The Value of Environmental and Social Proposals

Evidence of sustainable value raised in environmental and social proposals

Shareholder proposals frequently address risks due to environmental issues that can be highly costly to companies and their investors when they ultimately materialize in the near- or long- term. Consider that the shareholder value of BP plummeted by 55% after the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, from $59.48 per share on April 19, 2010 to $27 per share on June 25, 2010. Climate change-induced changes in severe weather such as drought and flooding, as well as regulatory responses and constraints in various markets worldwide, has been documented to threaten substantial financial risks to the banking, mining, industrials, transportation, agriculture and real estate sectors. Bringing greater transparency to the management of such risks has been the subject of shareholder proposals in these sectors.

Corporations also face risk related to social issues such as disruption of the business or supply chains due to human rights abuses workforce health and safety scandals or failures to protect the online safety of children. The growth in environmental and social shareholder proposals over the last several years also reflects concern that certain issues threaten the economy as a whole and large swathes of investment portfolios.

Informed investors are often early movers on addressing risks that ultimately prove to be quite material, and even existential, to their investments. As an example, proposals filed by members of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility ICCR) against predatory lending in the early 2000s at AIG and other companies.43 At the time, these proposals might have been characterized as merely addressing social risks yet they foreshadowed the banking crisis driven by such predatory practices that proved to be very expensive for AIG and the other companies, and for society in the housing crisis and bank bailouts that followed.

Shareholder proposals also mirror public sentiment. A recent study of companies in the Russell 3000 Index found that negative public sentiment about a firm on both financial and broad sustainable investing aspects are significantly related to the number of shareholder-sponsored proposals, with the impact of news sources being slightly stronger than social media in affecting the number of shareholder proposals. The study also found a strong association between the number of shareholder proposals on the ballot and director turnover and forced turnover of CEOs at the firm, finding one additional shareholder proposal is associated with a 10.9% increase in director turnover and a 24.8% increase in forced CEO turnover, both to the mean. The study not only found association between these factors; it also was able to demonstrate causal evidence that negative sentiment around corporate practices that are not sustainable leads to increased shareholder dissent.