State Street joins BlackRock and Vanguard in devolving
proxy voting powers
Institutional clients in the US and UK will now
be able to vote their shares
By Theo Andrew
14
Dec 2022
State Street Global Advisors (SSGA)
is the last of the ‘Big Three’ to devolve corporate proxy voting
powers to investors following similar moves by BlackRock and Vanguard.
Under the new programme, investors in “certain institutional funds” in
the UK and US – covering more than 40% of SSGA’s equity index assets –
will be offered a range of voting policies from the start of the proxy
2023 voting season, SSGA said in a statement.
It
comes just over a month after Vanguard announced it was piloting
a scheme for US retail investors and a year after BlackRock
gave institutional clients the power to vote
their shares, following mounting scrutiny about the power
passive giants have over corporate America.
SSGA said it intends to expand this to as much of its index equity
assets as possible.
“Giving even more investors the chance to choose how to vote shares
held in funds they are invested in will remain a priority,” Lori
Heinel, executive vice president and global CIO at SSGA,
said.
“Whether our investors delegate voting responsibility to us or choose
a different voting option, we remain committed to that mission.”
Like clients in SSGA’s separate managed accounts, investors will vote
via the asset manager’s proxy voting provider, the Institutional
Shareholder Service (ISS), but can still choose to delegate their
votes to the SSGA asset stewardship team.
According to SSGA, there are currently eight voting guideline options
that have been made available via the ISS, covering policies
comprising benchmark, sustainability, socially responsible investment,
Catholic principles, public fund, Taft-Hartley policy and
board-aligned policy.
SSGA, BlackRock and Vanguard – often labelled the ‘Big Three’ – have
been eager to change the view they hoard power via their trillions of
dollars of passive assets which could become an increasing focus for
regulators.
It
could also be seen as a move to placate activists and politicians,
with the likes of Elon
Musk, Bernie Saunders and Berkshire Hathaway’s Charlie
Munger all speaking out against
the rise of passives within the past 12 months.
Last month, BlackRock founder, chairman and CEO Larry
Fink wrote a letter to clients about the “transformative
power” of investor-led voting, noting “tremendous interest” from
clients.