DJ Angry Shareholders Disrupt Belgium National BankŽs AGM
BRUSSELS (Dow Jones)–Disgruntled shareholders disrupted proceedings at the annual shareholders meeting of the National Bank of Belgium (BNB.BT), angry over what they perceive as unfair treatment by the bank.
Hecklers repeatedly interrupted Vice Governor Luc Coene as he presented the bankŽs annual results for 2005, with slow hand clapping and shouts for their rights to be upheld. Many were angry they were forbidden from asking any questions until a later session after lunch.
“We were asking for more slides about the financial activity, for more transparency,” said Charles Demoulin, a senior manager for Deminor, a body that groups around 2%minority shareholder interests.
Unlike other central banks, Belgium’s is a listed company traded on Euronext. Half of its shares are in free float while the state owns the other half.
This has caused conflicts of interest between the bank’s public service obligations and private shareholders’ commercial interests.
Demoulin said the bank routinely disregards its shareholders’ interests.
“The main philosophy of the bank seems to give more to the state and less to the shareholders,” he said.
The bank’s income goes in three directions, said Demoulin. One part goes to the Belgian government, another part to its reserves, and a third, “tiny” amount to private shareholders.
He said the dividend payout to shareholders is increased annually only by the rate of inflation, while the bank’s income often rises considerably higher than the inflation rate.
In addition it doesn’t respect transparency rules that govern other Belgian companies through Belgium’s corporate code of conduct. This is despite the central bank of the Netherlands respecting that country’s corporate governance code, even though it isn’t a listed company.
For its part the bank maintains it is first and foremost a central bank and its main objective isn’t maximizing shareholder wealth.
“Being a central bank, the bulk of its income is generated by virtue of its legal right to issue bank notes,” it said in a statement. “This justifies the legal provisions that transfer the amount of income that exceeds the bank’s proper needs to the Belgian state.”
It said the rules of company law only apply as far as they are not inconsistent with the central bank’s statutes.
The bank’s shareholders have previously lost a series of court cases against the bank where they claimed the bank had unfairly transferred assets to the state instead of distributing it to minority shareholders.
Company Web site: http://www.bnb.be
-By Carolyn Henson, Dow Jones Newswires; +32 2 741 1484; carolyn.henson@dowjones.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 27, 2006 09:37 ET (14:37 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.