Active engagement needs research, cadence and materiality

When Kimberley Lewis (pictured above), head of active ownership at asset manager Schroders, used to work at Pfizer in the corporate responsibility department she was struck by how investor engagement with the drug company was often wide of the mark. Investors engaged on topics that weren’t the most material to the company; asking questions that Pfizer’s team knew weren’t particularly relevant to the company or sector.

“Do your research,” she urged investors gathered at Sustainability in Practice at Cambridge University in a panel session exploring the key characteristics of good active engagement. “You really need to think about the relevant issues for that company at that specific time,” she said, advising delegates to start comprehensively planning and researching 2023 engagement priorities now, ensuring cadence and materiality to increase the likelihood of success.

Successful active ownership requires investors to outline their expectations to corporate boards and clearly state their aims, she continued. Having set specific asks, she urged investors to track progress but with humility – neither assuming or projecting: investors should claim their stewardship role but balance that with demonstrating positive outcomes.

Active ownership involves clear intentionality, agreed fellow panellist Catherine Howarth, chief executive of ShareAction, the NGO that coordinates civil society activism.  Investors can’t stumble into meetings ill prepared; they need to know what companies should do better with clarity around their asks. Investors should also have a plan of what they will do if corporate behaviour doesn’t change – preferably in agreement with peers seeking change. “People have different appetites for collaboration so collectively ensure you know what you are doing so the group doesn’t fall apart when you run into the first hurdle,” she said.

Engagement at Railpen, guardian and administrator of the United Kingdom’s £35 billion ($47 billion) Railways Pension Scheme, is managed internally mirroring the asset managers own bias to internal asset management – and growth equity. “This is a ripe hunting ground for stewardship,” said Michael Marshall, head of sustainable ownership. Articulating the benefits of internal stewardship, he said it helps ensure alignment between stewardship aims and pension fund beneficiaries, allowing Railpen to tailor its engagement and escalate on a timeline of its own choice. “We care about the issues companies face,” he said.

External benefits

The Universities Superannuation Scheme, USS,  divides its stewardship of investee companies between internal and external management. External stewardship is delegated to carefully selected and monitored managers, explained Phil Edwards, head of manager selection at the pension fund. USS requires managers take clear ownership of stewardship priorities at a senior level and demands transparent reporting so the pension fund can see managers are doing what they say – along with compulsory PRI membership. Managers are selected according to their approach on stewardship and engagement; voting and transparency and the ability to work with others and lead, he listed.

Sponsored Content

The pension fund also checks managers voting record is aligned with its own principles and seeks relationships from which its own internal stewardship practices can also grow and evolve. “We assess every manager on these issues and the degree of alignment with our own approach,” he said.

Elsewhere USS investment managers can expect an escalation process. For instance, the pension fund recently voiced its concerns about one manager’s stewardship strategy, leading to the manager appointing a new head of stewardship. “We are encouraged – and now want to see changes,” said Edwards. “Escalation with our managers is a serious conversation that can ultimately lead to taking away some or all of our assets. We haven’t don’t this yet, but we would if we felt a manager was not taking action in a way we would like.”

Skills shortage

Panellists also noted the workload ESG teams face meeting disclosure and internal stewardship requirements. Investors are buying-in and developing internal stewardship skills, but recruitment is hard in the current market as the race for sustainability talent increases. “If you are going to do stewardship internally, prepare to be patient and pay,” warned Marshall.

Make it matter

Pension funds should ground stewardship programmes in the key interests of their own beneficiaries. Outside climate (in everybody’s interest) ShareAction’s Howarth noted health was a priority for many beneficiaries. “When you ask people what matters, health comes above income,” she said. This could lead to pension funds engaging on issues like a sugar tax. She also noted how more investors are engaging on biodiversity where strategies could focus on the agro-chemical industry.

Her point was echoed by Railpen’s Marshall, who noted that stewardship at the pension fund chimes with issues close to its beneficiaries like workplace rights. “Members views are reflected in the themes we adopt,” he said.

Collaboration

Howarth stressed the importance of collaborating with groups, citing ShareAction’s engagement on the living wage with the supermarket Sainsbury’s, working alongside NEST and Fidelity International. Elsewhere, engagement is best focused on sectors because it leads to whole industries moving forward. Panellists concluded with a nod to encouraging signs of investors getting more assertive and intentional about what they want to achieve, as well as a growing number of collaborations between asset owners and managers.

 

 

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

Holding managers to account

CalPERS has integrated sustainability into its investment strategy and implementation, and uses asset class-specific criteria to assess managers on ESG.

Empowering asset owners

Head of the global union movement, Sharan Burrow, has called on asset owners to “stop talking about constraints on fiduciary duty” and take the lead on the transition to a green economy. Burrow was part of a panel at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Chicago that told delegates the next wave of stewardship is not

Guide to persuading trustees to join the ESG journey: CalSTRS and BT Pension Fund explain all

For many asset owners, persuading their trustees to adopt an ESG strategy can be a challenge. The ESG strategy of one of the UK’s biggest pension funds, the $65 billion BT Pension Scheme, became more serious with the realisation that the scheme’s sponsors and beneficiaries were more interested in the area, said Daniel Ingram, head of

The importance of investment beliefs

It’s often said that investment beliefs provide the solid frame on which investment strategy can hang. Some of these Magna Carta’s are beguilingly simple, like ‘Costs Matter’. Others may enshrine beliefs like ‘A Long Term Investors Has Opportunities and Responsibilities.’ So, it was with keen interest that delegates at PRI in Person 2015, the annual

Designing an investment organisation for the long-term

With so many asset owners looking towards long-term investing, it is considered for funds managers to ask how their business models are aligned with those client aims, or not. In this research paper, Geoff Warren, research director for the Centre for International Finance and Regulation looks at how investment management organisations might be built to

UK funds set RI reporting expectations for managers

A group of 16 UK asset owners with combined assets of more than £200 billion ($269 billion) have developed a guide to responsible investment reporting in public equity. The aim of the guide is to clarify the investors’ reporting responsible investment requirements as they seek to include it in RFPs, manager searches, due diligence and

Previous