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Director's Domain: Corporate Governance News & Board Insights

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Visit the Director's Domain Archives

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June 04, 2026

Heed the flashing yellow lights. This week's governance headlines serve to remind us all that as the operating environment becomes more complex, so do the boards’ accountabilities. At Target, investors are scrutinizing leadership decisions, board structure, and succession planning. In the ever-changing AI space, regulators are increasingly testing where responsibility lies when powerful technologies might cause harm. And in the M&A world, companies are being reminded that ambitions cannot be unlimited. Nonetheless, scaling remains in vogue as AI companies race forward, committing unprecedented amounts of capital in pursuit of future growth. New playbooks are being written, even in old line businesses like Berkshire Hathaway, and seemingly old challenges like cybersecurity that never really went away despite the spotlight now on AI, continue to be key areas of board focus. Looking out for warning signs, in all areas of a business, has always been part of a strong governance platform, and nothing is changing about that. Throwing caution to the wind runs the real risk that it blows back in one’s face.

Read On

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May 28, 2026 -

Elon Musk has always pushed the envelope: the all-electric, sporty Roadster broke barriers in 2003, then came reusable rockets, and now another mind-bendingly audacious idea on the journey to colonizing Mars, rewriting the rules of corporate governance for what could become the largest IPO in history. SpaceX’s proposed governance structure would give Musk near-total voting control, severely limit or eliminate shareholder influence and lawsuits, avoid a majority-independent board, and even allow him to vote shares he has not yet been awarded. The message is hard to miss: Potential investors are welcome to join Elon for a ride on his financial rocket ship, but they shouldn’t expect guardrails or oversight. While we’ve seen the founder-centric, dual-class share structure before, most notably at Facebook/Meta, where Mark Zuckerberg holds more than 50% of the voting power, SpaceX is making a hyper-assertive play to dismiss governance norms in favor of near-total founder control. Meanwhile, the AI economy is pushing boards into entirely new territory. Observers suggest Anthropic’s latest cyber tools will ultimately create more visibility into enterprise risk than some companies are operationally prepared to manage—and create a whole new way of thinking about cyber oversight. Nvidia’s massive Taiwan investment highlights how dependent the future of AI has become on fragile geopolitical arrangements. In China, courts are signaling that aggressive AI adoption must be balanced by social stability and worker protections. Despite the rapid technological and social changes, this week also offered a reminder that old-fashioned governance failures can still destabilize a global company overnight, as BP ousts its chair over allegations of misconduct. Finally, activist investors continue to make their presence felt, with Lululemon founder Chip Wilson securing two board seats after a very vocal pressure campaign, Elliott Management winning representation at Synopsys, and GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen attempting to turn public pressure into a takeover weapon in his pursuit of eBay.

Read On

May 21, 2026 -

Everybody wants in on AI...until they don’t. Boards and executives are quickly realizing that keeping up with proper oversight and deployment is no easy feat. This week’s governance headlines revealed growing unease over whether organizations are moving a little too fast and not fully understanding the technologies reshaping their businesses. A new survey found many CEOs believe their boards are pushing aggressively on AI without fully grasping the risks, capabilities, or operational consequences. As AI moves deeper into corporate strategy and disclosure, companies may also be discovering that the real governance risk is whether leadership can adequately explain the technology when regulators, investors, or litigators come calling. And workers at Amazon and Walmart say automation is already influencing workplace decisions in ways that feel opaque, impersonal, and difficult to challenge when something goes wrong, as policymakers in California begin exploring how to protect workers from AI-driven disruption before it outpaces labor policy. Separately, at Lululemon, founder Chip Wilson’s escalating proxy fight reflects a different version of both side in the same debate, each arguing that governance credentials alone are no substitute for directors who truly understand the business they oversee. Elsewhere, activist investors continued circling underperforming companies, the gender debate in the boardroom is back, and OpenAI wins in court scoring a victory for governance. A range of messy issues yet the underlying challenge is the same: credibility is increasingly tied not to authority alone, but to demonstrated understanding.

Read On

May 14, 2026 -

Shhhh. The walls around the boardroom are feeling thin. This week’s headlines offered reminders that what directors say, text, forward, or allow into the room may be exposed to a much larger audience than they might have bargained for. A list of high-profile executives casually considered as potential OpenAI board candidates by Sam Altman, Satya Nardella and others made its way into the public domain, as part of the Musk v. Altman trial. Lawyers express concerns that AI note takers, adopted by many as productivity boosters, could turn seemingly private conversations or even board meetings into discoverable records, complete with asides no director would think to include in meeting minutes, and introduce the possibility of consequential errors. At the same time, outside voices are pressing to have a say in corporate decision-making. Proxy advisors are challenging Jamie Dimon’s dual role at JPMorgan, pushing shareholders to split the Chair and CEO roles, GameStop unexpectedly set its sights on eBay, and Italian gunmaker Beretta secured influence over Ruger after a bruising proxy fight. Meanwhile, a new BCG survey finds CEOs think their boards may be too enthusiastic about AI adoption, and an observer makes the case that energy resilience is the new cybersecurity and urges boards to make it a core governance issue rather than an operational afterthought.

Read On

May 07, 2026 -

The corporate power map is getting a rewrite. This week’s governance headlines point to a growing rebalancing of power between founders, boards, shareholders, regulators, and courts. SpaceX’s proposed IPO structure, which could effectively give Elon Musk veto power over any attempt to remove him as CEO or chair, pushes founder control to the extreme. Investor groups are already pushing back, urging the SEC to scrutinize the company’s disclosures and governance safeguards ahead of what could become the largest IPO in history. Elsewhere, Dell’s proposed move from Delaware to Texas reflects the broader search for legal environments viewed as more protective of management, while Victoria’s Secret’s activist dispute shows traditional proxy battles are hardly disappearing. Add in Apple’s latest App Store defeat, rising board-CEO tensions over AI adoption, and a possible shift away from quarterly reporting requirements, and the message is clear: corporate governance is entering a new phase where authority, accountability, oversight, and even platform governance are all up for debate.

Read On

April 30, 2026 -

Are you cool enough to sit on the Lululemon board? That’s the question company founder turned activist shareholder Chip Wilson is asking, as he wages a proxy fight accusing the current board of failing to understand the essence of the once trend-setting brand and the talent it needs to be a success. Meanwhile, activist investor Starboard Value takes a significant stake in Dynatrace to target performance more directly, pressing the board on whether its oversight and strategic direction are sufficient to unlock growth. Elsewhere, AI continues to introduce additional layers of governance complexity, bringing heightened legal exposure around novel issues such as how a company deploys AI (are legal and copyright norms respected?), and how it doesn’t (when public companies promise more AI integration than they deliver). And a new Glass Lewis memo outlines current trends in board composition.

Read On

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