UK Investors Sound Warning on Voting Rights

Changes proposed by the FCA risk removing pressure from firms to perform and could encourage lack of accountability from management.

Institutional investors have stressed that the UK should not follow the US in the uptake of dual class share structures (DCSS), as a proposal from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) could make it easier for them to be used in the country. DCSS are structures that allow companies to issue…

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Australian Supers Should be Bolder on Climate 

New report finds Australia’s powerful asset owners are reluctant to take public stands against companies that are failing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Australia’s US$2.45 trillion pension system should take a more public role in pressuring companies to improve their climate strategies – including by declaring voting intentions ahead of annual general meetings. That’s the view of the Investor Group on Climate Change (IGCC), an investor-led body focused on helping Australia and New Zealand’s…

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Investors Harness AI to Halt Deforestation

Technology is playing a “groundbreaking” role in PRI stewardship programme, which is gearing up to engage target companies across multiple sectors.

Advances in artificial intelligence (AI) have allowed global asset owners to take a novel approach to company engagement, through a campaign aimed at halting the destruction of the world’s tropical forests. Spring, a stewardship initiative launched last year by the UN-supported Principles for Responsible Investment, uses the large language models…

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Scope 3 Reduction Support Slips at Shell AGM

Resolution backing reveals receding shareholder commitment to reducing emissions, as investors told to “put their vote where their mouth is”.

Institutional investors have expressed concern over oil and gas firms’ lack of resolve to reduce environmentally harmful activities following shareholder vote results from Shell’s 2024 AGM this week. The AGM featured a proposal to align the company’s medium-term Scope 3 emissions targets with the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global…

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Nippon Shareholders Demand Green Steel Plan

LGIM, Amundi and Nordea call for Japanese steel giant to set stricter targets and disclose its climate lobbying activities.

A group of investors has filed resolutions calling on Japanese steelmaker Nippon to overhaul its decarbonisation strategy, challenging the assumption that carbon capture, use and storage (CCUS) can clean up this notoriously dirty industry. British asset manager Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) co-filed the resolutions with activist groups the…

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Amazon Pressed on Workers’ Rights – Again

Long-term shareholder value under threat, investors warn, as tech giant still fails to live up to human rights commitments. Issues around workers’ rights to freedom of association and collective bargaining are due to come under the spotlight once more during Amazon’s 2024 AGM next week. Building on similar initiatives in…

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CalPERS Warns Exxon of ‘Strong Response’ to Lawsuit

Public sector pension giant notifies oil major of consequences to its decision to sue shareholders over climate shareholder resolution.

The California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS), one of the world’s biggest pensions schemes, has warned ExxonMobil it will face consequences for its controversial decision to sue shareholders over a climate shareholder resolution.

CalPERS issued the warning after a group of ExxonMobil investors, employees and unions wrote to the pension fund urging it to vote against two of the company’s directors, including CEO and chairman Darren Woods, in protest against what they called an “attack on shareholder democracy”.

The move is the latest twist in an ongoing battle between the oil giant and climate-conscious investors over smaller shareholders’ rights to file resolutions.

In January, Exxon made the unusual decision to take legal action to prevent a shareholder resolution – which called for the group to adopt mid-term emissions reduction targets – from going to vote at its annual general meeting (AGM) later this month.

The two small shareholders who led the resolution, Arjuna Capital and Follow This, subsequently withdrew it. But Exxon still decided to press on with legal action, which many interpreted as an attempt to frighten off other investors from attempting similar action in the future.

In the letter to Exxon shareholders CalPERS and its sister fund the California State Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS), the group of asset owners, unions and environmental groups led by California Common Good asked the pension giants to “hold [the company] accountable for its unprecedented and extreme lawsuit against its shareholders and its ongoing undermining of the efforts to fight climate change”.

“We ask that CalPERS and CalSTRS predeclare a vote against Exxon’s Board of Directors and stop purchasing Exxon’s bonds,” the letter said.

CalPERS has not confirmed whether it will vote against the two directors, but Fiona Ma, California State Treasurer and a trustee of the pension fund said Exxon’s actions were “a serious threat to shareholder rights and require a strong response”.

“As the largest public pension fund in the country, we have a responsibility to lead on issues that threaten to undermine shareowners,” she said in a statement released on Thursday to coincide with the meeting of investors. “As fiduciaries to our members, we must consider labour practices, environmental impact, and anything else that has the potential to affect the long-term value of the companies we invest in.”

‘Vitriolic’ attack condemned