This is the first in a series of posts to discuss shareholder proposals during the 2012 proxy season.

The march towards board declassification showed no signs of slowing down in the 2012 proxy season. Of the 45 precatory shareholder declassification proposals that had gone to a vote as of mid-June, 40 of such proposals passed with an average support of 89% of the votes cast. This shows an increase in support of shareholder declassification proposals over the previous proxy season, in which  declassification proposals passed with average support of 77% of votes cast. For the proposals that failed, the average support was 43.7% (excluding a failed proposal at Hospitality Properties Trust, which garnered the support of 90% of votes cast but failed to get the requisite 75% of outstanding shares.) 

The number of shareholder declassification proposals might have been even higher had an additional 44 companies receiving such shareholder proposals not negotiated agreements to offer management proposals to declassify their boards, according to a report by the Harvard Law School Shareholder Rights Project (SRP). All the management proposals regarding declassification received resounding support of votes cast, but some nevertheless failed at companies, such as Alcoa and Charles Schwab, which require votes of more than 80% of the outstanding shares.

According to the ISS, only one-third of all S&P 500 companies have staggered boards, as compared with over half of the mid-cap and small-cap companies. Notwithstanding this gap, the activist focus continues to be on the large-cap companies. Approximately three-quarters of the shareholder declassification proposals this season were filed at large-cap companies, many of them proposed by institutional investors who were advised by the SRP.