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Why the ASX needs dual-class shares

The late Australian journalist Clive James once quipped, “The problem with Australians is not that so many of them are descended from convicts, but that so many of them are descended from prison officers.”

That legacy endures in the form of a patronising paternalism that permeates much of Australian government and society. Nowhere is this more evident than in the regulation of Australia financial services, where a conclave of bureaucrats and private-sector know-it-alls seem to believe it is their life’s mission to protect citizens from themselves.

For a brief golden period, Australia’s financial and capital markets were lightly regulated. That ended in 2001 with the Howard Government’s Financial Services Reform Act which ushered in a new regime of licensing and oversight. From that point forward, the ability of businesses and individuals to freely trade among themselves was diminished. They now needed government permission, who decides what kind of product is traded, what was the nature of the trade, and how the trade was conducted.

The ASX proposal

In a rare break from this mindset, and perhaps in response to suggestions from the authors of this column, the ASX recently announced it would explore the introduction of dual class share structures for listed companies. This move would bring Australia into alignment with global peers and eliminate a long-standing obstacle to listing on the exchange. The ASX remains the only major exchange that prohibits dual-class shares.

Dual-class structures typically involve different classes of shares with unequal voting rights. Common in founder-led companies, they allow management to focus on long-term value creation without being beholden to short-term market pressures.

Several of the world’s largest companies are founder created and led and employ dual-class shares. This includes, Alphabet (Google), Berkshire Hathaway, Meta (Facebook), Dell Technologies, Palantir, AirBnB, and Snap.

The ASX was not always opposed to dual-class shares. In fact, it once accepted expert evidence from Professor Peter Swan in support of News Corporation’s use of non-voting preference shares.

Preference shares have priority over ordinary shares when it comes to dividends, particularly when payouts are reduced or suspended. At the time, every News Corporation shareholder received both a voting and a non-voting share, and the market responded positively. This structure gave investors the flexibility to choose which class of shares to buy or sell. An increase in investor choice that typically supports higher stock valuations.

This arrangement allowed Rupert Murdoch to expand his media empire while retaining control. He was able to issue more preference shares to willing investors and sell some of his own, with preference shares typically trading at a slight discount to their voting counterparts.

Eventually, the government pressured the ASX to prohibit dual-class share structures for other companies. And when News Corporation relocated to New York, dual-class shares effectively disappeared from the ASX.

Will the ASX have more guts this time around?

Now with the proposal to bring back dual-class shares circulating, predictable opposition has surfaced.

Some fund managers and institutional investors, unhappy simply to exercise their right not to invest in such structures want to ensure that no one can. They would rather force every investor to go offshore to gain access to far more dynamic founder-led companies.

These fund managers and institutional investors have argued that dual-class shares give disproportionate power to founders and executives, potentially compromising shareholder rights and corporate governance. Perhaps true, but they always have the option to not invest.

The ASX floated the idea of permitting dual-class structures in 2007 but quickly retreated in the face of similar criticism showing itself to be overly cautious, if not outright risk-averse. When presented with the opportunity to attract innovative, founder-led companies to its board, it consistently chooses inaction, further cementing its slow slide into irrelevance.

And so we return to Clive James’ observation, that Australia is a nation more comfortable regulating behaviour than trusting in freedom. In today’s Australia, even something as simple as choosing which type of share to own is subject to oversight by a new class of financial gatekeepers. Well-intentioned, perhaps, but no less certain than their predecessors that too much freedom is a risk.

Thankfully, these gatekeepers cannot stop Australians from accessing opportunities overseas. In the meantime, the ASX appears almost committed to making itself obsolete, ceding ground to private equity and retreating from its role as a vibrant public marketplace.

 

Dimitri Burshtein is a principal at Eminence Advisory. Peter Swan AO is emeritus professor of finance at the UNSW Sydney Business School.

 

  •   16 April 2025
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10 Comments
Cam
April 17, 2025

If this stops activists like industry (union) super abusing their power, dual class shares sound great.
For those who like their activism, inevitably an institution or someone will come along who'll do the same activism but against causes you like. You're either happy with any large shareholder engaging in activism, or against.

Keith Fletcher
April 21, 2025

Hi Cam,
I think your comment needs to be expanded to make your point clear. Super funds, like any large holder of shares, can exert considerable influence over companies by voting or withholding their votes on critical issues. However, this power is inherent in the possession of a large number of votes and would not be an abuse unless the exercise of power was designed to further the dominant shareholder's interest, without any regard to the interests of the company or its other shareholders. In this situation, relief may sometimes be sought through an action for oppression.


Angus B.
April 17, 2025

Completely agree, the market can always decide not to invest. It seems like a similar paternalism to that which killed off bank hybrids.

Permitting dual-class shares is simply giving people the opportunity to invest in an instrument that belongs on a continuum between plain vanilla debt and plain vanilla equity.

So long as we don't end up with 'Golden Shares' being awarded, where super votes attach AND these shares are not publicly traded, or where the act of trading a super voting share extinguishes its super voting right.

peter care
April 17, 2025

The majority of retail investors would correctly disagree with dual listed share structures. As a part owner of a business (because that is what shareholders are) the right to elect the board and make other decisions should never be compromised.
Dual class shares may be good for managers and founders but they are not good for ordinary retail shareholders.
It is almost as if company founders and senior management are frightened of democracy and having to deal with those pesky part owners of the business (known as shareholders).
As a retail shareholder, I am happy with the current situation where there are only one class of shareholding on the main ASX board, and am dead against a dual shareholding structure. One share, one vote, one value!

Neil
April 18, 2025

This article lacks an explanation of why a dual class structure is required. The implication is that it would allow majority owners / founders to do what they like with the company without having to ask for permission from their fellow owners of the business. But this is not expressly stated. That is, the article lacks conviction and is non-persuasive.

When reading about the NewsCorp non-voting preference shares, I was thinking that bank (or any other corporate for that matter) hybrids are essentially doing the same thing. So, doesn’t the ASX already have the capacity to have dual class shares?

Davidy
April 20, 2025

As if the current setup doesn't stop owner/founders doing what they want.........Richard White/WiseTech and Chris Ellinson/Minres are prime examples

JimG
April 18, 2025

Is there any evidence that the move towards private equity is driven by the lack of an option to list on the ASX with dual share structure? If there was, then that I think would be a good argument for the ASX to consider changing the rules.

JimL
April 20, 2025

One of the great things about Firstlinks are the intelligent comments that broaden one’s perspective to a topic. Thumbs up or down, as a ‘borrow’ from YT, could also add a quick guide as to wider audience stance on subjects like this one.
While dual class shares are probably worth a broader conversation, I’d need more persuasion.

Brian Hor
April 20, 2025

Given that the shares would be listed and freely tradable, preference shares make absolute sense.

John Abernethy
April 21, 2025

Interesting article Dimitri.

The problem inherent in the Australian equity market is the growing default to index investing. Large Industry Funds default to buying large capitalisation companies and will do so whether they are voting shares or not.

Dual class structures may make sense in terms of equity if the non voting shares are compensated by having rights to preferred dividends and can vote if there are breaches in the financial management ( for instance) in a company.

The mere following of US dual class structures should not be meekly undertaken. The ASX needs to think laterally and take advice on this.

I would be happy to help if asked - but I won’t be!

 

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