Thoughts for Boards: Key Issues in Corporate Governance for 2025

As we look ahead to the challenges and opportunities facing boards of directors in this new year, it is illuminating to reflect on how much has changed in corporate governance. Over the last five decades, we have been on the front lines with our clients as the evolution of corporate governance has been propelled by […]

Feb 9, 2025 - 21:56
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Thoughts for Boards: Key Issues in Corporate Governance for 2025
Posted by Martin Lipton, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, on Friday, January 31, 2025
Editor's Note:

Martin Lipton is a Founding Partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. This post is based on a Wachtell Lipton memorandum by Mr. Lipton, Steven A. Rosenblum, Karessa L. Cain, Elina Tetelbaum, and Hannah Clark.

As we look ahead to the challenges and opportunities facing boards of directors in this new year, it is illuminating to reflect on how much has changed in corporate governance. Over the last five decades, we have been on the front lines with our clients as the evolution of corporate governance has been propelled by multiple crises and systemic shocks—including the Enron and WorldCom scandals and ensuing Sarbanes-Oxley legislation, which prompted incremental layers of disclosure and regulations, followed by the financial crisis and subsequent Dodd-Frank reforms, and most recently the Covid pandemic, which intensified the spotlight on ESG and stakeholder governance. In the private ordering arena, ISS and shareholder activists were remarkably successful in changing the status quo for once-common governance features like staggered board structures, and we saw the shelving of poison pills—a defense we originated and subsequently defended in Moran, Airgas and other cases. These trends have, in turn, increased the prevalence and omnipresent threat of proxy fights. And as the corporate governance debates have continued to evolve, we have seen institutional investors become increasingly active participants, with detailed and often diverging policies setting forth their priorities, preferences and perspectives on issues ranging from climate disclosures to DEI to over-boarded directors. The compounding effect is that boards today are expected to navigate a corporate governance landscape that has become much more complex and nuanced, with an expanding set of expectations for their oversight role and responsibilities.

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