QUESTION 1
[25 MARKS]
KK is a large listed company. When a non-executive directorship of KK Limited
became available, Johny Samora was nominated to fill the vacancy. Johny is the
brother-in-law of KK's chief executive Kennedy Kavena. Johny is also the CEO of
Samora Supplies Ltd, KK's largest single supplier and is, therefore, very familiar with
KK and its industry. He has sold goods to KK for over 20 years and is on friendly terms
with all of the senior officers in the company. In fact last year, Samora Supplies
appointed KK's finance director, Susana Shaningwa, to a non-executive directorship
on its board. The executive directors of KK all know and like Johny and so plan to ask
the nominations committee to appoint him before the next AGM.
KK has recently undergone a period of rapid growth and has recently entered several
new overseas markets, some of which, according to the finance director, are riskier
than the domestic market. Kennedy Kavena, being the dominant person on the KK
board, has increased the risk exposure of the company according to some investors.
They say that because most of the executive directors are less experienced, they
rarely question his overseas expansion strategy. This expansion has also created a
growth in employee numbers and an increase in the number of executive directors,
mainly to manage the increasingly complex operations of the company. It was thought
by some that the company lacked experience and knowledge of international markets
as it expanded and that this increased the risk of the strategy's failure. Some
shareholders believed that the aggressive strategy, led by Kennedy Kavena, has been
careless as it has exposed KK Limited to some losses on overseas direct investments
made before all necessary information on the investment was obtained.
As a large listed company, the governance of KK is important to its shareholders. Fin
Brun is one of KK's largest shareholders and holds a large portfolio of shares including
8% of the shares in KK. At the last AGM he complained to KK's chief executive,
Kennedy Kavena, that he needed more information on directors' performance. Fin said
that he didn't know how to vote on board reappointments because he had no
information on how they had performed in their jobs. Mr Kavena said that the board
intended to include a corporate governance section in future annual reports to address
this and to provide other information that shareholders had asked for. He added,
however, that he would not be able to publish information on the performance of
individual executive directors as this was too complicated and actually not the concern
of shareholders. It was, he said, the performance of the board as a whole that was
important and he (Mr Kavena) would manage the performance targets of individual
directors.
Required:
(a) Explain the term 'conflict of interest' in the context of non-executive directors and
discuss the potential conflicts of interest relating to KK and Samora Supplies if Johny
Samora were to become a non-executive director of KK Limited.
(8 marks)
(b) Assess the advantages of appointing experienced and effective non-executive
directors to the KK board during the period in which the company was growing rapidly.
(7 marks)
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