2012 Say-on-Pay Votes: Fulfilled Expectations, Though Not Without Surprises
By Shirley Westcott
This year’s mandatory Say-on-Pay (SOP) brought new challenges for issuers. Not only did the pace of failed plans accelerate, but last year’s votes proved to be a poor indicator of how companies’ plans would fare this season. This report, which will be updated at the conclusion of the calendar year, will point out some high-level trends in the voting data for companies with low SOP votes so far this year.
Although receiving at least 50% support on SOP is the primary goal for issuers, in many cases the institutional investor community will apply heightened scrutiny to compensation plans that received “significant” opposition. Thus, the data set we reviewed in this report—shown in Appendix A—covers plans that received less than 70% support. Following our analysis of these data is a brief section on guidance for issuers, both how to recover from a failed SOP vote in 2012 and how to prepare for 2013.
Failed SOP Votes
Through June 25, 2012 annual meeting dates, 53 SOP proposals had been rejected by shareholders (2.4% of the total), up from 37 (1.4% of the total) for the same period last year.1 Among these were 12 S&P 500 companies, double the number of S&P 500 firms that failed SOP in 2011.2
The magnitude of dissent has also increased. To date, 10 SOP proposals have received less than 30% support, with the lowest levels recorded at Digital River (19.2%) and Chiquita Brands International (19.8%). During all of 2011, only two companies received less than 30% support on SOP: American Defense Systems (11.1%) and Regis (28.9%).
Most companies whose SOP proposals were rejected last year addressed shareholders’ concerns and made meaningful changes to their pay programs, thereby garnering high approval this year. To date, only four companies have had their plans voted down for two consecutive years: Kilroy Realty, Hercules Offshore, Nabors Industries, and Tutor Perini.
This season’s surprise, however, has been the number of companies whose compensation plans sank from stellar to dismal support levels in only a year, Citigroup being the most highly publicized example. To date, 61 companies have seen their SOP approval levels plunge from over 90% in 2011 to below 70% in 2012, including 13 plans that failed. This reversal of fortune can be partly attributed to the influence of proxy advisory firms, particularly Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS).
Cooper Industries, International Game Technology, Mylan, Nabors Industries, NRG Energy, Pitney Bowes and Simon Property. The six S&P 500 firms that failed SOP in 2011 are Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Hewlett-Packard, Jacobs Engineering, Masco, Nabors Industries, and Stanley Black & Decker.
Advisory Service Recommendations
Although the impact of the major proxy advisors’ recommendations on executive pay has been documented in several studies (discussed below), this year it appears more pronounced. Through June 25, 91% of the companies that received less than 70% approval on SOP had also been issued a negative opinion by ISS, compared to 87% for the same period in 2011. Over half of these companies (64%) received an unfavorable recommendation from both ISS and Glass Lewis.
Similarly, as in 2011, virtually every failed SOP vote this year was opposed by ISS. The only exceptions were at First California Financial Group, InSite Vision, and Safety Insurance Group, whose plans were voted down despite being endorsed by ISS. However, two of these companies have significant ownership by hedge funds or private foundations, and the third (Safety Insurance Group) received a negative SOP recommendation from Glass Lewis. Although Glass Lewis has rejected fewer compensation plans this year than in 2011 (15.4% vs. 17.4%), its influence has contributed to the high SOP failure rate. Of the 53 plans that have failed to date, Glass Lewis vetoed 47.
This year, issuers are feeling the repercussions of ISS’s new Pay-for-Performance (PFP) model, which went into effect for February annual meetings onwards. Under its revised methodology, ISS is evaluating CEO pay and total shareholder return (TSR) performance on both a relative and an absolute basis. The relative analysis ranks CEO pay and performance against peers over one and three years, while the absolute analysis examines the trend in CEO pay and performance over five years. Moreover, instead of employing standardized GICS peer groups, ISS has developed smaller (14-24 company) peer categories based on market capitalization, revenue, and industry.
Although ISS’s new PFP methodology has produced about the same percentage of negative SOP recommendations as in 2011 (12%), the plans it is singling out for “no” votes has changed dramatically. Nearly two thirds of the companies that received a negative ISS recommendation this year had received a favorable ISS opinion on SOP last year, and a majority had also received strong investor support (over
80%) in 2011. This has been particularly unsettling for issuers whose compensation programs were unexpectedly voted down this year. Of the 53 plans that have failed so far in 2012, nearly half (22) had received over 80% shareholder support last year, and 13 had received over 90% support. One such company, Tower Group, observed in its 8-K filing that its executive compensation policies and programs had not substantially changed since the previous year. In fact, its CEO’s compensation was 40% lower than the previous year due to reductions in his annual cash and equity bonus.
Arguing with the Advisors
Many companies caught off guard by a negative proxy advisor opinion countered with supplemental proxy filings to better explain their compensation programs to investors. In many cases, they pushed back at the proxy advisors’ methodologies, most often disputing their choice of peer groups, or took issue with errors in their reports. Indeed, one company (Invesco) received a favorable recommendation from both ISS and Glass Lewis, yet still filed a supplemental proxy statement, noting that while the proxy advisors “reached the correct result,” ISS should have employed a more appropriate peer group, while Glass Lewis should have disclosed its comparators.
Proxy Advisor Policies – Don’t Ignore Them
Notwithstanding criticisms of their methodologies, the reality is that mandatory SOP has compelled more investors to rely on proxy advisors’ research to contend with the sheer volume of proxy voting. A recent survey conducted by the IRRC Institute and Tapestry Networks of 19 North American asset managers found that most make use of proxy firm data to assist with their voting decisions on SOP.3
Proxy advisors’ policies on executive compensation have also shaped corporate behavior. In a March 2012 survey of 110 large and mid-cap companies conducted by The Conference Board, NASDAQ OMX Group and Stanford University, 70% of respondents said that their compensation programs were influenced by the guidelines of proxy advisory firms.4
While it is evident that investors do not follow proxy advisor recommendations in lockstep—far fewer compensation plans have been rejected by shareholders than by proxy advisors—issuers need to be cognizant of the extent to which their major holders follow proxy advisors’ policies and also what factors trigger the greatest dissent.5 A March 2012 study by academics at Columbia University, Duke University and the University of St. Gallen, concluded that proxy advisor recommendations were the key determinants of SOP voting outcomes in 2011.6 According to their findings:
- A negative ISS recommendation was associated with 24.7% more votes against SOP.
- A negative Glass Lewis recommendation was associated with 12.9% more votes against SOP.
- Negative recommendations by both proxy advisors led to 37.9% higher voting dissent.
However, the degree an “against” recommendation affected shareholder votes depended on the severity and nature of concerns raised by the proxy advisor. The study found that dissent was higher when ISS cited multiple areas of concern, such as PFP and change-in-control agreements, or when Glass Lewis assigned an “F” grade to a company’s PFP. This underscores what many investors have been saying for years: although they use proxy advisors’ research to screen companies for further examination, they will still make their own voting determinations.
Guidance for Issuers
When preparing and drafting your compensation plan, it pays to know your shareholder base. Who are your top holders? Do they follow ISS or Glass Lewis, or do they have their own internal voting guidelines for evaluating executive compensation?
With assistance from their advisors (proxy solicitor, legal counsel, etc.), issuers should analyze their shareholder base to determine the levels of influence ISS and Glass Lewis have on their investors. This
analysis should also identify those holders that maintain their own internal voting guidelines. As with the policies of ISS and Glass Lewis, issuers should familiarize themselves with the critical vote drivers their top institutional investors will use to make their SOP decision.
When drafting the Compensation Discussion & Analysis (CD&A) section of the proxy statement:
- Be clear when telling your story
- Include narrative: many of the vote decision makers at the major institutions are not industry experts, help them understand your compensation decisions.
Issuers can take a number of measures to avoid or deflect a negative proxy advisor recommendation on SOP. Indeed, 91 companies were able to prevail in this year’s shareholder vote on SOP in the face of negative recommendations from both ISS and Glass Lewis—in some cases by a strong margin (over
70%). To date Alliance has identified 18 companies that received over 70% support despite negative recommendations from both ISS and Glass Lewis.
As an initial step, issuers should become familiar with proxy advisor policies on executive compensation and stay apprised of any revisions to them in advance of proxy season. While it is difficult to reverse- engineer black box models, ISS’s and Glass Lewis’s proxy reports and websites provide some transparency of their PFP methodologies and their checklists of problematic pay practices. Issuers should expect changes for 2013. Glass Lewis has already announced a partnership with Equilar, an executive compensation research firm, whereby Glass Lewis will integrate Equilar’s market-based peer groups and realizable pay data into its PFP model for annual meetings beginning in July 2012. ISS, for its part, is likely to rethink certain aspects of its PFP model for 2013, particularly its choice of peer groups, in view of the severe blowback it faced from issuers this year.
For proxy season issuers, Alliance recommends a targeted outreach campaign during the late summer and early fall. During the solicitation period it pays to “hope for the best, prepare for the worst.” Prepare a strategy outlining whether to engage communications with a proxy/compliance department contact(s) and/or the buy/sell side which will help determine responsibility (who will reach out to whom—whether a proxy solicitation firm will handle the initial outreach call or whether the company should be involved). In addition, prepare to have a team from the issuer available to speak with investors on their concerns.
It is impossible to over-emphasize the importance of ongoing engagement with top holders, even if the issuer’s SOP vote was “safe” this year. ISS and Glass Lewis give additional scrutiny to companies who received less than 70%-75% approval on SOP in the prior year. However, as witnessed this season, changes to proxy advisors’ compensation models can unexpectedly shift companies to the SOP penalty zone. While it is difficult to reverse an unfavorable proxy advisor recommendation—short of modifying a compensation plan—the best way to diminish proxy advisors’ influence is for the issuer to make its case directly to its major shareholders, both in terms of dialogue and proxy disclosure to help win over their support.
Don’t be reluctant to refute an advisory firm(s) in a supplemental filing. Some advantages of filing
supplemental material are to (i) strengthen their case on compensation decisions and practices (ii)
address any flaws or inaccuracies towards the advisory firm report(s) and (iii) provide information that can be passed along to institutional vote decision makers that may not have the time to speak during proxy season on SOP.
Every vote counts. Make a concerted effort to reach out to investors that can make a difference as well as considering solicitation tactics to drive in support from the individual investors whether it be a phone campaign and/or follow up mailings.
For further information, please contact Alliance Advisors, LLC at: Phone: 973-873-7700
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
1During all of 2011, 43 SOP proposals failed: 1.3% of the total.
2The 12 S&P 500 companies that failed SOP through June 25, 2012 are Abercrombie & Fitch, Best Buy, Big Lots, Chesapeake Energy, Citigroup, Cooper Industries, International Game Technology, Mylan, Nabors Industries, NRG Energy, Pitney Bowes and Simon Property. The six S&P 500 firms that failed SOP in 2011 are Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold, Hewlett-Packard, Jacobs Engineering, Masco, Nabors Industries, and Stanley Black & Decker.
3The IRRC Institute/Tapestry Networks study is available at http://www.irrcinstitute.org/projects.php?project=57.
4The Conference Board study is available at https://www.conference-board.org/retrievefile.cfm?filename=TCB-DN-V4N5-12.pdf&type=subsite.
5In 2011, ISS opposed 11.9% of SOP proposals and Glass Lewis opposed 17.2%. Investors voted down 1.3% of SOP proposals.
6The academic study is available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2019239.
Appendix A:
Issuer |
Meeting Date |
ISS |
Glass Lewis |
Vote Result |
% FOR* |
Supplement al Filing |
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. |
14-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
24.5% |
|
Actuant Corporation |
10-Jan-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
46.7% |
Yes |
Adobe Systems Incorporated |
12-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
57.9% |
Yes |
AECOM Technology Corp. |
8-Mar-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.4% |
|
Affymax, Inc. |
13-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
64.7% |
|
Affymetrix, Inc. |
11-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
53.5% |
|
AK Steel Holding Corporation |
24-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
69.5% |
Yes |
Akamai Technologies, Inc. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
52.3% |
Yes |
Allegheny Technologies Incorporated |
11-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
59.5% |
Yes |
Altera Corp. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
66.3% |
Yes |
American Eagle Outfitters, Inc. |
6-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
39.9% |
Yes |
Argo Group International Holdings, Ltd. (Bermuda) |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
45.5% |
|
Artio Global Investors Inc. |
11-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
69.9% |
|
AsiaInfo-Linkage, Inc. |
20-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
65.2% |
|
Associated Banc-Corp |
24-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
64.3% |
Yes |
Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings, Inc. |
1-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
67.8% |
Yes |
Autodesk, Inc. |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
54.0% |
Yes |
Avid Technology, Inc. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
50.8% |
Yes |
Bank of New York Mellon Corporation |
10-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.6% |
|
Best Buy Co., Inc. |
21-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
38.3% |
|
Big Lots, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
31.2% |
|
Brink's Company |
4-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
55.3% |
Yes |
C. R. Bard, Inc. |
18-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
60.2% |
Yes |
California Water Service Group |
22-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
62.1% |
Yes |
Career Education Corporation |
17-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.0% |
Yes |
Cedar Realty Trust, Inc. |
15-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
38.3% |
|
Central Federal Corporation |
17-May-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
53.4% |
|
Cenveo, Inc. |
2-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
40.4% |
|
Charles River Laboratories International, Inc. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
36.1% |
Yes |
Chelsea Therapeutics International, Ltd. |
12-Jun-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
64.2% |
|
Chemed Corporation |
21-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
47.9% |
Yes |
Chesapeake Energy Corp. |
8-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
20.0% |
Yes |
Children's Place Retail Stores, Inc. |
13-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
56.6% |
Yes |
Chiquita Brands International, Inc. |
22-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
19.8% |
Yes |
Citigroup Inc. |
17-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
45.2% |
|
Cleveland BioLabs, Inc. |
13-Jun-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
67.1% |
|
Cogent Communications Group, Inc. |
19-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
68.5% |
|
Community Health Systems, Inc. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
32.9% |
Yes |
Comstock Resources, Inc. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
34.7% |
|
Comtech Telecommunications Corp. |
13-Jan-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
68.4% |
|
Concur Technologies, Inc. |
14-Mar-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
61.7% |
|
CONSOL Energy Inc. |
1-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
54.2% |
Yes |
Consolidated Water Co. Ltd. (Cayman) |
22-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
65.7% |
|
Cooper Industries plc (Ireland) |
23-Apr-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
29.4% |
|
Cousins Properties Incorporated |
8-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
60.6% |
|
CryoLife, Inc. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
38.8% |
Yes |
Cutera, Inc. |
13-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
55.4% |
|
Delcath Systems, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
52.5% |
|
Devon Energy Corp. |
6-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
60.1% |
Yes |
Digital River, Inc. |
31-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
19.2% |
|
Doral Financial Corp. |
13-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
55.4% |
|
Dun & Bradstreet Corp. |
9-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
64.8% |
|
ECB Bancorp, Inc. |
7-Jun-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
68.8% |
|
EnergySolutions, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.2% |
Yes |
EnPro Industries, Inc. |
2-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
63.1% |
|
Enzo Biochem, Inc. |
26-Jan-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
60.3% |
|
Epiq Systems, Inc. |
5-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
30.1% |
|
First California Financial Group, Inc. |
7-May-12 |
For |
For |
Fail |
49.1% |
|
First PacTrust Bancorp, Inc. |
21-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
67.6% |
|
FirstEnergy Corp. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
62.5% |
Yes |
FirstMerit Corporation |
18-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
46.6% |
Yes |
Forest Oil Corporation |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
50.2% |
|
Foster Wheeler AG (Switzerland) |
1-May-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
65.9% |
|
Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. |
14-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
67.1% |
Yes |
Gentiva Health Services, Inc. |
10-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
36.5% |
|
GEO Group, Inc. |
4-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
60.1% |
Yes |
Geron Corporation |
17-May-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
63.3% |
Yes |
G-III Apparel Group, Ltd. |
5-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
35.2% |
|
GMX Resources Inc. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
65.7% |
Yes |
Greenbrier Companies, Inc. |
6-Jan-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
53.0% |
|
Greenhill & Co., Inc. |
18-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
59.5% |
|
Health Care REIT, Inc. |
3-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
63.9% |
Yes |
Healthways, Inc. |
31-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
33.2% |
Yes |
Heidrick & Struggles International, Inc. |
24-May-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
69.2% |
|
Hercules Offshore, Inc. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
48.0% |
Yes |
Hess Corporation |
2-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
57.8% |
Yes |
Huntington Bancshares Incorporated |
19-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
61.0% |
Yes |
Imation Corp. |
2-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
65.8% |
Yes |
Infinera Corp. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
41.6% |
|
InSite Vision Incorporated |
31-May-12 |
For |
For |
Fail |
58.7% |
|
Integra LifeSciences Holdings Corporation |
17-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
50.7% |
Yes |
InterMune, Inc. |
4-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
50.9% |
Yes |
International Game Technology |
5-Mar-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
44.4% |
Yes |
Isis Pharmaceuticals, Inc. |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
63.0% |
Yes |
iStar Financial Inc. |
31-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
68.3% |
|
Itron, Inc. |
4-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
51.9% |
|
ITT Educational Services, Inc. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
65.3% |
|
J.C. Penney Co., Inc. |
18-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
57.3% |
Yes |
Janus Capital Group Inc. |
26-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
61.4% |
Yes |
Jarden Corp. |
17-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
51.0% |
|
Johnson & Johnson |
26-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
56.8% |
Yes |
Johnson Controls, Inc. |
25-Jan-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.2% |
Yes |
Juniper Networks, Inc. |
22-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
66.8% |
Yes |
KB Home |
12-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
48.4% |
|
Kforce Inc. |
19-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
39.8% |
Yes |
Kilroy Realty Corporation |
17-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
29.9% |
Yes |
Knight Capital Group, Inc. |
9-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
32.0% |
|
Kratos Defense & Security Solutions, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.4% |
Yes |
Layne Christensen Company |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
57.0% |
|
Lazard Ltd. (Bermuda) |
24-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.2% |
|
Lender Processing Services, Inc. |
24-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.7% |
Yes |
Leucadia National Corporation |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
64.1% |
|
Level 3 Communications, Inc. |
24-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
57.9% |
|
Lincoln Educational Services Corporation |
1-May-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
64.0% |
|
Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. |
8-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.8% |
|
Lockheed Martin Corporation |
26-Apr-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
68.1% |
|
Manitowoc Company, Inc. |
1-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
48.4% |
Yes |
Masimo Corporation |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
37.7% |
|
Medicis Pharmaceutical Corporation |
15-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
66.3% |
|
MGM Resorts International |
12-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
64.2% |
|
Middleby Corporation |
10-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
53.3% |
|
Minerals Technologies Inc. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.8% |
|
Morgans Hotel Group Co. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
66.0% |
|
Motorola Solutions, Inc. |
30-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.8% |
|
Multimedia Games Holding Company, Inc. |
1-Feb-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
69.6% |
|
Mylan Inc. |
4-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
47.9% |
Yes |
Nabors Industries Ltd. |
5-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
25.2% |
|
National CineMedia, Inc. |
1-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
69.9% |
Yes |
Newpark Resources, Inc. |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
64.1% |
|
Noble Corp. (Switzerland) |
27-Apr-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
53.0% |
|
NorthStar Realty Finance Corp. |
24-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
62.1% |
|
NRG Energy, Inc. |
25-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
44.9% |
|
Nutrisystem, Inc. |
6-Jun-12 |
For |
Against |
Pass |
66.2% |
|
NuVasive, Inc. |
24-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
32.7% |
Yes |
NYSE Euronext |
26-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
57.0% |
Yes |
OM Group, Inc. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
23.6% |
Yes |
Orion Marine Group, Inc. |
22-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
53.0% |
Yes |
Overseas Shipholding Group, Inc. |
14-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
64.4% |
|
Pain Therapeutics, Inc. |
17-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
56.2% |
|
Palomar Medical Technologies, Inc. |
16-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
47.0% |
|
Penn National Gaming, Inc. |
6-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
53.4% |
Yes |
Phoenix Companies, Inc. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
46.1% |
|
Pitney Bowes Inc. |
14-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
35.2% |
Yes |
Plains Exploration & Production Company |
18-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
59.3% |
|
QUALCOMM Inc. |
6-Mar-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
68.8% |
Yes |
Quest Diagnostics Incorporated |
11-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
63.5% |
Yes |
Rambus Inc. |
26-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.4% |
|
Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. |
22-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
44.6% |
|
Rimage Corporation |
17-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
65.1% |
|
Ryland Group, Inc. |
25-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
40.9% |
|
Safety Insurance Group, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
For |
Against |
Fail |
42.9% |
|
Safeway Inc. |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
50.8% |
Yes |
Schnitzer Steel Industries, Inc. |
25-Jan-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
58.9% |
|
Sequenom, Inc. |
11-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
48.3% |
|
Shutterfly, Inc. |
23-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
63.5% |
|
Simon Property Group, Inc. |
17-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
26.7% |
Yes |
Smith Micro Software, Inc. |
21-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
59.6% |
|
Spectrum Pharmaceuticals, Inc. |
22-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
53.7% |
|
SPX Corporation |
3-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.1% |
Yes |
Staples Inc. |
4-Jun-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
60.9% |
Yes |
Sterling Bancorp |
3-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
40.0% |
Yes |
Strategic Hotels & Resorts, Inc. |
24-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
68.1% |
Yes |
Synchronoss Technologies, Inc. |
8-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
69.4% |
|
Targacept, Inc. |
31-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
68.1% |
Yes |
Tower Group, Inc. |
3-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
30.3% |
|
TransDigm Group Incorporated |
23-Feb-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
54.3% |
|
True Religion Apparel, Inc. |
25-Apr-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
59.0% |
|
Tutor Perini Corporation |
31-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
38.3% |
Yes |
Ultimate Software Group, Inc. |
18-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
66.9% |
|
Ultra Petroleum Corp. |
22-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
65.7% |
|
United Online, Inc. |
31-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
31.9% |
Yes |
United States Steel Corporation |
24-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
65.3% |
|
United Technologies Corporation |
11-Apr-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
61.0% |
Yes |
USEC Inc. |
26-Apr-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
69.8% |
|
VCA Antech, Inc. |
21-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Fail |
40.9% |
|
Ventas, Inc. |
17-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
66.5% |
Yes |
Vertex Pharmaceuticals Incorporated |
16-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
51.3% |
|
Viad Corp |
15-May-12 |
Against |
Against |
Fail |
21.1% |
Yes |
Vocus, Inc. |
7-Jun-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
52.4% |
|
Walt Disney Co. |
13-Mar-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
56.9% |
Yes |
Wave Systems Corp. |
19-Jun-12 |
For |
For |
Pass |
62.7% |
|
Weatherford International Ltd. (Switzerland) |
23-May-12 |
Against |
For |
Pass |
54.5% |
|
Willis Group Holdings Public Limited Co. (Ireland) |
25-Apr-12 |
Against |
Against |
Pass |
54.4% |
|
*Based on votes cast For/For+Against.
Sources: SEC filings, ISS Voting Analytics, and Glass Lewis data.