APG and NYC talk Amazon push back

Two of the world’s most influential institutional investors are hitting a brick wall in their attempts to engage with Amazon’s board on workplace safety. Every time the Netherland’s APG and the office of New York City Comptroller, fiduciary to New York city’s five pension funds, try to engage with the board at the tech giant in which they own a combined $6.5 billion they get push back from management.

The duo began engaging with the company about a year ago, in search of a better understanding of Amazon’s workplace safety during the pandemic. Their priority remains exploring the disconnect between what they have heard from workers and in the press, and the information the company puts out, explained Anna Pot, head of responsible investment, Americas, at APG and Mike Garland, assistant comptroller, NYC Comptroller’s office speaking at “Sustainability Digital; A Planet in Trouble.”

The institutional investors want to know what metrics the board is using to ensure staff are safe as a consequence of the company’s well documented investment in measures like masks and COVID tests.

“We have tried to correspond with the board, but every time we try, we receive a response from management,” said Garland. “We have been told in a letter from management that [board] directors meet with investors, but can’t honour all requests.”

 

APG’s engagement with Amazon has involved reaching out to the company and looking at the measures it is taking to safeguard the workforce. The process has revealed that the company has invested a significant amount in social distancing measures, masks and associated health benefits, said Pot.

Sponsored Content

“It is great to see these measures, but what are the outcomes?” she questioned. Both investors want to see what methods the company uses to oversee the effectiveness of the measures it has put in place; last December they compiled a shareholder proposal, but it didn’t “get the response” they sought.

Garland told delegates that because “the same person” was speaking for the board and management, it was impossible for the investors to have a window into the board’s oversight.

Describing APG as an engaged investor and its stake in Amazon as “significant” with ensuing responsibility and leverage, Pot said the asset manager would continue to engage.

“We want Amazon workers to be safe,” she said. Adding that APG “won’t stop” here but will continue to engage on improving labour conditions in a commitment to progress. Moreover, Pot said she believed engagement will ultimately yield access to the board for further discussions.

“We started a year ago and the company is responding to our requests,’ she said. “They are opening up a bit.”

Both investors’ engagement activity is also focused on the auto sector. Here dialogue is based around how companies are supporting their workforce in the transition to a green economy. A low carbon economy holds consequences for the future size of the sector’s workforce, and the investors are asking questions around how companies are equipping workers with new digital skills and how workers can become part of fast-changing companies.

Garland concluded that although all companies tout their workers as their most important asset, few disclose information about what this means, and how they actually manage their human capital.

Leave a Comment

Climate the No.1 priority for 2021

Climate the No.1 priority for 2021

Climate is by far the number one sustainability priority for investors in 2021 according to a poll of asset owners from more than 32 countries which came together for the Top1000funds.com online Sustainability event in March.

Sort content by

Bridgewater on the impact revolution

Integrating impact alongside risk and return is a revolution that will see more diversification among investor allocations to asset classes such as commodities. Elsewhere, it requires using multiple data sets to analyse stocks and sovereign bond allocations to see the real-world impact of a company’s product or services, and which governments are heading to net-zero. Bridgewater’s head of investment research Karen Karniol-Tambour explains.

Diversity doesn’t work without inclusion

Achieving diversity requires data, new recruitment practices and nurturing inclusion. And the financial industry must get its own house in order to better put pressure on investee companies.

Diversity uncut

In a fireside chat, Gloria Steinem reminds us why diversity is such an important issue for investors to understand, why it impacts society, business and investments so fundamentally, and why there is still so much work to do.

Sovereign engagement is the new frontier

Robeco chief executive Gilbert van Hassel opened the 'Sustainability Digital: A Planet in Trouble' conference with a reminder of the opportunities in sustainability and the importance of working with others. At Robeco this now includes engaging directly with sovereign governments.

Regulation and economics converge in ESG

Investors from Schroders, Trillium and PensionDanmark discuss how a changing regulatory picture and the economics of sustainable investment are coming together to create a tipping point in ESG, but they warn their peers to look beyond the label to what is on the inside.

Principles of a climate-impact dashboard

The climate-impact dashboard is part of a 3-D investment framework that balances risk, return and impact. This includes total portfolio thinking, long-horizon investing, impact investment strategies, system-level engagement and strategic partnership between asset owners and asset managers. Here Tim Hodgson lays out eight guiding principles to help shape a climate-impact dashboard.

Previous