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03 September 2015

Joint CEO-Chairman Role: Is Bank of America Backsliding on Corporate Governance?

Bank of America is planning to hold a vote on 22 September to approve bylaw changes made last year that would allow its CEO, Brian Moynihan, to become board chairman. The bank changed its bylaws in October 2014 without consulting shareholders to allow the combined role but now must ratify them with a shareowner vote.

Because investors voted to separate the jobs in 2009, it’s not surprising that the plans have met a cold response from some in the investor community. Two large institutional investors, California Public Employees’ Retirement System and the California State Teachers’ Retirement System, have been vocal in their opposition to the plan.

Others have scheduled a meeting with Bank of America management to get more information on the plan before they vote.

Should the CEO and Chair Positions be Combined or Separated?

Look at it this way: If you were given a job and then told you could head the body that oversees that job, judges the performance of that job, and ultimately decides remuneration for that job, would you pursue it? Of course you would. But should you be offered that position in the first place? There is a conflict of interest when you are both chairman and CEO.

Of course there are often controls on the power of a CEO who is also board chairman. They usually do not sit on the compensation committee that decides their pay, or on the audit committee that reviews the company’s financials. Many companies have also appointed a lead independent director to mitigate some of the conflicts inherent when a chair is also CEO. But the chairman still sets the terms of discussion at the board and is ultimately in control of the body that is to oversee and have ultimate hiring and firing authority over the position of CEO.

According to last year’s Spencer Stuart Board Index, about 53% of the boards in the S&P 500 have a combined chair/CEO, down from 74% in 2004 (see page 8 of the report). Clearly the trend is to separate the positions; an acknowledgement by many companies that separating the positions is just good governance. However, in another high-profile case, shareholders in 2013 rejected a proposal to split chairman and chief executive officer roles for JPMorgan’s Jamie Dimon.

In bringing up the vote that would allow the change, the Bank of America board has cited Mr. Moynihan’s leadership as a reason for a change to the company’s bylaws that would allow him to hold both positions. But is potentially weakening a company’s corporate governance a way to reward a CEO?

Simply put, no it is not.

My annual review is coming up next week, and if my boss says that my performance has been very good or improved over last year, I will ask to head the body that judges my performance. I’ll let you know how that goes.


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Image Credit: iStockphoto.com: E_Y_E

About the Author(s)
Matt Orsagh, CFA, CIPM

Matt Orsagh, CFA, CIPM, is a senior director of capital markets policy at CFA Institute, where he focuses on corporate governance, ESG, and climate change analysis. He writes and speaks frequently on these topics on behalf of CFA Institute. His paper, Climate Change Analysis in the Investment Process was named “Best ESG Paper” by Savvy Investor in 2021.