In the USA, there are three principal forms of business organisations: corporations, partnerships and limited liability companies.
Corporations
Most public companies are corporations. A corporation is an entity owned by stockholders, managed by a board of directors and established by the filing of a certificate of incorporation or similar document with the secretary of state of a US state. Corporations can be privately held or publicly traded on a stock exchange, with public corporations having more stockholders. The board of directors typically delegates day-to-day management of the corporation to the corporation’s executive officers but exercises oversight over such management. A corporation is liable for the obligations of its business, but its stockholders are generally not held liable for such obligations.
State law typically requires a corporation to hold board meetings and annual stockholder meetings. Although corporations have comparatively less governance flexibility and are subject to certain other disadvantages compared to other entity forms (including entity-level taxation), large and widely held public companies are usually organised as corporations, as they are recognised as the traditional corporate form and tend to be the preferred investment vehicle for investors.
Certain states provide for other forms of for-profit corporations, such as public benefit corporations and statutory close corporations. A public benefit corporation is organised for the purpose of a public benefit rather than for the primary purpose of enhancing stockholder value. Statutory close corporations (which are required to have less than a specified number of stockholders) are typically subject to fewer governance formalities than ordinary corporations.
Partnerships
There are two forms of partnerships: general partnerships and limited partnerships.
A general partnership is an entity in which two or more persons carry on the entity’s business. In a general partnership, each partner has the authority to undertake transactions, execute contracts and incur liabilities on behalf of the partnership, and is also personally responsible for the obligations of the partnership. State law does not require formal documentation in order to establish a general partnership, however, sophisticated parties often enter into a partnership agreement to specify the rights and obligations of the partners. Certain states provide for a limited liability partnership, which is a special type of general partnership. In a limited liability partnership, each partner is only personally responsible for liabilities arising from their own conduct on behalf of the partnership.
A limited partnership is an entity with two classes of partners: general partners and limited partners. A limited partnership is formally established by the filing of a certificate of limited partnership or similar filing with the secretary of state. The general partner manages the day-to-day affairs of the limited partnership and is personally liable for the partnership’s obligations. Limited partners are mostly passive investors, and their liability is capped at their investment as long as they do not exert active control over the limited partnership. State law governing limited partnerships is generally flexible, and the governance of limited partnerships can be customised to the preferences of the contracting parties.
Limited Liability Companies
A limited liability company (LLC) is an entity formed by one or more members by filing a certificate of formation or similar document with the secretary of state. Similar to a corporation, members of an LLC benefit from limited liability. As with a limited partnership, state law generally permits the governance formalities of an LLC to be customised to the parties’ preferences in an operating agreement.
The principal sources of corporate governance requirements for US companies are state statutory and common law, the entity’s organisational documents, federal securities laws and regulations, the stock exchange regulations and influential (but non-binding) non-legal guidelines, such as proxy advisory firms’ guidelines and institutional investor voting policies.
State Law
State law is derived from a state’s corporations code and related case law. The specific state’s law that applies to an entity generally depends on its chosen state of incorporation. In the USA, the most common state of incorporation for public companies is Delaware, where the Delaware General Corporation Law (DGCL) governs the affairs of Delaware corporations. The DGCL consists of a set of default and mandatory rules. Incorporators may generally opt out of the DGCL’s default rules in a corporation’s organisational documents, but a corporation is required to adhere to the DGCL’s mandatory rules.
The expertise of the Delaware judiciary and its active role in the development of corporate case law have generally been perceived as an advantage for Delaware corporations. Entity forms other than corporations are governed by other statutes and case law under state law.
Organisational Documents
An entity’s organisational documents set forth its governance rules, including any modifications the entity adopts to the default provisions under state law. The nature of these documents generally depends on the corporate form and state of incorporation of the entity. For example, a Delaware corporation is governed by a certificate of incorporation and by-laws and, in certain circumstances, a stockholders’ agreement. A general partnership and limited partnership are governed by a partnership agreement, and an LLC is governed by an operating agreement.
Federal Securities Laws
For public companies, the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange Act), as amended by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) and the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank), establish certain rules and disclosure requirements pertaining to corporate governance. Historically, the federal securities laws indirectly regulated the corporate governance of public companies through a disclosure regime. However, SOX and Dodd-Frank added substantive corporate governance rules, such as independence requirements for audit committee members.
Proxy Advisory Firms
Proxy advisory firms, such as Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis & Co (Glass Lewis), issue guidelines to advise stockholders of public companies on how to vote their shares on corporate governance matters. Passive institutional investors often vote on corporate governance matters in accordance with such guidelines, as well as their investors’ published voting policies. Given the trend towards shares being held passively, these guidelines and policies play a significant role in the governance of public companies.
The USA has two primary national stock exchanges: the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and the Nasdaq Stock Market (Nasdaq). US companies with publicly traded shares are generally required to follow the corporate governance rules and disclosure requirements set forth in the applicable stock exchange rules and the federal securities laws. These requirements are mandatory, although the stock exchanges provide exemptions for certain companies, such as those with a controlling stockholder, limited partnerships, companies in bankruptcy, smaller reporting companies, registered investment companies, and foreign private issuers.
Director Independence
The NYSE and Nasdaq require a majority of a listed company’s board of directors to be composed of independent directors, and boards are required to make the affirmative determination as to whether each director qualifies as independent under the applicable exchange’s definition of independence. The NYSE definition of independence requires that a director has no material relationship with the company. Nasdaq’s definition of independence turns on whether the director has a relationship that would interfere with the exercise of the independent judgement of the director in carrying out their responsibilities. Although these determinations generally require an assessment of all relevant facts and circumstances, each of the stock exchanges also includes bright-line tests that, if satisfied, disqualify a director from being independent.
These tests relate to:
Executive Sessions
The NYSE and Nasdaq require independent directors to hold executive sessions once and twice a year, respectively, without the presence of management. The NYSE requires disclosure of the name of the presiding director at each executive session or the method by which that presiding director was selected. The NYSE also requires a listed company to disclose the method for interested parties (not just stockholders) to communicate with the presiding director of the executive session or the independent directors as a group.
Composition of Board Committees
The stock exchanges generally require public companies to have three board committees: audit, compensation and nominating and corporate governance. Stock exchange rules and the federal securities laws include extensive rules regarding the composition and responsibilities of these three committees. Boards of public companies typically have other committees in addition to the three mandatory committees.
Audit Committee
NYSE- and Nasdaq-listed companies must have an audit committee with at least three members who are independent under the stock exchange rules and Rule 10A-3 under the Exchange Act. In order to be considered independent under Rule 10A-3 under the Exchange Act, audit committee members must not accept any consulting, advisory or other compensatory fee from the listed company or its subsidiaries, or be affiliated with the listed company or its subsidiaries. In addition, Nasdaq precludes a director who participated in the preparation of the financial statements of the company or its subsidiaries in the past three years from serving as an audit committee member.
The NYSE and Nasdaq require all audit committee members to have a certain level of financial literacy and one member to have a certain level of financial expertise. The NYSE also restricts service on multiple audit committees, providing that if a director serves on the audit committee of more than three public companies, the board must determine that such service would not impair the director’s ability to serve effectively on the listed company’s audit committee, and the board must disclose that determination publicly.
In addition to imposing requirements for audit committee members, stock exchange rules and the federal securities laws also specify certain powers and responsibilities that audit committees must have, including:
The NYSE mandates additional responsibilities of audit committees that are not otherwise required by Nasdaq rules, including:
The NYSE also requires listed companies to maintain an internal audit function, which may be satisfied by an internal department or an outside third party who is not the independent auditor, and the internal audit function must be overseen by the audit committee. The NYSE and Nasdaq rules also govern what types of matters must be addressed in audit committee charters.
Compensation Committee
NYSE- and Nasdaq-listed companies must have a compensation committee composed entirely of independent directors (subject to a limited exception for Nasdaq companies). The Nasdaq requires such a committee to be comprised of at least two members while the NYSE does not impose a minimum number of members. Each member of the compensation committee must qualify as independent under the stock exchange rules. Under these rules, when assessing the independence of a compensation committee member, the boards must take into account the following factors (in addition to the factors outlined under the Director Independence heading above):
The NYSE and Nasdaq require listed companies to have compensation committee charters, which must, among other things, include:
Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee
The NYSE requires listed companies to have a nominating and corporate governance committee composed entirely of independent directors to, among other things, select or recommend individuals for nomination to the board. In contrast, Nasdaq permits listed companies to select or recommend director nominees by either a majority of the listed company’s independent directors or a nominating and corporate governance committee composed entirely of independent directors (subject to a limited exception set forth in Nasdaq’s rules). The NYSE and Nasdaq rules also have requirements relating to nominating and corporate governance committee charters.
Board Evaluations
The NYSE generally requires listed companies to conduct self-evaluations of their boards and their audit, compensation, and nominating and corporate governance committees at least annually. However, the NYSE does not provide specific requirements on how these evaluations should be conducted. Nasdaq does not require its listed companies to conduct a board evaluation.
Ethics and Code of Conduct
Stock exchange rules and the federal securities laws require listed companies to adopt a code of conduct applicable to their directors, officers and employees, addressing matters relating to conflicts of interest, fair dealing, compliance with law and enforcement of the code of conduct. Any waivers of the code of conduct for directors or executive officers are required to be publicly disclosed.
Corporate Governance Guidelines
Any company listed on the NYSE must adopt and disclose corporate governance guidelines that address certain matters, including:
In Delaware, directors and officers of a corporation owe fiduciary duties of care and loyalty to the corporation and its stockholders. Certain other states have adopted constituency statutes pursuant to which directors and officers of corporations are, in certain circumstances, permitted to consider the interests of constituents other than stockholders, such as customers, employers, the community, suppliers or creditors.
Similar fiduciary duties are typically owed by the partners in a general partnership, the general partners in a limited partnership and the managers or managing members, as applicable, in an LLC. However, unlike with corporations, Delaware and certain other states permit these fiduciary duties to be limited or eliminated entirely in the entity’s organisational documents.
Duty of Care
The duty of care requires a director to act in an informed and considered manner and take the care that a prudent businessperson would take when considering a business decision. To satisfy this duty, a director should review all material information reasonably available and have sufficient time to consider such information in advance of making a decision on behalf of the corporation. A director should also be afforded the opportunity to ask questions of management and outside advisers and should take advantage of this opportunity in the event the director does not understand something or believes there is an omission.
A director is also entitled to rely upon information provided by management and outside advisers in satisfying this duty, unless the director has knowledge that the reliance is unwarranted.
Duty of Loyalty
The duty of loyalty requires a director to act in the best interests of the corporation and its stockholders rather than in the director’s own self-interest or the interests of some other constituency, such as a particular stockholder. To satisfy this duty, a director should either avoid situations involving a conflict of interest or disclose the substance of the conflict to the full board. In Delaware, the duty of loyalty also generally requires directors to make good faith efforts to oversee the corporation’s operations through the implementation and monitoring of a board-level information and reporting system designed to keep the board informed of critical risks (known as the “Caremark” duty). Delaware cases have also confirmed that the Caremark duty of oversight also applies to officers with respect to matters within their areas of oversight.
Judicial Standards of Review
If directors have discharged their duties of care and loyalty, their decisions will generally be protected by the presumption of the business judgement rule, pursuant to which courts will not rescind an action of the board so long as it can be attributed to any rational business purpose. However, if a plaintiff satisfies the burden of showing that directors failed to discharge the duty of care or the duty of loyalty (such as by showing the existence of a conflict of interest or gross negligence or bad faith on the part of directors when making such decision), the board could lose the protections of the business judgement rule and its actions could be subject to a higher standard of judicial scrutiny. For example, recent decisions by Delaware courts have demonstrated an increased willingness to permit Caremark duty of loyalty claims to survive the motion to dismiss stage when the directors’ failure to oversee critical risks rises to the level of bad faith.
In certain states, including Delaware, courts will apply enhanced scrutiny to board actions under certain circumstances due to the sensitive nature of the matter at issue, such as in connection with decisions to enter into a transaction constituting a change of control of the corporation or the adoption of a defensive action by the board.
See 4.8 Consequences and Enforcement of Breach of Directors’ Duties and 4.9 Other Bases for Claims/Enforcement Against Directors/Officers for more information about the standards of review and legal implications in connection with fiduciary duty breaches.
In the USA, there is a significant amount of rulemaking currently underway in respect of ESG-related disclosures. Over the last few years, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has been in the process of developing prescriptive disclosure requirements related to certain ESG topics, such as climate change, human capital management and board and workforce diversity. Most recently, this culminated in the SEC’s adoption of new rules that would require public companies to provide certain climate-related information in their public reports, but the effectiveness of such rules has since been stayed due to pending legal challenges. In the absence of such prescriptive requirements, ESG matters are subject to the same principles-based approach and materiality standard that applies to other types of disclosure under the federal securities laws.
However, despite the fact that the pace of rulemaking in this area has remained relatively slow, public companies have long faced pressure to voluntarily provide ESG-related disclosures. For years, institutional investors, proxy advisory firms, stockholders and other stakeholders have called on companies to provide ESG disclosures and/or enhance their ESG practices through public statements, voting guidelines and stockholder proposals. Stockholder proposals, in particular, generally serve as a low-cost way for stockholders to influence corporate behaviour and, since 2020, the number of stockholder proposals related to environmental and social matters has significantly increased year over year. There has also been a substantial increase in so-called “anti-ESG” proposals in recent years, reflecting the fact that ESG issues, particularly issues relating to climate change and diversity, have become increasingly polarised in the USA.
This growing divide has led some major institutional investors, including BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard, to revise their proxy voting guidelines to de-emphasise ESG as a stand-alone focus area and instead emphasise the importance of managing risks, including environmental and social risks. Failure to provide appropriate disclosures related to such issues can result in votes against the company, both on stockholder proposals and in director elections. For a discussion of examples of topical ESG issues, see the USA Trends & Developments chapter in this guide.
Companies often engage with investors on ESG matters through a broad array of channels, including providing ESG information in periodic sustainability reports, proxy statements and other public filings and hosting ESG-related conference calls. As Regulation FD prohibits selective disclosure of material, non-public information, companies that engage with investors on ESG matters in private meetings may be required to make additional public disclosure in order to satisfy their obligations under Regulation FD.
Corporations
In the USA, most public companies are corporations. State law generally delegates the authority to manage the business and affairs of a corporation to the board of directors. A board of directors typically delegates day-to-day management of the corporation to its executive officers but exercises oversight over management. The boundaries of a board’s delegation to management may be documented by a board-approved delegation of authority that sets forth what types of decisions and transactions require board approval (such as transactions above a specified threshold).
The board may also delegate certain of its oversight responsibilities to its committees, including its standing committees and/or new committees established by the board for the purpose of pursuing certain objectives, such as a transaction committee to manage the execution of certain strategic transactions or a special litigation committee to address stockholder derivative litigation. However, because the board as a whole remains responsible for ensuring it is satisfying its fiduciary duties, including its oversight responsibilities, it is important for the board to receive periodic updates regarding material issues it has delegated to management or its committees.
Stockholders do not actively manage the business and affairs of a corporation, but instead exert influence on a corporation by voting, submitting stockholder proposals, privately or publicly engaging with the board and/or management or obtaining representation on the corporation’s board either by nominating director candidates for election by stockholders or reaching an agreement with the board.
Limited Liability Companies
The governance structure of an LLC depends on whether the LLC has one or more members and whether it is managed by its members or managers. A single-member LLC will typically be managed by its sole member. A multi-member LLC may be managed by its members or by outside managers. Freedom of contract is a fundamental principle of US LLCs, so management authority in a multi-member LLC can generally be tailored in the operating agreement to the contracting parties’ needs.
Partnerships
In a general partnership, each partner has the authority to undertake transactions, execute contracts and incur liabilities on behalf of the partnership, and is responsible for the day-to-day affairs of the partnership. In a limited partnership, management authority is delegated to a general partner, and limited partners generally do not have management authority over the business. A limited partner who does participate in the day-to-day management of the partnership may lose the protection of limited liability.
Similarly to LLCs, limited partnerships follow the freedom of contract principle, so management authority in a limited partnership may also be tailored to the contracting parties’ preferences in the limited partnership agreement.
A board of directors of a corporation in the USA typically makes decisions relating to the following matters:
Certain actions that are approved by the board must also be approved by stockholders under state law or the stock exchange rules, including the following actions:
In an LLC or a partnership, decision-making authority may be tailored to the contracting parties’ preferences within certain parameters set forth in the LLC operating agreement or the partnership agreement.
A board of directors of a corporation in the USA (including its committees) makes decisions by passing resolutions at a board or committee meeting or by acting through written consent in lieu of holding a meeting. In advance of a board or committee meeting, management or the board’s outside advisers typically provide directors with a meeting agenda and written materials to ensure the directors are properly informed on the topics to be discussed at the meeting. Board meetings often include management presentations on the relevant topics and an executive session in which the board deliberates without the presence of management or any directors that are employed by the corporation.
At the meeting, the secretary of the corporation will typically keep board minutes as the official record of board deliberation and action.
Recent Delaware cases have emphasised the importance of boards adhering to corporate formalities (such as documenting board actions through minutes, resolutions and official letters). For example, stockholders are increasingly making demands in reliance on Section 220 of the DGCL, which gives stockholders the right to inspect a corporation’s books and records for certain purposes, in order to gather information to criticise a corporation’s decisions and decision-making processes in advance of filing lawsuits or launching activist campaigns. Under these cases, corporations that observe formalities can generally satisfy a Section 220 demand by producing those formal records only. However, corporations that instead correspond through informal channels (such as emails and text messages) may need to produce those electronic communications.
Corporations in the USA are required to hold an annual stockholders’ meeting for purposes of electing directors and taking other actions, and may also call special meetings to allow stockholders to take action in between annual meetings. If permitted by applicable state law and the corporation’s organisational documents, stockholders may take action by written consent in lieu of a meeting. See 5.3 Shareholder Meetings for more information about stockholders’ rights to call special meetings or act by written consent.
In an LLC or a partnership, action may be taken at meetings or by written consent, as may be set forth in the LLC operating agreement or the partnership agreement. There is generally no requirement to hold meetings.
A typical board structure for a US corporation includes a single class of directors elected annually with standing committees that are delegated authority by the board to be responsible for certain matters such as audit, compensation and corporate governance matters. The board’s authority to delegate matters to committees is typically broad, and committees will generally have the full authority to exercise the power of the board, subject to limited exceptions.
Most directors in the USA are elected annually. However, many states, including Delaware, permit boards to stagger their directors into separate classes that are up for election less frequently than annually. In such cases, each director class is generally limited to a term of no longer than three years. As a result, stockholders of corporations with staggered boards only elect a portion of the board each year (eg, a third of the board). Staggered boards have become less common among US public corporations, largely due to opposition from proxy advisory firms and institutional investors who argue that such structures diminish director accountability to stockholders and promote entrenchment. See 4.4 Appointment and Removal of Directors/Officers for more information regarding the election of directors.
A board of directors of a public corporation is typically comprised of management directors (ie, directors who also serve as employees or officers of the corporation) and independent directors. However, there may be other directors who are not independent but also not management directors (eg, directors who are employed by a controlling stockholder of the corporation). See 1.3 Corporate Governance Requirements for Companies With Publicly Traded Shares for a discussion of how the independence of directors is determined.
Management directors generally have more intimate knowledge of the corporation’s affairs as compared to independent directors. Certain states other than Delaware hold management directors to a higher standard of care due to their knowledge of and active involvement with the business. Independent directors are generally permitted to rely, within reasonable limits, on information provided by management and outside advisers in satisfying their fiduciary duties.
The board will also often appoint a chair from amongst its members to serve as the leader of the board. The chair can either be an independent director or a non-independent director. When the chair of the board is non-independent (such as the CEO of the corporation), public corporations generally appoint a lead independent director that has similar responsibilities as the chair to help ensure independent oversight of management. The specific responsibilities of the board’s chair are typically laid out in the corporation’s corporate governance guidelines or other organisational documents, but usually include duties such as presiding at board and stockholder meetings, establishing meeting schedules and agendas, serving as liaison between the board and management and being available, as needed, to meet with stockholders. In addition to the board chair, the board also appoints chairs of each board committee.
Composition requirements for US boards are driven by stock exchange rules, federal securities laws, state law, and proxy advisory firm guidelines.
Stock Exchange Rules
Subject to certain exceptions, both the NYSE and Nasdaq rules require a majority of a public company’s board to be independent, and only independent directors may serve on the audit, compensation and/or nominating and corporate governance committees. The NYSE and Nasdaq have bright-line tests relating to whether a director qualifies as independent, which must be affirmatively determined by the board. See 1.3 Corporate Governance Requirements for Companies with Publicly Traded Shares for a detailed discussion of the NYSE and Nasdaq requirements on director independence.
Federal Securities Laws
The federal securities laws require each member of an audit committee to be independent and provide an overlay of independence requirements for audit committee members. See 1.3 Corporate Governance Requirements for Companies With Publicly Traded Shares for a discussion of independence requirements under Rule 10A-3.
State Law
State law typically does not impose minimum independence requirements for company boards. However, for corporations, having independent directors may be favourable to the corporation and its directors from a stockholder litigation perspective. For example, in the context of a conflicted corporate transaction (ie, a transaction in which an officer or director has an interest on both sides of the transaction), review and approval (or ratification) of the transaction by disinterested directors (along with the implementation of other procedure protections, such as stockholder approval) may subject such a transaction to a more deferential standard of review by the courts.
Proxy Advisory Firms Guidelines
The proxy advisory firms have published extensive guidelines that relate to board composition. ISS and Glass Lewis guidelines stress that boards should be at least a majority independent, and have fully independent audit, compensation and nominating and corporate governance committees and independent board leadership (ie, either an independent board chair or a lead independent director). ISS and Glass Lewis have also adopted board diversity policies in their proxy voting guidelines that generally provide for negative vote recommendations against the chair of the nominating and corporate governance committee of companies that fail to maintain a specified level of board diversity (either in terms of gender or racial/ethnic diversity). The specific minimum diversity thresholds differ between ISS and Glass Lewis, with Glass Lewis generally imposing a higher threshold.
Investor Expectations
Investors are increasingly focused on ensuring that boards of public corporations have a sufficient mix of skills and expertise to enable them to exercise effective oversight and make informed decisions regarding the management of the corporation. Although there are limited requirements on the specific skills and qualifications directors must have, stockholders have submitted a number of proposals over the last few years seeking the representation of specific skills on boards, such as cybersecurity, sustainability or corporate governance experts.
In response, corporations are increasingly highlighting the skills and experiences represented on their boards by publishing skill matrices or other graphics that identify certain key skills that are relevant to the board’s ability to oversee the corporation’s business, such as finance and accounting, international, risk management and cybersecurity/technology expertise, and the specific directors (or aggregate number of directors) on the board that possess those skills.
Directors of US public corporations are typically elected at stockholder meetings by the vote of a majority of the stockholders present and entitled to vote (although some corporations may have plurality voting depending on state law and the corporation’s organisational documents). In majority voting, a nominee generally must receive more “for” votes than “against” or “abstain” votes to be elected (or re-elected) to the board. In plurality voting, the nominees who receive the most “for” votes are elected (or re-elected) to the board until all board seats are filled. As a result, under plurality voting, in an election where the number of nominees is equal to the number of available board seats (ie, an uncontested election), every nominee would be elected upon receiving just one “for” vote.
In most states, including Delaware, once a director has been elected, he or she may only be removed before the expiration of his or her term by the corporation’s stockholders or upon his or her resignation. Typically, stockholders may remove a director with or without cause by a majority vote. However, if the board is staggered or the corporation permits cumulative voting, a director may only be removed for cause unless otherwise provided in the corporation’s certificate of incorporation.
In the event there is a vacancy on the board (either because of a director’s removal, resignation or death or an increase in the board’s size), the stockholders or a majority of the directors still in office can generally appoint a new director to fill that vacancy unless the corporation’s organisational documents provide otherwise. Officers are appointed by the board of the corporation, and the offices of a corporation are typically set forth in the corporation’s by-laws or in board resolutions. An officer may be removed by the board with or without cause, subject to contractual protections in that officer’s employment agreement.
See 1.3 Corporate Governance Requirements for Companies with Publicly Traded Shares and 4.3 Board Composition Requirements/Recommendations for a discussion of rules and requirements relating to director independence.
The federal securities laws and state law provide rules relating to director conflicts of interest. Under the federal securities laws, public companies are required to disclose any transaction over USD120,000 that has occurred since the last fiscal year or is currently proposed, in which the company is a participant and any “related person” (defined to include the company’s directors, among others) has or will have a direct or indirect material interest. Whether a director’s interest in a transaction is “material” is a fact-specific determination; however, the federal securities laws do provide a number of “per se immateriality standards”, including if the director’s interest in the transaction arises solely because he or she also serves as a director at the other company involved in transaction and/or owns less than 10% of the other company’s stock. The federal securities laws also require public companies to disclose their internal policies for reviewing transactions with related persons and the persons responsible for applying such policies.
Under state law, transactions in which a director has a conflict of interest may be voidable and/or subject to a duty of loyalty breach claim by a stockholder. However, most states have adopted safe harbour statutes for conflicted transactions, which provide that such transactions are not per se voidable if any of the following conditions are met:
In Delaware, the DGCL was also recently amended to provide that transactions involving conflicted directors or officers or involving controlling stockholders (other than going-private transactions) can also now be protected from both equitable relief and damages liability (including in connection with duty of loyalty claims) if they are either (i) approved by an independent board committee consisting of at least two non-conflicted directors, or (ii) approved or ratified by a majority of the votes cast by the corporation’s non-conflicted stockholders.
See 2.1 Hot Topics in Corporate Governance.
In Delaware and many other states, directors and officers of a corporation owe fiduciary duties to the corporation as an entity and to its stockholders. See 2.1 Hot Topics in Corporate Governance for more information regarding general fiduciary duties. In the case of insolvent corporations, these duties require directors and officers to manage the corporation for the benefit of all residual beneficiaries, and creditors of insolvent companies may enforce these fiduciary duties against directors.
Certain other states have various forms of constituency statutes, which permit the board in certain circumstances to balance the interests of stockholders against interests of other constituents, including customers, employers, suppliers or creditors. In addition, directors of public benefit corporations are required to consider the interests of the public, not just those of the stockholders.
In certain states, including Delaware, all partners in a general partnership, the general partners in a limited partnership and the managers or managing members in an LLC owe similar fiduciary duties to the company and to the company’s other partners/members, but, unlike with corporations, these duties may be limited or eliminated entirely in the company’s organisational documents.
Claims against a director of a US corporation for a fiduciary duty breach may be brought directly by the corporation or by its stockholders on behalf of the corporation or, in some instances, on their own behalf. The consequences of a breach of fiduciary duty may be monetary damages or equitable relief.
A director is typically protected from personal monetary liability arising out of a breach of his or her fiduciary duty of care in several ways.
Firstly, courts typically apply the business judgement rule when reviewing the business decisions of a director in connection with an alleged duty of care breach. Because this standard of review is highly deferential to the board, it is rare for a court to find a fiduciary duty breach in decisions subject to the business judgement rule. (Note that duty of loyalty claims are generally subject to a heightened standard of review in the absence of the satisfaction of certain requirements, which means such claims are more likely to result in liability for directors.)
Secondly, states typically permit corporations to adopt provisions in their organisational documents that provide for the exculpation and/or indemnification of directors for losses and expenses incurred in connection with a duty of care claim. Indemnification rights generally apply to officers as well, and recently adopted amendments to the DGCL now permit Delaware corporations to exculpate certain senior officers in connection with direct duty of care claims brought by stockholders (but not for claims brought by the corporation or brought derivatively by stockholders on the corporation’s behalf). However, state corporation law statutes generally preclude corporations from exculpating and/or indemnifying directors and officers from duty of loyalty claims.
Thirdly, states typically permit corporations to purchase liability insurance for their directors to cover losses resulting from fiduciary duty claims, including duty of care and loyalty claims.
Courts evaluate board action under different standards of review, depending on the facts and circumstances underlying the board action. As discussed in 2. Corporate Governance Context, business judgement review is the default standard for courts to review board action. If a plaintiff satisfies the burden of rebutting a presumption underpinning the business judgement rule, courts in most states apply “entire fairness”, the most onerous standard of review, to board action, which requires the board to establish that a transaction was a product of fair dealing and fair price.
Courts in certain states, such as Delaware, apply enhanced scrutiny (which is an intermediate standard of review) to board action in certain circumstances, regardless of whether the presumptions underlying the business judgement rule have been satisfied, such as a board’s decision to enter into a transaction constituting a change of control of the corporation or to adopt a defensive action in response to a threat, such as adopting a poison pill. In circumstances where enhanced scrutiny applies, boards are required to take certain actions that they would not otherwise be required to take, such as seeking a transaction offering the best value reasonably available to stockholders in a change-of-control scenario.
Breaches of Corporate Governance Requirements
In addition to the core fiduciary duties of care and loyalty, Delaware and many other states recognise certain other corporate law doctrines that can support claims against directors or officers for breaches of corporate governance requirements. For example, in Delaware, board action that is intended primarily to interfere with the stockholder “franchise” – ie, core rights incident to share ownership, such as voting rights – must be justified by demonstrating a compelling justification for taking such action. Another example is the corporate waste doctrine, under which directors have a duty not to approve a “wasteful” transaction, which no person of ordinarily sound business judgement would find fair or acceptable.
Delaware law also imposes on directors a duty to disclose all material information in certain circumstances, including self-dealing transactions.
For a discussion of limitations on director and officer liabilities, see 4.6 Legal Duties of Directors/Officers.
Compensation for executive officers and directors of US corporations generally must be determined by the board of directors, and this responsibility is often delegated to compensation committees (or nominating and corporate governance committees, in the case of director compensation). In Delaware, the board’s decisions regarding executive compensation are generally protected by the more deferential business judgement rule. However, a conflict of interest resulting in application of the entire fairness standard may arise where directors approve compensation arrangements for themselves or for officers that are also controlling stockholders of the corporation.
The federal securities laws require public companies to convene a stockholder vote to approve, on an advisory basis, the compensation of the company’s named executive officers (generally, for corporations, the CEO, CFO and three other most highly compensated executive officers), commonly referred to as the “say-on-pay” vote, at least once every three years and a separate vote to determine how often the say-on-pay vote will be held (“say-when-on-pay”) at least once every six years.
The NYSE and Nasdaq listing standards also require listed companies to receive stockholder approval for most equity compensation plans (and material amendments thereto).
The federal securities laws require extensive disclosure regarding the compensation of executive officers and directors in a public company’s proxy statement. The disclosure focuses on compensation for the company’s named executive officers (as described in 4.10 Approvals and Restrictions Concerning Payments to Directors/Officers); however, additional executives may be included in this group because of turnovers during the applicable year.
The company’s Compensation Discussion and Analysis (CD&A) in its annual proxy statement must explain the material elements of the company’s compensation for its named executive officers and is intended to facilitate investors’ understanding of the numbers in the requisite tables that follow the CD&A. A short compensation committee report is also required to be included in the proxy statement. Disclosure of any policies or practices regarding the ability of employees and directors to engage in hedging transactions with respect to the company’s securities is also required.
Summary Compensation Table
The main table required to be included in a company’s proxy statement is the Summary Compensation Table, which generally discloses the compensation earned by each named executive officer for each of the prior three fiscal years by category: salary, bonus, stock awards, options awards, non-equity incentive plan compensation, change in pension value and non-qualified deferred compensation earnings, other compensation and total compensation.
The SEC’s “pay-for-performance” rules also require companies to include a table containing specific executive compensation and financial performance measures for the five most recent fiscal years, as well as narrative disclosure explaining the relationship between the compensation paid to each named executive officer and the performance of the company. Other required tables must include information relating to grants of equity and bonus awards made to each named executive officer in the last fiscal year, outstanding equity awards at the end of the last fiscal year, stock options exercised by the named executive officers and stock awards that have vested during the last fiscal year, pension benefits, and non-qualified deferred compensation.
Narrative or tabular disclosure regarding the circumstances in which a named executive officer may be entitled to compensation upon termination of employment or in connection with a change in control, including estimates of potential payouts, is also required.
Companies must also disclose the ratio between the CEO’s annual total compensation and the median of the annual total compensation of all other employees.
Director Compensation
Director compensation for the most recent fiscal year is also required to be disclosed in a table that is similar to the Summary Compensation Table, along with related narrative disclosure.
Stockholders are the owners of a corporation. This ownership relationship is governed by state law. If the corporation is public and listed on a stock exchange, this relationship will also be governed by stock exchange rules and the federal securities laws. Some corporations (but few public companies) may also have stockholder agreements in place that impose additional rights or restrictions on stockholders.
Under state law, stockholders have no involvement in the management of a corporation, which is vested in a board of directors and often delegated to executive officers by the board. State law generally enumerates certain actions that require stockholder approval, which is further discussed in 3.1 Bodies or Functions Involved in Governance and Management.
Annual meetings of stockholders of a corporation are generally required under state law for the election of directors. For example, in Delaware, if a corporation fails to hold its annual meeting 30 days after the date designated for the annual meeting or 13 months after its last annual meeting, the Delaware Court of Chancery may order a stockholder meeting upon the application of any stockholder or director.
Special meetings of stockholders may be called by the board of directors or any other person authorised by a corporation’s organisational documents, such as stockholders. Corporations may explicitly prohibit the ability of stockholders to call special meetings in their organisational documents as a defence against stockholder activism. Most corporations that permit stockholders to call special meetings impose certain procedural requirements in their organisational documents that restrict such a right (such as ownership thresholds, informational requirements and blackout periods). Such restrictions must be contained in the corporation’s certificate of incorporation or by-laws.
State law governs the mechanics of holding a stockholder meeting. In Delaware, the location and time of annual meetings may be established in a corporation’s organisational documents or by the board. Such meetings can also be held virtually (by means of remote communication) if permitted by the corporation’s organisational documents. Written notice of a meeting must be given to stockholders entitled to vote no later than ten days and no earlier than 60 days before the date of the meeting. The board is required to fix a record date for the purpose of establishing which stockholders are entitled to notice and the right to vote at a stockholder meeting, which must be no later than ten days and no earlier than 60 days before the date of the meeting.
Quorum requirements may be set in a corporation’s organisational documents but may not be less than one third of the shares entitled to vote at the meeting. Delaware law generally does not govern the type of business to be conducted at a stockholder meeting, but corporations may include rules in their organisational documents or publish rules and/or agendas that impose restrictions on the proposals that can be acted on at a meeting. For example, it is common for public corporations to adopt advance notice by-laws, which require stockholders wishing to nominate a director or make a stockholder proposal to satisfy rigorous procedural and substantive requirements in order for their nomination or proposal to be properly raised at a stockholder meeting.
In Delaware, stockholders, by default, have the right to take action by written consent without holding a stockholder meeting unless prohibited by the corporation’s certificate of incorporation. Most public corporations prohibit stockholder action by written consent in their certificates of incorporation.
A stockholder of a US corporation may file (i) direct claims against the corporation or its officers and directors for actions that directly harm the stockholder or (ii) derivative claims against the corporation’s officers and directors for actions that harm the corporation. A common example of a derivative claim brought by a stockholder is a claim alleging a breach of fiduciary duty by the board.
Prior to filing a derivative claim, a stockholder must demand that the board pursue the claim or, in most states, including Delaware, demonstrate that such a demand is futile because of the board’s conflict of interest with respect to the litigation. This procedural requirement does not exist for direct claims, so stockholders at times try to refashion derivative claims as direct claims.
Federal Securities Law
The federal securities law requires an investor or group of investors who acquire beneficial ownership of more than 5% of a public company’s voting equity securities to file reports relating to their ownership on Schedule 13D, or if eligible, on Schedule 13G. Passive investors that own less than 20% of a company’s equity securities are eligible to report that ownership on Schedule 13G, and are otherwise subject to a less onerous reporting regime than that applicable to Schedule 13G filers. An investor who acquires more than 5% of a public company’s voting equity securities, and is not eligible to file a Schedule 13G, must report the acquisition on a Schedule 13D with the SEC within five business days of crossing the 5% threshold.
Schedule 13D requires the disclosure of the identity of the investor, information about the investor’s ownership of the company’s securities and sources of funds, any of the investor’s arrangements with respect to securities of the company and the purpose of the acquisition, including any plans or proposals which the investor may have to make changes to the board or management or to consummate a corporate transaction. The Schedule 13D must be amended to reflect any material changes in the disclosure contained in the original Schedule 13D (including the acquisition or disposition of 1% or more of the class of equity securities of the corporation) within two business days of such change. Subject to certain exceptions, an investor eligible to file a Schedule 13G must file the report within 45 days after the end of the calendar quarter in which the investor first became obliged to make such a filing.
Institutional Investment Managers
Institutional investment managers that have assets under management of at least USD100 million must report to the SEC their holdings of exchange-traded equity securities, certain equity options and warrants, shares of closed-end investment companies and certain convertible debt securities on Form 13F within 45 days of the end of each calendar quarter. Form 13F requires disclosure of the name of the manager, the name and class of security holdings and the number of shares and the market value of such shares as of the end of the calendar quarter.
Beneficial Owners
Beneficial owners of more than 10% of any class of equity security of a public company (as well as directors and officers) must report their beneficial ownership of equity securities on Section 16 forms. Transactions in equity securities by such stockholders, directors and officers must generally be reported within two business days. These parties may be required to disgorge to the company any profits made in connection with the purchase and sale of the company’s securities within a six-month period.
Acquisitions of Voting Securities
Certain acquisitions of voting securities by an investor must be reported to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the Department of Justice (DOJ) prior to consummation if the transaction value and the sizes of the investor and issuer exceed certain thresholds pursuant to the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act. Upon the investor making the filing, the FTC and DOJ have a 30-day period in which to request further information from the investor to determine whether the acquisition violates the US antitrust laws.
The contents of the filing are confidential. Stockholders should be mindful of other regulatory regimes that may be implicated by a stockholder’s acquisition of shares, including:
The federal securities laws require public companies to file publicly annual, quarterly and current reports relating to the occurrence of certain events material to stockholders. Annual and quarterly reports must be certified as accurate and complete by a company’s CEO and CFO. Public companies are also required to file proxy statements in connection with their stockholder meetings.
The federal securities laws require public companies to disclose the following information relating to corporate governance in their proxy statements:
Public companies must also disclose the occurrence of certain events in a current report, including:
The federal securities laws also require a public company to post on its website the charters of its audit, compensation and nominating and corporate governance committees or include the charters as an appendix to its proxy statement every three years. NYSE requires listed companies to make their codes of ethics publicly available on or through its website.
State law generally requires corporations and certain other entity forms to file the certificate of incorporation for the corporation with the Secretary of State. Certain states also require corporations and certain other entity forms to file annual or biannual reports, which generally require basic information about the entity, such as its legal name, address, registered agent and names of directors and officers. States typically make these filings publicly available.
The federal securities laws require public companies to have an independent auditor review their financial statements and disclosures and provide an opinion as to their fairness and compliance with the Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP).
The SEC considers the independence of an auditor impaired if the auditor is not, or if a reasonable investor with knowledge of all attendant facts and circumstances would conclude that the auditor is not, capable of exercising impartial judgement on all issues encompassed within the audit engagement. In addition, certain actions and arrangements between a company and its outside auditor are not permitted, including contingent fee arrangements, direct or material indirect business arrangements between a company and its outside auditor and a company hiring certain employees of the independent auditor during a one-year cooling-off period.
SEC rules prohibit independent auditors from providing certain non-audit services to a company, including but not limited to bookkeeping, management or human resource functions or legal services and unrelated expert advice. Independent auditors may provide other non-audit services to a company that are not specifically prohibited by SEC rules as long as the audit committee pre-approves such services. A company’s audit committee is responsible for the oversight of its independent auditor.
The federal securities laws require a public company to maintain adequate internal controls over financial reporting (ICFR) in order to provide reasonable assurances with respect to the reliability of the company’s financial reporting and compliance with GAAP measures. A company’s principal executive and financial officers are responsible for the design and implementation of the internal ICFR regime and must report control deficiencies and related findings to the audit committee and the company’s independent auditor. Subject to certain exceptions, companies are required to include a management-drafted internal control report with their annual report and a related attestation by the company’s independent auditor.
The NYSE requires a company’s audit committee to discuss policies with respect to risk assessment and risk management, but states that the audit committee is not required to be the sole body responsible for risk oversight. The federal securities laws require disclosure of the board’s role in the company’s risk oversight process, including with respect to cybersecurity risks. However, in response to investor, proxy adviser and stakeholder pressure, many companies go beyond these requirements to provide more detailed risk oversight disclosures, particularly in proxy statements, often including descriptions of their risk oversight processes for other critical risks facing the company and/or describing the number of directors the company has that have risk oversight experience.
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Corporate governance reforms continue to be an important topic for US companies. This article will cover the key topical issues at the time of publication in 2025.
Companies Face Continued Political and Economic Uncertainty
Companies are facing an increasingly challenging business environment driven by ongoing political and regulatory developments, policy shifts and economic volatility. For example, President Trump has already issued multiple executive orders that alter the regulatory landscape, including orders directing all executive departments and agencies to (i) freeze all rulemaking activity (including the issuance, proposal and publication of any new rules or other regulatory actions) until they can be reviewed and approved by a presidential appointee; and (ii) initiate processes to identify and rescind/modify regulations deemed to be inconsistent with the administration’s policies. While it is not uncommon for incoming administrations to implement regulatory freezes or rescind prior rules, the high amount of regulatory activity during the Biden administration, including in key areas such as cybersecurity/data privacy, AI and consumer protections, means these orders could meaningfully impact a number of new and pending regulations with which companies may have already started to comply.
Major policy shifts at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC) are also expected under the direction of new Chair Paul Atkins. To date, the SEC has dropped several of its high-profile cases and enforcement actions against crypto companies and ended its defence of the landmark climate disclosure rules adopted under the prior administration (which have not yet become effective due to ongoing legal challenges). In February, the Staff of the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance also issued new guidance and interpretations that may make it more difficult for shareholders to engage with companies on ESG-related issues going forward, including (i) a new legal bulletin rescinding 2021 guidance that had narrowed the ability of companies to exclude shareholder proposals with “broad societal impact” from their proxy statements; and (ii) a revised Compliance and Disclosure Interpretation addressing circumstances in which a shareholder’s engagement with a company’s management on ESG and other matters could result in the shareholder losing its eligibility to report beneficial ownership on the short-form Schedule 13G and instead require reporting on the more disclosure-intensive Schedule 13D. These changes have already started to impact the 2025 proxy season, with shareholder proponents withdrawing environmental and social proposals at much higher rates, and the SEC granting no-action requests for such proposals far more frequently than in previous years. In terms of future SEC priorities, according to Chair Atkins’ testimony during his Senate confirmation hearing, key focus areas during his tenure will include matters like developing a regulatory framework for digital assets, facilitating capital formation and scaling back “[u]nclear, overly politicized, complicated, and burdensome regulations” to instead focus more on disclosure of financially material information.
In addition to political and regulatory shifts, companies are also facing uncertainty as a result of rising geopolitical tensions and concerns over issues like tariffs, trade policies and taxation. Given the impact such factors can have on corporate performance, investors are increasingly looking for companies to disclose how their boards and management oversee and manage macroeconomic risks, and investors have demonstrated an increased willingness to hold directors accountable for perceived oversight or disclosure failures.
In this rapidly changing environment, it is important for business leaders to stay apprised of new and ongoing developments and consider their impact on their company’s strategic plans, operations and risk profiles. Boards may also want to consider requesting more frequent updates from management on key developments that could materially impact their business and, in some cases, even ask management to review and test assumptions and sensitivities underlying their company’s strategic plans to ensure different potential scenarios are taken into account, if appropriate. Additionally, companies should also consider preparing responses to possible shareholder questions regarding how they are navigating these ongoing political, regulatory, economic and social uncertainties.
Corporate DEI Practices Face Growing Scrutiny
Although there is still a significant amount of uncertainty regarding the new administration’s priorities and policies, one area that has become a clear area of scrutiny for regulators and politicians is diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI).
The legal basis for DEI attacks stems, in part, from the U.S. Supreme Court’s June 2023 decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, in which the Court struck down race-based affirmative action programmes in college and university admissions based on Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination based on race, colour or national origin in connection with programmes/activities that receive federal financial assistance. While the Harvard decision does not directly apply to private corporations, in its wake, US companies have faced increased legal challenges to their corporate DEI programmes, including, most recently, from federal regulators.
Consistent with President Trump’s campaign promises, over the last few months, the administration has taken significant actions to roll back private sector DEI initiatives through executive orders. These executive orders, among other things, direct the U.S. Attorney General, in consultation with the heads of relevant federal agencies, to identify private sector companies with “egregious and discriminatory” DEI programmes, signalling the possibility of potential investigations, lawsuits or other regulatory actions against publicly traded companies and large nonprofits. The U.S. Department of Justice (the DOJ) and the U.S. Office of Personnel Management have since issued internal memoranda implementing these executive orders, including one memorandum describing the steps the DOJ plans to take to “investigate, eliminate, and penalize illegal DEI and [accessibility] preferences, mandates, policies, programs, and activities in the private sector”, including the possible use of criminal investigations.
In response to these developments, many companies are re-examining their DEI policies and activities, including any DEI-related representation goals (eg, for their boards, management, employees, suppliers and/or vendors), compensation metrics and public disclosures.
Many proxy advisers and institutional investors have also revised their voting policies and guidelines to reflect the fact that they are under increased scrutiny with respect to DEI. For example, ISS has indefinitely halted its consideration of gender, racial or ethnic diversity when making voting recommendations with respect to the election of directors at US companies, while Glass Lewis has stated it will continue to apply its diversity-related voting policies but will now flag for its clients any recommendations that it makes with respect to the election of directors that are based, at least in part, on diversity considerations.
The DEI landscape is likely to continue to evolve in the coming months. As a result, it will be important for public and private companies to continue to monitor these developments and periodically review their DEI policies and disclosures to assess potential risks.
Evolving Approaches to Artificial Intelligence
As corporate uses of AI become more common, investors are calling on companies to provide greater transparency into how companies govern, oversee and manage the risks related to AI. For example, according to data from ISS, shareholder proposals related to AI more than quadrupled between 2023 and 2024. These proposals typically request that the targeted company (i) disclose information about AI use and/or management of related risks; (ii) conduct a third-party evaluation about AI-related risks and impacts; and/or (iii) establish a formal board-level committee to oversee AI. In 2024, AI-related proposals that went to a vote received, on average, support from 20% of votes cast, and none passed. However, a few notable examples received significantly higher levels of support (including 43% at Netflix and 37.5% at Apple).
Glass Lewis also added a new section related to AI oversight in its 2025 voting guidelines. Under this policy, while Glass Lewis will generally not make voting recommendations on the basis of a company’s AI oversight practices or disclosure, in cases where there is evidence that insufficient oversight and/or management of AI technologies has resulted in material harm to shareholders, Glass Lewis may recommend against directors if it finds the board’s oversight of, response to or disclosures concerning AI-related issues to be insufficient.
As a result, companies are increasingly including AI-related information in their public filings (most commonly, in their 10-Ks and/or proxy statements), including identifying any material risks AI poses to their business and how such risks are overseen at the board and/or management level. Some companies that rely on AI for material services or operations are, with board oversight, also developing internal frameworks to govern their use of AI, including policies, guidelines and controls to ensure such use complies with their company’s goals and legal, regulatory and ethical obligations.
Boards themselves are also employing a variety of methods to deepen their directors’ understanding of AI, including having directors participate in education sessions with management about their company’s use of AI and related risks and opportunities, bringing in external specialists to discuss AI-related trends and developments periodically and/or appointing directors with specific AI experience (though the latter is less common).
While corporate practices and disclosures related to AI continue to evolve, companies should also be aware of a number of recent regulatory enforcement actions and shareholder lawsuits that have been filed against companies (and their executives) for alleged misrepresentations related to their AI capabilities, usage and/or metrics (often referred to as “AI washing” lawsuits). Companies should consider subjecting any AI-related public statements to similar internal review and compliance processes as their other public disclosures.
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