Union take on Walmart divestment

The following article is a letter from United Food and Commercial Workers’ John Marshall in response to our recent article, Walmart takes divestment blows to the body.

 

I read with interest the excellent article on the Swedish AP funds’ recent divestment from Walmart based on concerns about the company’s systematic abuses of workers’ rights in the United States. As you may know our union has been very engaged with the company on these issues and has supported the workers currently organising in the Organisation United for Respect at Walmart (OUR Walmart).

In my role with the United Food and Commercial Workers’ capital stewardship program, I am in regular communication with a number of investors and analysts about concerns related to the company’s poor labour practices. In that context I was intrigued by the quote in this article from an unnamed analyst referring to the perceived desirability among portfolio managers of holding Walmart stock, apparently due to the belief that Walmart is a good proxy for the global economy.

That perspective is very different from what I would characterise as the prevailing view among analysts, specifically that Walmart stock over the past several years has been attractive to the extent that it is a countercyclical asset and, in particular, that it is insulated from risk in the eurozone. This perceived insulation and Walmart shares’ close correlation with the defensive consumer staples sector, which has rallied over the past several years, explain most of the relatively modest gain in Walmart shares during that period.

Indeed, despite this favourable macroeconomic environment for Walmart, its stock has significantly underperformed its retail peers, including unionised retailers such as Costco and Kroger, over the past one, three, five and 10-year periods.

Sponsored Content

WMT vs PEERS

As for the impact of labour concerns on the company’s share price, we have pointed to two direct areas of concern for investors: the well documented operational problems associated with understaffing and underinvestment in training, as well as the lost sales and slowed expansion resulting from reputational harm. For a fuller discussion of these issues, please see this report we published last year.

Over the past two years, in the face of Walmart’s apparent unwillingness to reassess its hostility toward its own workforce, several large investors – including APG, PGGM, Mn Services and now the Swedish AP funds – have taken the decision to divest their Walmart shares. Prior to these divestment decisions, while these investors were engaging Walmart as owners, representatives of each of these funds travelled to the US and met personally with Walmart workers to hear their perspectives.

Although we do not advocate divestment as a strategy and view the continued engagement by other investors as critical to the long-term effort to change Walmart, the Dutch and Swedish funds have earned the gratitude of thousands of Walmart workers for simply listening to them and taking these concerns seriously. Perhaps someday Walmart’s leaders will do the same.

 

John Marshall, CFA

Senior capital markets economist

United Food and Commercial Workers

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

Optimal factor index design?

EDHEC-Risk Institute suggests that investors should be wary when implementing factor tilts to ensure diversification still reigns.

Beyond backtests: considering the robustness of smart beta

Systematic equity investment strategies – so-called smart beta strategies – are usually marketed on the basis of outperformance. However, it is important to recognise that performance analysis is typically conducted on backtests that apply the smart beta methodology to historical stock returns. Concerning actual investment decisions, a relevant question, therefore, is how robust the outperformance

Big owners should act like big owners

One of the key ways that institutional investors can promote a long-term orientation in the companies they invest, is by rejecting a company’s compensation plan if it puts too much emphasis on short-term results, says Bob Pozen, visiting senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Writing in the Financial Analysts Journal, he says

Capturing true geographic exposures in risk reporting

New research by EDHEC-Risk Institute questions the usefulness of analysing geographic equities exposures based on the stock’s place of listing, incorporation or headquarters. Head of applied research, Felix Goltz, suggests that in a globalised marketplace, a more meaningful analysis of geographic risk exposures, and performance attribution, comes from looking at geographic segmentation data including total sales

G7 agreement shows benefits of engaging policymakers

Fiona Reynolds, managing director at the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) discusses why it’s in everyone’s interests for more investor voices to be heard between now and November before the world’s nations converge at COP21 in Paris.   The announcement that the G7 leading industrial nations have agreed to cut greenhouse gases by phasing out the use of

Fiduciary duty: great power, great responsibility

As the landscape for investment changes rapidly, so too does the notion of fiduciary duty. Fiona Reynolds, managing director of PRI, argues that using the status quo as a reason not to adapt to changing perceptions and new demands from investors is no longer possible or acceptable. The PRI will publish a fiduciary duty roadmap

Previous