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Going Beyond: Shareholder Engagement

As Shareholder Meeting Season comes to a close, focus shifts to Shareholder Engagement Season.

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Shareholder meetings are landmark events for North American listed companies, but executives need to engage shareholders throughout the year. Michael Vogele, Managing Director of the global advisory group at Alliance Advisors, explores.

The 2024 shareholder meeting season is in full swing, but companies across the US already need to be conscious about what comes next, Shareholder Engagement season. There are plenty of tactics here, and expertly executing requires the assistance of an advisor with deep knowledge of the shareholder meeting and institutional investor landscape. Mandated by the US SEC, for instance, N-PX filings detail the proxy voting records of registered funds, giving issuers insight into how investors voted at their shareholder meeting.

To truly understand investors’ motivations, companies should directly engage with them during the “off-season.

Investors signal their expectations for public companies through their proxy voting policies, which are publicly available and updated once a year. These proxy voting guidelines offer a sense of potential issues for shareholder meetings. Sifting through the paperwork can certainly secure valuable insights – a recent study by Deloitte and Tufts University found that 83% of professional investors across the US now boast specific ESG policies – the sheer breadth of shareholder pressure points require a more holistic approach, ultimately one that involves year-long engagement because there are countless issues for which investors apply case-by-case analyses and speaking directly with the investor can shed light on how they may vote on a particularly nuanced matter.

A range of challenges

The scale of the challenges facing US corporate leaders is clear from the numbers and it is imperative that issuers understand key stakeholders’ evolving expectations. Consider for example, the rising importance of cybersecurity. With new SEC rules obliging companies to disclose serious incidents, a full 71% of US investors now see cyber as a major threat.

And if that’s echoed by the reaction of corporate leaders – PwC reports that 88% of American companies are considering sharpening their cyber risk policies – there are plenty of other worries too.

As the Deloitte survey implies, ESG is one, though in practice that spans the gamut from board diversity to practical action on climate change. A second involves corporate pay, while third involves AI: at Apple’s AGM in February, 37.5% of shareholders voted for a motion demanding the company clarify how it uses the technology.

Given these competing priorities, how should executives react? SEC forms and policy documents are a good start. But to truly get to grips with what shareholders want, companies can’t imply wait for contact – but should rather proactively engage investors to understand their concerns.

In-person meetings (most over Zoom or Teams) are obviously important here: the statistics make clear that letter writing won’t get leaders far. Just as crucial is thinking carefully about which stakeholders to approach. While calls with investor portfolio managers are important from a financial perspective, stewardship or responsible investor teams are the groups which ultimately make proxy voting decisions.

In a broader sense, companies should rely on their last shareholder meeting results to decide which issues to focus Shareholder Engagement efforts on over the coming year. As a rule of thumb, any resolution receiving below 80% support from shareholders requires a robust corporate response. Shareholder resolutions creeping over the 20% threshold are even more urgent.

Based on recent experiences, meanwhile, US companies seem destined to have a busy year. As GAM Investments reports, for instance, many resolutions covering environmental disclosure hit that all-important 20% mark over the last two years, with few signs that’ll change through 2024.

Transparency and speed

Once companies have pinpointed the main shareholder worries – and which investor teams to engage – what should they do next? In the first place, we’d recommend speaking to every stakeholder willing to have a conversation, including those rejecting the company line.

If, moreover, it becomes clear that a majority of respondents are worried about a particular policy, executives should move fast. In reality, of course, implementing changes might take years. Nevertheless, corporations should signpost their intentions in advance, and clearly explain timelines.

Whatever the challenge, leaders would be wise to link change with wider business goals. Beyond fulfilling their primary professional function, this is what investors increasingly expect: 63% across the US prefer that ESG goals connect with shareholder value through quantitative data. The same is true in cyber security. With each major incident sparking a 9% drop in value, there’s clearly space for companies to balance ethics and the bottom line.

Not that a universal approach necessarily works either. Once again, dialogue the watchword here, helping executives determine exactly what shareholders are looking for. When it comes to compensation, for instance, every investor has their own preferred style – and major US corporations, from Apple to Visa, may feel shareholder principles do not allow for industry-specific considerations.

One important way to break the deadlock is transparency, ensuring investors can judge companies on their progress. Around environmental concerns, for instance, companies could publish greenhouse gas targets. For cybersecurity, they could pledge to appoint IT experts to the board, especially urgent with those SEC changes, an approach giants like Amazon are increasingly extending to AI.

Openness is doubly important for corporate compensation. Publishing financial or other goal data for short-term incentive schemes is one good example. And though firms may worry that publishing puts them at a competitive disadvantage, transparency means they can prove their metrics are fair, especially when payouts are higher than expected.

It’s a similar story elsewhere: publishing shareholder feedback and issuing follow-up statements are both ways of keeping investors engaged long after the shareholder meeting season ends. Another tactic is leveraging expert advice, helping busy executives keep abreast of stumbling blocks all year round. Given how many investor challenges US executives now face, getting outside help surely makes sense.

Michael Vogele, Managing Director of Alliance Advisors Global Advisory Group, has 22 years of experience providing consultative services on Shareholder Engagement & ESG topics.

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