US companies face less pressure for climate and social reforms
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[June 09, 2023] By
Ross Kerber
(Reuters) - Shareholder support for proxy resolutions on topics
including climate change and workforce diversity dropped significantly
this spring, analysts said, as tough proposals from activists met with
growing political pressure on fund firms' voting.
Halfway through the shareholder annual meetings of Russell 3000
companies, average support for voted resolutions on environmental issues
was 25% through mid-May, compared with 38% for all the prior proxy
season ended June 30, 2022, and 43% for all of the prior year, according
to shareholder engagement firm Georgeson.
Support for resolutions on social issues fell to 20% this year so far,
from 26% in 2022 and 33% in 2021, Georgeson said.
"We've seen a dampening effect," said Georgeson Strategist Kilian Moote,
since the drop in supports often reflected resolutions asking for steps
investors deemed too burdensome.
He declined to discuss specific companies, but his description fit
results like at major U.S. banks that defeated calls to wind down
financing for major fossil fuel projects. At the same time, compromises
with ESG advocates show executives still care about sustainability
matters.
For instance, companies including Ford and eBay agreed to report more
workforce details such as recruiting and retention rates in deals that
led shareholder activist group As You Sow to withdraw resolutions before
they were voted, said its CEO Andrew Behar.
Ford declined to comment. eBay did not return messages.
Behar added that new resolutions that got low backing stand to gain in
coming years, such as a call on Exxon to account for divested assets in
emissions reporting, which won 18% support. He also said Republican
attacks on ESG likely depressed fund firms' support for many items.
"Their attorneys and compliance people would be saying, 'let's be a
little more cautious this year'," Behar said.
Exxon did not respond to requests for comment.
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State Street Global Advisors' global head of asset stewardship
Benjamin Colton said via email that while companies have become more
transparent, there have been more of what he called "overly
prescriptive proposals."
"These dynamics have led to an overall decline in investor support
for environment and social shareholder proposals," Colton said.
Other top asset managers, BlackRock and Vanguard did not comment for
this story.
Both have previously said they vote on a case-by-case basis and
noted an increasing number of proposals affect support rates.
Average support for resolutions filed by investors opposed to ESG
fell to 6% from 9%, such as one from the free-market National Center
for Public Policy Research calling for IBM to review its ESG record
in China that won 7% support.
IBM declined to comment.
Scott Shepard, a director at National Center, said its resolutions
still help demonstrate what he called the "partisanship" of top
asset managers. Many now realize they need to take into account
risks like pushing for decarbonization before new technologies are
ready, he added.
"We're seeing that reflected in the numbers" in this year's voting
results, he said.
(Reporting by Ross Kerber; Additional reporting by Sabrina Valle in
Houston; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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