Farm Futures logo

Will Werner Baumann get shareholder support?

Shareholder advisory groups split on whether investors should support Bayer AG's management.

Bloomberg, Content provider

April 14, 2020

2 Min Read
Adam Berry/Stringer/GettyImagesNews

By Tim Loh and Eyk Henning

Two influential shareholder advisory groups are split on whether investors should support Bayer AG’s management at its upcoming annual meeting, a year after a damaging no-confidence vote.

Glass Lewis & Co. still sees risks brought about by Bayer’s takeover of agriculture giant Monsanto, advising shareholders to abstain rather than vote to endorse Chief Executive Officer Werner Baumann’s actions in 2019. While Institutional Shareholder Services Inc. recommended backing Baumann and his team, it expressed concern that litigation related to the Roundup weedkiller could further hurt the company’s value and reputation.

Bayer declined to comment on the advisory groups’ recommendations.

Concerns linger over Baumann’s strategic choices after he helped orchestrate the $63 billion deal that brought Bayer an avalanche of U.S. lawsuits from people claiming Roundup causes cancer. Three lost trials and at least 48,000 more suits have spurred investor flight, wiping tens of billions of dollars off Bayer’s valuation.

A year ago, both Glass Lewis and ISS recommended against voting to discharge Bayer’s management for its actions in 2018 -- an effective no-confidence ballot. More than half of shareholders did just that, making Baumann the first head of a major German company in decades to lose the non-binding but highly symbolic vote. It’s unclear whether the CEO could survive a second such rebuke.

Related:Shareholders rebuke Bayer CEO Werner Baumann

This year, Glass Lewis had initially recommended voting against support for Bayer’s management team because the company has ignored abstentions. Bayer has now committed to tally “abstain” votes and record them publicly, leading the adviser to change its recommendation, according an update of its note issued Monday.

Bayer acknowledged in February that the losses from Roundup could force it to sell assets, issue new equity or borrow money at unfavorable terms. Bayer insists the herbicide is safe and has appealed the losing verdicts.

The company’s high-stakes talks with plaintiff attorneys to resolve the litigation have been slowed by the coronavirus pandemic. The company recently backed out of tentative agreements to resolve the claims, giving it more time to assess the impact of the pandemic on its business and potentially keeping the total amount of Roundup settlements under $10 billion, Bloomberg reported earlier this month, citing people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified.

To contact the reporters on this story:

Tim Loh in Munich at [email protected];

Related:Bayer hires high-profile lawyer to fight Roundup lawsuits

Eyk Henning in Frankfurt at [email protected]

To contact the editors responsible for this story:

Eric Pfanner at [email protected]

John Lauerman, Marthe Fourcade

© 2020 Bloomberg L.P.

About the Author(s)

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like