The world's leading asset
managers, with trillions of dollars under their direction, continue to vote
down efforts to address the crisis.
Monday, November 04, 2019
A "striking"
report published Monday by the U.K.-based charity ShareAction exposes how the
largest U.S. asset managers are "overwhelmingly"
stalling corporate efforts to tackle the climate crisis despite those
companies' public proclamations and the growing demands for bold action from
people around the world.
ShareAction promotes "responsible
investment." According to the new report (pdf),
the group's "vision is a world where ordinary savers and institutional
investors work together to ensure our communities and environment are safe and
sustainable for all."
As the report—entitled Voting
Matters: Are Asset Managers Using Their Proxy Votes for Climate Action?—explains:
Investors have a key role to
play in helping avert dangerous climate change. One way they can do so is by
using their proxy voting rights. Proxy voting is the primary means by which
shareholders can exert influence over their investee companies and exert
stewardship... Yet, this stewardship tool is often underused by investors. This
year, the directors of BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell, and Total were all
(re-)elected with on average 97% support from shareholders, despite these
companies being some of the largest emitting companies on earth and lacking
plans to transition to a well-below 2°C world.
Voting Matters analyzes
how 57 of the world's largest asset managers have voted on 65 recent
shareholder resolutions that covered topics including "climate-related
disclosures, companies' lobbying activities, and the setting of targets aligned
with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement."
ShareAction researchers found
that "U.S. asset managers are clear laggards in terms of proxy voting on
climate, whilst European asset managers lead the way." The top 10 worst
performers overall are based in the United States; even the report's highest
ranked U.S. managers score lower than those in Europe and the rest of the
world.
"These results are highly
concerning," Voting Matters says, "as the 20 largest U.S.
fund managers control about 35% of global assets under management (AUM), more
than double the 14% run by the top 20 European players."
The worst performers overall
are Capital Group, T. Rowe Price, Blackrock and J.P. Morgan—which are tied for
third—Vanguard Asset Management, Fidelity Management and Research Co.,
Wellington Management International, Franklin Templeton, Northern Trust, State
Street Global Advisors, and MetLife Investment Management.
"Six out of 10 of the
worst performers have come out in support of the Taskforce for Climate-related
Financial Disclosures (TCFD) and joined at least one investor engagement
initiative on climate change," the report notes, "yet fail to vote in
favor of resolutions on climate-related disclosures."
The report's author, ShareAction
campaign manager Jeanne Martin, said in a statement Monday that "you can't
boast climate-awareness in public and block climate goals in private."
"Ultimately, these
investors will be judged on their voting, which is the most powerful tool at
their disposal," Martin added. "They have the power to put the brakes
on the climate emergency, but they're on auto-pilot, driving us head-on into
it. We hope their clients take note of these findings which separate out those
who are really walking the walk on climate change."
Martin, in a series of tweets
Monday, outlined some of the report's key findings, including how fund managers
are responding to the more than 50 investor initiatives that aim to compel and
support investor activity on the climate crisis, such as the Climate Action
100+ (CA100+) Initiative, a global coalition that
pushes some of the world's highest emitting companies to pursue climate action.
Highlighting ShareAction's
recommendations for asset owners, Martin concluded that "as stewards of
capital for millions of beneficiaries, asset owners have a duty to monitor the
engagement activities and proxy voting records of their asset managers."
The report notes that
"the last few years have seen a shift in investors' attitudes towards
climate change." For example, "1,118 institutions representing
US$11.48 trillion in assets and more than 58,000 individual representing US$5.2
billion have committed to divest from fossil fuels."
For those figures, Voting
Matters cites Fossil Free, a
project of the global environmental group 350.org. DivestInvest and
350.org detailed the
divestment movement's successes in September with a report—released just ahead
of the Financing the Future summit in Cape Town—that celebrated surpassing the
$11 trillion milestone.
"What began as a moral
call to action by students is now a mainstream financial response to growing
climate risk to portfolios, the people, and the planet," the September
report said. "The momentum has been driven by a people-powered grassroots
movement, ordinary people on every continent pushing their local institutions
to take a stand against the fossil fuel industry and for a world powered by 100
percent renewable energy."
No comments:
Post a Comment