Inside view: How to be an effective steward of assets

If they know how to be better stewards, many pension schemes will choose to work with asset managers that have properly addressed shareholder governance, says Aaron Overy of the Asset Management Exchange (AMX).

The pressure on pension schemes and asset managers to act as active stewards is mounting. Consumer concerns about climate change and egregious remuneration practices are forcing the industry to review how to be an effective and responsible investor.

Meanwhile, the UK government has promised to consult on changes to the ways pension schemes should carry out engagement as part of their stewardship obligations.

The first step for an institutional investor is to determine its stewardship beliefs. That should include a plan for how it should approach environmental issues as well as which social policies and governance practices it wants to support.

In our opinion, there are two aspects to acting as a responsible investor – firstly, a scheme needs to determine how it will use its voting rights, such as:

  • Does it have a policy defined by an external body such as the Local Authority Pension Fund Forum (LAPFF), Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) or Association of Member Nominated Trustees (AMNT), defined internally, or does it rely on the investment manager?
  • Does that then involve voting on all types of resolutions across all companies held in the portfolio or spending time focusing on those resolutions that concern, for example, management pay and where allocations are meaningful?

Secondly, it needs to determine how it wants to engage with companies to influence corporate behaviour. Both should be covered in a responsible investing pledge.

Red lines
Once a philosophy has been determined, the next step is to establish how to turn these ideas into investment practices. For example, institutional investors have a number of ways they can manage their voting rights. They can decide to do it themselves, ask their asset managers – and set ‘red lines’ for the standards that they expect from them – or request a third party does it for them.

Examples of ‘red lines’ include:

  • Voting against the chair of the board if the company does not have an environmental sustainability committee chaired by a board director, or if the company is outside the FTSE 350 and does not have a named board member with responsibility for this area as evidence of appropriate concern.
  • Vote against the chair of the board and the re-election of non-independent members of the remuneration committee if the committee does not consist of a majority of independent non-executive directors.

Though in theory it’s possible for a pension scheme to do this itself, this can be challenging in practice. Both investors and managers can benefit from the services of proxy voting services because such providers collate the myriad of notices about annual general meetings and the voting options.

Once these votes have been collated, they need to be centralised, ‘quality controlled’ and prioritised. This data helps the stakeholders decide how to vote because it provides a summary of the issues as well as the options available.

The ability of an asset manager to use the data from the proxy voting services effectively will vary. For example, an active manager with a constrained portfolio should be a highly effective steward. They will have carried out the necessary research on each stock selected for their portfolio so should understand the issues affecting each company.

The job for a provider of passive vehicles is, however, more complex. These companies have not handpicked the stocks to be included in their products – they are instead selected to provide the best replication of the index.

In addition, these managers are often providing trackers of global securities, which will cover thousands of the different stocks. There are, for example, 1,636 stocks covering 23 developed markets in the MSCI World index. And that’s just one benchmark: passive providers may offer multiple global indices across numerous asset classes.

As the recent ‘Investor stewardship: One hand on the wheel?’ report by Willis Towers Watson said, the stewardship job at an index provider is vast: “It requires corporate engagement on dozens of complex issues covering close to 10,000 companies, voting on tens of thousands of resolutions, regionally fragmented public policy engagement, research, disclosure and external communication.”

Index providers should, in theory, have the scale to build the teams required to take on this sizeable challenge. In the past, however, they have not done this.

In theory, index providers could address this challenge by building their own internal expertise, but it might make better sense to outsource this to a specialist organisation. Such an organisation can do much more than proxy voting services – it can invest in the teams needed to research the tens of thousands of available securities in order to make exercising voting rights effective.

By working with a number of different large institutional investors, it would have the necessary influence to help make meaningful change at corporations. For example, by commanding a sizeable minority of the shares, it can ensure companies address global warming.

Meaningful change
Institutional investors are going to face growing pressure to act as effective stewards by engaging with companies to affect meaningful change. If an index provider cannot provide the level of stewardship service required by its increasingly demanding institutional investors, it should instead look to contract out these services.

In our view, pension schemes will choose to work with managers which have taken the right steps to address these challenges and can demonstrate this in their portfolio.

Aaron Overy is head of client and manager development at Asset Management Exchange (AMX)

©2019 funds europe

HAVE YOU READ?

THOUGHT LEADERSHIP

The tension between urgency and inaction will continue to influence sustainability discussions in 2024, as reflected in the trends report from S&P Global.
FIND OUT MORE
This white paper outlines key challenges impeding the growth of private markets and explores how technological innovation can provide solutions to unlock access to private market funds for a growing…
DOWNLOAD NOW

CLOUD DATA PLATFORMS

Luxembourg is one of the world’s premiere centres for cross-border distribution of investment funds. Read our special regional coverage, coinciding with the annual ALFI European Asset Management Conference.
READ MORE

PRIVATE MARKETS FUND ADMIN REPORT

Private_Markets_Fund_Admin_Report

LATEST PODCAST