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The End Of Shareholder Value: Corporations At The Crossroads
 
 
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The End Of Shareholder Value: Corporations At The Crossroads [Hardcover]

Allan Kennedy (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 30, 2000
In The End of Shareholder Value, Allan Kennedy shines the spotlight on a new revolution in business-as customers, employees, political and social leaders, and governing boards begin to challenge the cozy relationship between executives and investors that has crippled companies in the name of maximizing shareholder value. Analyzing both historical and current material, he explores the colorful history of corporations since the turn of the century, evolving from engines of innovation to machines driven by short-term financial gains. From GE to the hottest new Web-based start-up, those companies that subscribe to the shareholder value ethic cannot be sustained and will, inevitably, be replaced by those who figure out how to create and share wealth with all their important constituencies. Provocative and wide-ranging, The End of Shareholder Value showcases progressive experiments in the public and private sectors, outlines new roles and responsibilities for all participants, and challenges everyone to rethink the purpose of business in the new millennium.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

After two decades of taking the money and running, it's time for corporate managers to seek to make a difference as well as a buck. That's the thesis of Allan Kennedy's analysis of the state and likely fate of corporate America at the turn of the new century. It was Kennedy who, in 1982, cowrote the bestselling Corporate Cultures, which gave us the notion of the heroes, rites, and rituals involved in modern business. Here, Kennedy argues that shareholder value--using discounted future cash-flow streams rather than traditional accounting measures such as earnings per share--has become the final gauge of a company's worth. This emphasis will have potentially dangerous unintended consequences for everyone, he says. Management's shortsighted focus on squeezing the last penny out of every part of the business has exploited its key stakeholders. Faced with downsizing, outsourcing, and hard (sometimes deceptive) bargaining, employees, suppliers, governments, communities, and customers are each beginning to turn on companies in ways that now threaten the future success of the companies themselves. The result today, he writes, is an overvaluation of stock prices that's "simply a symptom of the failure of the shareholder value ethic to produce anything of lasting value."

The book outlines three eras of business evolution, from the family enterprises of the 19th century, through the engineers and inventors of the immediate post-World War II period, to the financial entrepreneurs of high technology. As it briefly chronicles the growth of some of the corporate icons of each era, the portrayal is not always favorable, particularly when it reaches the present. One is tempted to think of investment bankers and venture capitalists as the Svengalis (or Rasputins) of the high-tech economy, whose machinations have led to "insupportable levels in the stock market [that] should be known as the shareholder value bubble." Finally, Kennedy proposes remedies to create real, sustainable wealth for all of a company's stakeholder groups, not just the stockholders. While there's little to dispute in these rather general proposals, his recommendations for overhauling the way boards of directors are chosen and operate are thorough and well argued, radical even.

Kennedy is a bit of a Cassandra in places. He's very skeptical of even the small nuggets of promising Internet trends and statistics he himself quotes. Nevertheless, the book is provocative and timely. Perhaps the most important point is its resuscitation of the old discussion about the wider, social purpose of business--a debate that's been forgotten in the flush of the "new economy." --Alan J. White

Review

"From the co-author of The New Corpora te Cultures, a radical suggestion: that there are other indexes to corporate health than quarter-to-quarter shareholder happiness. "Allan Kennedy provocatively proposes that running corporations to benefit shareholders damages companies and the societies they operate in. [He] has raised questions about managing for shareholder value that someone will have to answer." -Mark Henricks. American Way "Allan Kennedy has always seen the corporation in its full cultural context. Now he demonstrates that corporate managers have mistaken the shareholder value formula for the building of true wealth. His fascinating stories of companies make both great reading and a compelling case for the broadening of corporate objectives." -Stan Davis, co-author of Future Wealth and Blur" --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Basic Books (May 30, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0738202401
  • ISBN-13: 978-0738202402
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.6 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,968,169 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Thought provoking, but not convincing, July 9, 2000
This review is from: The End Of Shareholder Value: Corporations At The Crossroads (Hardcover)
Managers currently has as their mandate the creation of shareholder value. Kennedy advocates discarding this benchmark for a new, fuzzier set of measures that addresses the needs of other stakeholders (employees, government, environment, suppliers).

This is neither necessary nor appropriate; shareholder value works - and in effect successfully considers non-shareholder stakeholders. Kennedy makes some interesting points in this book, but in the end in his quest to end the philosophy of shareholder value he is throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Kennedy's contention is that high paid managers of our public corporations are running their companies into the ground in the pursuit of, as he repeatedly calls it, "higher share price now." They are, he claims, mortgaging their companies' futures for profits today.

Kennedy does not make a particularly strong argument for this view; his examples of current corporate abuses are weak, and he ducks issues that would contradict his claim.

The two main case studies Kennedy presents are General Electric and Cisco. Both companies, even by his reckoning, are rock solid companies. They will continue to grow, both in revenues and probability. The problem? A) their stocks are overvalued and B) it is unlikely that they will continue to grow at the same astronomical rates.

Fair enough. But this is not much of a criticism on management. Kennedy consistently fails to show that managers are acting inappropriately, or that they're actually destroying value. This book might have more appropriately been titled "the markets are out of their minds." The correction will come. In this vein Kennedy's argument is convincing.

That's not to say that I think that Cisco is a bad company, nor that the Cisco managers have acted inappropriately. Indeed, they've performed splendidly. We have every reason to believe that the company will continue its success. However it is inappropriate that the stock is currently trading at 100+ multiples.

An important principle of market theory is that the stock price is a proxy for long-term profitability. As we've seen in the Cisco case, this does not work perfectly all of the time (that is what market corrections are for). The market whips around as the speculators move in and out based on quarterly earnings and other news, but in the long run the stock price should reflect all available information about the company which impacts the company's long-term profitability.

Kennedy includes entire chapters on the destructiveness of the shareholder value movement on governments, suppliers, and employees. However, his treatment is superficial - these interests (those of the shareholders and the various stakeholders) should in the long-term be aligned. A company who abuses their employees will see their intellectual capital flee as employees leave to work for the competition. This affects the share price. A company who flaunts environmental regulations should in the least be affected adversely by customers who choose to buy from more responsible firms, and in stronger cases be sued back to the stone age. This affects the share price.

End the end companies add value to society by being profitable. The efficient market hypothesis tells us that the share price is a proxy for this long-term profitability, incorporating all available information. Kennedy never explicitly addresses this theory; this is the book's biggest blind spot.

Some of the recommendations are insightful; particularly those that deal with the composition of corporate boards and with the release of information. This is a provocative and though provoking book, but in the end Kennedy makes a weak case for throwing out the benchmark of shareholder value as the motivation which guides our corporations.

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14 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Anti-Greed Tract Favoring Balanced Stakeholder Rewards, June 11, 2000
By 
Donald Mitchell "Jesus Loves You!" (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 109,000 Helpful Votes Globally) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The End Of Shareholder Value: Corporations At The Crossroads (Hardcover)
I agree with Allan Kennedy that companies would achieve much better results if they concerned themselves with providing all stakeholders (including employees, suppliers, government, and communities) with great results, not just shareholders.

Where I disagree with his book is I think his argument is flawed on how he comes to this conclusion. Basically, he outlines the major ways that stakeholders can be shortchanged (putting employees through constant downsizing, with products that don't meet customer needs, too much pressure on suppliers to provide low prices, and reneging on deals with governments) and acts as though every company does all of these things non-stop. That's certainly the exception, not the rule, in my experience.

He then places a lot of weight on the idea that because stock prices are so high now that companies cannot possibly hope to accelerate stock prices any more with the existing exploitive tools listed above. That seems like apples and oranges to me. I work with companies to help them improve stock price, and I don't know of any companies that are doing more than 20 percent of the things that could improve their stock price. I agree that stock prices may not go up a lot more for old economy companies, but the reason is that the managements don't know how to expand stock price any more, not that the stock prices could not be expanded further.

Kennedy uses GE as an example and flatly sees no future stock-price improvement for that company. That seemed like a fallacious argument to me because partially breaking the company up with new equity securities that would have a higher multiple than the parent could easily double this company's valuation in just a few months. The company's e-commerce initiatives have enormous potential for a high and large valuation, for example.

Our research with the most successful companies in expanding shareholder value shows that balanced benefits for all stakeholders is the best way to grow stock price. So even if you subscribe to the 'greed is good' school, you should share. The reason for this result is because cooperation from the other stakeholders adds value that allows the companies to grow faster and be more profitable. Kennedy missed that point, even though I have been publishing annual articles on this subject documenting this point for many years in Chief Executive Magazine and on our various Web sites.

If you want to learn more about some of the flawed and stalled thinking that has emerged in some companies that subscribe to discounted cash flow stock-price valuation methods, you have found the right book. If you want to know what will be the best practices for rewarding all stakeholders in the future, this one has some of the vision but not all of the right stuff.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars exercise in fuzzy thinking, May 17, 2004
By 
Svetoslav Tassev (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This book is an exercise in fuzzy thinking. Kennedy is totally confused about what shareholder value is. He is confusing shareholders' legitimate desire to get a meaningful return on their capital (enough to compensate for the risk they assumed) with management's unscrupulous attempts to increase reported EPS over the short term. Whatever contributes to the former creates shareholder value. Whatever contributes to the later, doesn't necessary do so. The puruit of shareholder value has nothing to do with unscrupulous management. But that's not all.
He doesn't understand the mechanics of a modern capitalist economy nor does he understand the interactions among different groups in society and the fundamental principals of business valuation and corporate finance.
I should also mention his constant misinterpretation of facts: Kennedy is idealizing the 19th century entrepreneurs as men who started their businesses only for the sake of the common good. Wealth, according to him, was only a byproduct of their charitable attempts to improve society. I doubt if that was true. Being open about one's own greed was not an acceptable social behavior in 19th century. Subsequently, men of wealth tried to come up with noble excuses for their profit seeking.
Kennedy argues that maximizing shareholder value ignores employees, customers, suppliers, communities and the government. If that was true then everything we know about modern Economics must be wrong!
Let's start with employees. Do they really suffer from shareholders' attempts to maximize their own profit? If shareholders didn't care about profit, they wouldn't start the business to begin with and without the business, employees would have nowhere to work. Conclusion: profit seeking (maximizing shareholder value) creates value for workers. The alternative would be a centralized communist economy where government runs all businesses. Business ventures are not evaluated by the profits they could generate but by the amount of people they would employ (more is better).
What about governments? The purpose of government is to serve the people. Government has no other purpose. Therefore we can not say that corporate behavior harms government unless that behavior harms Society. Harm done to a government by a corporation that doesn't harm Society is no harm at all. An example would be any legal attempt to minimize taxes. It harms government because it decreases the amount of funds available to expand bureaucracy but it benefits Society because businesses can allocate capital more efficiently than governments.
What about suppliers? Are they being harmed by the "shareholder value menace"? Suppliers are also businesses with shareholders of their own. Each and every company is both a buyer and a supplier. If a company is being squeezed by its customers, it can always attempt to do the same to its suppliers.
It is true that many communities, many local and national governments, and many workers end up abused by businesses (big and small). It is also true that many businesses are being endlessly abused by militant labor unions and governments. It doesn't follow that business owners should be prevented from seeking lawful ways to increase their wealth.
Kennedy even goes as far as to argue that increasing shareholder value harms shareholders. Here logic fails him completely. The discussion of GE is an illustrative example. Although Kennedy admits that GE's cost cutting initiatives increased value for current shareholders, he claims that the inflated stock price at the end of 1999 will prevent those who buy today (1999) to realize similar gains. True. So what? No one is being forced to buy overpriced common stock. People suffer their own ignorance about corporate valuations. Do we need to hold CEOs responsible for holding their stock prices low so that anyone, who buys a share of common stock at any time, can have a decent return?
Wall Street does not hold CEOs responsible for the stock price of their companies (low or high). It does hold them responsible for the operating results. Stock prices take care of themselves.
His recommendations for change are even sillier then his criticisms. He suggests to replace the pursuit for shareholder value with...building shareholder wealth!!! If I were a Boston snob I could probably see the difference but I am not. It sounds all the same to me. Arguing about the usage of words and terms (among vs. between; many vs. a lot; shareholder value vs. shareholder wealth; etc.) is intellectual no more challenging then collecting stamps or baseball cards. If the Boston snobs think otherwise then I would let them have it their way.
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Society at large dictates the size and shape of the institutions that dominate most people's day-to-day lives. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
shareholder value ethic, shareholder value era, shareholder value movement, shareholder value thinking, traditional manufacturing businesses, investment incentive programs, stock price levels, customer franchise, large public companies, watching the watchers, higher stock price
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United States, Von Meister, New York, General Electric, Silicon Valley, General Motors, Wall Street, World War, Jack Welch, Precision Instrument, Digital Research, Dow Chemical, Lever Brothers, North American, Sam Walton, Stanford University, World Wide Web, Digital Equipment Corporation, Kidder Peabody, Los Angeles, South Africa, Bell South, Ben Franklin, Conference Board, Forrester Research
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