Documentos t茅cnicos y actualizaciones de pol铆ticas – 成人视频 /es/ A full service proxy solicitation and corporate advisory firm Mon, 20 Apr 2026 14:18:31 +0000 es hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://e4h8grreyn6.exactdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-favicon.png?resize=32%2C32 Documentos t茅cnicos y actualizaciones de pol铆ticas – 成人视频 /es/ 32 32 2026 U.S. Proxy Season Preview /es/2026-u-s-proxy-season-preview/ Wed, 15 Apr 2026 15:09:50 +0000 /2026-u-s-proxy-season-preview/

2026 U.S. Proxy Season Preview: Key Trends Shaping Shareholder Proposals, Proxy Voting and SEC Policy

ByShirley Westcott

As the 2026 annual meeting season unfolds, companies and investors are navigating a proxy environment marked by regulatory disruption, lower environmental and social proposal volume, more fragmented voting behavior, and the growing use of AI in proxy research and vote execution. Shirley Westcott’s 2026 U.S. Proxy Season Preview highlights how the SEC’s suspension of most substantive no-action review, the evolution of shareholder proposal strategy, the expansion of retail voting tools, and the weakening grip of proxy advisors are reshaping the issuer-shareholder dynamic.

Key takeaways:

  • SEC no-action review remains largely suspended through September 2026.
  • ES proposal volume is down and support remains weak.
  • Retail voting tools are gaining relevance.
  • AI is accelerating the shift away from proxy-advisor-centered voting models.

Overview

In what promises to be a groundbreaking year, the 2026 proxy season will play out alongside an ambitious SEC regulatory agenda with a focus on supporting innovation, capital formation, market efficiency and investor protection.

The SEC’s near-term priorities include establishing a regulatory framework for crypto assets, expanding investor access to private markets, easing compliance burdens, re-anchoring disclosures in materiality, and reforming securities litigation to curb frivolous lawsuits1.  The Commission is additionally fast-tracking a rule change to allow public companies to switch from quarterly to semi-annual earnings reporting.

The proxy voting landscape is also being reshaped with the goal of “depoliticizing” shareholder meetings and restoring their focus to core corporate matters.  This will include an SEC proposal this spring to modernize Rule 14a-8 and, per a recent White House executive order (EO), consideration of new rules to regulate proxy advisory firms.

While these initiatives will not directly impact 2026 annual meetings, other trends and developments will inform contemplated regulatory actions and recast the company/shareholder dynamic in the future:

Much ado about omissions: For this year’s proxy season, the SEC made two significant regulatory shifts which will give companies more control over their annual meeting agendas: largely suspending its substantive review of no-action requests in favor of company discretion and restricting small investors from using Notices of Exempt Solicitation to promote activist campaigns.  Despite the outcry—and even lawsuits—from some shareholder proponents, companies have been judicious in their exclusion decisions, which are tracking in line with the proportion of proposal omissions in 2025.

Shareholder proposal volume shrinks:  After peaking in 2024, the overall volume of shareholder proposal submissions is continuing to contract, with environmental and social (E&S) filings at their lowest level in 10 years.  Proponents held back this year due to steadily declining support levels and last year’s SEC guidance—Staff Legal Bulletin (SLB) 14M— which eliminated the significant social policy override that had previously made it difficult for companies to exclude proposals. Filings of traditional governance resolutions remain robust with this year’s initial votes drawing strong investor support.

Less predictable voting outcomes:  Companies will find it increasingly challenging to forecast proxy votes and gauge shareholder sentiment due to fractured voting and limitations on investor engagements.  As a result of the SEC’s revised guidance last year regarding Schedule 13G eligibility, investors’ engagement discussions have become more circumspect and their proxy voting policies have become more opaque in terms of their voting intentions.  In addition, the Big Three—BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street–have split their stewardship teams which may lead to a divergence in their voting policies over time.  They are also expanding their voting choice programs, which give their clients the ability to follow either in-house or third-party voting policies.

Diminishing proxy advisor influence:  In the face of mounting regulatory and legal pressure at both the federal and state levels, Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis are rethinking their business models in ways that will lessen their influence on shareholder meeting votes. This will become more pronounced in 2027 when Glass Lewis retires its benchmark voting policies and migrates its clients to customized guidelines reflecting their individual stewardship priorities.  Several major asset managers are also distancing themselves from the proxy advisors by bringing their proxy research, data collection and voting in-house, aided by artificial intelligence (AI) technology.

Retail votes will become more consequential:  Individual investors will gain in prominence in proxy votes and corporate communications as a result of pass-through and auto-voting programs.  This season, Exxon Mobil will debut its retail voting program, which allows its retail shareholders to automatically cast their votes in line with the board’s recommendations. Broader adoption by the corporate community could substantially diminish the influence of shareholder activists and special interest groups.

This report delves further into these and other key issues that will impact the 2026 proxy season and beyond.

Shareholder Proposal Omissions

Shareholder proposal omissions are being closely tracked this season following the SEC’s announcement last fall that, due to resource constraints following the government shutdown, it would not be adjudicating no-action requests through September 2026, other than those based on Rule 14a-8(i)(1) where the proposal is not a proper subject for shareholder action under state law.  Companies are at their own discretion in deciding what resolutions to leave off ballots based on the provisions of Rule 14a-8, prior published guidance, and/or judicial decisions.

The SEC additionally revised its Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations (C&DIs) on proxy rules and schedules, stating that it will object to “voluntary” Notices of Exempt Solicitation that are filed by persons owning less than $5 million of the company’s shares, primarily to generate publicity for their shareholder resolutions and “vote no” campaigns.  This has forced shareholder activists to come up with alternative communication channels to share their views on proxy ballot items with other investors2.

Omission Trends

Overall, companies have been cautious in their exclusion decisions to avoid investor backlash, which could take the form of opposition to directors, negative publicity and even litigation.  Over half (58%) of the announced omissions were governance proposals, largely sponsored by John Chevedden, of which about one-third (35%) were flagged for procedural deficiencies and 19% were considered substantially implemented, primarily due to a management proposal on the ballot that essentially fulfilled the request.  Nearly half (42%) of the E&S resolutions scheduled for exclusion were regarded by companies as ordinary business (see Table 1).

No company has yet sought no-action relief based on the SEC’s state law carve-out.  Last fall, SEC Chair Paul Atkins suggested that Delaware law does not accord shareholders with a fundamental right to submit precatory proposals31.  If a company obtains a legal opinion that precatory proposals are not a proper subject for shareholder action under state law, the SEC staff will likely defer to that position.

Atkins also said that a shareholder proposal that does not meet Texas’s eligibility requirements may be excludable under Rule 14a-8(i)(1).  Last year, the state amended the Texas Business Organizations Code (TBOC) to allow Texas corporations that opt into Section 21.373 to restrict the submission of shareholder proposals to a single or multiple holders of at least $1 million in stock or 3% of the voting shares, whichever is less.  This ensures that shareholder proposals carry the backing of investors with significant, sustained financial interests in the company.  Several companies—including Forward Industries and Texas Capital Bancshares–are availing themselves of this measure as part of their moves to Texas.  At its April 21 annual meeting, Texas Capital Bancshares will hold a separate advisory vote on whether to be governed by the provision.

Investor and Proxy Advisor Reactions

Through April 10, none of the omissions sparked any strong repercussions from investors or proxy advisors in terms of opposition to directors at annual meetings (see Table 2).  Glass Lewis indicated that it will not raise concerns regarding technical omissions, such as submission timeliness and proof of stock ownership, but it will review other types of exclusions case by case.  ISS said that it will not substitute its judgment for that of the SEC in determining whether a proposal is properly excludable under Rule 14a-8.  However, it expects companies to provide clear and compelling reasons for ordinary business and substantial implementation exclusions in their proxy statements3. Failure to do so may be regarded by ISS as a governance failure, which will be flagged in the proxy report or, in rare circumstances, result in a negative ISS recommendation against one or more agenda items, such as the election of directors.

Lawsuits Emerge

Some shareholder proponents are resorting to litigation to keep their proposals on proxy ballots or, in the case of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) and As You Sow, to block the SEC’s continued implementation of its no-objection policy4 ICCR also posted on its website examples of “egregious” unilateral omissions.5

Of the six lawsuits filed against companies, three have settled.  AT&T and PepsiCo reached agreements with the New York City Retirement Systems (NYCRS) and the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Foundation, respectively, not to exclude their resolutions on workforce diversity and animal welfare.  Axon Enterprise also settled a lawsuit filed by the Nathan Cummings Foundation by agreeing to provide detailed annual disclosure of its direct political spending over the next five years.

Still pending are lawsuits against BJ’s Wholesale Club, Chubb, and UnitedHealth Group, which plan to omit resolutions filed, respectively, by the New York State Retirement Systems (NYSCRF), As You Sow and ICCR member Fonds de Missions.  The proposals, which were deemed to constitute ordinary business, deal with deforestation risk, subrogation claims against fossil fuel companies, and the impact of acquisitions on the healthcare system.  In late March, a D.C. federal judge denied As You Sow’s request for a preliminary injunction on the basis that it did not show any likelihood of prevailing on the merits.  However, the judge also declined to dismiss the complaint at this early stage6.
The legal actions appear to be having a chilling effect on some companies’ omission decisions.  A number of firms, such as Goldman Sachs Group and Huntington Ingalls Industries, have chosen to include shareholder resolutions in their proxy materials, notwithstanding their view that they could have been properly excluded.7.

Table 1: Omission Trends: 2026 (as of April 10) – 2025

2026Number Filed*Number OmittedPercent OmittedSubstantially ImplementedOrdinary BusinessEconomic RelevanceProcedural DefectOther or Multiple
Governance3208828%1723138
Compensation24625%231
E&S2895920%5251622
TOTAL63315324%242714061
2025Number Filed*Number OmittedPercent OmittedSubstantially ImplementedOrdinary BusinessEconomic RelevanceProcedural DefectOther or Multiple
Governance33610030%18130636
Compensation731318%23071
E&S48910321%7734109
TOTAL89821624%278947916

*Based on SEC filings, proponent websites and media reports.

Table 2: Director Votes Where Proposals Excluded (Jan. 1 – April 10, 2026)

CompanyMeeting DateExcluded ProposalBasis for ExclusionDirector Votes*
Becton DickinsonJan. 27Independent chairProcedural defect94.8% - 99.7%
Air Products and ChemicalsJan. 28Written consentProcedural defect93.8% - 99.6%
Emerson ElectricFeb. 3Declassify boardSubstantially implemented88.2% - 97.3%
Amentum Holdings**Feb. 6Supermajority votingProcedural defect90.4% - 99.9%
AppleFeb. 24Customer subscription auto-renewalsProcedural defect91.0% - 99.6%
Jewett-Cameron Trading***Feb. 27Nominations for directorProcedural defect62.0% - 67.8%
F5Mar-12Political spendingSubstantially implemented95.1% - 99.4%
Walt DisneyMar-181. Family-friendly content, theme parks, partnershipsProcedural defect, ordinary business, false and misleading, substantially implemented93.1% - 99.6%
2. Global content managementProcedural defect, ordinary business
3. Shareholder communicationsProcedural defect, ordinary business, personal grievance
ConcentrixMar-25Supermajority votingSubstantially implemented98.5% - 99.6%
Cooper CompaniesApr-07Independent chairSubstantially implemented92.9% - 99.1%

*Based on “for” votes as a percentage of “for” and “against/withhold” votes.
**ISS recommended against the chair of the nominating/governance committee at Amentum Holdings.
***ISS recommended against the board chair at Jewett-Cameron Trading for independence concerns.  The low director votes likely reflect the company’s poor financial performance over the past year.

Governance and Compensation Proposals

For the first time in six years, the volume of governance and compensation-related resolutions may outflank E&S filings, which as of April 10 stood at an estimated 344 and 289, respectively.  First quarter votes also show that support for traditional governance measures will continue to far outpace that for E&S resolutions, with majority votes already occurring at Keysight Technologies (special meeting rights), Zscaler (board declassification) and Starbucks (supermajority voting), where the board made no recommendation on the matter (see Table 3).

Corporate gadfly John Chevedden continues to be the most prolific filer, having sponsored over two-thirds (68%) of the governance and compensation resolutions publicized to date.  Indeed, ICCR reported that of the 415 proposals filed by its members this year, 255 were on governance matters, the majority of which were submitted by one member-Chevedden.

This year, Chevedden has crafted new angles to his standard resolutions, though some may not reach ballots due to company omissions.

  • Board declassification: This season’s proposals include two variations, which are largely directed at companies where management resolutions have failed in the past.  One version contains a requirement that the company adjourn the annual meeting for up to two weeks to seek more votes to reach the supermajority approval threshold.  The other type asks the company to hold an annual advisory shareholder vote on each director that does not stand for election in a given year.  Three targeted companies—Elevance Health, Eli Lilly and Emerson Electric–excluded the resolutions as substantially implemented or false and misleading.
  • Majority voting: Chevedden is seeking an assurance that directors who fail to obtain majority support in an uncontested election leave the board within nine months. CSX and Expeditors International omitted the resolution as substantially implemented, pointing out that the Chevedden proposal would actually allow a holdover director to remain on the board longer than their resignation policies allow—namely, within 90 days of the vote being certified.  The proposal is scheduled for a vote at six other companies.
  • Say on stock repurchases: A rekindled Chevedden effort asks Flowserve to hold an annual advisory vote on stock repurchases which, among other drawbacks, can artificially inflate earnings per share and boost executive pay.  Previous requests of this nature were successfully challenged as ordinary business in 2019 and 2020.
  • Say-on-pay (SOP) frequency: Chevedden is calling on Alphabet and Meta Platforms to initiate an annual SOP vote rather than continue their current triennial cycle.  Alphabet omitted the proposal as substantially implemented because it provides shareholders with a frequency vote every six years.

Proposals calling for an independent board chair are the most popular filing this year, despite rarely ever receiving majority support due to their inflexible approach to board leadership (see Table 4).  These are being sponsored predominantly by Chevedden, the National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) and The Accountability Board (TAB), in some cases at overlapping targets.  TAB singled out several companies for having recently made or announced leadership changes that result in a non-independent chair.  It additionally asked repeat target PepsiCo to simply separate the chair and CEO roles without imposing any independence requirement.  In a novel supporting statement, TAB produced quotes from four PepsiCo directors that commended the independent chair leadership structure of the other boards they serve on.

Rule 14a-4 Proposals Reemerge

Deep-pocketed labor unions are once again resorting to Rule 14a-4(c)(2) solicitations to press for a variety of governance reforms at companies embroiled in labor disputes.  This approach was taken two years ago by the AFL-CIO and United Mine Workers of America at Warrior Met Coal to bypass the one-proposal limit of Rule 14a-8.

This year, the Communications Workers of America (CWA) submitted five governance proposals at Nexstar Media Group, which advocate for an independent board chair, proxy access, special meeting rights, poison pill ratification, and shareholder approval of major transactions valued at more than 20% of the company’s market capitalization.  The National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET-CWA), which represents workers at Nexstar-owned television stations, takes issue with the company’s $6.2 billion acquisition of TEGNA and union busting efforts at certain television stations8.

Trillium Asset Management also threatened to utilize Rule 14a-4 to pressure BJ’s Wholesale Club not to omit its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions resolution.  This would have included submitting and soliciting support for not only its GHG proposal, but additional “good corporate governance” proposals as well9.

Table 3: Early Shareholder Proposal Votes (Jan. 1 – April 10, 2026)

ProposalNumber VotedAverage Support*Majority Votes
Governance
Declassify board151.50%1
Cumulative voting12.90%
Supermajority voting197.90%1
Dual-class stock - recapitalization136.80%
Dual-class stock - vote reporting220.40%
Special meetings447.10%1
Written consent336.70%
Independent chairman313.50%
E&S
Waste lagoon harm12.50%
DEI report (disability inclusion)15.00%
Immigration risk assessment12.70%
E&S - Conservative
Charitable contributions30.70%
Risks/costs of climate commitments 21.20%
DEI risk 30.80%
Gender dysphoria healthcare30.80%
China risk report 22.20%
AI-driven child sexual exploitation18.10%

*Based on “for” votes as a percentage of “for” and “against” votes.

Table 4: Top Shareholder Proposal Filings: 2026 (as of April 10) - 2025 (full year)

Proposal2026Proposal2025
Independent chairman101Special meetings79
Special meetings60Supermajority voting46
Written consent48Direct stock purchase plans*44
Supermajority voting32GHG emissions reduction41
Political contributions27Lobbying disclosure38
Charitable contributions – conservative22DEI/anti-discrimination report -conservative37
GHG emissions reduction19Declassify board29
Dual-class stock17Severance pay29
Declassify board15Recycling29

*These proposals were filed by Chris Mueller and his affiliates regarding companies’ direct stock purchase plans offered through their transfer agent, Computershare.  All were omitted or withdrawn due to company challenges on ordinary business or procedural defect grounds.

E&S Proposals

The number of E&S filings is continuing to decline after peaking in 2023-2024 following the SEC’s release of SLB 14L, which made it harder for companies to omit proposals that had a broad societal impact.  This was reversed by last year’s guidance—SLB 14M—which likely dampened this year’s submission volume.

Investor and proxy advisor support for E&S initiatives has also fallen substantially over the past five years due to the poorer quality and targeting of proposals.  This year, proponents have slimmed down some of their requests so they are less prescriptive, including on climate change; diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI); lobbying disclosure; unionization and plastics recycling.

The 2026 E&S votes will also be impacted somewhat by ISS’s policy change, which is shifting from generally supporting resolutions on climate change/GHG emissions, diversity, human rights and political contributions to a case-by-case framework.  The revision will mainly be felt on political spending proposals, which ISS backed 80% of the time in 2025.

In addition to longstanding initiatives, new–and even curious–topics have emerged this season, including horseshoe crab harvesting, livestock waste lagoons, food additives and immigration enforcement.  Those voted to date have generated only marginal support, though several were withdrawn following successful negotiations.

Climate Change

For a second year, AI data centers are a focal point of climate-related resolutions with various proponents questioning how—or if—Big Tech companies intend to fulfill their GHG emissions reduction goals in view of the massive energy demands from their data center buildouts.  As You Sow is separately asking at least one electric utility—Southern–how it is shielding customers from the cost burdens of data center infrastructure—a concern the Trump administration is addressing with its “ratepayer protection pledge” requiring major technology companies to pay for their own power needs10.

As You Sow has shifted the thrust of its financed emissions proposals by asking banks, such as Wells Fargo, to report on litigation risk arising from climate-related damages associated with their financing of high-carbon sectors.  A separate type of proposal, which is the subject of an omission-related lawsuit, asked Chubb to consider the benefits of pursuing subrogation claims against oil and gas companies for catastrophic losses related to climate change.  Prior climate finance resolutions, which saw declining levels of support, asked banks and insurers to report the GHG emissions from their lending, investing and underwriting activities.

DEI

Pro-DEI advocates have toned down their 2026 requests, which over the past six years asked companies to report on the effectiveness or outcomes of their DEI efforts by publishing quantitative data on workforce composition and on recruitment, retention and promotion rates of employees by gender, race and ethnicity.

This year, proponents are presenting alternative types of resolutions.  The first, sponsored by As You Sow, simply requests a report on companies’ diversity and inclusion policies and practices without asking for specific data.  The targets—Coca Cola, Pilgrim’s Pride, PulteGroup and Royal Gold—appear to have been selected for having low scores relative to peers on As You Sow’s Racial Justice Scorecard, which assesses public companies’ policies and performance related to DEI and environmental justice.

Another variation, filed by As You Sow, Amalgamated Bank and Clean Yield Asset Management, asks five companies to report their employee retention rates by the categories the company is required to track under applicable federal and state laws, such as age, gender, race, veteran status and disability status.  Unlike workforce representation data, which is a static headcount, retention rate data shows whether any demographic group is leaving the company disproportionately.

NYCRS separately targeted AT&T and Fastenal with proposals to annually disclose their Consolidated EEO-1 reports to “demonstrate their diversity performance.”  Both companies discontinued providing workforce diversity data in the last two years.  NYCRS settled a lawsuit with AT&T to keep the resolution on the ballot, while Fastenal’s board has chosen to make no recommendation on it.

The proponents’ shift in approach may have been prompted by companies’ reluctance to share workforce demographics due to heightened legal, reputational and enforcement risk following the Trump administration’s 2025 EOs rolling back illegal DEI programs.  According to a Conference Board study, there was a significant reduction in company disclosures of key diversity metrics between 2024 and 202511. The share of S&P 500 firms reporting the number of women in the workforce fell from 82.7% to 69.2% year over year, while those disclosing minorities in the workforce remained consistent at 16%.  Among Russell 3000 firms, 62% disclosed women in the workforce in 2025, down from 75.2% in 2024, and 26.5% disclosed minorities in the workforce, down from 30.9% in 2024.

Immigration Risk Assessment

In a new campaign, a number of shareholder activists are taking issue with the Trump administration’s immigration policies and enforcement, specifically the risk of workforce disruptions and labor shortages arising from deportations of illegal aliens and restrictions on work permits for foreign nationals.

The Investor Advocates for Social Justice (IASJ) and several religious orders asked Tyson Foods to explain how the elimination of work authorizations under the Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan and Venezuelan (CHNV) parole program may exacerbate labor shortages in the company’s meatpacking facilities.  The Biden-era program was terminated in June 2025 and parole recipients were ordered to self-deport unless they had obtained lawful status to remain in the U.S.  The proposal received only 2.7% support.

In a similar vein, the SOC Investment Group is asking Alphabet, Amazon.com and Walmart, which are among the top recipients of H-1B visa petition approvals, how the higher fee structure will impact their workforce and operations.  In September 2025, the Trump administration raised the annual fees for skilled foreign workers on H-1B visas from $215 to $100,000 to discourage companies from supplanting American workers with lower-paid foreign labor.  Amazon.com omitted the resolution as ordinary business.

Zevin Asset Management (ZAM) is focusing on data privacy and surveillance tools used by immigration, law enforcement and military actors, particularly at tech companies, such as Alphabet and Amazon.com, whose AI and cloud technologies can be used as surveillance pipelines.  ZAM and the AFL-CIO are also targeting retailers Home Depot and Lowe’s Companies regarding their use of third-party security systems, such Flock Safety’s automated license plate recognition, which can aid U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) in conducting raids at store locations where migrant day laborers often congregate in parking lots.

Lobbying Activities

The American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) is once again coordinating proposals on lobbying disclosure which have been reformulated for 2026 to avoid the sizable number of exclusions that occurred last year.  In 2025, Air Products and Chemicals—followed by 14 other companies—successfully argued to the SEC that the 79 items sought in the request constituted micromanagement.  This year’s version has been scaled back to cover the following disclosures:

  • Federal and state direct lobbying amounts, and
  • Any indirect payments to trade associations or social welfare groups that are used for lobbying.

The proposal also avoids references to specific trade associations or non-profit groups, such as the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).

AFSCME and its affiliates have filed only seven lobbying resolutions this year, including four resubmissions, of which one was withdrawn and one was omitted on technical grounds.  One repeat target—Amazon.com—has already omitted the proposal as micromanagement citing last year’s no-action letters.  Several other companies, including Axon Enterprise, Cadence Design Systems, Fidelity National Financial and Huntington Ingalls Industries, also relied on the 2025 micromanagement precedents in their efforts to omit political spending proposals.

Conservative Proposals

Conservative-leaning investors have filed over 100 proposals so far this year, of which 84% cover E&S issues, including charitable contributions, climate change, plastics, DEI, China business risk, abortion, gender ideology, and online child exploitation.  This compares to 135 filings during 2025, of which 115 addressed E&S topics.  To date, 18% of their 2026 resolutions have been omitted—all on E&S matters—which in about half of the cases were based on ordinary business grounds.

Inspire Investing alone targeted 38 companies for 2026 proposals, of which nearly two dozen were withdrawn or not filed following constructive dialogue and negotiations with the companies.  Roughly half of its proposals are specifically DEI-related, while others are aimed at employee free speech and corporate partnerships with outside activist organizations.

Return on Investment (ROI) Audit

The National Center for Public Policy Research (NCPPR) is taking a new approach to its anti-environmental, social and governance (“anti-ESG”) proposals by asking a number of companies to disclose ROI and net present value (NPV) calculations, factoring in cognizable litigation and reputational risk, to determine if their DEI and sustainability/climate change commitments are creating or destroying value.

Its initial ROI audit proposals focused on Intuit’s and Visa’s DEI programs, which received 0.8% and 0.9% support, respectively, and on Deere’s GHG emissions reduction goals, which garnered 1% support.  NCPPR reached settlements with five additional companies—AT&T, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Chevron, Eli Lilly and PepsiCo–with most agreeing to update their disclosures affirming that their sustainability investments are rooted in rigorous financial analysis, such as ROI or NPV.  Several other companies omitted the resolutions as ordinary business, including United Parcel Service where the request was framed as a bylaw amendment to appoint a risk committee charged with ensuring that the company’s sustainability projects are supported by NPV and ROI analysis.  Similar binding bylaw resolutions are on the ballots at Coca Cola and Ford Motor.

Women’s Rights Audit

In a new initiative, NCPPR is asking several companies to conduct a women’s rights audit to assess whether their business decisions involving transgenderism have been fully informed by the biological definition of a woman and by the risks to females of allowing biological males into women’s private spaces and sports under the guise of “transgender rights.”  The proponent noted in its proposal at CVS Health—which has been omitted–that the company likely has contracts with the federal government and the Trump administration’s 2025 EOs made it unequivocal federal policy to recognize two sexes–male and female–based on immutable biological classifications.

Child Exploitation

Compared to other topics, conservative-oriented proponents have historically made a stronger showing on human rights issues, particularly child exploitation.  Earlier this year, the Oklahoma Tobacco Settlement Endowment Trust (TSET) scored 8.1% support on a resolution at Visa to assess whether its payment systems facilitate the creation or distribution of harmful deepfake content, such as AI-generated child pornography.  A similar resolution is pending at Mastercard.

Concerns over online child safety may draw more attention this season following a recent $375 million jury verdict against Meta Platforms for misleading users about the safety of its platform and failing to protect children from online predators.  Liberal and conservative proponents alike have been raising this issue with Meta since 2021, and this year Trillium Asset Management is asking the company to consider tying performance on child safety to its senior executive compensation program.

Proxy Voting in Transition

The proxy voting landscape is continuing to shift towards more decentralization, initially spurred by Republican officials concerned about the concentration of corporate voting power among several large index funds which has facilitated ESG and politically motivated agendas.  In response, the Big Three asset managers initiated client-driven voting options and bifurcated their stewardship teams, allowing for voting divergence on issues such as sustainability.

Two trends are poised to accelerate the decentralization process: greater retail participation in proxy voting and a shift away from standardized proxy advisor voting policies in favor of client customization.

Expansion of Retail Investor Voting

Retail investors will become more relevant in proxy votes due to the growth in flexible voting tools, such as the pass-through voting programs introduced by BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard several years ago.  Vanguard has already announced the addition of 17 new funds to its program for 2026, including its flagship Vanguard 500 Index Fund, which will increase the number of eligible investors to approximately 22 million.  It has also committed to expanding the program to at least 50% of the assets under management in its U.S. equity funds by 2027 and to add a board-aligned policy option as part of a settlement to an antitrust lawsuit by 13 Republican state12.

This year marks the launch of Exxon Mobil’s Voluntary Retail Voting Program, which was approved by the SEC last September.  The opt-in plan allows Exxon’s individual investors to provide standing instructions to vote their shares in line with the board’s recommendations while retaining the ability to opt out or override votes at any time13.  Exxon indicated that as of March 1, 2026, over 100,000 shareholders representing more than 3% of the outstanding shares have signed up for the program.

The introduction of the program coincides with Exxon’s proposal to redomicile from New Jersey to Texas at its May 27 annual meeting.  Notably, the company does not plan to opt into provisions of the TBOC that would diminish shareholder rights, such as ownership requirements to initiate derivative proceedings or submit resolutions.

One critic—NYCRS—characterizes the program as “robo-voting” in line with the board’s recommendation and has countered with a proposal asking Exxon to modify it by providing multiple voting options, including an “against management” policy and/or customized policies.  As noted by Exxon, this would compel the company to include language or options in its solicitations that are against the board’s recommendations, which is inconsistent with state law and the board’s fiduciary duties.

According to Broadridge Financial Solutions, other companies have expressed interest in pursuing similar retail voting programs.  If they move forward, issuers will have an avenue for engaging with individual investors, facilitating the achievement of quorum, and countering the influence of shareholder activists who often hold few shares.

Proxy Advisor Reset

Escalating regulatory, legal and competitive pressures, along with technological advances, are reshaping the proxy advisory industry, which will reduce the dominance of the major players—ISS and Glass Lewis—in the marketplace.

The most significant undertaking is the Trump administration’s December EO directing multiple agencies— the SEC, Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Labor (DOL)—to consider actions to curb their sizable influence over shareholder meeting votes, particularly as they pertain to ESG and DEI matters14. Under the directive, the SEC is tasked with doing the following:

  • Enforce the anti-fraud provisions in securities laws with respect to material misstatements or omissions in proxy advisor recommendations,
  • Assess whether proxy advisors should register as investment advisors,
  • Consider requiring more transparency around conflicts of interest,
  • Analyze the extent that “robo-voting” may constitute the formation of a Section 13(d) group, and
  • Examine whether registered investment advisors breach their fiduciary duties by following proxy advisory advice that is based on non-pecuniary factors, such as ESG and DEI.

ISS and Glass Lewis have also been facing an ongoing FTC antitrust investigation as well as state-level investigations, enforcement actions and litigation for potential violations of antitrust and consumer protection laws.  In addition, 13 states are following Texas’s lead by introducing legislation patterned after the “Proxy Advisor Transparency Act” developed by Consumers’ Research that would require proxy advisory firms to disclose a written financial analysis when their recommendations go against the board’s position and judgment15. The Texas law (SB 2337) was temporarily enjoined last fall and is pending trial.

Institutional investors are rethinking their reliance on proxy advisory firms as well.  Earlier this year, the asset management units of JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo announced they were severing their ties to ISS and Glass Lewis and bringing their proxy research and voting in house.  JPMorgan is transitioning to a proprietary AI-driven platform—Proxy IQ—to collect and analyze proxy data to inform its voting decisions at U.S. company annual meetings.  Wells Fargo will use AI technology and policy engines developed by Broadridge to run its own proxy voting processes.

So far, ISS and Glass Lewis are addressing these developments by repositioning their service offerings away from standardized voting recommendations.  ISS has rolled out two new research services—Gov360 and Custom Lens—that will allow its clients to leverage ISS’s data to make their own voting decisions.  Glass Lewis plans to discontinue its benchmark voting policy altogether in 2027 and offer clients multiple AI-powered research perspectives calibrated to their specific investment and stewardship priorities16.

For issuers, this transformation presents both benefits and challenges.  The retreat from proxy advisor-aligned voting will alleviate “best practice” uniformity in favor of more nuanced, company-specific voting decisions.  At the same time, the growing dispersion in investor viewpoints and voting practices will necessitate wider reaching engagement efforts and more tailored communications on the part of companies.

Frequently asked questions

The 2026 proxy season is unfolding against an unusually active SEC agenda, including potential changes to disclosure, earnings reporting, proxy rules and proxy advisor oversight. It is also marked by the SEC’s suspension of most substantive no-action review, a continued decline in environmental and social proposal volume, and a shift toward more decentralized, customized proxy voting by institutional and retail investors.

Because the SEC is largely not opining on no-action requests through September 2026 (except for limited state-law issues), companies have more discretion, and more responsibility—over whether to omit shareholder proposals under Rule 14a 8. In practice, omission levels so far are broadly in line with 2025, with many exclusions grounded in procedural defects, substantial implementation and ordinary business arguments, but issuers are treading carefully to avoid investor backlash and litigation.

Retail investors are gaining influence due to the expansion of pass through and auto voting tools that make it easier for individuals to participate consistently in proxy votes. Programs such as Vanguard’s voting choice expansion and Exxon Mobil’s new voluntary retail voting program, which allows investors to give standing instructions to vote with the board while preserving override rights, are early examples of how issuers and intermediaries are activating the retail vote at scale.

AI is beginning to power new proxy research and voting platforms that enable investors to move away from one size fits all proxy advisor recommendations. For example, large asset managers are developing or adopting AI driven systems that aggregate and analyze proxy data, support policy based decisioning and generate customized vote recommendations aligned to their own stewardship priorities, rather than relying solely on benchmark policies from ISS and Glass Lewis.

成人视频 can help you

To discuss how these trends may affect your company’s annual meeting strategy, shareholder engagement approach or proxy communications planning, contact 成人视频.

Citations

1 See the SEC’s Spring 2025 Regulatory Agenda at .

2 For example, The National Legal and Policy Center (NLPC) is posting lengthy proxy memoranda on its website to rally support for its proposals. See .  The Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) is encouraging its members to continue drafting exempt proxy solicitations and is posting them on its website.  See .

3 See Atkins’ speech at .
4 [3] See ISS’s 2026 FAQs at .

5 See Democracy Forward’s press release and the complaint against the SEC at and .

6 See ICCR’s post at .

7 See the judge’s memorandum opinion at .

8 See the CWA’s press release at .

9 See Trillium’s press release at .

10 See the Ratepayer Protection Pledge at .  It has been signed by Alphabet, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, OpenAi, Oracle and xAI.

11 See the Conference Board’s report at .

12 See the terms of the settlement agreement at .  State Street added a fully board-aligned policy option to its program in 2023.  See .

13 See Exxon’s press release at and Davis Polk’s press release at .

14 See the Dec. 11, 2025, EO, “Protecting American Investors from Foreign-Owned and Politically-Motivated Proxy Advisors” and related fact sheet at and .

15 See Consumers’ Research’s model legislation at .  The states include Arizona, Iowa, Kansas, Mississippi, Nebraska, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming.  Legislation has already passed in Kentucky and Indiana.  See Glass Lewis’s response at .

16 See Glass Lewis’s white paper, “AI and the Fiduciary Test,” at .

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State Street Issues 2026 Policy Updates /es/state-street-issues-2026-policy-updates/ Tue, 07 Apr 2026 17:16:37 +0000 /state-street-issues-2026-policy-updates/

State Street Issues 2026 Policy Updates

ByShirley Westcott

State Street Investment Management (SSIM)–formerly State Street Global Advisors (SSGA)–has published its 2026 global voting policy updates which are effective April 2026¹.  The material changes, which are discussed below, include embedding financial performance into certain policies, streamlining the framework for evaluating shareholder proposals, and disclosing the guidelines followed by the asset stewardship team when engaging with U.S. public companies.

Financial performance

SSIM has incorporated financial performance, based on total shareholder return (TSR) relative to the company’s Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) sector, into its assessment of board composition, board oversight of risks and opportunities, and executive compensation. It has removed board diversity factors from its discussion of board quality and composition.  It has also eliminated its section on board oversight of geopolitical risk.

Evaluation of shareholder proposals

In evaluating shareholder proposals, SSIM will consider whether adoption would promote long-term shareholder value in the context of its core governance principles:  effective board oversight, quality disclosure and shareholder protection.  It has removed its previous factors for supporting a shareholder proposal which, in the case of disclosure requests, included satisfying SSIM’s detailed disclosure criteria on issues such as climate change; nature and biodiversity; human capital management; diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI); human rights; and political activities.

Shareholder rights

SSIM has removed its explicit preference for a 25% or less ownership threshold for shareholders to call a special meeting or act by written consent.

Engagement policy

SSIM has added an appendix with guidelines on how its asset stewardship team will conduct engagements with U.S. public companies.  In keeping with last year’s SEC guidance on passive/active investor status, SSIM’s discussion parameters underscore that it does not seek to influence or change control of any issuer, including the following:

  • It will not discuss how it intends to cast its vote on any particular ballot item or its rationale for any vote it has made.
  • It will not dictate or pressure companies to adopt or change any policies or fundamental business choices.
  • It will not engage in discussions that explicitly or implicitly suggest contingent voting or divestment if a company does not adopt SSIM’s viewpoint on a particular item, or that suggest that any particular factor, policy or practice is dispositive in its engagement or voting decisions.

SSIM expects its U.S. portfolio companies to set engagement meeting agendas.  The stewardship team will be in “listen-only” mode during discussions of the following topics with either companies or investors soliciting SSIM’s votes in connection with contested shareholder meetings, “vote no” campaigns, or shareholder proposals:

  • Contested director elections
  • Adoption of a climate transition plan
  • Adoption of specific targets for emissions reduction
  • Disclosure, reduction or adoption of a policy on Scope 3 emissions
  • Changes to the company’s capital allocation

SSIM further states that it does not apply, nor will its stewardship team discuss, specific targets or thresholds of gender, racial or ethnic diversity in connection with U.S. portfolio companies.

Proxy voting process

In its overview of its asset stewardship program, SSIM deleted references to its use of Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) to facilitate the execution of its proxy votes, including acting as its proxy voting agent, assisting in applying SSIM’s voting policy, and providing research and analysis relating to general corporate governance issues and specific proxy items. 

¹ See SSIM’s 2026 policies and summary of changes at and .

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UK Investment Trusts in 2026: Governance Under Pressure /es/uk-investment-trusts-in-2026-governance-under-pressure/ Wed, 01 Apr 2026 12:41:43 +0000 /uk-investment-trusts-in-2026-governance-under-pressure/

UK Investment Trusts in 2026: Governance Under Pressure

Introduction

2025 marked a decisive shift in the UK investment trust landscape. What began as a prolonged period of wide discounts evolved into a sustained test on balance sheets, permeating into corporate governance, as boards were increasingly required to demonstrate that the closed-ended structure continued to serve shareholder interests.

At the centre of this shift was a series of high-profile activist campaigns led by Saba Capital, whose actions since late 2024 have reshaped expectations around board accountability, corporate actions, and across the sector.

Our analysis examines these developments through a governance, M&A, and activism lens, highlighting how shareholder expectations have evolved and why boards are increasingly judged on their ability to deliver tangible outcomes within the closed-ended structure. Alongside this, Nepean’s contribution provides a complementary perspective on the strategic communication challenges facing boards, particularly in the context of the Saba campaigns.

Activism in Focus: Saba Capital’s Campaigns (Late-2024 to 2025)

Since the end of 2024, Saba Capital has mounted coordinated campaigns across multiple UK investment trusts, seeking outcomes ranging from board change and enhanced discount-control mechanisms to structural reform, including mergers, wind-ups, or conversion to open-ended vehicles.

While many of Saba’s formal resolutions were ultimately defeated, the broader impact of these campaigns has been significant. The activism demonstrated that:

  • large shareholders are prepared to challenge the legitimacy of the closed-ended structure where discounts persist;
  • board composition, tenure, and responsiveness are now regularly challenged; and
  • corporate actions once considered exceptional are increasingly viewed as normal.

For issuers, the key lesson is that “Winning the vote” is no longer the end-game. Even unsuccessful activist campaigns have materially influenced board behaviour, disclosure standards, and strategic positioning. Activists are also focusing on their financial returns, which they believe will be enhanced by making changes to the governance structure of funds.

Developments since 2025 suggest a further escalation. Activism is no longer limited to proposing change, but increasingly about controlling outcomes. Large shareholders have demonstrated their ability to block strategic transactions, including mergers. They have also shown the ability to shape board decisions indirectly through ownership concentration. Overall, the events represented a meaningful shift in board dynamics. It is also a reminder that activism can evolve from persuasion to leverage.

Net Asset Value (NAV) Discounts as a Governance Indicator

Perhaps the most enduring theme of 2025 was the treatment of discounts to Net Asset Value (NAV) as a live measure of governance quality. For investment trusts, the market’s message was clear:

  • persistent discounts are no longer seen as a purely cyclical or technical issue;
  • they are interpreted as a reflection of board effectiveness, engagement quality, and structural credibility.

Where discounts remain elevated despite buybacks and engagement, investors are increasingly questioning whether the closed-ended structure itself remains appropriate.

The Impact of US-Style Activism on UK Investment Trust Sector

Saba’s role is particularly noteworthy given its identity as a US-based hedge fund exerting influence over UK-listed investment trusts. This has introduced several new dynamics into the market:

  1. A different activism playbook: Unlike traditional UK stewardship-led engagement, Saba’s approach has been more overtly transactional and structural, framing persistent discounts as evidence of governance failure rather than market conditions. This has accelerated the pace at which boards are expected to respond.
  2. Shareholder concentration risk: Saba’s campaigns highlighted how significant minority stakes can be leveraged to block or influence corporate actions, including mergers. This has sharpened boards’ focus on developing a more granular understanding of their shareholder base and the risks associated with concentrated ownership.
  3. Market-wide signalling effect: Even where Saba did not prevail, its campaigns signalled to other investors that boards can be challenged and that the investment trust sector is increasingly open to activist intervention.

Implications for Boards and Issuers

As a result, issuer expectations have shifted: boards are now expected to anticipate activism, not merely respond to it. The experience of 2025 suggests that inaction is now the highest-risk strategy. The developments across 2025 give rise to several clear governance implications:

  1. Engagement must be proactive, not reactive: Waiting for an activist requisition before engaging shareholders is no longer sufficient. Boards are expected to demonstrate a deep understanding of strategy and the systemic risks to the funds.
  2. Structural questions cannot be deferred indefinitely: Where discounts persist despite buybacks and engagement, boards should expect pressure to consider more fundamental options, including consolidation or conversion.
  3. Corporate actions require activist-proofing: M&A proposals must be stress-tested against shareholder fairness, mandate alignment, and value transfer optics.
  4. Shareholder register monitoring is critical: Understanding who holds influence—and how that influence might be exercised—has become a core governance responsibility
  5. Structural changes must be considered for contingency: Boards should not wait until pressure escalates to consider alternatives such as mergers, wind-downs, or structural change.

Conclusion: 2025 as an Inflection Point

For UK investment trusts, 2025 was an inflection point. Developments into 2026 suggest it is becoming something more — a structural reset in governance expectations.

The combination of sustained activism, persistent discounts, and increasingly contested corporate actions has fundamentally altered how boards are assessed.

For issuers, the lesson is not that activism must always be resisted or conceded, but that credible governance, clear strategy, and early engagement are now essential defences. In these events, governance is measured by how well the board translates strategy into fruitful shareholder outcomes.

As the sector moves forward, boards that can articulate why the closed-ended model works, and how they will protect shareholder value within it, will be best placed to navigate the next phase of scrutiny.

Independent Strategic Communications Advice for Boards: Lessons from the Saba 7

For a few unfortunate investment trust boards, Saba was the Grinch that stole Christmas of 2024. But, if they’d hoped that it was a passing challenge, events since will have left them sadly mistaken.

The saga has persisted for more than a year. Whilst boards and their investment trusts have not sat still, activist threats remain and further challenges arising from investor demographic shifts continue to mount.

Below, we explore what boards learnt from their initial threat exposure, and what they should consider to traverse the hurdles ahead.

The Visibility Gap

Our review (in-post) of the trusts revealed a consistent pattern: boards with low public visibility – limited LinkedIn activity, minimal proactive media engagement, and absent or outdated standalone websites – were generally less well prepared when activist pressure emerged.

Of course, having effective and efficient storytelling channels in place is unlikely to have prevented the Saba challenge itself. Rather, we believe the lack of greater preparedness meant tackling the challenge once established became harder – and would have been harder still had Saba opted to pick off individual trusts rather than a collective.

Of the Saba 7, most had no LinkedIn presence in the period preceding the requisition, with little evidence of targeted engagement from board members to relevant stakeholders. Trusts largely communicated through RNS announcements, with scarce use of digital channels. When activist scrutiny intensified, these boards lacked official means through which to communicate with the broad investor base.

Most board members at the time of the requisition were found to have established channels on LinkedIn. However, posts about their respective trusts were minimal – only to be ramped up ahead of the requisitioned meetings.

The Cost of Reactive Governance

These requisition processes did not come cheap, and we think it is reasonable to suggest that such costs were heightened by the lack of a comprehensive, pre-existing route to communicating with shareholders.

* Henderson Opportunities Trust and Keystone Positive Change Investment Trust have not disclosed their fees due to their voluntary liquidations. Figures above are an average of other trusts’ costs where clearly disclosed.

** Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust recorded £1.673 million in non-recurring expenses, comprising costs associated with the February requisitioned general meeting and ‘legal costs incurred in connection with the cancellation of the share premium account’.

Four of the seven trusts recorded cumulative additional expenses of £2.58 million in their subsequent annual reports, accrued in relation specifically to those single requisitioned meetings. The others have either not disclosed their fees* or have reported fees in combination with other related costs.

These are not insignificant figures, and fees accrued at shareholders’ expense – something we know Board members, with their focus on shareholders’ interests, are acutely aware of.

Prevention is better than cure, but a cure is still preferable to emergency surgery. And cheaper, too.

The Retail Challenge

Investment trusts are operating in an increasingly challenging environment. Their traditional investor base is ageing, while younger generations are gravitating towards alternative investment products and have markedly different expectations regarding communication and engagement. At the same time, the sector continues to face persistent structural pressures: widening discounts, consolidation among wealth managers, and growing competition from a broader universe of investment products.

Private investors are central to the sector± – accounting for over a third of total shareholdings by value – and their influence is increasing as retail participation rises across UK markets. And yet, there is still a limited understanding among many retail investors of what an investment trust is, how it works, and what exactly the role of the board is. This has created both a vulnerability and an opportunity: a need to prepare for expert activists among an increasingly ill-informed investor base, but also a chance to more effectively engage brand new audiences.

The average investment trust shareholder is 60–65 years old§ but, as wealth shifts, this profile will change. The typical future investor will be digitally native and motivated by values – an audience that currently favours other vehicles like ETFs. Lacking the longstanding loyalty of the old guard, they might also be more likely to sympathise with an activist’s calls for change – making critical the need for board independence, if they are to avoid being swept away in a coup.

In a landscape defined by demographic change, increasing retail influence, evolving expectations, and heightened activist pressure, boards must ensure they are not only fulfilling their duties but are visibly doing so.

Building Board Preparedness

For investment trusts, boards serve as the embodiment of shareholders’ interests. They are their independent, accountable representatives, and the experts entrusted with governance and critical oversight.

We believe there is a significant opportunity for boards to raise their voice and be more proactive by building their platform to communicate to shareholders. Modern challenges require modern solutions, and the demands of an increasingly critical retail investor base have to be met – particularly in the face of activist threats.

The successful transmission of board messages greases the wheels of action. It can allow them to better hold investment managers to account and allow for more productive engagement with activists – particularly when those activists are supported by a broader group of shareholders. In getting these messages across, digital methods in particular are currently underutilised.

Independent of investment managers, board members should build their own digital profiles – both individually and at the trust-level. Personalisation is a route to ownership of accountability: a counter to criticism levelled at investment trust by Saba and others.

Our research suggests that LinkedIn is one platform in particular where boards can be doing more, alongside use of video content, independent websites, and targeted engagement with the press.

In combination with other forms of shareholder engagement, such as proxy solicitation, it is a route to a more comprehensive communications strategy: traversing the width of the shareholder map and meeting the needs of the full breadth of shareholders, big and small.

Raising Their Voice

Since Saba’s original challenge, boards have come a long way. It was a wake-up call, and one that many have answered. Today, as we have seen in recent weeks and months, they’re fighting back – and winning, too. But this is a challenge – both in responding to activists and in adjusting to an increasingly retail-led investor base – that is going nowhere.

Boards need a voice: one that is independent of investment managers, loud enough to reach retail investors, and clear and distinct in its delivery.

This is not an exercise in vanity. Building a communications platform is a route to more effective positioning and protection. It means reaching the full breadth of shareholders in decision-making moments; being prepared for the current and future challenges that are shaping the sector; and driving cost-savings in contentious situations, to all shareholders’ benefit.

Only with such a voice can boards be confident in their position in the moments that matter.


For more information, please visit or email info@nepean.co.uk

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Citations

* Henderson Opportunities Trust and Keystone Positive Change Investment Trust have not disclosed their fees due to their voluntary liquidations.

† Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust recorded £1.6 million in non-recurring expenses, comprising costs associated with the February requisitioned general meeting and ‘legal costs incurred in connection with the cancellation of the share premium account’.

± 

§ 

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FTSE 100 & DAX 90: Top Investor Voting vs. Proxy Advisory Analysis /es/ftse-100-dax-90-top-investor-voting-vs-proxy-advisory-analysis/ Wed, 04 Mar 2026 12:02:48 +0000 /ftse-100-dax-90-top-investor-voting-vs-proxy-advisory-analysis/

FTSE 100 & DAX 90: Top Investor Voting vs. Proxy Advisory Analysis

BySandro Barbato

Introduction

This cross-market comparison has been developed focusing on the United Kingdom and Germany, arguably two of the most sophisticated capital markets in Europe. Distinctions in specific voting guidelines and corporate governance expectations between these jurisdictions are not viewed as compromising the validity of this high-level statistical comparison.

To facilitate a robust dataset for meaningful analysis, the FTSE 100 was utilized for the United Kingdom, while a synthetic «DAX 90“ -comprising an aggregation of the DAX 40 and MDAX 50- was established to provide a comparable German peer group.

Therefore, we examined the voting activity of 15 top-tier global investors across 85 FTSE 100 and 82 DAX 90 constituents throughout 2025, with a total volume of 24,535 and 19,414 recorded investor votes, respectively. It is considered a substantial basis for evaluating voting behaviour against Institutional Shareholder Services (“ISS”) and Glass Lewis (“GL”) recommendations, the two preeminent global proxy advisory firms.

Key Findings

  • Within the FTSE 100 and DAX 90 indices, alignment with positive ISS recommendations appears consistently high. In the FTSE 100, twelve investors exhibit an alignment of 99% or greater, whereas ten investors attain this threshold within the DAX 90. The remaining institutional investors nevertheless maintain substantial alignment rates, ranging between 91.7% and 98.7%.
  • The negative ISS recommendations reveal a starkly different landscape. The peak alignment in the FTSE 100 reaches 96%, and 88.3% in the DAX 90. Furthermore, alignment rates fluctuate significantly, descending to as low as 19.1% in the FTSE 100 and 14.2% in the DAX 90.
  • Regarding positive GL recommendations, the degree of alignment across both the FTSE 100 and the DAX 90 tends to be lower. While ten investors in the FTSE 100 maintain an alignment of 99% or greater, only three investors reach this level within the DAX 90.
  • Concluding with negative GL recommendations, the highest alignment within the FTSE 100 stands at 72.2%, with a notable decrease to a floor of 17.7%. In contrast, the DAX 90 exhibits a higher peak alignment of 86.3%, while the minimum alignment observed is 29%.

Deconstructing the «Blind Following» Narrative

The high degree of alignment with positive proxy advisory recommendations suggests that proxy advisory mirrors an established consensus on core corporate governance topics.

In contrast, the lower alignment with negative recommendations indicates that investors’ internal voting guidelines are less rigid and thus frequently support agenda items even when ISS and/or Glass Lewis recommend against them. This highlights a distinct misalignment between the standardized recommendations of proxy advisors and the independent stewardship policies of individual institutional investors.

The (Secret) «Decision-Maker» Narrative

The discourse surrounding proxy advisory firms frequently invokes the narrative of a «secret decision-maker,» a theme that remains a staple of both professional discussions and media coverage.

While it cannot be entirely discounted that certain individual AGMs, if viewed in isolation, might suggest that proxy advice served as the primary catalyst for a voting outcome, our empirical data appears to challenge this assumption.

From Ex-Post Observation to Ex-Ante Strategy

ISS and Glass Lewis recommendations are strong statistical indicators, but their review is essentially passive and retrospective.

While our clients already benefit from a proprietary database granular enough to track & analyse specific agenda item types, achieving success at an AGM requires moving beyond reactive damage control. By shifting the focus to a proactive analysis of individual investor guidelines, companies can bridge the ‘governance gap’ long before a proxy advisory analysis is even published.

Ultimately, a positive outcome is determined by aligning corporate decisions and the meeting agenda with investors’ expectations well in advance of the shareholder meeting.

Alignments & Divergences with ISS & Glass Lewis

Statistics: FTSE 100 & DAX 90 vs. ISS & Glass Lewis

Comparison of the Peers: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

The following dataset details the voting activity of the fifteen selected institutional investors alongside their disclosed utilization of ISS and/or Glass Lewis (“GL”) advisory services. This data serves as the empirical foundation for the subsequent analysis of alignment or divergence with the proxy advisory recommendations.

  • Sample Size and Investor Profile: The dataset encompasses the aggregate number of agenda items voted upon by each constituent investor across both indices. For instance, Amundi recorded votes on 1,798 items within the FTSE 100 and 1,570 within the DAX 90. It appears that investors utilizing index-tracking strategies naturally exhibit a higher volume of voted agenda items. Conversely, more concentrated or selective investors, characterized by a narrower scope of investee companies, demonstrate a correspondingly lower number of voted items.
  • Weighting and Distribution: Within this peer group, the total volume of votes amounts to 43,949. The FTSE 100 accounts for 24,535 of these votes (55.8%), while the DAX 90 represents 19,414 (44.2%).
  • Market Variance: The higher volume observed within the FTSE 100 appears to be driven by a greater aggregate number of votable agenda items per company in the UK market, rather than being a result of investor selection. As delineated in the “Methodology & Database” section, the analysis encompasses 85 of the FTSE 100 and 82 of the DAX 90 companies, reflecting a balanced corporate peer group despite the variance in absolute vote counts.
Comparison of Peers: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

ISS Recommendations Alignment: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

Further illustrations can be found on the heatmaps and bar charts below.

ISS + = Voting +

This dataset shows the percentage of «For» votes cast for agenda items that received a positive ISS recommendation. Any deviation from 100% occurs when an investor votes against an item despite a supportive ISS recommendation.

  • High Alignment: Alignment with «For» recommendations remains exceptionally high across both markets; indeed, the degree of alignment exceeds 99% in twelve instances within the FTSE 100 and in ten cases within the DAX 90.
    Market Comparison: The unweighted average alignment for positive recommendations is slightly higher in the DAX 90 (~98.8%) than in the FTSE 100 (~98.1%).
  • Regional Trend: In 11 out of 15 cases, investors show higher alignment with ISS «For» recommendations in the DAX 90 compared to the FTSE 100.

ISS – = Voting –

This dataset shows the percentage of “Against» votes cast for agenda items that received a negative ISS recommendation. Any deviation from 100% occurs when an investor votes for an item despite a negative ISS recommendation.

  • Low Alignment: Alignment with «Against» recommendations remains low across both markets.
    Market Comparison: In contrast to the consensus observed regarding positive recommendations, the unweighted average alignment for negative recommendations decreases substantially to approximately 41.5% in the FTSE 100 and 51.5% in the DAX 90. Furthermore, individual alignment levels exhibit significant volatility, descending to a floor of 19.1% within the FTSE 100 and 14.2% within the DAX 90.
  • Regional Trend: In 10 out of 15 cases, investors demonstrate a relatively stricter adherence to ISS «Against» recommendations in the German market than in the UK.
ISS Recommendations Alignment: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

Glass Lewis (“GL”) Recommendations Alignment: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

Further illustrations can be found on the heatmaps and bar charts below.

GL + = Voting +

This dataset shows the percentage of «For» votes cast for agenda items that received a positive GL recommendation. Any deviation from 100% occurs when an investor votes against an item despite a supportive GL recommendation.
Strong Alignment : Similar to ISS, alignment with positive GL recommendations remains exceptionally high, with nearly all investors exceeding 90% across both markets.

  • Market Comparison: The unweighted average alignment for positive recommendations is slightly higher in the FTSE 100 (~98.3%) compared to the DAX 90 (~96.3%).
  • Regional Trend: 10 of 15 investors show a higher alignment with GL «For» recommendations in the FTSE 100 compared to the DAX 90.

GL – = Voting –

This dataset shows the percentage of “Against» votes cast for agenda items that received a negative GL recommendation. Any deviation from 100% occurs when an investor votes against an item despite a supportive GL recommendation.

  • Low Alignment: Alignment with «Against» recommendations is notably low across both markets.
  • Significant Drop in Alignment: Consistent with the ISS data, the unweighted average alignment for negative recommendations is much lower than for positive ones, at approximately 34.1% in the FTSE 100 and 52.2% in the DAX 90. Furthermore, individual alignment levels exhibit significant volatility, descending to a floor of 16.7% within the FTSE 100 and 29% within the DAX 90.
  • Regional Trend: 12 of 15 investors demonstrate a stricter adherence to GL «Against» recommendations in the German market than in the UK.
GL Recommendations Alignment: FTSE 100 & DAX 90

Heatmaps: Alignments & Divergences with ISS & Glass Lewis

Heatmap- FTSE 100 Alignment vs. DAX 90 Alignment

Heatmap- DAX 90 Alignment

Heatmap- FTSE 100 Alignment

Bar Charts: Alignments & Divergences with ISS & Glass Lewis

Alignments & Divergences with ISS-For
Alignment - ISS For = For
Divergence- ISS For = Voting Against
Alignments & Divergences with ISS-Against
Alignment- ISS Against = Voting Against
Divergence- ISS Against = Voting For
Alignments & Divergences with Glass Lewis-For
Alignment- Glass Lewis For = For
Divergence- Glass Lewis For = Voting Against
Alignments & Divergences with Glass Lewis-Against
Alignment- Glass Lewis Against = Voting Against
Divergence- Glass Lewis Against = Voting For

About Correlation, Causality & Possible Influencing Factors

Interpreting Congruence: Why High Alignment Is Not Proof of Causation

According to a paper by Robert Matthews in 2000 titled “Storks Deliver Babies (p=0.008)”, a highly statistically significant correlation exists between stork populations & human birth rates across Europe.

As the paper showed that a high correlation does not inherently imply causality, the author noted: “While storks may not deliver babies, unthinking interpretation of correlation and p-values can certainly deliver unreliable conclusions.”

Possible Factors Influencing Voting Alignments

  • Shared Best Practices: Both investors and proxy advisors frequently operate from the same global governance playbooks. Frameworks established by organizations such as the ICGN, UN PRI, and the OECD, alongside national Corporate Governance Codes, create a common baseline. Consequently, high alignments with positive proxy advisory recommendations might just reflect a shared adherence.
  • Feedback Loops: ISS and Glass Lewis conduct comprehensive annual policy surveys and regular client consultations to ensure their benchmarks remain aligned. By considering also this direct input for their guidelines, there might be a certain self-reinforcing cycle.
  • Routine Consensus: A certain portion of AGM agendas consist of «routine» and rarely controversial items. In these cases, there is a natural market-wide overlap in positive recommendation & voting, which mathematically inflates alignment percentages.
  • Common Perspectives: The high degree of alignment with positive recommendations suggests that proxy advisors mirror an established consensus on basic corporate governance best practices.

Possible Factor Influencing Voting Divergences

  • Diverging Perspectives: In contrast, the lower alignment with negative recommendations might indicate that investors’ internal voting guidelines are less rigid and thus frequently support agenda items even when ISS and/or Glass Lewis recommend against them. Consequently, this highlights a clear misalignment between the recommendations of proxy advisors and the independent views and voting policies of individual institutional investors.

Methodology & Database

Methodology Market Peer Comparison & Index Selection

  • Our study examines 15 of the largest international institutional investors, selected based on average investment size and strategic shareholder structures.
  • The underlying voting behavior has been curated directly from the investors’ respective public disclosure platforms. This approach ensures that the dataset reflects the official, ex-post records of their stewardship activities, providing a transparent and verifiable basis for our analysis.
  • Furthermore, the analysis utilizes original ISS and Glass Lewis recommendation data, deliberately avoiding datasets reconstructed ex-post from the disclosed voting records of investors assumed to have outsourced their voting decisions. Our direct access to primary advisory data ensures that the dataset remains both reliable and comprehensive; consequently, this approach facilitates a high degree of analytical precision by eliminating the risks of secondary data degradation.
  • We tracked the correlation of ‘For’ and ‘Against’ votes relative to ISS and Glass Lewis guidance, omitting ‘Abstain’ votes from the scope. Abstentions represent a marginal fraction of the total—never exceeding a 0.01% threshold of votes cast—and are frequently non-existent among the investors in our study.To establish peer groups comparable between the UK and Germany, we opted for the FTSE 100 on the one side, and we aggregated the DAX 40 and MDAX 50 to create a synthetic DAX 90.
  • By utilizing this synthetic index, we not only achieved a highly balanced sample sizes for our analysis but also concentrated on the German side to large-cap and mid-cap companies, which better reflects the set-up of the FTSE 100.
  • To ensure a consistent baseline for voting guidelines and investor expectations, we excluded companies without full proxy coverage—typically, though not exclusively, due to insufficient free float.
  • We also excluded companies incorporated outside the target market to ensure a consistent comparison, as foreign entities may be subject to different regulatory expectations and voting guidelines.
  • In total, the analysis covers 167 companies: 85 FTSE 100 companies with 24,535 agenda items (55.8% of total votes) and 82 DAX 90 companies with 19,414 agenda items (44.2% of total votes).

成人视频 Team

At 成人视频, we support our EMEA-clients on each assignment with a dedicated global team that consists of:

Photo by AlphaTradeZone

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Top FTSE 100 Institutional Investors Alignment with ISS & Glass Lewis /es/top-ftse-100-institutional-investors-alignment-with-iss-glass-lewis/ Wed, 25 Feb 2026 08:48:48 +0000 /top-ftse-100-institutional-investors-alignment-with-iss-glass-lewis/

Top FTSE 100 Institutional Investors Alignment with ISS & Glass Lewis

ByOliver Taylor

Summary:
Top FTSE 100 Institutional Investors Proxy Alignment

Deconstructing the "Blind Following" Narrative

While a strong alignment rate with ISS «FOR» recommendations may suggest that FTSE 100 investors simply adopt proxy advisor guidance, the underlying data presents a far more differentiated picture when examining «AGAINST» recommendations. Only one of the 15 investors assessed shows high alignment with ISS on negative votes. Eight exhibit moderate-to-high correlation (approximately 34%–75%), while the remaining seven demonstrate significant independence, with alignment dropping to as low as 19%. This divergence on contentious items indicates that FTSE 100 investors are exercising their own judgement rather than «outsourcing» decision-making.

The "Decision-Maker" Myth

The data makes clear that while proxy advisors help establish a reference point for voting expectations, they do not determine final outcomes. The substantial variation in alignment across “AGAINST” recommendations shows that investors ultimately rely on their own governance assessments rather than external instruction. Taken together with the broader factors outlined in ‘Interpreting Congruence & Possible Reasons for Voting Alignment’, the commonly held view of proxy advisors as the hidden decision-makers at FTSE 100 AGMs appears increasingly difficult to support.

From Ex-Post Observation to Ex-Ante Strategy

While ISS and Glass Lewis recommendations remain useful statistical indicators, their assessments are inherently retrospective and reactive. Securing favourable AGM outcomes requires a shift from monitoring proxy advisor outputs to proactively understanding investor-specific policies well before the publication of any reports. By aligning agenda items, governance practices, and strategic communications with the expectations of key shareholders, companies can mitigate risks long before AGM season. Ultimately, success is shaped not by last-minute adjustments but by a sustained, forward-looking engagement strategy tailored to the nuances of each investor’s guidelines.

Congruence & Divergence with ISS & Glass Lewis

Voting Congruence & Divergence with ISS & Glass Lewis

To better understand the congruences & divergences between voting recommendations from proxy advisors and observed investor voting behaviour, we analysed four categories for each of the both proxy advisors:

  1. ISS recommended FOR, Investor voted FOR
  2. ISS recommended FOR, Investor voted AGAINST
  3. ISS recommended AGAINST, Investor voted AGAINST
  4. ISS recommended AGAINST, Investor voted FOR
  5. Glass Lewis recommended FOR, Investor voted FOR
  6. Glass Lewis recommended FOR, Investor voted AGAINST
  7. Glass Lewis recommended AGAINST, Investor voted AGAINST
  8. Glass Lewis recommended AGAINST, Investor voted FOR
1

ISS FOR Voting FOR-Alignment

  • When ISS recommended FOR, 12 institutional investors voted FOR in 99% or more of these cases.
  • Three institutional investors have an alignment between 97.2% and 91.7%.
2

ISS AGAINST Voting AGAINST-Alignment

  • Two institutional investors have an alignment between 96% and 88.9%.
  • Three institutional investors have an alignment between 73.7% and 50%.
  • The remaining ten institutional investors have alignments between 44% and 19.1%.
3

Glass Lewis FOR Voting FOR-Alignment

  • When Glass Lewis recommended FOR, 10 institutional investors voted FOR in 99% or more of these cases.
  • The remaining five institutional investors have an alignment between 98.7% and 91.4%.
4

Glass Lewis AGAINST Voting AGAINST-Alignment

  • Only one of the 15 institutional investors have an alignment over 70% when Glass Lewis recommended AGAINST.
  • Two institutional investors have an alignment between 50% and 70%.
  • The remaining 12 investors have an alignment between 44.4% and 16.7%.
InvestorVoted ItemsProxy AdvisoryISS + Voting +ISS + Voting -ISS - Voting -ISS - Voting +GL + Voting +GL + Voting -GL - Voting -GL - Voting +
Amundi1798ISS & Glass Lewis91.7%8.3%44%56%91.4%8.6%33.3%66.6%
Black Rock 1827ISS & Glass Lewis99.2%0.8%36%64%99.1%0.9%38.9%61.1%
Capital Group 917ISS97.2%2.8%20%60%97.1%2.9%20%80%
Columbia Threadneedle 1852ISS99.9%0.1%23.8%76.2%99.8%0.2%17.7%82.3%
Dimensional Fund Advisors 1792ISS & Glass Lewis99.3%0.7%96%4%98.7%1.3%72.2%27.8%
Fidelity FMR 1430ISS & Glass Lewis99.1%0.9%22.7%77.3%99.2%0.8%37.5%62.5%
Geode Capital 1562ISS99.9%0.1%24%76%99.8%0.2%16.7%83.3%
Invesco Asset Management 1833ISS & Glass Lewis99.8%0.2%19.1%80.9%99.7%0.3%18.8%81.2%
JP Morgan Asset Management1852ISS & Glass Lewis99.9%0.1%24%76%99.8%0.2%16.7%83.3%
MFS Investment Management 1215ISS & Glass Lewis99.4%0.6%50%50%99%1%50%50%
Norges Bank 1682ISS99.8%0.2%25%75%99.6%0.4%16.7%83.3%
Northern Trust 1588ISS99.1%0.9%88.9%11.1%98.5%1.5%53.3%46.7%
State Street Investment 1852ISS95.6%4.4%52%48%95.4%4.6%44.4%55.6%
T. Rowe Price 1483ISS & Glass Lewis99.7%0.3%73.7%26.3%99.1%0.9%40%60%
Vanguard 1852ISS & Glass Lewis99.8%0.2%24%76%99.8%0.2%27.8%72.2%

«+» indicates a positive recommendation or vote (FOR).
«-» indicates a negative recommendation or vote (AGAINST).

Interpreting Congruence & Possible Reasons for Voting Alignment

Interpreting Congruence: Why High Alignment Is Not Proof of Causation

  • In a paper by Robert Matthews in 2000 titled“Storks Deliver Babies (p=0.008)”, the Stork-Baby Correlation was examined.
  • The examined data showed that a highly statistically significant correlation exists between stork populations & human birth rates across Europe.
  • As the author notes, this “shows that a highly statistically significant correlation exists between stork populations and human birth rates across Europe. While storks may not deliver babies, unthinking interpretation of correlation and p-values can certainly deliver unreliable conclusions.”

Possible Reasons for Voting Alignment with Proxy Advisory

Shared Best Practices: Both investors and proxy advisors frequently operate from the same global governance ‘playbooks.’ Frameworks established by organizations such as the ICGN, UN PRI, and the OECD, alongside national Corporate Governance Codes (such as the DCGK in Germany), create a standardized baseline for high-quality governance. Consequently, high alignment might reflect a shared adherence.

Routine Consensus: A certain portion of AGM agendas consist of «routine» or non-controversial items, such as dividend payments or the appointment of auditors. In these cases, there is a natural market-wide overlap in voting, which mathematically inflates alignment percentages.

Feedback Loops: ISS and Glass Lewis conduct comprehensive annual policy surveys and regular client consultations to ensure their benchmarks remain aligned. By incorporating this direct input into the guidelines, proxy advisors adopt a form of consensus views.

Non-Glass Lewis Clients: The high level of alignment observed among ISS-exclusive clients with Glass Lewis recommendations might indicate that proxy advisors are not necessarily standard-setters, but act as mirrors of an existing basic market consensus.

Methodology

  • Our study examines 15 of the largest international institutional investors, selected based on average investment size and strategic shareholder structures.
  • For the 2025 FTSE 100 Annual General Meeting (AGM) season, we analysed voting recommendations from leading proxy advisors ISS and Glass Lewis.
  • To ensure a consistent baseline for voting guidelines and investor expectations, we excluded companies without full proxy coverage -typically due to insufficient free floats.
  • Consequently, this report focuses on 85 FTSE 100 companies, cross-referencing their proxy recommendations against the actual voting records of our 15 selected investors.

成人视频 Team

At 成人视频, we support our EMEA-clients on each assignment with a dedicated global team that consists of:

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Vanguard Releases 2026 U.S. Voting Policies /es/vanguard-releases-2026-u-s-voting-policies/ Thu, 15 Jan 2026 11:29:06 +0000 /vanguard-releases-2026-u-s-voting-policies/

Vanguard Releases 2026 U.S. Voting Policies

ByShirley Westcott

Vanguard has published its updated U.S. and global proxy voting guidelines, which take effect in January 2026.

As announced last June, Vanguard has split into two separate investment advisors, Vanguard Capital Management and Vanguard Portfolio Management consisting of distinct investment management and stewardship teams that administer proxy voting for the firm’s internally managed funds¹.  For 2026, they are following identical policies for U.S. companies, though these may eventually diverge in future years.

The U.S. guidelines contain no substantive revisions.  Instead, the language throughout has been amended so that the policy may recommend a particular voting decision rather than stating that the funds will generally vote “for” or “against” a proposal.  Vanguard has also removed detailed factors on certain topics, such as director elections, that would prompt a favorable or negative vote, as discussed below.  This approach is likely the result of SEC guidance issued in early 2025 regarding Schedule 13D/G status.  Vanguard’s policy documents highlight the passive nature of its internally managed U.S. funds, which will not nominate directors, solicit or participate in the solicitation of proxies, or submit shareholder proposals at portfolio companies.

Board composition: Vanguard considers an appropriate mix of skills, experiences and perspectives when examining board composition.  It has removed references to directors’ personal characteristics, such as age, gender and/or race/ethnicity.

Board leadership: Consistent with its prior policy, votes will generally be recommended against shareholder proposals to separate the CEO and chair roles unless there are significant concerns regarding the independence or effectiveness of the board.  Vanguard has deleted from its policy specific factors that would sway it to vote in favor of the shareholder proposal, such as the lack of a robust lead director role, lack of board accessibility, low overall board independence, governance structural flaws, unresponsiveness to shareholder votes, unilateral actions that impair shareholder rights, or oversight failings, including those of a social or environmental nature.

Director capacity and commitments: Vanguard is maintaining its current overboarding policy whereby votes may be recommended against a public company executive who sits on more than two public company boards and other directors who serve on more than four public company boards.  Vanguard has deleted explicit factors that may lead to an exception, such as a public commitment that the director will be stepping down from any directorship(s) necessary to fall within these thresholds.

Director accountability: As in the past, votes may be recommended against directors who fail in their oversight role, fail to act on majority shareholder votes, or take unilateral action that meaningfully diminishes shareholder rights.  Vanguard has eliminated from its policy specific concerns that may spur negative votes, such as “zombie” directors on the board, egregious pay practices, excessive non-audit fees paid to the auditor, unilateral adoption of onerous advance notice or exclusive forum provisions, or failure to oversee material social or environmental risks.

Contested director elections: Vanguard has largely retained the criteria used in its case-by-case evaluation of board contests.  It has removed as a factor whether the board engaged in productive dialogue with the dissident.

Exclusive forum/exclusive jurisdiction: Vanguard will continue to give companies latitude in designating state courts in a company’s state of incorporation or principal place of business as the exclusive forum for adjudicating certain claims.  It has deleted its policy of generally supporting the designation of state courts in Delaware as the exclusive forum. It has also removed its policy of opposing governance committee members if a company unilaterally adopts a forum selection provision that meaningfully limits shareholders’ rights without a compelling rationale.

Hybrid/virtual meetings:  Vanguard has eliminated its specific criteria for supporting proposals to conduct a “virtual-only” shareholder meeting.  It expects such meetings to be designed so as not to curtail shareholder rights, such as shareholders’ ability to ask questions.

Citations

¹ See the Vanguard Portfolio Management Investment Stewardship (VPMIS) policy for U.S. portfolio companies at and its global and regional policies at .  See the Vanguard Capital Management Investment Stewardship (VCMIS) policy for U.S. companies at   and its global and regional policies at .

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BlackRock Publishes 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates /es/blackrock-publishes-2026-u-s-benchmark-policy-updates/ Wed, 24 Dec 2025 09:14:37 +0000 /?p=63033

BlackRock Publishes 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates

ByShirley Westcott

BlackRock has released its 2026 updates to the Blackrock Investment Stewardship (BIS) U.S. benchmark policies and engagement priorities which become effective in January 2026¹.

The policy revisions mainly consist of clarifications and changes to wording, particularly in view of the White House executive orders on diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) and the SEC’s Schedule 13D/G guidance, which were issued in the early part of 2025.  For example, throughout the document, BIS replaced “may vote against” directors with “may not support” directors.  It further noted in its section on shareholder proposals that it is subject to certain rules, regulations, agency guidance and contractual agreements that limit how it interacts with companies.  It explicitly stated that it does not nominate directors for board elections or submit shareholder resolutions to companies.

Other changes include the following:

Board composition:  BIS continues to downplay references to board gender and racial diversity.  Its revised policy states that it may not support members of the nominating/governance committee at an S&P 500 firm where the board is a sustained outlier compared to market practice in terms of having a variety of experiences, perspectives and skillsets.  According to a footnote, this also includes directors’ professional and demographic backgrounds.  BIS has eliminated its previous basis for determining outliers—namely, that 98% of S&P 500 firms had 30% or more diverse representation as of December 2024.

Executive compensation:  BIS added a discussion on executive perquisites, which states that it examines the rationale for certain perquisites, such as security, and whether their appropriateness is regularly evaluated by the compensation committee.

Material sustainability-related risks and opportunities: BIS has clarified that although it considers standardized disclosure of sustainability-related data useful, it does not mandate that companies follow any specific disclosure framework.

Climate and nature-related risk:  BIS has combined its discussion of climate and natural capital risks and indicated that, in both cases, it will convey concerns about board oversight through director election votes or support of a business-relevant shareholder proposal.

BIS has also deleted outdated references, including to the Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), which disbanded in 2023, and to earlier research by the BlackRock Investment Institute on the low-carbon transition.  It also removed its expectation that companies stress-test their business models under a range of climate-related scenarios, including the Paris Agreement goal of limiting global warming to well below 2⁰ C.

Companies’ impact on their workforce, supply chains, and communities:  BIS has emphasized that it does not direct a company’s policies or practices on stakeholder relationships, which are the responsibility of the board and management.  It may convey concerns regarding oversight of material risks related to stakeholders through its votes on director elections or support of a business-relevant shareholder proposal.

Human capital management:  BIS has removed its expectation that companies disclose their approach to DEI, as well as their workforce demographics based on EEO-1 Survey disclosures.

Corporate political activities:  BIS adjusted its criteria for supporting a political spending or lobbying disclosure proposal to situations where additional transparency would aid in understanding how the company manages material risks associated with its political activities.  Previously, BIS felt more disclosure was warranted if it was unclear how a company’s political activities supported its strategic policy priorities or if there appeared to be discrepancies.  BIS also deleted references to using third-party research, such as the CPA-Zicklin Index of Corporate Political Disclosure and Accountability, for industry peer comparisons.

Shareholder proposals:  BIS has emphasized its case-by-case approach to shareholder proposals, stating that it may support (rather than is likely to support) disclosure requests that aid in understanding how companies manage material risks that affect their long-term performance.  It will continue to reject shareholder proposals that are inconsistent with long-term financial value or that seek to micromanage companies.

BIS will no longer routinely explain to companies its rationale for supporting shareholder resolutions.  However, its updated policy describes some of the factors it considers when evaluating them:

  • Consistency between the specific request made in the proposal, the supporting documentation and the proponent’s other communications on the issue.
  • The costs and benefits to the company in complying with the request.
  • The company’s governance practices and disclosures relative to those of peers.
  • The legal effect of the proposal, such as whether it is precatory or binding or if it would be deemed illegal in a given jurisdiction.

BIS has removed its discussion on escalation efforts, including supporting a shareholder proposal or voting against directors, if a company has not shown sufficient urgency in addressing a material risk.

 

¹ See BlackRock’s 2026 U.S. benchmark proxy voting guidelines and engagement priorities at and .

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Glass Lewis Releases 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates /es/glass-lewis-releases-2026-u-s-benchmark-policy-updates/ Fri, 05 Dec 2025 16:58:35 +0000 /glass-lewis-releases-2026-u-s-benchmark-policy-updates/

Glass Lewis Releases 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates

ByShirley Westcott

Glass Lewis has published its 2026 U.S. benchmark policy updates, which will take effect for shareholder meetings on or after Jan. 1, 2026.1  The substantive changes pertain to mandatory arbitration provisions and Glass Lewis’s pay-for-performance (PFP) methodology, which is addressed in more detail in a separate document.2  Other sections of the guidelines have been clarified, including supermajority voting provisions, certificate and bylaw amendments that reduce shareholder rights, and company omissions of shareholder proposals.

Glass Lewis has also updated the language in the document to clarify that the guidelines contain the views of its benchmark policy, which reflects broad investor opinion and widely accepted governance principles.  Beginning in 2027, it will transition from a single house view to a suite of research perspectives to inform clients’ proxy voting decisions.3

Mandatory Arbitration Provisions

Glass Lewis has amended its benchmark policy to include its approach to mandatory arbitration provisions, which restrict shareholders’ legal recourse and limit the transparency and legal certainty that public court rulings provide.   In September 2025, the SEC issued a policy statement that facilitated companies’ ability to include these provisions in their governing documents, if consistent with state law, when contemplating an initial public offering (IPO).4

If a company’s governing documents include a mandatory arbitration provision or other potentially negative provision following completion of its IPO, spin-off or direct listing, Glass Lewis may recommend against the governance committee chair or the entire committee.  Glass Lewis will also oppose any bylaw or charter amendment seeking to adopt a mandatory arbitration provision without a compelling rationale, among other factors. 

PFP Evaluation

Glass Lewis has made significant changes to its proprietary PFP model, including replacing its historical A-F letter grade system with a scorecard-based approach to evaluating PFP alignment relative to Glass Lewis-selected peers over a five-year measurement period.  Final alignment scores, which range from 0 to 100, are determined by the weighted sum of up to six tests, each with their own concern rating (ranging from severe to negligible).  The tests include:

  • CEO granted pay vs. total shareholder return (TSR)
  • CEO granted pay vs. financial performance (revenue growth, return on equity, return on assets and sector-specific metrics)
  • CEO short-term incentive (STI) payouts (as a percentage of target) vs. TSR
  • Total named executive officer (NED) granted pay vs. financial performance
  • CEO compensation actually paid vs. TSR
  • Qualitative features (downward modifier)

This analysis informs Glass Lewis’s voting decisions on say-on-pay proposals.  Companies with an overall rating of “severe” or “high” concern are more likely to receive a negative recommendation.

 Shareholder Rights

Currently, Glass Lewis recommends against the chair of the governance committee, or the entire committee, if the board unilaterally amends the governing documents to reduce or remove important shareholder rights, or to otherwise impede the ability of shareholders to exercise such rights.  Glass Lewis has added the following to its list of board actions that would prompt a negative recommendation:

  • The adoption of provisions that limit shareholders’ ability to submit proxy proposals.
  • The adoption of provisions that limit shareholders’ ability to file derivative suits.
  • The adoption of a plurality, rather than a majority, voting standard in director elections.

The updates reflect recent revisions to the Texas Business Organizations Code (TBOC) which allow publicly listed companies domiciled in the state to impose higher ownership thresholds for shareholders to submit proposals than required under SEC Rule 14a-8.  In addition, certain states, such as Texas and Nevada, have adopted laws permitting companies to impose ownership thresholds for shareholders to initiate derivative actions.

 Amendments to the Certificate of Incorporation and/or Bylaws

Glass Lewis has consolidated its approach to amendments to the certificate and/or bylaws into a single section of the policy document.  In its case-by-case evaluation, Glass Lewis will generally support amendments proposed by management that are unlikely to have a material negative impact on shareholders’ interests, such as technical amendments.  It will continue to discourage the practice of bundling amendments into a single proposal, which could lead to an adverse recommendation if any of the amendments are of significant concern.

Supermajority Voting

Glass Lewis is codifying a case-by-case approach to management proposals to repeal supermajority voting provisions to take into account situations where the company has a large or controlling shareholder and a supermajority requirement may protect the interests of minority shareholders.   In such cases, Glass Lewis will oppose the resolution.  Its current policy favors a simple majority vote to approve all matters presented to shareholders.

Excluded Shareholder Proposals

Glass Lewis adheres to the view that shareholders should be afforded the opportunity to vote on all matters of material importance.   Currently, it makes note of instances where a company has successfully petitioned the SEC to exclude a shareholder proposal through the no-action process.  If it believes that the exclusion is detrimental to shareholders, it may recommend against the governance committee members.

Glass Lewis has removed this guideline in view of the SEC’s mid-November announcement that, due to resource constraints following the recent government shutdown, it will not be responding to most no-action requests through Sep. 30, 2026.  Glass Lewis will monitor the SEC’s ongoing changes to the shareholder proposal process and may update its policy on omissions prior to or during the 2026 proxy season.

Citations

1 Glass Lewis’s 2026 U.S. benchmark policies and summary of changes may be downloaded at .

2 See the U.S. & Canada PFP Methodology Overview at .

3 See Glass Lewis’s press release at .

4 See the SEC’s press release on mandatory arbitration at .

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ISS Releases 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates /es/iss-releases-2026-u-s-benchmark-policy-updates/ Tue, 02 Dec 2025 17:21:38 +0000 /?p=62854

ISS Releases 2026 U.S. Benchmark Policy Updates

ByShirley Westcott

Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) has published its U.S. benchmark policy updates for the upcoming proxy season, which will take effect for shareholder meetings on or after Feb. 1, 20261. As detailed below, the revisions mirror the changes ISS proposed in October and are concentrated around the following topics: multi-class capital structures, executive and non-employee (NED) compensation, and environmental and social (E&S) shareholder proposals. Notably, ISS is adopting a more flexible approach to certain issues, including giving companies more latitude in their choice of equity pay awards and their responsiveness to say-on-pay (SOP) votes, as well as moving away from its default position of supporting specific categories of E&S resolutions.

ISS has additionally made minor edits to the policy document, including eliminating information that is duplicated in its U.S. Peer Group, U.S. Executive Compensation Policies and U.S. Equity Plans FAQs, which will be updated in mid-December.

Problematic Capital Structure/Unequal Voting Rights

ISS is eliminating inconsistencies in its treatment of capital structures with unequal voting rights by considering them problematic regardless of whether superior voting shares are classified as “common” or “preferred.”  Preferred shares that only have voting rights with respect to items that affect their class of holders are not considered problematic.

ISS will oppose management proposals to create a new class of preferred stock with voting rights superior to the common stock with the following exceptions:

  • Convertible preferred shares that vote on an “as converted” basis; or
  • The enhanced voting rights of the preferred shares are limited in duration and applicability and are voted in a way that mirrors the votes of the common shares.

The same exceptions will apply to ISS’s policy of recommending against directors, committee members or the full board (other than new nominees) at companies that maintain multi-class capital structures with unequal voting rights.

 Long-Term Alignment in Pay-for-Performance (PFP) Evaluation

ISS is extending the time horizon of its U.S. PFP quantitative screens (Relative Degree of Alignment and Financial Performance Assessment) from three years to five years to better reflect how investors assess a company’s long-term performance when evaluating CEO compensation relative to peers.

ISS’s assessment of pay quantum (Multiple of Median test) will now incorporate both one-year and three-year views of CEO pay relative to peers to smooth out short- to mid-term fluctuations, unusual one-time events, or external factors.

 Time-Based Equity Awards with Long-Term Time Horizon

ISS is taking a more flexible approach in evaluating the equity pay mix in its PFP qualitative analyses whereby time-based equity awards with extended time horizons will be viewed positively.

Although ISS did not provide further details, a plurality of investor respondents to its 2025 policy survey considered time-based awards with three-year vesting plus a two-year post-vesting retention requirement to be sufficiently long-term to dispense with performance requirements for part or all of executives’ long-term incentive awards.

Company Responsiveness to SOP Votes

ISS will be more flexible towards company responsiveness to a low (less than 70%) SOP vote in the prior year in cases where shareholder feedback is difficult to obtain because of recent SEC guidance regarding Schedule 13G (passive) versus Schedule 13D (active) filing status for institutional investors.  If a company discloses that it attempted but failed to elicit sufficient feedback from its investors, ISS will assess the company’s actions taken in response to the vote and how they are beneficial to shareholders when recommending on the reelection of compensation committee members.

ISS has also clarified the factors it considers in the case of low SOP support related to an unusual situation, such as a proxy contest, merger or bankruptcy.  In addition to the disclosure of engagement efforts and relevant compensation actions, ISS will take into account significant board turnover.

High NED Pay

ISS is expanding its policy on high NED compensation, allowing for adverse recommendations against the responsible board committee in the first year of occurrence of highly problematic pay or when a pattern emerges across non-consecutive years.  Currently, negative recommendations are only triggered after two or more consecutive years of excessive NED pay absent a compelling rationale or other mitigating factors.

Problematic NED pay practices include large pay magnitude; performance awards, retirement benefits and excessive perquisites; and inadequate disclosure of the rationale for unusual payments.  NED pay practices that are only marginally problematic in the absence of other escalatory factors or multi-year patterns will continue to receive warnings only.

Equity Plan Scorecard (EPSC) Enhancements

ISS is adding a new scoring factor under the Plan Features pillar of its EPSC that will assess whether equity plans that include NED participation disclose cash-denominated award limits, which is considered best practice.  For 2026, the NED individual award limit factor will only apply to S&P 500 and Russell 3000 ESPC models.

ISS is also introducing a new overriding negative factor where an equity plan proposal will receive a negative recommendation if it lacks sufficient positive features under the Plan Features pillar, despite an overall passing score.  For 2026, this will apply to S&P 500, Russell 3000, and non-Russell 3000 EPSC models.

E&S Shareholder Proposals

ISS is implementing a fully case-by-case approach to shareholder proposals on diversity, political contributions, human rights and climate change/greenhouse gas emissions to reflect shifting investor sentiment, declining support for such proposals, regulatory changes and evolving company practices.  Currently, ISS generally recommends in favor of such proposals, though its level of support has been falling in recent years.2

Globally, ISS will continue to apply a consistent case-by-case framework to its evaluation of E&S proposals.  It is adding a new factor on whether the proposal addresses substantive matters that impact shareholders’ interests, including shareholder rights.

Citations

1 See ISS’s executive summary and redlined changes to its U.S. benchmark policies at   and .

2 See 成人视频’ 2025 U.S. Proxy Season Review at /2025-u-s-proxy-season-review/.

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European Proxy Season 2025 Review /es/european-proxy-season-2025-review/ Fri, 10 Oct 2025 10:33:16 +0000 /european-proxy-season-2025-review/

European Proxy Season 2025 Review

ByThe Great Calibration

Foreword

For the past three years, 成人视频 has had the privilege of guiding listed companies across EMEA in preparing for their Annual General Meetings.

Though relatively new to the market, we have forged an alliance of seasoned professionals, market specialists, and emerging talent—united by a shared commitment to delivering a truly distinguished client experience.

As one client graciously observed: “You anticipate questions our board, legal, or colleagues have not yet considered.”

It is precisely this blend of insight, creativity, and meticulous attention that defines our approach to governance and shareholder engagement.

This Season Review reflects the collective expertise of our team, drawing on our work across the United Kingdom, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and Spain. It provides a considered overview of the 2025 Shareholder Meeting Season -the triumphs, the challenges, and the notable trends- and offers our perspective on the forthcoming 2026 season.

Particular attention is given to ESG and Sustainability reporting across the region. While investors have streamlined their guidelines in response to the evolving political landscape, they are exercising heightened scrutiny regarding the quality and integrity of disclosures.

Board composition, qualifications, and independence continue to be the primary drivers of shareholder dissent. However, the rationale for opposition is evolving, with increased focus on committee effectiveness, responses to previous shareholder concerns, and preparedness for both short- and long-term strategic imperatives.

Remuneration matters remain closely examined, with the United Kingdom, in particular anticipating a new wave of policies for shareholder consideration.

We hope you enjoy this edition, and we invite you to remain engaged with our team’s weekly updates via our dedicated news channel.

Tom & Angelika

Angelika Horstmeier

Senior Managing Director

EMEA & LatAm

View profile

Executive Summary

2025 AGM Season Review

Across Europe, the 2025 proxy season showed familiar patterns of combined high routine support with sharper dissent concentrated in executive pay and selected director elections. This was uncovered through the AGM landscape, where voting behavior revealed much, including familiar patterns and hidden gems.

2025 Avg. Support Levels – Per Category

Germany. Outcomes diverged by the different indices. DAX issuers continued to clear most items comfortably, but MDAX/SDAX companies experienced materially higher “Against” rates and lower average support on remuneration reports and new/renewed policies. Virtual-AGM mandates became a live fault line at a few large names, underlining how meeting format decisions can influence investor sentiment.

United Kingdom. Across all markets, average support was highest in 3 out of the 4 focal items. However, outliers on remuneration reports and policies highlighted investor intolerance for windfalls, uneven disclosure and weak performance alignment.

Austria. Headline voting remained calm. Discharge and routine items continued to pass with strong margins, yet pay items drew comparatively elevated scrutiny. The pattern suggests investors want tighter calibration (metric choice, target setting, caps, and a clearer account of realizable pay) even where overall support remains comfortable.

Switzerland. Routine consensus remained strong, while investor coalitions kept pay fairness, independence, and ESG disclosure in focus.

Spain. Approvals were high across especially for director elections. There were pockets of pressure on pay and growing attention to board parity and AI oversight.

European Trends

Pay Calibration in Focus

Across markets, remuneration remains the most contentious and scrutinized topic. Voting behavior reveals that investors are converged on a single expectation: show the business problem the plan solves, the rationale for chosen metrics, the benchmarks (caps, malus/clawback), and the realizable pay under credible scenarios. Mid-cap German and Austrian issuers are particularly exposed where the rationale is vague or structures permit excessive or unwarranted payouts. UK and Swiss investors consistently demand for clearer links between outcomes and performance, with limited patience for retrospective rationales or mid-cycle resets.

Rise of Beneficiary Voting Among Large Managers

A structural shift is the scaling of beneficiary voting choice, which redistributes a slice of voting power away from central stewardship teams to end-investors. BlackRock were key in putting this trend to the mainstream when they launched the BlackRock Voting Choice in 2022, where clients can default to BlackRock or select third-party policy sets. As of June 30, 2025, they report that clients representing about $784bn in AUM were actively exercising policy choices. State Street Global Advisors expanded Proxy Voting Choice in 2025 (including European SICAVs), offering multiple third-party policy menus and reporting strong take-up. Vanguard materially widened Investor Choice in May–September 2025 to 12 index funds, bringing eligible assets to nearly $1 trillion and reach to 10 million investors, with participation more than doubling year-on-year.

For European issuers, the short-term goal is greater dispersion around mean outcomes, particularly on remuneration and E&S-linked items, as subsets of beneficiaries adopt different policies. Despite the levels of opt-in rates, even smaller level participation on very large AUM can tilt close votes. Issuers should therefore complement traditional stewardship engagement with segments thoroughly tailored to addressing common beneficiary policy issues.

Evidence-based Stewardship and Controls

The UK’s outcomes-oriented stewardship reporting and the incoming internal-controls declaration (for FYs starting 1 January 2026) are already shaping investor expectations across Europe. Boards should assume their assertions will be tested against audit, risk, and internal-control evidence packs, with an emphasis on scope, testing methodology and third-party assurance. Even outside the UK, this standard is becoming the practical benchmark for credibility.

Meeting Format is now Strategic

German votes on virtual-AGM mandates showed that format choices carry reputational and voting risk. Issuers with complex or sensitive items (new pay policies, contested elections, significant capital asks) may benefit from physical or hybrid formats to demonstrate openness to challenge and to manage perception risk.

The ESG Shift: From Aspiration to Execution

Across markets, investor focus moved from broad ESG narratives to assurance-ready, decision-useful disclosure. CSRD/ESRS has effectively turned sustainability reporting into a controls exercise by enforcing boards to evidence data lineage, audit trails, and third-party assurance—especially for climate metrics, supply-chain emissions, and social KPIs. Where disclosure quality is lacking or methodologies aren’t reproducible, scrutiny now travels through governance frameworks (committee chair and board votes) rather than E&S proposals. Support for environmental and social resolutions declined, but stewardship intensity rose via targeted engagement, with large managers rewarding issuers that present transition plans and credible interim milestones.

Germany
DAX, MDAX & SDAX

AGM Format Takes Center Stage

Introduction

Germany is one of the few jurisdictions worldwide where a two-tier board is the rule where a non-executive Supervisory Board (SB) controls the separate executive Management Board. The shareholders only elect the Supervisory Board members, while the Management Board (MB) members, for example the CEO, is appointed by the Supervisory Board.

Although five-year terms are possible, many institutional investors do not support terms exceeding four years. Therefore, the primary way to express criticism during such a multi-year term is to vote against the SB’s discharge. Similarly for the MB, as they are anyway not elected but appointed.

The most followed topic in this proxy season was around the virtual AGM. Due to proxy advisory guidelines and investor pressure, the first authorization two years ago were mostly limited to 2 years.

This season, also connected to a presumed tightening of the relative ISS guidelines, there was a certain uncertainty among companies. As these authorizations for holding virtual AGMs are bylaw-connected votes, different minimum thresholds are applicable. Between the traditional German legal form of the Aktiengesellschaft (Public Limited Company) and the European legal form of the Societas Europaea, such thresholds could be at 50% support, 2/3 or 75%.

Partially, these thresholds can also vary depending on specific deviating rules inside the bylaws. Considering the most important companies inside the DAX family, only two companies failed to achieve the necessary support.

As the vast majority of companies asked again for an authorization for the next two years, this topic will come back with the 2027 AGM season, while companies need to figure out what to do in 2026.

Key AGM Results: DAX

  • Non-executive (Supervisory Board) elections analysis shows 36% female candidates vs. 64% male (31 vs. 56).
  • 3 of the 36 Remuneration Reports (8%) received a negative ISS recommendation.
  • 6 of the 19 Remuneration Policies (32%) received a negative ISS recommendation.

AGM Season Insights: DAX

In 2024 and in 2025, there was a ratio of female and male candidates of roughly 1/3 to 2/3. However, it must be noted that these numbers are somewhat distorted, as the overwhelming number of elected directors have multi-year, usually four-year terms.

We talk about candidates for a board seat, but there is a possibility that the same person is proposed by more than one company. Often, there is no attention for such cases, as there is for the usually applied multi-year terms.

In 2025, we found two cases where the same person stood for nomination at multiple supervisory board mandates:

  • Rachel Empey at BMW and at Deutsche Telekom with support levels reaching 98.5% and 99.8% respectively;
  • Sigmar Gabriel at Deutsche Bank, Rheinmetall & Siemens Energy with support levels reaching 95.6% and 99.3% respectively;

The remuneration topic is divided into two different findings.

The Remuneration Reports stays low in ISS-against ratios, with only 8% in 2025 of 36 Reports, in line with 2024 where ISS was against 9% out of 35 different Reports.

Similarly, the support rates of around 90% in both years and the lowest approval at 67.4% in 2025 against 58.3% in 2024.

The Remuneration Policies, however, present a different picture. 32% of the 19 Systems received a negative ISS-recommendation, whilst the average support was at 89% and the lowest support at 56.7%. Interestingly, in 2024 only 17% of the 12 Policies received a negative recommendation, yet the average support level was nearly identical to 2025, at 89%. The lowest support in 2024 was even less at 40.4%.

Within the DAX, the only company not achieving the necessary support for the renewal of their virtual AGM authorization was Siemens. It was not the company with the lowest support level in the DAX. This means that Siemens is mandated to hold a physical AGM in 2026 due to the expired authorization in their bylaws.

Key AGM Results: MDAX

  • Non-executive (Supervisory Board) elections analysis shows 33% female candidates vs. 67% male (27 vs. 56).
  • 20 of the 46 Remuneration Reports (44%) received a negative ISS recommendation.
  • 10 of the 24 Remuneration Policies (42%) received a negative ISS recommendation.

AGM Season Insights: MDAX

In 2024 and in 2025, there was a ratio of female and male candidates of roughly 1/3 to 2/3. But it must be considered that these numbers are somewhat distorted, as the overwhelming number of elected directors have multi-year, usually four-year terms.

We talk about candidates for a board seat, but it can happen that the same person is proposed by more than only one company. Often, there is no attention for such cases, as for the usually applied multi-year terms.

In 2025, we found one case where the same person ran for more than one supervisory board mandate:

  • Stephan Sturm ran for a seat at Hugo Boss and at Knorr Bremse, with support levels between 86.9% and 98.8%.

The remuneration topic, however, raises several warning signs.

Since our first in-depth analysis in 2024, the quota of negative ISS recommendations is at high levels. In 2024, ISS was against 36% of the Remuneration Reports, and this year against 44%. The impact on the voting results is visible. While one Report only achieved 38.9%, the average support is only at 84.5%. This indicates a high degree of misalignment with ISS expectations, which partially overlap with most of the institutional (free float) investors.

Similarly for the Remuneration Policies with 43% negative ISS recommendations in 2024 and 42% in 2025. And with an average support of only 84% and the lowest support of a System at 47.8%, the perception of a certain misalignment continues also here, which is partially comprehensible because up to a certain degree, the Remuneration Report and the Remuneration System depend on each other.

Inside the MDAX, the only company not achieving the necessary support for the renewal of their virtual AGM authorization was TUI. Interestingly, it was not the company with the lowest support level inside the DAX. This means that TUI is mandated to hold a physical AGM in 2026 due to the expired authorization in their bylaws.

Key AGM Results: SDAX

  • Non-executive (Supervisory Board) elections analysis shows 28% female candidates vs. 72% male (37 vs. 94).
  • 34 of the 65 Remuneration Reports (52%) receive a negative ISS recommendation.
  • 16 of the 31 Remuneration Policies (52%) receive a negative ISS recommendation.

AGM Season Insights: SDAX

From 2024 to 2025, the ratio of female to male candidates dropped from roughly 1:2 to 1:3. But it must be considered that these numbers are somewhat distorted, as the overwhelming number of elected directors have multi-year, usually four-year terms.

We talk about candidates for a board seat, but it can happen that the same person is proposed by more than only one company. Often, there is no attention for such cases, as for the usually applied multi-year terms.

In 2025, we found no cases of individuals running for multiple supervisory board mandates in the SDAX, unlike in the DAX and MDAX.

The remuneration topic instead raises several warning signs.

Since our first in-depth analysis in 2024, the quota of negative ISS recommendations is at high levels. In 2024, ISS was against 59% of the Remuneration Reports, and this year against 52%. The impact on the voting results is visible. While one Report only achieved 49.6%, the average support is only at 87.53%. It shows a high degree of misalignment with ISS expectations, which at least partially overlap with most of the institutional (free float) investors.

Similarly for the Remuneration Policies with 55% negative ISS recommendations in 2024 and 52% in 2025. And with an average support of only 87.4% and the lowest support of a System at 48.81, the perception of a certain misalignment continues also here, which is partially comprehensible because up to a certain degree, the Remuneration Report and the Remuneration System depend on each other.

Inside the SDAX, all company achieved the necessary support for the renewal of their virtual AGM authorization.

Interestingly, the SDAX contains several particularities relative to the DAX and MDAX.

  • Companies founded under the European Societas Europaea (“SE”) framework can opt for a one-tier board system. With Patrizia and GFT Technology, the SDAX contains companies with such a one-tier board system. At Patrizia this also meant that the CEO was elected, too.
  • Fielmann elected all eight supervisory board candidates by slate, thus with a single voted agenda item.
  • Kontron is an Austrian company. While we usually exclude non-domestic incorporated companies, in their case we opted to include it due to the similarity in legal & corporate governance structures, as well as investor and proxy advisor expectations.

Selection of Available Investor Rationale for Negative Voting Decisions
DAX, MDAX & SDAX

Non-Executive (SB) Election

  • A vote AGAINST the director nominee is warranted for lack of diversity on the board.
  • The board is not majority independent.
  • A vote AGAINST the non-independent board chair.
  • We note that 40% of the board’s posts are not filled by underrepresented gender.
  • The nominee is a new non-independent director and the level of gender diversity on the board is less than 33%.

Non-Executive Board (SB) Discharges

  • The board’s Audit committee should comprise directors who are unquestionably independent and have appropriate qualifications, experience, skills and capacity to effectively contribute to the committee’s work.
  • Poor governance practice.
  • A vote against is warranted due to corporate governance concerns.

Executive Board (MB) Discharges

  • Ongoing investigations
  • We do not believe the  ratification of management acts is in the best interest of shareholders.
  • The discharge resolutions are currently bundled, which does not allow shareholders to target individuals

Remuneration

  • Pension contributions would remain at 50% of base salaries, which is considered very high in the context of broader European practices.
  • The vesting curve provides for payouts for up to 50%-points underperformance, which is not considered to be rigorous.
  • The increased level of flexibility results in less transparency on the pay composition setting and according payouts.
  • Short-term incentive opportunity outweighs long-term incentive opportunity.
  • A vote AGAINST is warranted because awards are permitted to vest for below median relative performance.

2026 Season Outlook:
DAX, MDAX, & SDAX

Every proxy season is heavily influenced by changes to proxy advisory and institutional investors guidelines.

Considering the recent ISS survey and the covered topics there, changes in their guidelines could include for example stricter rules about overboarding thresholds.

While some companies have a certain degree of protection against free float negative votes due to their ownership structure, some others have less.

Institutional investors will continue to push for an alignment with best practice, their own or their proxy advisors’ guidelines.

While the discharge proposal votes remain a topic not worthy of concerning discussions, both the remuneration and the supervisory board elections show very high numbers in terms of negative ISS recommendations and mixed voting results.

Recurring yearly dissent by investors and proxy advisors makes it necessary to analyze them and to react accordingly, taking the negative feedback into account. Voting results below 80%, and particularly below 75%, necessitate further action if there are to be no further problems.

Another interesting point will be the usage of the virtual AGM format. Depending on the shareholder structure and the received dissent, it is not fully clear how (dissent) investors will react if a company will hold its AGM again in the virtual format.

While this is a relatively new topic in the market, coming up only through Covid pandemic, a close analysis of the situation in this year may help companies to make a fact-based decision about the future usage.

One option that is currently discussed by several of our clients is for example an annual alternation of physical and virtual AGMs. Others instead are considering to use the physical AGM only when important agenda items are to be voted.

Such may for example include (re-)elections of key supervisory board members, such as the Chair, or new remuneration systems. Your consultant should be able to provide you advisory also in this space.

United Kingdom
FTSE 100

Evidence Over Assertion

Introduction

The UK remains a high-standards, shareholder-rights market, anchored by the Corporate Governance Code, the Investment Association’s Public Register discipline at the 20% dissent threshold, and an outcomes-oriented stewardship regime that continues to shape how investors vote and how boards respond.

The 2025 UK proxy season was stable overall, despite moments of volatility. Most routine items sailed through with very high support, yet a visible minority of meetings saw targeted push-back especially on remuneration and a handful of high-profile board elections.

Investors directed their attention on pay design and disclosure, on the accountability of the chair and key committee leads, and on the credibility of internal control narratives ahead of the new controls declaration that applies to financial years beginning 1 January 2026.

Key AGM Results

  • Director elections marginally improved. There were notable disparities between male and female candidates.
  • Average support for remuneration report approval dropped by 1.13%-points between 2024 to 2025, indicative of a small increase in shareholder scrutiny of retrospective pay practice.
  • Remuneration policy approval, support improved modestly by 0.73%-points between 2024 to 2025, suggesting cautious shareholder approval of forward-looking pay frameworks

AGM Season Insights

Executive Remuneration Debate

Executive pay debate re-ignites. FTSE 100 CEO pay hit a record median £4.6m, with more boards paying £10m+ at the top end. This sharpened investor attention on quantum, calibration of LTIs, and fairness narratives, even where vote outcomes remained above 90%.

With record CEO pay levels in public view, disciplined communication around fairness and realizable pay will be critical, especially for companies seeking to increase pay quantum or retention awards.

The financial services, specifically the banking sector, went through an adjustment to incentive top talents following the removal of the bonus cap, testing investor patience where increases in variable opportunity were not matched by risk, deferral and claw-back narratives.

BP and Board Accountability

Board accountability was salient topic this year and was represented conspicuously by BP, where investors channeled their concerns about the pace and presentation of strategic shifts through the chair’s re-election. That vote was about more than climate policy as it signaled that for many holders, the director ballot has become the preferred escalation route when they perceive a gap between strategy, delivery and dialogue.

Provision 29 and Tighter Controls

One of the most significant forms of regulatory update comes in the form of a change in reporting and control, which has shifted from boilerplate to board-room due to the incoming internal-controls declaration, Provision 29. Boards should be preparing detailed frameworks in advance (scope, design, testing, assurance options).

UK 2026

Stewardship reporting intensifies. Once the UK Stewardship Code 2026 is in effect, signatories move to a two-part regime (periodic policy/context + annual activities/outcomes), raising the bar on voting rationale and engagement transparency, pressure that will flow through to issuer dialogues.

With UK investors expected to produce more outcomes-focused Stewardship reports, can we expect clearer rationales for “Against” and more consistent follow-through on engagement asks? This would improve the feedback loop ahead of 2026 AGMs.

2026 Season Outlook

The next season will be shaped by both new rules and by how boards apply existing expectations with discipline. Pay policy renewals will return in a heated public climate, with the number of issuers submitting theirs for shareholder approval expected to peak. Boards seeking to raise opportunities or adapt structures will need to showcase shareholder interests to business goals first and show, with numbers, how the chosen design solves it. Why the metrics, why the calibration, what the benchmarks are, and what realizable pay looks like across different scenarios.

Events from this year signify that there will be heightened focus from investors on chair and committee accountability. Where strategic shifts are underway, the chair’s role in the matter will be scrutinized and may need to be as viewed as importantly as the equity story. For years we have seen a shift in the standards held by Remuneration and audit committee chairs.

The IA’s Public Register continues to anchor that discipline; any vote breaching the 20% threshold should be met with a timely explanation, targeted outreach, and a report back before the next AGM that details the changes made. Resolutions appearing on this list tend to leave a blemish that the issuer are encouraged to address to mitigate shareholder concerns.

Finally, controls readiness is set to become a voting issue, not just a disclosure line. By the time annual reports land in early 2026, investors will expect to see a board-level assessment that is scoped, tested and assured. Issuers are advised from early on to make their programs visible by mapping risks to controls, documenting evidence, and aligning internal audit and external assurance.

Austria
ATX 20

Remuneration Dissent in Focus

Introduction

In Austria, a two-tier board is the rule where a non-executive Supervisory Board controls the separate executive Management Board. The shareholders only elect the Supervisory Board members, while the Management Board members appointed.

While multi-year terms are possible, many institutional investors do not support terms of over four years. Not being able to express any criticism or even getting rid of a Supervisory Board member more directly, the (negative) discharge voting is the only way to express criticism.

Key AGM Results

  • •Remuneration topics stay at high levels of negative ISS recommendations (50% & 60%). Lowest support at 66.6%. In 2024, similar negative ISS levels occur.
  • Not much different the situation at Non-Executive (SB) elections. Nearly half of the candidates received a negative ISS recommendation. Lowest support at 54.3%.
  • Both discharge, for Non-Executive (SB) and Executive (MB), without any negative ISS recommendation. Lowest support at 91.3%.

AGM Season Insights

In 2024, there was nearly a parity between male and female non-executive (SB) candidates. But it must be considered that these numbers are somewhat distorted, as the overwhelming number of elected directors have multi-year terms. Therefore, this topic must be seen with a wider time horizon. Even though in 2025 only 23% of the candidates were female and 77% male, in 2024 it was close to parity with 48% vs. 52%.

With such a two-year horizon of 2024 and 2025, the quota of male candidates is at 63%. Therefore, the two-year female quota is at 37%, which is far from parity, but well in line with the legal framework and national corporate governance code, asking of 30% minimum participation of each gender.

We talk about candidates for a board seat, but it can happen that the same person is proposed by more than only one company. Often, there is no attention for such cases, as for the usually applied multi-year terms.

In 2025, we found two cases where the same male individual ran for two different supervisory board seats. In the first case, the candidate received a negative ISS recommendation, while in the second, he was supported by ISS.

The remuneration topic instead raises several warning signs.

Since our first in-depth analysis in 2024, the quota of negative ISS recommendations is at high levels. In 2024, ISS was against 65% of the Remuneration Reports, and this year still against 60%. The impact on the voting results seems limited. While one Report only achieved 66.6%, the average support is still at 90.3%. It nevertheless shows a high degree of misalignment with ISS expectations, which at least partially overlap with most of the institutional (free float) investors.

Similarly for the Remuneration Systems. with 56% negative ISS recommendations in 2024 and still 50% in 2025. And with an average support of only 87.9% and the lowest support of a System at 69.3%, the perception of a certain misalignment continues also here, which is partially comprehensible because up to a certain degree, the Remuneration Report and the Remuneration System depend on each other.

What instead is not a topic in Austria is the discharge voting. With no negative ISS or Glass Lewis recommendations in the past two years, and average support levels of between 94.5% and 99.7% and the lowest support at 91%, no important dissent occurs.

Publicly available negative voting rationale from institutional investors provide a certain inside into some of the most important reasons for negative investor voting in the ATX.

Non-Executive (SB) Election

  • The nominee is non-independent, and the board is not sufficiently independent.
  • The board should have an appropriate balance of competencies and backgrounds.
  • A voting against the current nomination committee chair is also warranted as a signal of concern to the board because the board is insufficiently gender diverse
  • The nominee has attended fewer than 75% of expected meetings in the year under review without a satisfactory explanation.
  • The nominee holds an excessive number of mandates at listed companies.

Remuneration

  • Remuneration paid to management is not in line with performance, disproportionate, or incommensurate in relation to that of comparable businesses.
  • Key performance indicators or parameters that influence variable compensation can be retrospectively adjusted.
  • Structure of the compensation scheme does not comply with internationally recognized best practice.
  • The management board’s pay package remains substantially above what peers are paying. We emphasize that this has been a concern for a number of years, and the company has still failed to adequately address these concerns.
  • A vote against has been applied because awards are permitted to vest for below median relative performance which therefore fails the pay for performance hurdle.
  • Under the LTI, discretionary adjustments were made without a compelling explanation as to how far values were adjusted or why they were considered reflective of actual performance.

2026 Season Outlook

Every proxy season is highly influenced by proxy advisory and institutional investors guideline changes.

Considering the recent ISS survey and the covered topics there, changes in their guidelines could include for example stricter rules about overboarding thresholds.

While some companies occur with a certain degree of protection against free float negative votes due to their ownership structure, some others have less.

Institutional investors will continue to push for an alignment with best practice, their own or their proxy advisors’ guidelines.

While the discharge proposal votes remain a topic of not worthy of concerning discussions, both the remuneration and the supervisory board elections show very high numbers in terms of negative ISS recommendations and mixed voting results.

Recurring yearly dissent by investors and proxy advisors makes it necessary to analyze them and to react accordingly, taking the negative feedback into account. Voting results less than 80%, particularly below 75%, necessitates further action if there are to be no further problems.

Switzerland
SMI & SMIM

Scrutiny on Pay and ESG

Introduction

Switzerland maintains a distinctive corporate governance framework that blends Anglo-American and Continental European elements. Despite not being subject to the EU’s Shareholder Rights Directive II (SRD II), many Swiss companies voluntarily align with international best practices. This proactive approach has contributed to strong institutional investor support across AGMs.

Key AGM Results

The 2025 proxy season was characteristically high-consensus on routine items, with Audit and Capital proposals clearing the bar at (99% average support).

  • The widest dispersion in remuneration and in a handful of board elections at complex or controlled issuers.
  • In 2025, average support for the approval of the remuneration report grew by 2.68% compared to 2024. All items received above 50% support in 2025.

AGM Season Insights

Ethos Foundation activity in Switzerland generally serves as an indicator towards interesting governance related events happening in the market. During the 2025 proxy season, they were actively involved in several high-profile AGMs, consistently challenging companies on executive remuneration, governance structure, and sustainability disclosure.

At UBS, Ethos opposed the executive pay plan, a new share buyback program, and the sustainability report, citing poor climate transparency and overly leveraged variable pay. At Novartis, they rejected all remuneration items, criticizing the CHF 95 million executive package for 2026 amid a sharp rise in CEO pay. Holcim drew similar scrutiny, with Ethos opposing the chairman’s CHF 48 million pay over, 600 times the national average, and calling for greater role separation. Meanwhile, Nestlé faced opposition on discharge and sustainability votes after a water-labelling scandal, and through EEP International, Ethos mobilized 122 institutional investors to push asset managers toward ESG-aligned voting.

Across these engagements, clear patterns emerge. Ethos has adopted a firm stance against excessive, opaque, and highly variable executive pay, particularly where it risks misalignment with long-term performance. Their critiques also extend to board composition, especially the combining of CEO and chair roles, and to governance practices that appear to prioritize controlling shareholders or insiders at the expense of broader accountability. In matters of sustainability, Ethos continues to insist on transparency, third-party verification, and climate action that moves beyond box-ticking.

These interventions reflect a shift in Swiss stewardship culture. Ethos is not only holding companies accountable on a case-by-case basis but also shaping broader norms through coordinated investor action. Their strategy signals rising expectations for Swiss issuers to meet higher standards on pay fairness, governance independence, and , backed by credible disclosure and consistent shareholder dialogue.

2026 Season Outlook

Pressure Points

Expect continued pressure on quantum and the leverage of variable pay—especially where disclosure doesn’t allow investors to assess realizable outcomes. Scenario charts and clear cap mechanisms will be key.  In relation to director elections, we expect focus on board independence & discharge to intensify. Where ownership is concentrated, investors will keep using director elections (and the discharge item) to press for refresh, independence on key committees and demonstrable responsiveness.

Issuers should prioritize: for any item that draws notable opposition, provide a public, time-bound follow-up plan and report on outcomes before the next AGM.

Conclusion

Switzerland continues to post exceptionally high routine support but pay and board independence remain the pressure valves. With CEO pay trends back in the headlines, 2026 will reward issuers that prove calibration (not just state it): clearer pay design and disclosure, credible independence and refresh, and sustainability reports that stand up to binding scrutiny.

Spain
IBEX 35

Succession and AI Oversight

Introduction

Spain’s 2025 Proxy Season unfolded with few disruptions across IBEX 35 companies, signaling a period of relative stability in corporate governance.

While all proposals were approved, underlying voting trends, particularly around director elections and executive remuneration, offer a nuanced view of evolving investor expectations and proxy advisor influence.

The season was marked by high support for board nominees and a rebound in remuneration approval rates, even amid rising scrutiny.

These patterns reflect both the maturity of Spain’s governance framework and the effectiveness of company engagement strategies in navigating shareholder concerns.

Key AGM Results

  • Remuneration proposals remain the most contested, despite being standard agenda items. Proxy advisor opposition rose in 2025, yet shareholder support for both remuneration reports and policies remained strong, with average approval rates increasing year-on-year.
  • With average support rising to 97% in 2025. Even as ISS increased its opposition rate, no directors failed to secure majority support suggesting effective company engagement and disclosure strategies.

AGM Season Insights

Gender Parity Law and Board Impact

Spain’s Parity Law (LO/2024) mandates that listed companies achieve at least 40% female representation on their boards. This binding requirement has accelerated board refreshment efforts.  Although the IBEX 35 collectively surpassed the threshold, progress remains uneven across the broader market. Boards falling short may face pressure to hasten progress ahead of the 2026 proxy season.

Board Mandates Broaden to Include AI Oversight

Spanish boards are increasingly tasked with steering AI strategy and risk oversight considering the country’s pioneering AI governance framework. Since June 2024, AESIA, the Agencia Española de Supervisión de Inteligencia Artificial, has served as Spain’s dedicated AI regulator, preparing for enforcement of the EU AI Act through the national law drafted in March 2025. Spain’s boards will likely need to integrate AI oversight into their governance framework, guided by AESIA’s regulatory regime and Spain’s transposition of the EU AI Act in March 2025.

2026 Season Outlook

Remuneration should continue to be a priority for the board with special emphasis on remuneration policy proposals because they are binding and establish remuneration direction for coming years.  A few developments to keep in mind is that Glass Lewis will be using a new pay-for-performance methodology in 2026 to evaluate how executive remuneration and company performance are aligned. Both proxy advisors have signaled interest in the balance between time‑ and performance‑based equity in their policy surveys, so the results of these and any subsequent policy amendments should be considered.

Spanish boards begin preparing for AI governance and digital oversight, anticipating future EU regulation and investor interest in ethical tech deployment. We expect boards to continue operationalizing oversight: formalizing reporting lines and KPIs for AI risk, adding AI to board agendas, and forming or expanding technology, risk, or ethics committees to supervise AI programs.

Sustainability Review

Adjusting ESG Expectations

Top Trends from the 2025 European Proxy Season

The 2025 European proxy season represents a key inflection point in ESG, marked by a broad recalibration of investor expectations and corporate responses. The overall environment shifted from ambitious targets to pragmatic stewardship, with heightened emphasis on regulation-driven transparency, data integrity, nuanced shareholder engagement, and outcomes-focused sustainable investment. Five critical trends emerged across regulation, reporting, shareholder proposals, sustainable investment, and stewardship, which together have shaped the ESG landscape for European companies and investors this year.

Compliance is Key: Regulation Drive ESG Reporting

The 2025 proxy season saw significant regulatory shifts driven by the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the newly proposed Omnibus package aimed at simplifying and streamlining sustainability reporting. The Omnibus package notably reduces the scope of CSRD by about 80%, focusing mandatory reporting on larger companies with over 1,000 employees and higher financial thresholds. It also delays reporting requirements for many companies, providing relief by pushing back compliance deadlines for the “second wave” of companies from 2025 to 2027.

Key changes include a substantial reduction in mandatory data points and the removal of sector-specific reporting standards, aiming to ease the compliance burden without compromising transparency. The mandatory double materiality principle remains intact, requiring companies to disclose both financial impacts and broader environmental and social effects. The package also maintains a focus on climate-related disclosures aligned with the Paris Agreement and net-zero commitments.

Investors have responded by intensifying scrutiny on the quality and verifiability of disclosures, linking proxy voting to the credibility of transition plans and ESG data. Enhanced fund labeling rules are further tightening the ESG investment landscape, weeding out greenwashing and emphasizing compliance as foundational for market trust and access to capital.

These shifts mark the need for a practical recalibration, balancing ambitious sustainability goals with what is feasible for companies to accomplish, signaling that regulatory compliance is now a core strategic priority for European companies navigating the evolving ESG landscape.

Transparency Transformed: The Age of Audit-Ready ESG Data

As a result of the CSRD and associated European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS), a new level of transparency in European ESG reporting has been ushered in for 2025. These regulatory frameworks demand rigorously verifiable and audit-ready sustainability disclosures, elevating transparency from narrative storytelling to a discipline of data integrity and accountability.

Corporate boards now prioritize the acquisition of high-quality, consistent, and auditable ESG data, recognizing it as foundational to meeting stringent double materiality requirements, assessing both the financial impacts of ESG risks and opportunities on their business, and their wider environmental and social effects. Formal sustainability audits have gained significant traction, often uncovering data comparability issues from prior years rather than flagging outright failures, reflecting a maturing reporting landscape.

Transparency expectations have expanded beyond climate risk disclosures to include granular metrics around diversity, governance, and supply chain emissions. Increasingly, shareholders in jurisdictions such as Spain and Switzerland are actively involved in approving these non-financial reports, underscoring a shift toward greater shareholder scrutiny and demand for substantive disclosures.

The challenge of delivering assurance-ready ESG data has catalyzed significant investment in data acquisition, analysis, and governance, with nearly half of institutional investors indicating plans to increase budgets in these areas. Meanwhile, investors express healthy skepticism toward ESG ratings alone, concerned these can incentivize reputation management rather than real impact, reinforcing the critical role of robust, traceable, and independently assured data.

Shareholder Proposals: From Volume to Value

Across the globe, environmental and social shareholder proposals faced a sharp decline in both the number filed and the levels of support. According to Diligent, overall support for environmental and social proposals dropped from 15% and 18%, respectively, in 2024 to approximately 11% in 2025, with no environmental proposals passing in major European markets for the first time. This drop reflects growing investor «proposal fatigue» and a deliberate shift to more discerning scrutiny of ESG issues rather than broad, unconditional endorsement.

Leading asset managers such as Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) and Norges Bank Investment Management adopted refined strategies, focusing on pragmatic stewardship over prescriptive resolutions. LGIM notably voted against Equinor’s energy transition plan due to insufficient specificity and time-bound targets, demonstrating a shift to holding companies accountable for credible, climate action rather than accepting general commitments. Norges shifted from a more active role in filing emissions-focused proposals to prioritizing private dialogue and targeted stewardship that seeks measurable progress.  This pivot reflects broader trends where investors are balancing strategic activism with regulatory and market complexities.

Vanguard’s 2025 European stewardship briefing also underlines this evolution. They observed that shareholder proposals increasingly require detailed, credible disclosures, challenging companies to evolve beyond broad ESG policies toward transparent metrics and robust governance. Vanguard further emphasized the growing importance of strategic dialogue off the ballot, with pre-AGM engagement playing a central role in shaping company responses.

Say-on-Climate resolutions saw relatively stable volumes compared with prior years; however, increased abstentions signaled heightened caution from passive investors balancing strategic influence with portfolio management. This careful approach aligns with BlackRock’s opening 2025 Global Voting Spotlight, which emphasizes voting decisions based on defensible, measurable outcomes rather than symbolic climate proposals. The report highlights that BlackRock supported fewer than 2% of environmental and social proposals globally, reflecting a trend toward selective backing focused on impact and integration with company strategy.

Overall, this recalibration highlights investors’ demand for ESG actions backed by data, accountability, and actionable plans, not merely aspirational targets or boilerplate policies. Shareholders now seek defensible, time-bound actions and measurable progress, sidelining generic proposals in favor of focused, feasible stewardship that drives tangible benefits.

Governance Focus and Capital Market Competitiveness

The 2025 European proxy season reflected a pronounced shift toward governance fundamentals as a primary area of investor focus. This includes intensified scrutiny on board effectiveness, director elections, executive compensation, and shareholder rights, with a view to enhancing corporate competitiveness in a rapidly evolving regulatory and economic landscape. Several markets are revising rules on meeting formats and shareholder rights to balance transparency with operational efficiency, reflecting broader competitiveness priorities across Europe.

For instance, changes in Germany require shareholder approval to renew virtual-only meeting authorizations, while Italy allows closed-door meetings until the end of 2025, impacting the platform for shareholder dialogue. Investors increasingly emphasize clear pay-for-performance in executive compensation policies and call for transparent CEO-to-median-employee pay ratios. Governance proposals received steady or increased support relative to environmental and social resolutions, signaling that governance is viewed as a foundation for sustainable, long-term value creation.

This governance recalibration intertwines with regulatory reforms aimed at strengthening Europe’s capital markets and fostering competitive yet responsible business environments. It underscores that, alongside ESG commitments, companies must elevate governance quality to attract and retain investor confidence amid dynamic proxy season pressures.

Looking Ahead

European companies face a future where ESG success demands audit-grade transparency, regulatory fluency, and demonstrable progress on climate goals. The 2025 proxy season’s recalibration marks a turning point from aspirational talk to credible action, where investor confidence hinges on data integrity, defensible transition plans, and sophisticated engagement. Forward-looking firms will embed ESG as a strategic value driver rather than compliance checkboxes.

Investor stewardship will continue to mature from passive acceptance to active, data-driven partnership, with digital tools enabling richer dialogue and governance rigor. The evolving regulatory landscape, combined with changing investor expectations, sets a high bar, rewarding transparency, accountability, and authentic ESG impact as the new normal across Europe and beyond.

Team

Head shot of Angelika Horstmeier, Managing Director

Angelika Horstmeier

Senior Managing Director

EMEA & LatAm

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