14 BARRON’S April 6, 2020
buybacksfor the protection of work-
ers,” says John Streur, CEO of Calvert
Research & Management, a unit of
Eaton Vance. Streur says companies
with strong governance, including an
emphasis on stakeholders and a focus
on getting the community through the
pandemic, “should be better positioned
for long-term success.”
For shareholders, the rationale
goes, commitment to employees and
other groups ensures the health of
publicly traded companies over the
long haul, by giving them loyal work-
ers, customers, and suppliers.
“Whether you’re a start-up, a small
or medium-size business, or a large
enterprise, you’re seeing every com-
pany learn completely new ways they
can support people and communities
in response to this pandemic,” Cisco
Systems CEO Chuck Robbins told
Barron’s. “The reality is, the concept of
stakeholder capitalism has been core
to many companies, including Cisco,
for a long time now, and you are see-
ing us act on those values.”
Recently, a group including New
York City Comptroller Scott Stringer—
who oversees the city’s pension
funds—and other investors urged
companies to make paid leave avail-
able to all employees, prioritize health
and safety, and retain employees,
which, they argued, would allow com-
panies to resume operations quickly.
Companies making layoffs should be
mindful not to practice discrimina-
tion, they added.
Lots of cutbacks still lie ahead for
employees, including cuts to employer
contributions to already damaged re-
tirement accounts. Obviously, smaller
businesses have a tougher time than
larger ones in taking care of workers
when business dries up. Plenty of
workers have been furloughed in lever-
aged industries such as retail, lodging,
and restaurants. But in many cases,
they remain eligible for full health ben-
efits, as they do at J.C. Penney.
“Stakeholder capitalism might be
accelerated [by the crisis],” says Abby
Joseph Cohen, advisory director and
senior investment strategist at Gold-
man Sachs Group. “But the results
will depend on leadership from both
companies and government officials. I
currently have more confidence in the
former than the latter.”
A look at what big publicly traded
companies are doing during the crisis
shows that many are thinking about
the broader society, with measures
that can’t exactly be characterized as
shareholder friendly. A list can be
found on JUST Capital’s website.
Goldman Sachs gave employees
extra leave and launched a $300 mil-
lion package of grants and low-inter-
Crisis Prods
CEOs to Look
Beyond
Shareholders
Some companies are making big
commitments to employees and
other stakeholders during the year
of Covid-19. Will it last?
“You’re seeing
every com-
pany learn
completely
new ways
they can
support
people and
communi-
ties.”
Chuck Robbins,
Cisco
A
s tens of millions of people
are losing jobs in the U.S.
amid the coronavirus cri-
sis, companies are step-
ping up to commit to their
biggest constituencies
beyond their own share-
holders. The move is likely to acceler-
ate the trend toward what’s known as
stakeholder capitalism—in which em-
ployees, suppliers, customers, and
communities are given equal consider-
ation to shareholders.
With the average tenure of big-com-
pany CEOs lasting just about five
years, most of them haven’t led
through a recession, much less a pan-
demic. This week, Bank of America
CEO Brian Moynihan and other World
Economic Forum officials urged com-
panies to pay attention to a variety of
key groups during the coronavirus
crisis, with employees topping the list.
In an interview with Barron’s ,Moy-
nihan said shareholders “want us to do
what’s in the best interests of the long-
term health of this company. Our team-
mates are essential to that.” He stressed
that safety for workers meant economic
security too. Last month, BofA, Citi-
bank, and other banks said they
wouldn’t make layoffs. Though
Moynihnan says the two are unrelated,
many—including BofA—also said they
would suspend share buybacks.
That’s quite a turn from the past,
when companies traditionally placed
shareholders’ interests at the top of the
list. “Companies are committing to stop
By LESLIE P. NORTON
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan onBarron’s Roundtableon Fox Business Network in January
est loans to communities and small
businesses.
Home Depot gave hourly workers
extra paid time off, with more for as-
sociates age 65 and over; paid time off
for workers diagnosed with coronavi-
rus until released by a doctor to re-
turn to work; and paid time off for
anybody needing to quarantine.
Walmart offered customers no-con-
tact payment, pickup, and delivery
and, with the Walmart Foundation,
committed $25 million to support or-
ganizations fighting the coronavirus,
including $10 million for food banks.
Johnson & Johnson will donate
$300 million, much of it over 10
years, to support front-line health-
care workers in the fight against
Covid-19, and to recruiting and train-
ing more workers.
Companies that ranked well in Bar-
ron’s Most Sustainable Companies list
had similar responses. No. 5–ranked
Best Buy offered contactless curbside
service and temporary pay hikes.
“These initiatives should help Best
Buy maintain and attract customers
and employees and create long-term
value for shareholders and stakehold-
ers,” wrote analysts at Calvert, which
assembles the list for Barron’s. Mean-
while, No. 7–ranked Cisco will allocate
$8 million in cash and $210 million in
products to the global coronavirus
response.
Will the trend survive the coronavi-
rus crisis? Bob Eccles, an expert on
sustainable strategies and a visiting
professor at Oxford University, is
skeptical: “It only becomes real when
the company’s board has published a
statement of purpose about their com-
pany: What commitments are they
making to their stakeholders, over
what time frames, and how do they
address trade-off decisions? Other-
wise, who’s accountable?”
For now, the move toward stake-
holder capitalism seems relentless. “I
consider Covid-19 an accelerant to
many of the paradigm shifts already
under way, such as deglobalization
and the rise of populism,” Joyce
Chang, chair of global research at J.P.
Morgan, wrote in an email to Barron’s.
The response from Moynihan and
other CEOs to these societal changes?
“For capitalism to survive, it must be
reformed,” says Chang.
That has also been the driving force
behind the sustainable investing
movement, which could be the big
winner if stakeholder capitalism be-
comes the new normal.B John Lamparski/Getty Images