this post was submitted on 24 Sep 2023
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It literally is in practice.
It isn't. If it were, that would mean that in practice, board members act to maximize shareholder value because they are legally obligated to do so, and that simply isn't true.
In practice, board members and C-suite employees are incentivized to maximize shareholder value. They are not legally obligated to do so.
Fiduciary duty is a legal requirement, meaning that if you don't fulfill your fiduciary duty, you're liable. But nobody has been successfully sued for not maximizing shareholder value when their actions were in line with the business judgment rule ("made (1) in good faith, (2) with the care that a reasonably prudent person would use, and (3) with the reasonable belief that the director is acting in the best interests of the corporation"). Successful lawsuits regarding breach of fiduciary duty (in the context of corporate law) require the defendant to have acted with gross negligence, in bad faith, or to have had an undisclosed conflict of interest.
The closest instance of legal precedent that I know of (aside from "" of course) that eBay v. Newmark (Craigslist), which Max Kennerly took as meaning that corporations are legally required to maximize profits. In this case, Craigslist was found to have violated their fiduciary duties to eBay because Craigslist, in Max's words, "tried to protect the frugal, community-centric corporate culture that was a hallmark for their success."
Except, if you actually read the case notes, it's clear that the issue wasn't that Craigslist wasn't maximizing their profits, but that they were diluting the percentage of stocked owned and flexibility of selling those stocks of other stockholders. The issue wasn't that Craigslist wanted to spend half their profits supporting charities or anything like that - no, it was that they were trying to artificially limit, thus directly devaluing, the shares they had already sold. In other words, I agree that this was a case about minority shareholder oppression as opposed to being an edict to maximize profits / shareholder value.
And other than people threatening legal action, the most recent case we have (other than eBay v. NewMark) in favor of shareholder primacy is 124 years old - Dodge v. Ford. But the opposite is true:
The belief that a corporation is legally obligated to maximize shareholder value isn't just wrong; it also:
I said in practice, not in law
Just pointing out I'm a different person lol