Wall Street Week
Welcome to the Wall Street Week newsletter, bringing you stories of capitalism about things you need to know, but even more things you need
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Bloomberg
by David Westin

Welcome to the Wall Street Week newsletter, bringing you stories of capitalism about things you need to know, but even more things you need to think about.  I’m David Westin, and this week we told the story of President Donald Trump’s first 100 days (the second time) and how two very different companies, Mars and Enel, have found success by embracing their own versions of stakeholder capitalism. If you’re not yet a subscriber, sign up here for this newsletter.

Summers: ‘Worst 100 Days Since WW II’

April 30 will mark the 100th day of Donald Trump’s presidency (this time around). Presidential historian Barbara Perry took us back to FDR’s coming to office in 1933 in the midst of the Great Depression, bringing with him the first “100 day” agenda. Trump has signed 130 executive orders this year as of April 17, blowing past FDR’s 99 executive orders he signed in his first 100 days.

A separate question is how effective all this action will prove to be. Special contributor Larry Summers of Harvard said an important effect of the Trump administration so far has been “the American capital flight trade.”

‘Stakeholder Capitalism’ or Simply ‘Sound Business Practice’?

In 2019, the Business Roundtable released a statement signed by 181 CEOs endorsing what it called “stakeholder capitalism.” They emphasized the importance of serving all with a stake in a company’s future: shareholders, customers, employees, suppliers, and communities alike. It caused a stir at the time, as some worried it softened the focus on the importance of making money and building shareholder value.

The Yale School of Management established a program to study how stakeholder capitalism fits into the life of real companies, interviewing 175 CEOs on the question. Jon Iwata, who runs the program, reports that overwhelmingly, the CEOs interviewed endorsed some form of what the BRT had endorsed, though they didn’t necessarily think of it as “stakeholder capitalism” and didn’t think it was all that new.

One of the biggest and most successful companies around is Mars, founded by Frank Mars in 1911. The Mars family still owns the company, and it practices its own form of stakeholder capitalism, based on the principles on which the family has run the company since the beginning. Victoria Mars, a great-granddaughter of the founder, serves on the board today, and reports that the principles written down and followed by management at the direction of the family help “our associates make the right decisions that create the concept of a win, win.”

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