Corporate Win over Activist Investors

New rules regulate proxy adviser behavior, including a requirement that they ensure investors see opposing views. Proxy firms can be legally liable for compliance failure.

U.S. companies scored a long-sought win Wednesday when the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approved new rules that are expected to make it harder for activist investors to push for changes in corporate strategy.

The main target of the SEC’s overhaul is firms such as Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) and Glass Lewis & Co., which are paid by pension funds and other institutional investors to advise shareholders on how they should vote their stock. The companies—known as proxy advisory firms—have significant influence in whether activist campaigns succeed because investors often follow their recommendations in board elections.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups have lobbied the SEC for years to rein in proxy advisers, arguing that the firms are conflicted and should be more aggressively regulated. The SEC took the first step in toughening oversight last November, when it proposed a number of rule changes.

The prospect of a crackdown has generated intense opposition from hedge funds, investor advocates, and environmental groups, which all use corporate proxies to push their agendas. In February, famed investor Carl Icahn called the SEC’s proposal a “big step backward” for corporate governance that would make it more challenging to hold companies accountable for poor performance.

Key Details

“Today’s recommendations will help ensure that the interests of Main Street investors and the obligations of those who vote on their behalf will not only be better aligned, but better decisions will be made,” SEC Chairman Jay Clayton, a political independent, said in remarks ahead of the vote.

Clayton generated controversy last year when he pointed to public comment letters that indicated retail investors backed the overhaul. Some of letters appeared to be fakes, designed to trick the SEC.


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