websites-group
  • Reporting
  • Reporting
  • Investors Highlight Climate Change Risk Ahead Of AGMs
  • NewsLetter
Reporting

Investors Highlight Climate Change Risk Ahead Of AGMs

Investors Highlight Climate Change Risk Ahead Of AGMs

Investment managers will be turning the spotlight on companies’ efforts to manage climate change in this year’s AGM season, as the Investment Association (IA) today outlines its expectations of companies on issues including: climate change, executive pay, audit quality and diversity.

https://twitter.com/InvAssoc/status/1235510035368644608

The IA, whose members own one third of the value of UK listed companies, for the first time is asking companies to explain in their annual report the impact climate change will have on their business model and how these risks are being measured and managed. This will provide essential evidence of how well companies are responding to climate change, and whether they are adapting their strategy to ensure the long-term viability of their businesses.

The AGM season gives investment managers the opportunity to hold companies to account and ensure they are considering the long-term value of their businesses, ultimately to the benefit of savers and investors.

IVIS, the IA’s Institutional Voting Information Service, will therefore be tracking companies’ progress, with investors wanting to see significant movement towards reporting in line with the Task Force for Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) recommendations by 2022. This will see companies reporting on climate-related risks in a consistent, clear and comparable manner, enabling investment managers to make better informed investment decisions.

Andrew Ninian, Director for Stewardship and Corporate Governance at the Investment Association, said:

“With one third of the FTSE owned by IA members, our industry is looking to the UK’s largest listed companies to demonstrate that climate change is being taken seriously in boardrooms. Climate change could result in a significant loss of value in companies if risks are not effectively measured and managed, ultimately hitting savers’ pockets. Companies need to be looking at the impact of climate change on their business, products and strategy and set out to investors how they are responding to these risks.”

In addition to climate change, investment managers will also be increasing the pressure on companies to improve gender diversity at a senior level, and to bring executive pensions in line with the rest of the workforce.

This year, for the first time, IVIS will give a ‘red-top’, its highest warning level, to companies which have 20% or less gender diversity in their senior leadership teams, in addition to their boards.

On executive pensions, IVIS will now be giving a ‘red top’ to those companies with an existing director who has a pension contribution of 25% of salary or more, and has not set out a credible plan to reduce that contribution to the level of the majority of the workforce by the end of 2022.

Audit quality also remains of key concern. Investors rely on the quality and robustness of a company’s financial reporting to make good investment decisions and to hold management and boards to account. In this year’s AGM season, investors will be looking to audit committees to better explain how it assessed the quality of the audit and, when necessary, challenged management judgements.

Source: IA

Related articles

  1. ISDA warns on proposed changes to post-trade deferrals regime.

  2. The partnership will focus on delivering an institutional custody solution for digital assets.

  3. The IOSCO Fintech Task Force will collaborate closely with other international bodies.