CalPERS expands engagement

CalPERS plans to send a written request to up to 58 of its largest domestic company investments to adopt a majority voting standard in uncontested director elections, following an increase in the number of shareowner proposals that staff have been delegated to submit at CalPERS portfolio companies.


Some of the high profile companies included in that list are Apple, BlackRock, Coca-Cola, Google, News Corp, and Visa, and this initial correspondence will be followed by ongoing dialogue with corporate boards and management, and subsequent potential filing of a shareowner proposal as needed.

Staff led by senior portfolio manager global equity, Anne Simpson, argued that removing the limits on the number of allowable proposals supported the investment office’s strategic priorities.

The investment office identified five strategic governance priorities in its roadmap 2010 to be achieved in support of implementing the fund’s financial reform objectives:

1. Formalising a total fund process for developing investment, environmental, social and governance policy and practice

2. Influencing capital market regulation as reflected in an evolving US legislative and regulatory environment

Sponsored Content

3. Developing a shareowner-aligned director pool of talent

4. Implementing majority voting standards for director elections at CalPERS equity portfolio companies

5. Executing a financial sector engagement initiative to catalyse adoption of accountable corporate governance best practices.

CalPERS has had limitations on the number of shareholder proposals it can file since 2004 with limits including: companies under the fund’s focus list methodology; up to 20 proposals per year at companies engaged under the committee’s strategic plan for executive compensation; and up to 10 proposals per year for governance issues that are consistent with CalPERS corporate governance principles that have already been identified by the investment committee as matters of special concern.

In the US the default voting threshold for director elections is a plurality standard, which means the director who receives the most votes wins in contested elections, but in an uncontested election an incumbent director can be re-elected by a single vote.

CalPERS says corporate governance practices should focus board attention on aligning the economic interests of the company with those of shareowners and holding the board of directors accountable for those interests.

It argues that one such governance practice, which is effective in holding directors accountable for creating shareowner value and encouraging better shareowner-director communication, is a director-election standard which requires a majority of votes cast for a director to be elected/re-elected to the board.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

CalPERS: a new framework of economy

CalPERS has adopted 10 preliminary investment principles following a board offsite in July, but a number of topics, including the role of active management, are still under debate ahead of the September board meeting that is the deadline for the principles’ adoption. The $266-billion Californian fund began the process for establishing investment principles in January

Social networks in the investment web

Reels of financial data and analysis coupled with the occasional piece of market gossip or personal hunch are the time-honoured tools investors rely on in building an active portfolio. More recently, an element of sustainability or corporate governance analysis has tried to muscle into the process. Soon there will be another revolutionary option complementing financial

Eijffinger’s decade of financial repression

Financial repression will define the economic landscape for at least another decade, according to professor of financial economics at Tilburg University, Sylvester Eijffinger, which has serious implications for institutional investors. Eijffinger, who also is also a visiting professor at Harvard, sits on the monetary experts panel of the European Union and is an adviser to

Is reviving Europe a suspended apparition?

Getting Europe’s swelling institutional capital to support long-term projects that could benefit its uninspired economies was an idea that sent heads nodding around the continent as it suffered the brunt of the financial crisis. Get pension, insurance and foundation money into where it is most needed with the attraction of reliable long-term cash flows and

Let’s talk about underfunding

Even using the assets of the pension plan was not enough of a leg-up to save the city of Detroit from bankruptcy. As the last words in the song Put your hands up for Detroit by Fedde Le Grand say, it is system shutdown. The fiscal demise of this city may be a lesson for

Johnson urges pension simplicity

There is a David-and-Goliath feeling to the battle Michael Johnson, a research fellow at the London-based think tank the Centre for Policy Studies, is waging against the pension industry. His research, which lays out the case for radically simplifying all aspects of the United Kingdom’s pension sector, has earned him a reputation as a maverick.

Previous