2026.05.14 · Vol.1 No.3
Where governance meets reckoning.
Quorum/Case Study/May 2026
Case Study · Analysis

Goyotech 2018 / Otsuka Furniture 2015 — Structural Analysis of Defense Failures in Proxy Contests

Founder removal approved at 82% support, family-run tragedy — peacetime governance accumulation determines wartime outcomes.

May 14, 2026 Quorum Editorial Reading time: ~16 minutes

In proxy contests, there exists an industry consensus: "the defense is structurally favorable." Japan's 2023 shareholder proposal approval rate of 5% or less serves as evidence. Yet this consensus harbors a critical, hidden prerequisite. When we dissect two cases—Goyotech 2018 and Otsuka Furniture 2015—through primary sources, three conditions emerge that cause defense collapse. Notably, none of these arose in wartime. Each represents the manifestation in crisis of what was absent during peacetime.


Introduction — The "Defense Advantage" Consensus and Its Exception

Those with long experience in proxy contests share a common view: "the defense is structurally favorable."

The logic is straightforward. Shareholder proposals require a majority to pass, and the defense needs only preserve that majority. According to EY Japan's 2024 shareholder proposal survey, proposals peaked at 344 in 2023—a historic high—yet passage was limited to a handful of cases, with an estimated approval rate below 5%. The Daiwa Institute of Research's 2024 activist investor summary notes that activist fund numbers surged from 8 in 2014 to 69 as of May 2023, yet this asymmetry has persisted.

However, this consensus contains an embedded precondition: "provided that the defense maintains legitimate standing."

What happens when that precondition collapses? Two cases reveal the structure.

One is Goyotech in 2018. At an extraordinary shareholder meeting, the founder's removal passed at 82% support. Complete defense defeat.

The other is Otsuka Furniture in 2015. Founder Katsuhisa Otsuka's shareholder proposal garnered only 36% support, while the company's opposing proposal (backed by his daughter, Kumiko) passed at 61%. This case marked "defense victory," yet unpacking why defense prevailed reveals stark contrast with Goyotech.

This analysis dissects both cases in parallel, using figures and structure to identify the conditions under which defense collapses.

01Goyotech 2018 — What 82% Means

Case Overview

Goyotech Co., Ltd. (TSE code 7519, now delisted) was a publicly listed company dealing wholesale in textile and interior materials.

In late 2018, major shareholder BT Holdings submitted a shareholder proposal seeking removal of the second-generation CEO, Koji Owaki, and election of new directors. The stated reasons were operational underperformance, improper accounting, and disregard for compliance and governance.

The case proved complex. Owaki's side initially halted the extraordinary meeting scheduled for March 19, 2019 via board resolution. However, BT Holdings petitioned the Nagoya District Court for permission to call the meeting, which was subsequently held on April 28.

Result: Owaki's removal passed at 82% support. Entrepreneur Yuichi Miyahara was elected as his successor.

This 82% figure transcends the simple majority (50%) required for removal; it vastly exceeds the impact that ISS and Glass Lewis negative recommendations typically wield on director election support (a 17-point differential per Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance 2024 data), signifying a structural "collapse of support."

Why Defense Failed: A Breakdown

From the Goyotech record, the elements observable as causes of defense failure are these:

ElementStatus
Legitimacy of resultsOperational underperformance persisted; long-term performance decline was documented
Accounting & complianceImproper accounting practices were alleged
Governance structureDisregard for governance was central to the shareholder proposal
Accumulation of shareholder engagementNo effective dialogue; shareholders escalated to litigation
Institutional investor vote directionThe 82% figure suggests institutional votes overwhelmingly shifted to the attack side

Notably, even after resorting to board-level meeting cancellation, the shareholder petition succeeded via court approval, and 82% emerged. This indicates the issue was not tactical but rather the erosion of the underlying legitimacy the defense had accumulated.

The company subsequently failed to improve internal controls. On July 26, 2021, it was delisted (per Japan Exchange Group announcement). The delisting rationale explicitly stated: "false representations in the internal control certification form and failure to progress on remediation despite 11 months in the special alert market category." The proxy contest defeat was not the endpoint; it marked one phase of a deeper structural crisis, confirmed retroactively.

02Otsuka Furniture 2015 — Why "Defense" Won

Case Overview

In January 2015, Otsuka Furniture's (TSE code 8186) board voted 4-to-3 to remove founder Katsuhisa Otsuka from the CEO post, reducing him to honorary chairman. The next day, Katsuhisa submitted a shareholder proposal to elect new directors including himself, while the company countered with an opposing proposal led by his daughter, President Kumiko.

On March 27, the proxy battle's outcome was decided at the shareholder meeting.

Pre-meeting surveys showed Katsuhisa with 28.2% voting power, Kumiko with 21.2%—"father favored"—yet on the day, 81% of uncommitted shareholders backed Kumiko (per Toyo Keizai Online 2015 reporting).

Structural Factors Determining Victory

ElementKumiko's side (Victor)Katsuhisa's side (Defeated)
Institutional investor engagementYears of accumulated strategy briefings and shareholder engagementInsufficient ongoing dialogue with institutional investors
Voting advisor firmsBoth ISS and Glass Lewis endorsed the company proposalFailed to secure endorsements
Media strategyPublished mid-term plan, established reform narrativeEmotional statements, critiqued for lack of concrete specifics
Financial & governance designROE-focused financial strategy, emphasis on independent directorsFocus on maintaining the traditional business model
Shareholder compositionAttracted institutional and retail shareholder majoritiesPrimary support from industry associations and trading partners

Critical was the voting advisor firms' stance. On March 14, 2015, both ISS and Glass Lewis publicly endorsed Kumiko's proposal. Per Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance 2024 data, their combined market share is roughly 90%, and a negative recommendation carries a 17-point swing in director election support. This influence directly contributed to the pre-vote reversal (father's 28.2% lead overturned to Kumiko's 61% victory).

Kumiko secured ISS and Glass Lewis support not through last-minute maneuvers. It rested on "years of accumulated investor briefings combined with a mid-term plan emphasizing ROE and governance."

03Shared Structure Across Both Cases — What Did Not Rise in Wartime

MetricGoyotech 2018Otsuka Furniture (Katsuhisa side) 2015
PerformanceUnderperformance, long-term declineBaseline adequate; forward outlook uncertain
Accounting & complianceImproper accounting allegedNo direct allegations
Governance structureAbsent (cited as removal rationale)Independent director request from board members
Institutional investor engagementAbsentIndustry associations and trading partners primary; insufficient institutional dialogue
Voting advisor firmsNo support (presumed)Opposed side (Kumiko's opposition) endorsed
OutcomeRemoval at 82% approvalProposal at 36%, rejected

The shared structure is this: "What did not emerge in wartime did not exist in peacetime."

In Goyotech, three pillars—performance, governance, and dialogue—were absent peacetime. Defense had no foundation to stand on when crisis arrived. With Katsuhisa's side at Otsuka Furniture, the missing element was not performance but "accumulated engagement with institutional investors and voting advisor firms." Kumiko's side, by contrast, had built these three across the years. Thus, despite entering the contest at an apparent disadvantage (28.2% to 21.2%), they departed with 61%.

04Figures in Context — Japanese Shareholder Proposal Approval Rates and the Defense Asymmetry

The defense-favorable structure in Japanese proxy contests is confirmed across multiple datasets.

DataValueSource
2023 shareholder proposals total344 (historic high)EY Japan 2024 survey
2024 companies receiving proposals109Same
Proposals at 20%+ support ratio (2023)54.2% (N=155)Same
Proposals at 20%+ support ratio (2024)48.2% (N=137)Same (year-over-year decline)
Estimated overall approval rate5% or lessInferred from EY Japan data
Activist funds (2014)8Daiwa Institute 2024 summary
Activist funds (2023)69Same
ISS & Glass Lewis combined share~90%Harvard Law School 2024
ISS negative recommendation director election swing17 pointsSame
ISS negative recommendation shareholder proposal swing36 pointsSame

The 5%-or-less approval rate reflects defense's "need only preserve majority, not achieve it" asymmetry. Yet if we add contextual qualifications, this asymmetry operates only under certain conditions:

Condition (ISS 2025 Japan Guidelines)ISS Response
ROE less than 5% in most recent yearManagement opposition recommendation considered
ROE 8% or higher in most recent year or 5-year average 8% or higherOpposition recommendation withheld
Policy-held stocks exceed 20% of net assets (no reduction plan)Director opposition recommendation
Policy-held stocks at or below 20% with published reduction planOpposition recommendation withheld

The defense advantage measured at 5% approval rate holds only when prerequisites are met: sustained ROE above 8% and governance metrics in order. Absent these, results like Goyotech's 82% emerge.

5% and 82%. The gap between them stems not from tactical differences in wartime but from the presence or absence of peacetime accumulation.

05Three Conditions for Defense Failure

From both cases and the data, we generalize the conditions under which defense collapses.

Condition 1: Long-term Performance and Financial Metrics Decline

ISS's director election opposition threshold is ROE below 5% ("under review") and below 8% ("no exemption"). If results deteriorate persistently, voting advisor endorsement slips from defense. Goyotech's underperformance was entrenched.

This manifests not merely as "attack on performance grounds" but indirectly as "ISS and Glass Lewis recommendations shift toward the attack side."

Condition 2: Governance Structure Neglect and Opacity

Governance gaps prevent institutional investors from exercising their "self-directed voting" (explicit in the FSA's 2025 Stewardship Code revision) on defense's behalf. In Goyotech, governance disregard was stipulated as the legal basis for removal in the shareholder proposal.

Glass Lewis's 2025 Japan Guidelines specify independent audit committee majorities and director tenure management. Institutions without these provisions cannot secure independent shareholder support for defense.

Condition 3: Absence of Institutional Investor and Voting Advisor Engagement Accumulation

The Otsuka case most vividly illustrated this. Kumiko's greatest advantage was the accumulated briefing history and the mid-term plan's alignment with ISS and Glass Lewis priorities.

Legitimacy is not desk-bound reasoning. It is legitimacy spoken in the language and metrics that reach ISS, Glass Lewis, and institutional investors—and this language translates directly to vote counts.

This dialogue cannot be recovered three months before the meeting. Glass Lewis's average lead time in Japan (recommendation publication to meeting) is approximately 20 days; the pre-engagement and understanding phase requires a minimum six-month runway (per Business Lawyers).

06Counterexample

To test the "three defense failure conditions," we present one contrasting case.

The 2019 LIXIL Group case saw founder Kinya Seto first step down as CEO, then prevail in a shareholder vote to return. In this case, incumbent management engaged extensively with institutional investors, yet the attack side (Seto) won.

This counterexample shows that "the side with institutional engagement always wins" does not hold. Investor assessment encompasses performance metrics, team confidence, and competing candidates—a composite judgment. Just as "meet all three conditions and you lose" invites overstatement, so does "meet the conditions and you win."

What the cases do establish: when any of the three conditions is absent, defense's loss probability rises structurally. This inference from both dissections is sound.


Conclusion — Only What Accumulates in Peacetime Becomes a Weapon in Wartime

Goyotech's 82% and Otsuka Furniture's Katsuhisa side at 36%.

Both numbers share a common message: proxy contest outcomes are not decided on meeting day. Performance levels, governance infrastructure, engagement accumulation with institutions and voting advisors—none can be assembled in three-month sprints.

The defense's structural advantage (5% approval rate) holds across the statistics of companies meeting prerequisites. For enterprises in ISS opposition territory (ROE below 5%, governance absent), this statistic is not theirs.

One cannot conjure legitimacy overnight in wartime.

Only what accumulates in peacetime becomes a weapon in wartime. And for those without it, 82% awaits.

Primary Sources and References