Author Archives: sdiamond

New HP Chair Ray Lane: HP Board Did Not Tell Investors the Whole Story Behind Hurd Ouster

SEE UPDATES AT END.

Apparently the HP Board did not tell investors everything there was to know about the ouster of HP CEO Mark Hurd.

At least that is what the incoming HP Board Chair Ray Lane has told the New York Times in a letter that attempts to explain the ouster. While there was some disclosure by HP that Hurd had fudged expense accounts, Lane now says that that explanation did not give investors the full story. Lane says that Hurd “repeatedly lied” to the Board about his involvement with Jodie Fisher.

Federal securities laws require statements to investors not be materially misleading. If the board knew Hurd had “lied repeatedly” to them it certainly would have made sense to tell investors, the owners of the company, that this was the case.

All that HP said at the time of the firing was that their standards of business conduct were violated, which is so vague as to be meaningless. The market was confused at the time and remains now even more confused about the nature of corporate governance at our country’s largest technology player.

Oh, and why was Lane now revealing this information? Apparently he is embarrassed that the new CEO HP has hired, Leo Apotheker, was CEO of SAP when SAP was stealing IP from competitor Oracle. I guess Lane’s attempt to distract the market from that story is to somehow try to beef up the board’s ouster of Hurd.

Just in case folks are wondering about the role that SAP may have played in the IP theft, SAP has admitted its TommorowNow (SAP TN) subsidiary violated a federal statute against intentional theft of information from a computer.

Claims that SAP itself was involved in this illegal behavior survived “summary judgment” (i.e. an attempt to dismiss the Oracle claim by SAP) because, in the words of the federal judge hearing the case, “triable issues exist with regard to the extent of SAP AG’s and SAP America’s knowledge of the alleged infringement; with regard to whether SAP AG or SAP America induced, caused, or materially contributed to the alleged infringement; and also with regard to the extent of any actual involvement by SAP AG or SAP America in any copying that was performed by SAP TN.”

Normally when a company like SAP loses on a summary judgment motion they will attempt to settle the dispute rather than proceed to trial since otherwise they are leaving matters in the hands of a jury. In fact, SAP issued a public statement after the court’s August ruling saying it would compensate Oracle for the harm it caused. Oracle also won summary judgment on several other issues before the court.

Recall that HP’s new CEO, Apotheker, was a senior SAP sales executive and CEO while SAP TN was engaged in this activity. Yet that somehow was ignored by the HP board in its vetting of him. As I said when first interviewed about this story, the entire HP board should go, sooner rather than later.

UPDATE: The FT reports that Lane does not take office until November 1. One wonders, then, how he is privy to details about the Hurd ouster that investors are not? The FT seems shocked by what it called the “outbursts” and “astonishing public accusations” by Lane.

UPDATE #2: It appears the TN theft may have stopped prior to the elevation of Apotheker to the CEO position. He was at the time a member of the SAP Executive Board, which together with the Supervisory Board is the equivalent of an American Board of Directors, and deputy CEO. The Oracle complaint against SAP includes references to emails indicating that Apotheker was familiar with TN operations.

New York Times: The Hypocritical HP Board

Joe Nocera at the Times takes the board of directors at HP to task for hiring as its new CEO Leo Apotheker who was CEO of SAP when that company admitted theft of key intellectual property assets from major competitor Oracle.

The HP board had some two months ago ousted Wall Street darling CEO Mark Hurd for what appeared to be minor expense account issues, but somehow was so enamored of Apotheker, apparently in part for his minor role as a liason between HP and SAP during his brief and disastrous 8 months as SAP CEO, that they rewarded him a compensation package worth tens of millions.

HP recently tapped the services of hotshot defense lawyer Alan Ruby to go after Hurd when he joined Oracle for the mere possibility that he might, someday, misuse confidential business information for Oracle that he gleaned while at HP. Ruby should stay near the phone – the hapless HP board may need him again to bail their new CEO out of trouble.

The Myth of the Non-State Actor: Taliban/Pakistan Links Clearer

Ever wonder how the US can evade the longstanding principles of international law and use assassination, torture and secret jails to fight the “war on terrorism”?

By creating the myth of what security studies folks call the “non-state actor.”

The idea is that terrorist groups like the Taliban and al Qaeda are somehow capable of organizing a global war against US interests as free standing movements functioning independently of the existing state system. Since in large part international humanitarian law is about how states go to war against each other, it frees states from many constraints when acting against so-called non-state actors.

There is indeed a war of sorts underway against certain aspects of US power on a global level but as this report in the Wall Street Journal indicates that war relies heavily on state support from nations like Pakistan.

SEC Puts Proxy Access on Hold

This is a setback for the corporate governance movement. Business representatives so fear their own shareholders that they are suing to overturn the new proxy access rules put in place by the SEC. In response, unfortunately, the SEC has stayed implementation of the rules.

More on this soon.

HP – Poster Child For Proxy Access

thumbstandard1Back in 2008 I found myself in a somewhat heated exchange with Yale’s Jeffrey Sonnenfeld at a conference at the Yale School of Management. He heartily defended the HP board of directors for ousting veteran technology oriented directors Tom Perkins, founder of companies like Genentech and a 20 year veteran of HP under its founders Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard, and George Keyworth. Of course, it turned out the “spying” methods used to go after Keyworth were anything but moral and touched on being illegal.

Sonnenfeld has once again come to the HP board’s defense in its latest ouster, this time of its wildly successful CEO, Mark Hurd. Hurd’s “sins,” at worst, remind one of the silliness that led right wing Republicans to impeach President Clinton. Both men landed on their feet, to say the least. Clinton is now one of the most respected political leaders on the planet and Hurd is now helping HP’s frenemy, Oracle, integrate newly acquired Sun into a rapidly evolving tech services market for Larry Ellison.

So what is that people like Sonnenfeld, not to say the current HP board itself, don’t understand?

The problem is that the mantra for board independence has in fact led to a culture of “politically correct” conservatism in American capitalism as a whole that threatens American leadership in innovation, creativity and productivity. HP’s board is independent, alright, so independent that only two of the ten board members (prior to the elevation of Ray Lane as chair and Leo Apotheker as CEO) had any serious technology experience. None has a real science background. The only stock the board members own appears to have been given to them by the Company for their “service” to shareholders.

Compare this to people like Ellison, who still has the bulk of his wealth tied up in Oracle, a company he founded several decades ago. Steve Jobs at Apple would have most of his wealth still in the company if their board hadn’t stupidly fired him some years back only to have to finally admit the silliness of their move and bring him back. Apple is now one of the most successful companies in modern business history.

Suffice to say when a board looks like that of HP, filled with bean counting finance people and other non-entities, it tends to look for leaders who have the same look and feel. So they have come up with a Leo Apotheker who was ousted from SAP after only 8 months as its sole CEO last year in the wake of a short but disastrous run in which he alienated, in turn, employees, shareholders, customers and fellow executives.

Despite the opportunity to hire from among the world’s best and brightest and to take on their board, no doubt, some of the world’s leading business and political leaders, the HP board circled the wagons and coughed up someone who in his first phone conference with Wall Street analysts did not even know the correct name of the company he was hired to lead. The market proceeded to wipe billions off HP’s share price.

To make matters worse, the board recruited Ray Lane, a venture capitalist, as board chair. Lane was pushed out of Oracle when he was no longer seen as a potential replacement for CEO Larry Ellison. But Lane no doubt remains hungry to become a CEO and will be waiting to pounce if, or when, Apotheker screws up.  This is an unstable and unworkable governance structure.

No wonder the HP board has been blasted publicly by, among others, Jack Welch and Larry Ellison. No wonder the stock lost billions in value after the ousting of Hurd and lost billions more after the elevation of Apotheker to the CEO spot.

Of course, life under Hurd was not great. He, too, was largely a number cruncher who relied heavily on buying R&D instead of nurturing it as had been HP’s “Way” under its founders, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard, two of the founding giants of Silicon Valley.  Employee morale has sunk to historic lows as many talented engineers and scientists leave for greener pastures as their stock options vest.

No doubt, Hurd, and his predecessor Carly Fiorina, were largely responsible for picking the current feckless board, using their control of the proxy system.

Recently, the SEC made it easier for investors to nominate candidates for corporate boards, the so-called “proxy access” rules. These allow investors who, together, hold 3% or more the stock of a corporation to put nominees on the same proxy consent request used by corporate management to solicit consent, or the votes, of shareholders. The rule changes turn the consent request into an actual ballot with competing slates appearing on the same piece of paper received by shareholders.

HP would make a perfect test case for the new rules. Let’s hope Cal/PERS and other large institutional investors step forward to change the leadership culture at our country’s most important technology company.

Proxy Access Rule Issued by SEC

After years of hard work by organized labor, pension activists and, finally, friendly politicians, the SEC has bit the bullet to allow shareholders under (very) limited circumstances to spend their own money to participate in shareholder democracy!

I am being ironic but also accurate. Until now managers use corporate resources to help directors get elected: they control access to the proxy statement that accompanies the proxy card that shareholders inevitably submit back to management who then vote onto boards their hand picked director candidates.

Now however shareholders can piggy back on the proxy material sent out by management and use that material to nominate independent candidates for corporate boards.

Much like the market for corporate control it may well be that the mere threat of the rule will be enough to change corporate behavior – event studies galore will no doubt emerge soon!

The link below is to a law professors’ site that is debating the issue and here is a link to the rule itself on the SEC website.

The Conglomerate Blog: Business, Law, Economics & Society.

Pundita: Ah I see from this map of Mexico that we’ve had everything backward.

_48659365_mexico_cartels_464map1An important post by Pundita this AM. There is an insurgency underway in Mexico today – but the question is, who are the real insurgents?

Folks, forget Somalia, forget Yemen, forget Afghanistan, we have a failing state right on our southern border and as our economy continues to flail it will only get worse.

An earlier post here made an important point about the fecklessness of today’s global elite – and the consequence that crime bosses increasingly fill the gap in today’s world.

Pundita: Ah I see from this map of Mexico that weve had everything backward..

Inside a Foxconn sweatshop

Steve Jobs says Foxconn is a “pretty nice” place to work. If he thinks that will stand up to even a cursory examination of life for China’s industrial workers, he is kidding himself. And if he thinks that can shield Apple from a big hit to its fragile brand image he is also kidding himself.

There are decades of academic and NGO research on the horrific conditions faced by Chinese workers. And this report by Bloomberg makes clear that Foxconn is no exception.

I recall a meeting I had a few years ago (in Steve Jobs’ hometown Palo Alto no less where he said so callously the other day that Gunn High School kids commit suicide, too) with a visiting workers compensation lawyer from China. He described the thousands of Chinese workers who return to their rural villages minus eyes and limbs or suffering from neurological or respiratory diseases, all the result of working in plants like those managed by Apple/Dell/Sony subcontractors.

I thought at the time that he was describing something resembling the return of wounded soldiers after the American Civil War.

Apple should publicly call for an independent investigation of conditions in Valley subcontractors and support the formation of independent trade unions and the establishment of enforceable labor laws.

Inside a Foxconn factory.

Chinese workers revolt; Steve Jobs spins; Silicon Valley call to investigate labor conditions in China

images2On the 21st anniversary of the crushing of the Tienanmen Revolt of 1989, the Financial Times has taken official notice of what we have been following at Global Labor/King Harvest for several years: a virtually hidden uprising of Chinese workers.

In response to their editorial and an opinion piece by David Pilling that appeared yesterday, I sent in the following letter:

Sirs,

Independent and widely respected Chinese labour activist Han Dong Fang is surely correct, as a tactical matter, that it is important to take politics out of the new labour movement that you now recognize is emerging in China (David Pilling “Chinese labour is licensed to stake its claim”).  The “race to the bottom” has now hit bottom and Chinese industrial workers are taking matters into their own hands to correct the years of growing inequality in an economy built on their backs.

However, that does not mean as you concluded in your leader today (“Chinese workers are now in revolt”) which appears, perhaps coincidentally, on the anniversary date of the crushing of the Tiananmen Revolt of 1989, that “fundamental reform” is simply a matter of economic restructuring to rebalance the Chinese economy. Fundamentally, economic policy shifts will only be an outcome of political processes.

That is the reason that we in the West should reaffirm support for freedom of association, the most basic of human and labor rights, in China.  Only if Chinese workers, rural and urban, are free to organize independently of the government can the democratic institutions emerge that will insure that new economic policy indeed is fair and balanced.

Sincerely

Stephen F. Diamond

Also of interest is a letter that workers at the Honda plant forced the local ACFTU to send in defense of striking workers who were set upon by thugs, apparently dispatched by the ACFTU to break the strike. The strike was a success resulting in a big jump in wages, relatively speaking.

Meanwhile, closer to home, Steve Jobs has spoken in defense of Apple subcontractor Foxconn where a rash of suicides has led to global outrage and an attempt to boycott Apple. Jobs claims Foxconn is not in fact a sweatshop (“they have a swimming pool”) and, somewhat lamely, he tried to compare the worker suicides there to a rash of suicides by teenage high school students from Palo Alto’s Gunn High School.

Of course, Palo Alto, where Jobs lives, is one of the world’s wealthiest communities (just count the swimming pools) and while the Gunn suicides are a terrible phenomenon, to suggest that there are therefore no serious problems at Foxconn does not pass the smell test. In fact, Jobs rarely comments on these kinds of issues and that he has in this case makes clear that Apple is very concerned about the impact of the conditions at the subcontractor on its bottom line – as they should be.

Jobs argues that Apple is good at oversight of its factories. But it does not rely on enforceable labor law and legal trade unions which are the two necessary pillars of any safe and healthy workplace. And presumably Foxconn would not have raised its wages by 30% after the tenth worker committed suicide if it did not think it had a problem. Where was Apple’s oversight team before that worker had to give up his life?

In light of the naivete or malfeasance at work in the mindset of Silicon Valley managers I have asked the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission, which was in touch with me recently about testifying, to hold a hearing here in the Valley about labor conditions at its Asian subcontractors.

Meanwhile you can support the Foxconn/Apple campaign here.

FT.com / Comment / Editorial – Chinese workers are now in revolt.

A rare MSM spotlight on Han Dong Fang of China Labour Bulletin

imagesHan Dong Fang of the independent Hong Kong based China Labour Bulletin comments in this FT video on the recent labor unrest and tragic Foxconn suicides.

A wildcat strike at Honda has led to a large wage increase as well.

I recently was profiled in Inside Fashion making the point that the global “race to the bottom” in China has likely touched bottom. Workers there are pushing back.

The regime itself now likely realizes the need to raise domestic demand to counter balance the hit the export sector is taking. The key step now is the legal recognition of genuinely independent unions. In the longer run the new Chinese labor movement must develop an alternative perspective on economic organization.

June 1: Han Dongfang on why Chinas labour system is broken – world – FT.com.