Year of the Outback tour; Telstra
August 16, 2002Productivity Commission Report on Prices Surveillance Act 1983
August 20, 2002ADDRESS TO THE
AUSTRALIAN INDUSTRY GROUP
ANNUAL DINNER
MONDAY, 19 AUSGUST 2002
Thank you for your invitation to speak here tonight. I thought I might comment
tonight on the big story in international markets, the volatility of world stockmarkets
and its implications for regulatory policy.
Slide 1 shows the growth of the US S&P 500 stock index over the course
of the last 12 years. As you can see from 1996 to its peak in March 2000 it
doubled. This had all the hallmarks of a bubble. And the events since then have
the hallmarks of a correction.
In mid July 2002 the S&P 500 was down 48 per cent from its peak.
Compare this with the growth in the ASX200 index. The ASX200 was much more
steady and incremental in growth – no bubble and no bust. But remember back
to 2000. Most people saw our market’s `conservative’ growth as an indication
of some kind of failure – we were an old economy rather than a new one, we had
missed the ICT boom, etc. etc. At that time I argued we were a new economy not
because we manufactured ICT but because we used it. And better than putting
all our eggs in the tech basket was to have a rounded economy that was broadly
based and could withstand shocks.
If the Australian stock market had the same sector weights (including IT) as
the S&P, our stock market would have recorded a 32 per cent fall in value
rather than the 3 per cent fall that has occurred from March 2000.
Slide 2 shows that over the last three or so years, the Australian share market
has performed extremely well compared to other markets. The Reserve Bank reports
in its latest Statement of Monetary Policy, that the UK and Canadian
markets fell by more than 30 per cent and the US and Japanese markets fell by
around 40 per cent since March 2000. Our performance in comparison leaves our
stock market as one of the best performers in the world over the last couple
of years.
Slide 3 shows why we can call the US sharemarket result a bubble. It compares
the S&P index with underlying corporate profits based on tax returns. Interestingly,
this is a measure of profits that companies do not have an incentive to overstate
– they are profits filed for the purpose of tax.
Slide 4 shows how on an `as reported’ profits basis stock prices rose all out
of proportion with P/E ratios reaching unprecedented levels.
Going back to the comparison of corporate profits and share prices [slide 3],
it is not hard to see why managers were motivated to fix remuneration to share
prices rather than underlying profits. During the Tech boom the fact that a
company made low or no profit was almost a badge of honour. In Tech companies
there was often another reason to pay executives in shares or options – sometimes
there was no cash.
One of the advantages of a market is that it allows profitable businesses to
prosper and non profitable ones to fail. As a consequence capital gets allocated
to the more profitable ones. This shows up at the level of the firm – capital
is allocated to produce the goods and services that people want to buy. And
the price signals of all those consumers buying goods and services for value
allocates capital as between alternative uses.
At the national economic level, this success in efficient resource allocation
shows up in higher productivity growth and more robust GDP growth. This is not
to say there are no occasions to intervene in a market – plainly there are.
But over time markets allocate limited resources better than the alternative
mechanisms such as State ownership and State control.
Australia’s GDP growth has remained strong during the Asian crisis, and the
recent US recession. The latest National Accounts data confirms that Australia
continues to be one of the strongest growing economies in the industrialised
world. Growth was 4.2 per cent in the year to the March quarter. Low inflation,
low interest rates and a competitive exchange rate have provided a sound environment
for business growth.
This is an exceptional performance when compared against many of our trading
partners. For example, in 2001 the US grew by only 0.3 per cent and the European
Union by 1.5 per cent. Closer to home Japan, our largest export market, contracted
by 0.5 per cent.
Australia’s market sector labour productivity grew by 3 per cent
per annum over the second half of the 1990s, compared to just 0.8 per cent
per annum in the second half of the 1980s.
In a framework of strongly competitive markets, good corporate governance and
sound reporting help ensure that scarce equity and debt are allocated to firms
that can make the most productive and profitable use of them.
As we saw in the US in the late 1990s, it may be possible for a short period
for prices to run away from fundamentals.
But in the longer term, corporate fundamentals will always assert themselves
in the markets for debt and equity: Does the firm have good profits and cash
flows? Does it compare well to competing firms in its sector and the broader
economy? Is it well governed, with good board oversight of its strategic direction?
Are the company’s directors and management honest in their dealings? Does the
company fully and promptly disclose relevant information, which enables investors
to make informed decisions?
Good accounting, auditing and corporate governance help markets answer those
vital questions, and allocate scarce capital to those who can make the most
productive use of it.
These factors are all essential to well functioning markets, which are among
the foundations of a strong economy.
And when an economy uses its resources more productively, the total welfare
of the community is lifted.
So we want our markets to function well; to build a stronger economy, to benefit
the community.
In any year there will be thousands of business failures.
They will fail not necessarily because they are run by bad people. Or because
any law was broken. Or because of executive greed. They might fail because they
produce goods or services which people don’t want to buy, or don’t want to buy
at that firm’s price when it is available cheaper elsewhere. They might fail
because of management inexperience, or because they were under-capitalised and
never had a chance. They may fail because of external factors which were not
forseen or could not be counteracted.
A company’s failure can be a very personal blow to its investors, its directors,
its management and its employees but it does not necessarily mean someone has
broken the law. Effective corporate regulation and effective corporate governance
does not and should not mean that corporate failures will be eliminated.
What it means is that investors, management, employees and customers can be
confident that corporate activity is transparent and open, that corporate laws
are followed, and that any failure to follow the law will be pursued by a vigorous
corporate watchdog and enforced by an independent judiciary.
Australia vs USA
Under this Government, Australia now has the highest rate of share ownership
in the world. We welcome the fact that so many more Australians have a stake
in Australian companies. But this widespread share ownership has not eliminated
the risk inherent in investments. It does make corporate regulation more important,
so that risks of theft, fraud, concealment are eliminated or at least minimised
to the extent possible.
These are not just issues for Australia. Globally there is a focus on disclosure
and transparency. Recent corporate collapses in the United States serve to remind
us of the serious costs of regulatory failure and corporate wrongdoing. Investors
lose money, employees lose jobs, great companies can be destroyed. Confidence
is shaken.
The Government wants to ensure that Australia’s regime of corporate regulation
protects the legitimate interests of all market participants, including the
individual owners of shares as well as companies.
This Government commenced the overhaul of Corporations law with its Corporate
Law Economic Reform Program in 1996 because we recognised that bad regulation
has a real economic cost, while good regulation can increase the overall wealth
of the community.
Previously, as part of CLERP, the Government restructured Australia’s accounting
standard setting process to strengthen the independent standard setter and balance
the influence of the accounting bodies with broader stakeholder input.
We require disclosure of options.
The Corporations Act 2001 requires that details of the options granted
as part of the remuneration of directors and the five most highly remunerated
officers of a company be disclosed in the annual directors’ report.
- For listed companies, the requirement is to disclose `details of the nature
and amount’ of these options. This would normally be taken to include their
value.
However, to put the matter beyond doubt, the AASB has included in a proposed
accounting standard on “Director, Executive and Related Party Disclosures”
a requirement that disclosing entities disclose as remuneration:
- The value of equity-based compensation benefits based on their net fair
value at vesting date (a valuation methodology is also specified); and
- Information on the terms and conditions of grants of equity compensation
and other bonuses in the year of grant and in subsequent years until fully
vested; this includes the price at which options may be exercised and the
performance criteria that must be met in order for them to vest.
The AASB issued an exposure draft of this standard on 31 May 2002.
On many levels, Australia’s corporate regulation and corporate culture compares
favourably with the United States.
Our accounting standards promote substance over form – the “true and fair”
requirement – whereas the US tends to rely on detailed provisions – the “black
letter law” approach – which can encourage circumvention and loopholes.
To give you an example, the US Financial Accounting Standards Board has a standard
governing accounting for financial derivatives and hedging – a standard that
has been cited in relation to the collapse of Enron.
This standard, based on a simple principle but with myriad qualifications,
exemptions and exceptions, now runs to over 800 pages. And it is still a work
in progress.
A culture that says “show me where it says I can’t do this” is more
susceptible to sharp practice and unethical decision-making than one which favours
compliance with broad principles of accurate reporting.
The Australian Accounting Standards Board has announced that it will issue
future international standards at the same time as they are issued by the International
Accounting Standards Board.
- This follows the announcement by the Financial Reporting Council on 3 July
2002 of its support for the adoption by Australia of international accounting
standards from 1 January 2005.
- The IASB expects to issue its exposure draft on Accounting for Share-Based
Payments in October 2002 which will require expense recognition of equity-based
remuneration, including share options. The IASB expects to issue a final standard
towards the end of 2003 to apply as a final standard to accounting periods
beginning on or after 1 January 2004.
Disclosure of information to markets is another important difference.
Australia has an effective continuous disclosure regime, where significant
information must be disclosed to the market as and when it is known, rather
than the US system which focuses on quarterly reporting.
In addition, the presence of non-executive directors on boards appears to be
a more common element of corporate culture in Australia than in America.
This distinction is most often seen in relation to the roles of Chief Executive
Officer and Chairman. In America, the combined role of “Chairman and CEO”
is far more prevalent. The practice most Australian public companies follow
is to have an independent director as Chairman rather than the CEO. This is
the preferred approach recommended in our guidelines for recommended corporate
governance practice.
Improvements
We have room to improve and we are doing so in a number of areas.
The Government commissioned Professor Ian Ramsay to review the question of
the independence of company auditors and we will issue our response to his recommendations
in our CLERP 9 paper to be released shortly. But that report was written before
more recent developments and therefore could not respond to them.
- Final implementation of reforms in the audit area will take account of
any recommendations of the HIH Royal commission, work currently being undertaken
by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit, and developments overseas,
particularly in the United States in response to the collapse of Enron and
WorldCom.
CLERP 9 will also contain proposals in the areas of audit standard setting,
analyst independence, shareholder participation, continuous disclosure and enforcement
issues.
ASIC, while having stated that it does not believe that Enron/WorldCom type
accounting abuses represent a material risk in Australia, has established a
task force to review the financial reports of selected listed companies and
report on compliance with accounting standards.
In addition to action by government and its agencies, non-government organisations
have a key role to play in maintaining proper standards of corporate governance.
The Australian Stock Exchange plays a key role in the continuous disclosure
framework, but also in shaping Australia’s corporate culture. The Government
welcomes the recent initiative by the ASX to establish a corporate governance
council and its announcement that it will enhance Listing Rule requirements
regarding disclosure of compliance with standards.
Enforcement
Part of the test of the effectiveness of a law is its enforcement. By this
standard, Australia’s corporate law and its system of enforcement rates very
highly.
Over the past two years, ASIC has successfully prosecuted a number of high-profile
corporate officers.
- Former Harris Scarfe CFO, Alan Hodgson, was gaoled for 6 years;
- Following HIH’s collapse, Rodney Adler was banned from company management
for 20 years, fined and ordered to co-pay compensation in the amount of $7
million;
- Ray Williams was banned from company management for 10 years, fined and
ordered to co-pay $7 million compensation; and
- Nicholas Whitlam was banned from acting as a director of any company for
5 years and ordered to pay penalties of $20,000.
Many of these people are appealing.
Looking at the last 3 years, action taken by the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission has resulted in the gaoling of 69 corporate criminals
for a maximum of 229 years.
Today, ASIC has 111 defendents before the courts facing criminal charges and
20 facing civil proceedings.
We have made also made it easier for ASIC to enforce our laws by significantly
boosting ASIC’s funding.
In the May Budget, the Government committed to boosting ASIC’s funding by more
than $90 million over four years, to maintain its enforcement capability and
undertake ongoing work to implement and administer the recent CLERP reform in
the financial sector.
By contrast, Labor’s election policy was to boost ASIC’s funding by only $6
million over 4 years; $84 million less than was delivered by this government.
There has been a very recent suggestion about increasing penalties for corporate
offenders. Increasing maximum legal penalties achieves nothing unless prosecutions
are brought and secured. Look at the failure of the `Skase Chase’.
However, laws and enforcement do not tell the whole story.
Governments aim to incorporate regulatory flexibility and avoid prescriptive
approaches as far as possible. We have attempted to take a longer-term view
in our regulation, so that changes in technology, business practice and community
expectations can be successfully incorporated into regulation in an evolutionary
manner.
But this approach cannot be sustained unless business also accepts responsibility
for maintaining confidence in business practices.
Regulation is vital, but if `sharp’ practice becomes morally acceptable, if
peer standards do not reinforce standards, our laws will not be sufficient in
themselves.
And business leaders such as yourselves have a central role in reinforcing
and upholding standards. Without those standards, a great restraining force
is lost.
Conclusion
Our economy is strong but not immune from international developments. We have
come a long way with tax reform, reform of corporate governance, balancing our
Budget, repaying $62 billion of Labor debt and labour market reform. But if
we want to withstand these continuing challenges there is more to do. Our work
is not yet finished.