this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2025
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Big companies already have elected boards. Someone has to be the secretary.
Big boards of shareholders consisting of the CEOs of other companies. Its how you get industry cartelization.
Why do CEOs reciprocally sit on each other's boards?
Very often, a CEO will receive stock in-lieu of compensation. This makes them a major shareholder of their existing firm. Firms will also use stock in-lieu of payment when negotiating contracts between firms, particularly in M&A and other consolidation agreements.
Consequently, you'll have a guy like Michael Dell, whose primary wealth comes not from owning shares in Dell Computers but in Broadcom Semiconductor Company. This came about because he received 22M shares from Broadcom in exchange for his controlling interest in VMWare, a company he obtained by trading his Dell stock to the original owners.
He sits on Broadcom's board and the former CEO of VMWare sits on his board. When Broadcom skyrocketed in valuation (currently in the $1T range) during the Crypto/AI induced chip shortage, Dell's net worth skyrocketed with it.