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Proxy reforms would hurt investors

Proxy reforms would hurt investors The government’s proposed crackdown on proxy advisers would harm the provision of independent research that makes markets function better.  May 3, 2021 – 12.00am Save Share The government’s proposed regulatory crackdown on proxy advisers is an illogical and unnecessary blow to investor rights. Which makes you wonder how, at a time the country is on a “war footing” against the pandemic, these so-called reforms could reach the top of the to-do list. Surely it has nothing to do with the fact proxy adviser Ownership Matters (OM) has been charting the wastage involved in the government’s JobKeeper program, or the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI) forthright stance on listed companies doing more than the government on climate change? That would be petty.

Retirement Funds Bring Climate Change Pressure on Australia s 200 Biggest Companies

Retirement Funds Bring Climate Change Pressure on Australia’s 200 Biggest Companies Company directors deemed to be “moving too slowly” on climate change will face increased pressure from Australia’s largest retirement funds. The Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI), comprised of 37 superannuation companies, will recommend members vote against the re-election of directors deemed to have fallen short on addressing climate change. ACSI will be communicating with the boards of the ASX200, Australia’s 200 largest publicly listed companies. The move also comes following the release of the book, “The Dictatorship of Woke Capital: How Political Correctness Captured Big Business,” which details how social justice causes now permeate the corporate sector.

Glencore s transition plan translates into nine new coal mines and expansions

27 April 2021 Later this week, shareholders in Glencore will vote on the company’s climate transition plan, otherwise known as a ‘Say on Climate’. Glencore joins just a handful of other companies, including oil majors Royal Dutch Shell and Total, in giving its shareholders a vote this year. In all likelihood, shareholders will vote in favour of Glencore’s climate strategy. It is an awkward situation: the first Say on Climate vote for a globally material emitter will likely rubber stamp plans for at least nine new or expanded coal mines in NSW and Queensland. Glencore’s coal expansionism Glencore, the world’s largest coal producer, placated climate-conscious investors in early 2019 by announcing a “cap” on coal production. It committed to limiting coal production to its 2019 production levels of 145 million tonnes per annum.

Going green with stocks could make you richer

Switzer Daily 26 April 2021 Like it or not but with the election of US President Joe Biden, the Greenies are coming and the stock market won’t be able to ignore the implications. Today in our 5 things you should know, two of our top stories are about the environmental ‘police’ on the prowl for climate bandits! First we saw Joe Biden get so serious about fighting climate change that he’s prepared to hit exports from other countries with a carbon tax, which the European Union also endorses. And then the Australian Council of Superannuation Investors (ACSI) put our top 200 companies on the local stock exchange on notice over their climate

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