The proxy advisory firm provides a cost-effective way for institutional investors to evaluate proposals, vote for proxies, and meet fiduciary standards. However, these companies suffer greater shaking than executive compensation, corporate governance, and stakeholder management, but are not entirely accountable for reports and resist opinions from companies that often rate them. The outcome is a flawed process that prevents shareholders from having the information they need to make an informed choice on important issues.
The SEC has been reviewing its proxy process for over a decade, aiming to address the lack of oversight in this critical area. In 2020, the SEC completed a medium reform set to make the proxy advisory process more transparent and accurate, but was soon sued by a leading representative advisor and took the rules away before implementing it. . The move to withdraw the rules was challenged, but businesses currently have both cases stuck in court, but businesses pay the price.
By reviving the rules of 2020, or, if not possible, it is time to end the work of reasonable proxy advisory reform, through new laws or regulations.
Two major problems and their solutions
Problem: Lack of opportunity to provide input
Currently, companies do not have the authority to review or respond to proxy research reports before being presented to investors as fact, along with specific recommendations on how investors vote. However, the ability of publishers to evaluate and provide feedback on proxy reports prior to publication is important to maintaining the integrity of their proxy votes.
- During the proxy season, proxy advisors need to quickly generate detailed reports on thousands of publishers, and in many cases, reports and voting recommendations are published very close to the date of the annual meeting.
- That recommendation is weight. As many studies have shown, companies with “opposite” recommendations from key proxy advisors can expect a significant decrease in voting support (the latest data shows that average 28% of S&P 500 companies (Shows the spread).
- What's worse, the majority of investors' votes are thrown inside 24-48 hours Continuing on to the final report. This leaves publishers and investors little time to resolve issues with the final report.
- Finally, although proxy advisors may claim almost perfect accuracy speed, the error exists (recent reports found 64 instances where companies have warned investors about the error via supplementary filing. ).
Proxy Advisors often differ from the publisher's philosophy of executive compensation and corporate governance. However, if the publisher is allowed to simply review the draft report and provide a hyperlinked response to the final report sent to the investors, those investors will be in contrast on the key issues. You will be better informed of the perspective, that is, information. in front Voting as trustee.
Solution: Let the publisher review it, Please do not changea draft proxy report is reported to ensure that the data is properly verified before investors use it to make a fiduciary vote decision.
Problem: Conflict of Interest
The research identified several potential conflicts of interest for proxy advisors, including providing consulting services to the same companies that they valued for investors. The effect of this type of conflict is that when a proxy advisor changes the methodology, it naturally drives the business to the consulting side. These dual roles can pressure businesses to purchase consulting services and ensure favorable recommendations.
Solution: A proxy advisor must disclose conflict of interest information in each proxy report. This includes:
- Provide voting research and recommendations about the publisher while providing consulting to the publisher.
- Provide recommendations to other investors about shareholder proposals, while also providing recommendations for shareholder proposals. or
- It is owned by a group of investors who advocate the same issues that are recommended by proxy advisors.
The road ahead
Executive Compensation Centre supports efforts to revive the reasonable 2020 SEC rules of supervision of proxy advisors, has statutory authority to regulate proxy advisory companies, and voting recommendations constitute “solication” under proxy rules. I agree.
However, if these regulations do not revive, it appears that there is a very high chance that Congress will take action. The bill passed by the House in September could be resubmitted this year, calling for reforms similar to those mentioned above.
Significant efforts have been made to identify the monitoring required by the proxy advisory firm. Now it's time for the SEC to implement these reforms, complete the regulatory framework and ensure a fair and transparent proxy voting process for all stakeholders.