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Corporate Governance

 

Companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) must comply with certain standards regarding corporate 

governance under Section 303A of the NYSE Listed Company Manual. However, listed companies that are foreign 

private issuers, such as Kyocera Corporation, are permitted to follow home country practice in lieu of certain provisions 

of Section 303A.

 

The following table shows the significant differences between the corporate governance practices followed by U.S. listed 

companies under Section 303A of the NYSE Listed Company Manual and those followed by Kyocera Corporation.

   

 Corporate

 Governance Practices 

Followed by NYSE-listed U.S. Companies

 

Corporate Governance Practices Followed by Kyocera Corporation

 

1. An NYSE-listed U.S. company 

must have

 

a majority of directors 

meeting the

 

independence 

requirements under Section

 

303A 

of the NYSE Listed Company 

Manual.

 

For large Japanese companies, including Kyocera Corporation, which employ 

a corporate governance system based on a board of corporate auditors (the 

“board of corporate auditors system”), the Corporation Act of Japan (the 

Corporation Act) has no independence requirement with respect to directors. 

The task of overseeing management and independent auditors is assigned to 

the corporate auditors, who are separate from Kyocera Corporation's 

management. All corporate auditors must meet certain independence 

requirements under the Corporation Act.

 

For large Japanese companies with a board of corporate auditors, including 

Kyocera Corporation, at least half of the members of such board must be 

“outside” corporate auditors. Such “outside” corporate auditors must meet 

additional independence requirements under the Corporation Act. An 

“outside” corporate auditor means a corporate auditor who has not served as a 

director, manager or other employee of Kyocera Corporation or any of its 

subsidiaries previously.

 

As of June 27, 2012, Kyocera Corporation had six corporate auditors, of 

whom three were “outside” corporate auditors. 

In addition to the independence requirements under the Corporation Act 

described above, the rules of the Japanese stock exchanges require that, with 

effect from the day following the date of the annual shareholders meeting for 

the fiscal year ended on March 31, 2010, at least one of Kyocera 

Corporation's outside directors or outside corporate auditors must meet certain 

additional independence criteria.   

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