What is a Shareholder Proposal?
/Shareholders—as owners of a company—have a legal right to offer proposals to appear on the corporate proxy statement to be voted upon at a company’s annual shareholders meeting. Corporations are required to hold these annual meetings in order for shareholders to vote
on matters related to the corporation such as auditor ratification, election of directors, and executive compensation. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires public companies to file an announcement ahead of the annual meeting including its items of business called the proxy statement.4 SEC Rule 14a-8 allows shareholders to submit statements of up to 500 words (“shareholder proposals”) to be included in the company’s proxy statement.
The proxy statement is therefore the vehicle by which investors are informed of proposals by other investors. SEC Rule 14a-8 defines a shareholder proposal as a specific request from the shareholder - a “recommendation or requirement that the company and/or its board of directors take action, which you intend to present at a meeting of the company’s shareholders.” The SEC states that the proposal “should state as clearly as possible the course of action” that the shareholder believes the company should follow.
“Shareholder proposals are a crucial tool for investors to engage with their companies. Engagement covers a host of strategies investors use to obtain additional information and influence the policies and practices of their portfolio companies on governance and sustainable value creation.”
Some shareholder proposals seek changes in governance infrastructure, for example, requesting that the CEO and the board chair be separate people to increase the independence of the board and its ability to oversee the company on behalf of shareholders. Or they might request a change in voting standards to allow proposals to be passed by a vote of a simple majority rather than a larger voting threshold of supermajority, thus creating a better balance of power between the company and its investors. Other proposals may address environmental or social challenges facing the company—issues that may also be the subject of a wider social or political debate, but which nonetheless have a potential financial impact on the company or the larger economy on which returns depend.
For example, a proposal may request the disclosure of the company’s assessment of its operations, policies and practices designed to mitigate environmental, regulatory or liability risks associated with its mining operations. In another instance, a proposal may request
that a company report as to its timeline and plan for how it expects to transition to meet its stated objective of net zero greenhouse gas emissions. Some of these proposals might be described as “social or political proposals,” but they must nonetheless be relevant to the company’s business according to SEC rules and comply with more than a dozen strict SEC rules for acceptable proposals and filings.
Most shareholder proposals are non-binding. Non-binding proposals give companies the flexibility to address shareholder concerns without displacing the traditional role of the board of directors to oversee the operations of the company.