from the CIPC. “If you consider the Companies Act and King IV in
substance over form, shareholders should have a right to be heard at an AGMs,”
says Parmi Natesan, CEO of the IoDSA. “It is imperative that companies ensure
that AGMs not only comply with the form of the law but that they also enable
easy, unrestricted and effective shareholder participation during the meetings,
in substance.”
“Whilst engagement between companies and shareholders can take place at any
time, the AGM is the key point of formal engagement and the main opportunity for
shareholders to exercise their voting rights, raise concerns and ask
questions,” explains Natesan.
A key, but often neglected voting resolution at AGMs is the appointment of
directors. Shareholders have the legal right and obligation to appoint directors
to oversee the company. Those directors, in turn, have a legal obligation to
act in the company’s best interests and can be held personally liable if they
do not do so. A big emphasis at AGMs should therefore be ensuring that
the right people are appointed to the board and that they are held properly
accountable.
Shareholders need to be confident that they are appointing directors in whom
they have full trust. They then need to allow these directors to exercise their
discretion in the fulfilment of their duties while holding those directors
accountable. They should also consider when the removal of a director is
appropriate as this is another powerful and important tool that a shareholder
has to protect the company’s interests.
In relation to the AGM resolution on director appointments, questions asked
should therefore be aimed at determining whether board members have the
necessary knowledge, skills, experience, independence, personal competencies,
track record and even sufficient time available to effectively serve on the
board.
“In summary, shareholders now have confirmation of their right to be heard
at virtual AGMs and are encouraged to use their voice effectively in exercising
their voting rights and holding the directors accountable,” says Natesan.
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