
Management booted out as Japan's shareholders flex their muscles in AGMs
Authorities in Japan, which is emerging from years of deflation, have ramped up calls for more proactive and vocal shareholder stewardship over the last two years - and the AGMs suggest that activists and domestic institutional investors are making the same arguments to improve corporate performance.
An increasingly assertive domestic shareholder base is likely to sway management changes, investors and advisors say, providing momentum to Tokyo Stock Exchange's quest to make the world's fourth-largest economy an attractive destination for international and domestic investment.
Investors are already flocking in, with the TSE's reforms helping spark a rally in Japanese stocks, which last year scaled an all-time record high and have since been buoyant.
Last month chemicals firm Taiyo Holdings' (4626.T), opens new tab chief executive officer Eiji Sato and the entire board of directors of electrical parts maker Tokyo Cosmos Electric (6772.T), opens new tab were forced to step down.
"It's extremely rare in Japan that a boss or a board member loses his job merely because he's deeply disappointing," said Nicholas Smith, strategist at CLSA Securities.
Whereas in the past management has typically only been forced out in cases of misconduct or fraud, the prospect of ouster for perceived poor business decisions is prompting executives and the boards of companies to change course to meet shareholder demands.
"There's no aftermarket for dud managers. There's negligible mid-career hiring and these people are lifers at their companies so all of this is quietly terrifying," Smith said.
Taiyo CEO Sato was punished for diversifying into pharmaceuticals, which had poorer margins than its core business, dismissing privatisation proposals from private equity funds and because he was deemed to be overpaid, Smith said.
"This is one of the rare cases of a CEO being ousted for corporate governance reasons rather than legal ones," said Seth Fischer, chief investment officer at activist investor Oasis Management, which voted against Sato.
Taiyo's largest shareholder DIC Corp (4631.T), opens new tab and founding family also voted against Sato, Tokyo Shoko Research showed.
"Now management can be voted out for not making any changes and other companies are moving towards needing to do something," Fischer added.
Managers have cause for concern as domestic investors adopt more stringent shareholder voting guidelines in line with the TSE's reform recommendations, which has made voting against directors more commonplace.
For instance, Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management's votes against management proposals in the 12 months ended June 2024 stood at 22.1%, up from 19.8% the year prior.
Increasingly this means domestic asset managers vote in the same way as activists.
"There's more alignment between activists and domestic shareholders on capital policy which is leaving companies with nowhere to hide," said Govinda Finn, a governance researcher at Kobe University.
"We have an incredibly good relationship with domestic investors and increasingly engage with them to share ideas about what we think the issues at companies are," Fischer said.
The new prospect of domestic investors voting against management has prompted firms to take preventative action, said Hiroo Shimoda, senior manager at MUFJ Trust and Banking, which advises firms on shareholder relations.
"More and more companies think it would be a real problem if their domestic shareholders and activists came to be in agreement, so they rework their strategies in advance," Shimoda said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Yen gains broadly as Japan's Ishiba stays on; dollar weakens
NEW YORK, July 21 (Reuters) - The yen climbed across the board on Monday after beleaguered Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba vowed to hang on as leader even though his ruling coalitionlost its majority in Sunday's upper house elections, an outcome that was not exactly a shock and has been mostly priced in. Investors braced for market disquiet ahead of a deadline on U.S. tariff negotiations. Japanese markets were closed for a public holiday, leaving the yen as the main indicator of possible investor angst. The dollar, on the other hand, fell against most currencies, in line with the decline in U.S. Treasury yields, analysts said. In afternoon trading, the Japanese currency gained 1% to 147.315 yen per dollar, although not far off from the 3-1/2-month low of 149.19 yen hit last week as investors fretted about Japan's political and fiscal outlook. The yen also nudged 0.4% higher against the euro to 172.27 and against sterling to 198.64, up 0.4%. Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party returned 47 seats, short of the 50 it needed to ensure a majority in Japan's 248-seat upper chamber, where half the seats were up for grabs. He vowed to stay on in his role even as some of his own party discussed his future and the opposition weighed a no-confidence motion. "The elections were not as awful an outcome for the Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba as analysts had predicted. The PM's party managed to minimize seat losses and Ishiba was not forced to resign his position," said Juan Perez, director of trading at Monex USA in Washington. "This overall plays as a welcome tune for Japanese yen developments since the reality is far more optimistic than anticipated with the PM promising to stay in power and work out differences in coming up with fiscal policy." The election result, while not entirely a shock to markets, also comes at a tricky time for a country trying to get a tariff deal with U.S. President Donald Trump before an August 1 deadline. Investor focus has also been firmly on Trump's global tariff salvos, with a Financial Times report last week indicating the U.S. president was pushing for steep new tariffs on European Union products. U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Sunday he was confident the United States can secure a trade deal with the EU, but said August 1 was a hard deadline for tariffs to kick in. EU diplomats said the bloc was exploring a broader set of counter measures against the U.S. as prospects for an acceptable trade agreement fade, even though a negotiated solution was still their preferred option. The euro was up 0.4% at $1.1681, while sterling last fetched $1.3488, up 0.6%. The European Central Bank is due to meet this week and is expected to hold rates steady after a string of cuts, while investor attention has been on whether the Federal Reserve succumbs to pressure from Trump to cut interest rates. In the United States, Trump appeared near the point of trying to dismiss Fed Chair Jerome Powell last week, but backed off with a nod to the market disruption that would likely follow. The U.S. central bank is widely expected to hold rates steady at its July meeting. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Monday said the entire Fed needed to be examined as an institution and whether it had been successful. Speaking with CNBC, he cited what he called "fear-mongering over tariffs" despite the emergence thus far of little, if any, inflationary effect. "If this were the (Federal Aviation Administration) and we were having this many mistakes, we would go back and look at why. Why has this happened?" he said. "All these PhDs over there, I don't know what they do." Traders are fully pricing in a Fed rate cut by the October meeting with the odds of a second rate cut this year not fully priced in yet. The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six others, was down 0.5% at 97.969. "I think the dollar topped out last week, while foreign currencies have bottomed, so foreign currencies have come back stronger here," said Marc Chandler, chief market strategist, at Bannockburn Forex in New York. "I think the dollar is very much connected to interest rates. The 10-year yield is off more than six basis points." In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin fell more than 1% to $116,788 , with investors profiting from recent gains in the run-up to the signing into law the GENIUS Act last Friday.


Reuters
3 hours ago
- Reuters
US retail giant Costco to set up global capability centre in India, to employ 1000 people, sources say
HYDERABAD/BENGALURU, July 21 (Reuters) - U.S. retailer Costco Wholesale Corp (COST.O), opens new tab will open its first global capability centre (GCC) in India in Hyderabad, two people familiar with the plans told Reuters. The centre will initially employ 1,000 people and scale up eventually, sources said. Costco did not immediately respond to Reuters request for a comment.


Reuters
4 hours ago
- Reuters
Indian farmers accelerate summer crop sowing amid strong monsoon
MUMBAI, July 21 (Reuters) - Indian farmers have accelerated the planting of summer-sown crops such as paddy, soybeans, cotton and corn, following above-average monsoon rainfall in July which increased the moisture levels required for sowing, according to government data. The monsoon is the lifeblood of India's nearly $4 trillion economy, delivering almost 70% of the rainfall needed to water farms and replenish aquifers and reservoirs. Nearly half of India's farmland is not irrigated and depends on the annual June-September rains for crop growth. The country has so far received 6% more rainfall than normal since the start of monsoon season on June 1, which helped farmers to plant summer crops on 70.83 million hectares (175 million acres) by July 18, up 4.1% from the last year, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers' Welfare. Farmers have planted 17.67 million hectares with rice paddy, up 12.4% on the same period last year, as a hike in support prices prompted farmers to expand the area. India is the world's biggest exporter of rice and the top importer of edible oils such as palm oil and soyoil. Farmers planted soybean on 11.17 million hectares, down from last year's 11.9 million hectares but having accelerated in the last week. Corn was planted on 7.1 million hectares, up from 6.17 million a year earlier. The cotton area was 3.4% lower at 9.86 million hectares, having also seen an increase in the past few days, while pulses planting rose by 2.3% from a year ago to 8.2 million hectares. The farm ministry keeps updating the provisional sowing figures as it gathers more information from the state governments. Farmers are inclined to expand the area under paddy as the government buys large quantities at state-fixed support prices, which is not the case for other crops, said a Mumbai-based dealer with a global trading firm. "So far, the weather's been pretty good for crops, except in a few parts of north-eastern India. If the monsoon stays strong next month, we could be looking at a bumper harvest across the country," he said.