FANews
FANews
RELATED CATEGORIES
Category Investments

Active ownership Q&A: how can investors drive change?

14 April 2022 Schroders

What does active ownership really mean in practice? Experts from our sustainable investment team explain.

Active ownership is one of the most important devices in a sustainable investor’s toolkit.

Kimberley Lewis, Schroders’ Head of Active Ownership, explains: “Where Schroders has taken the decision to invest in a company on behalf of clients, we believe we can protect and enhance the value of that investment by being active owners and engaging with that company. This is central to our investment philosophy.”

But what is active ownership? What does it look like in practice? How is Schroders pushing for change with companies’ management?

What is active ownership?

KL: “Active ownership involves engaging with companies to influence corporate behaviour around long-term sustainability issues.

“Through ongoing dialogue we get to know companies better and, where necessary, ask companies to change their practices. Once a year we also get the opportunity to vote at a company’s AGM.”

What do we mean by “engagement” when we talk about active ownership?

Hannah Simons, Head of Sustainability Strategy, explains: “When the industry talks about ‘engagement’, this is really a word to describe interactions with companies in which we have invested our clients’ money.

“These interactions are crucial in our assessment of what makes a good investment. This is why it is not only our sustainable investment team driving these activities but also portfolio managers and financial analysts.”

Why is actively engaging with companies important?

KL: “Because by engaging with companies we can understand them better and we can also make our expectations clear.

“Ultimately, this connection and shared understanding is crucial when the dialogue is about effecting change that, in our view, is needed to safeguard and even increase the value of investments for which we are responsible.”

How does it work in practice?

KL: “An engagement generally begins with setting the basis for this common understanding and helping the company understand our position on a topic.

“Methods include one-on-one meetings with company representatives such as members of the board or managers of specialist areas, phone calls or written correspondence with company advisers and stakeholders, and collaborative engagements with other companies, for example on reporting frameworks.”

What issues does Schroders engage on?

HS: “We focus on issues that, following a thorough assessment, we think are material to the long-term value of our holdings. We do so by considering a company’s connection and impact across its main stakeholders: employees, customers, communities, the environment, suppliers and regulators.

“The governance structure and management quality that oversee these stakeholder relationships are also a key focus for engagement discussions.”

What makes a successful engagement?

KL: “We believe that four attributes are critical to successful active ownership and engagement: knowledge, relationships, impact and incentives.

“As well as drawing on the sustainable investment team expertise, we leverage the perspectives of our portfolio managers, analysts, external partners and clients to really understand which sustainability issues matter to long-term performance.

“Schroders has built strong, long-standing relationships with many of the companies in which it invests, with our engagement history dating back to the year 2000.

“The insight gained through engagement can directly influence the investment case.

“Ultimately, we have the power to reduce or even sell out of a holding if engagement is unsuccessful, or the option to avoid investing at all. In the case of listed equities, we exercise our voting rights.”

How do you report on progress?

KL: “We report on all aspects of our engagement activity on a quarterly basis. To facilitate this, we keep an ongoing record of all of our engagement activity and review progress against the objectives we had set. But having a robust mechanism to assess progress is not only important for reporting.

“For us it is also a learning opportunity, a way of seeing what approach has a better chance of success and under what circumstances.”

HS: “Reporting on progress is something that our clients often ask us about. Being open about the process is also crucial for others to hold us, as investors, to account.”

Our vision for the future of our active ownership

Schroders has a long history of engagement and active ownership. We appointed our first governance resource in 1998 and have recorded and monitored ESG engagements spanning more than 20 years.

Our fast-growing active ownership team is building further on that foundation and has set out its vision in a recently published Engagement Blueprint. It can be found on the Active Ownership section of our website.

KL: “This focus on our future active ownership effort is rooted in the long-term outcomes we want to see across our holdings and we will use it as a compass for our future engagements.”

Quick Polls

QUESTION

As uncertainty prevails, and post-election business and consumer sentiment begins to ebb, how do you intend investing your clients’ funds through 2025?

ANSWER

Diversify across regions, themes.
Move to defensive assets.
Review clients’ long-term objectives.
Trust your DFM or fund managers.
fanews magazine
FAnews November 2024 Get the latest issue of FAnews

This month's headlines

Understanding treaty reinsurance – and the factors that influence it
Insurance brokers: the PI scapegoat
Medical Schemes' average increases for 2025
AI is revolutionising insurance claims processing and fraud detection
Crypto arbitrage: exploring the opportunities and risks
Subscribe now