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Investors seen failing to vote for green
resolutions 
London, 5 January: Institutional investors are overwhelmingly
failing to back shareholder resolutions on social and environmental
issues, according to a new study.
The study,
carried out by VBDO (the Dutch Association of Investors for
Sustainable Development) looked at the voting behaviour of
seven major Dutch investors, including ABP, one of the world's
largest pension funds, PGGM, a leading advocate of socially
responsible investment, and banks ING and ABN Amro.
The study analysed around 280 proposals submitted in 2005
by shareholders in the US where it is traditionally
easier to get shareholder resolutions considered at annual
general meetings than in Europe. It found that the seven investors
supported these resolutions in just 12% of cases.
"In most situations, they vote against proposals in
which companies will have to exert themselves in an environmental
or social area," VBDO says.
"VBDO knows that these institutional investors often
agree with the contents of these proposals, but are reluctant
to be open about it," says Piet Sprengers, managing director
of VBDO.
"When it concerns the direction of the management of
a company or the rewarding of the management, these institutions
are prepared to meet them head on," he adds. "When
it comes to sustainability, the institutions suddenly become
a lot more charitable and are unwilling to offend the management."
The study looking at voting by PGGM, ABP, SPF, Robeco, Aegon,
ING and ABN Amro. Robeco and ABN had the highest percentage
of votes in favour of resolutions, at 32% and 30% respectively.
SPF had the lowest, at just one vote in favour out of 89.
However, VBDO notes that by no means all institutional investors
disclose how they vote, or even necessarily vote on resolutions
at all, so those "investigated ... are therefore a positive
exception with regard to the exercising of their voting powers
and the publicising of their voting behaviour."
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