Advisory resolutions help owners

The 2017 annual general meeting season in Australia, with its many shareholder resolutions, has highlighted the need to modernise some voting policies too anaemic for contemporary active owners. It has also triggered renewed interest in provisions for shareholder-initiated resolutions, following the 2012 Companies and Markets Advisory Committee consultation into shareholder engagement and the AGM.

Regnan supports calls for reform. However, given that it usually occurs at a stately pace, it does not keep up with the needs of investors such as PRI signatories committed to active ownership, and many may need to make use of alternatives.

The emergence of advisory resolutions

Shareholders in Australian companies make do with an incomplete set of active ownership tools.

The first tool is company engagement. At its best, this is an information-rich two-way dialogue between investor and company, based on the mutual goal of long-term performance. By sharing research, insights, ideas and examples, good engagement encourages and empowers corporate leaders in governance maturity, risk oversight and better disclosure for a more informed market.

The second active ownership tool is proxy voting. Unlike engagement, which is generally conducted in private, proxy voting delivers to the company a concrete, unambiguous and transparent expression of shareholder views. However, that directness also narrows its scope to a simple ‘yes or no’ on prescribed matters, framed by the company or Corporations Act. Thus, it does not always cover the issues of legitimate and emerging interest to shareholders.

Sponsored Content

What is missing from the toolkit is a mechanism capable of both being originated by shareholders and overcoming equivocation, while also stopping short of trespassing on director authority.

Well-formulated, non-binding shareholder resolutions can achieve this balance, but they are not enabled under Australian law, other than for changes to the company constitution. In jurisdictions where shareholders have this right, this provision is regularly availed.

Calls to legislate for shareholder resolutions have recently resurfaced. Meanwhile, the absence of such a mechanism of law in Australia has encouraged workarounds such as protest votes at AGMs. Protest votes include ballots cast against directors, regardless of their role, to express dissatisfaction about a matter – such as a dearth of women on the board. Protest votes communicate the strength of investor concern, but uncouple the literal substance (“don’t re-appoint Mr X to the board”) from the intended message (“recruit some women”) and rely on separate communication to clarify what they are meant to convey. Even with clarification, this model will falter if protest votes become widespread; a director could be lost via this means if investors with diverse complaints all expressed their views in this way.

A different workaround dominating this year’s AGM season is the two-part resolution. Part one puts forward a change to the company constitution to allow advisory resolutions from shareholders. Part two contains the actual advisory vote. While advisory resolutions don’t bind directors to action, the strength of this model is that shareholders have the opportunity to express their views on part two, regardless of what happens in part one. And since advisory resolutions compel nothing more than formal recognition of shareholder views, this arrangement, in the absence of regulatory reform, neatly rounds out the active ownership tool kit.

Freedom of expression

Any tool could, and should, be used in support of fund policy – for instance, on climate change. When making decisions about resolutions before them during this AGM season, a number of investors have cited reasons unrelated to the merits of the substantive matter. The sheer variety of these reasons suggests a deeper underlying cause – defaulting to the company’s recommendations, out of concern that doing otherwise constitutes a rebuke.

This self-censorship is inconsistent with a commitment to active ownership. Investors should be able to express concrete views via advisory votes whenever opportunities arise. They could set an expectation for this by changing voting policy settings and communicating this change to companies proactively. The example in the box below shows a policy wording clarifying that a vote on a specific matter is neither generalised support nor lack of support for the company, and should not be misconstrued as a rebuke.

This policy change would free investors to express their true position on advisory matters via the voting process – and provide companies with a less muddied picture of their owners’ interests and concerns.

The integrity of the process is important. Workarounds that facilitate active ownership are available. We urge all active owners to embrace advisory resolutions until reform can be achieved.

The perfect should not be the enemy of the good.

Susheela Peres da Costa is head of advisory at Regnan.

 

Example of policy wording

An active owner could set its policy as follows:

 

“We will vote on all resolutions in accordance with our position on the substance of the resolution.

 

We will do this in all cases where we believe concrete communication of support is advisable.

 

We may also vote in ways that support our ability to do this. For instance, we may vote for mechanisms that enable an advisory resolution to be put forward.”

 

 

 

Leave a Comment

The future belongs to investors who can adapt

The future belongs to investors who can adapt

Canada's HOOPP has officially adopted the total portfolio approach since the start of 2026. Unpacking the move, the fund's managing director and head of total portfolio group Jacky Lee writes that while the approach doesn't magically make the return better, the fact that it frees the investment team from outdated processes and gives investment leaders the flexibility to act is what gives it an edge.

Sort content by

The investment model for asset owners: is there a best-practice version?

In the last of a series of articles exclusively for conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com, Roger Urwin, head of global content at Towers Watson examines the asset owner investment models that are recognised as best practice, questioning whether there are patterns to the models of success. The best-practice investing model could either involve how you do it or what

PFZW reformulates investment principles

PFZW, the €150 billion ($205 billion) Dutch pension fund for the health care industry, has created a new investment framework which is the result of an 18-month soul-searching journey under a project called “The White Sheet of Paper”. The framework will translate into policy and implementation steps starting from 2015. Jaap van Dam, PGGM´s chief

Risk parity – the benefits of a conditional approach

Risk parity is a meaningful and robust approach for building well-diversified portfolios, but it relies on historical volatility estimates, which penalises upside risk as well as downside risk and leads to a massive overweighting of bonds versus equities, even in a low yield environment. The authors from EDHEC Risk-Institute build the case for an alternative

The in-house investment team: right people, roles, rewards

Good people are at the core of any successful organisation, and that is true for asset owners. Global chief investment officer of Towers Watson, Craig Baker discusses how designing and implementing structures that attract the right people in the right roles can unlock long-term sustainable advantages that the right investment team can offer.   It

Ubiquitous and adaptive investing – the aspiration of a truly global fund

Large pension funds might be invested on a truly global basis but their operating models are rarely global structures. Towers Watson argues that asset owners can benefit from a business model that can deliver organisational performance, manages talent and aligns with core missions from multiple operating locations. Over the last decade, large pension funds and

Evolution in risk reporting for sophisticated institutional investors

Risk reporting is increasingly regarded by sophisticated investors as an important ingredient in their decision-making process, authors from EDHEC argue that  the effective number of (uncorrelated) bets could be a useful risk indicator to be added to risk reports for equity and policy portfolios. Risk reporting is increasingly regarded by sophisticated investors as an important

Previous