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利用股东决议就环境和社会问题向公司施压的投资者表示,他们担心埃克森美孚 绕过 美国证券监管机构提起的诉讼可能会削弱他们的影响力。

在美国总统乔·拜登的任命下,美国证券交易委员会(SEC)通过向监管机构提出上诉,让企业更难阻止这些决议提交股东投票。

埃克森美孚避开了美国证券交易委员会,并 于本月早些时候对两名股东提起诉讼 ,这两名股东提出了一项决议,呼吁这家石油巨头制定减少部分温室气体排放的新目标。

埃克森美孚在诉讼中指责投资者滥用这一程序,提出决议来推进其削减化石燃料业务的议程,而不是增加股东价值。该公司表示,去年90%的股东投票否决了类似的提议。

这家美国最大石油生产商正在寻求在 3 月 19 日之前做出裁决,并于周四要求法官快速审理此案。其股东委托书需要在 4 月 11 日之前提交,以赶上 5 月份的年度股东大会。

“我们担心这一行动可能会产生寒蝉效应,特别是对那些没有资源在法庭上与埃克森美孚或其他公司抗争的小投资者来说,”跨宗教企业中心首席执行官乔什·辛纳 (Josh Zinner) 表示。责任(ICCR)。ICCR 代表宗教投资者和其他具有社会意识的资产管理公司。

机构投资者委员会(其成员包括大型养老基金和资产管理公司)执行董事艾米·博勒斯(Amy Borrus)表示,这些决议在允许投资者向公司管理层、董事会和其他投资者表达自己的观点方面发挥着重要作用。

她补充说,如果埃克森美孚胜诉,其他公司也可能会在法庭上碰碰运气。多家公司和贸易团体抱怨 SEC  2021 年的政策变化 使天平对他们不利。美国证券交易委员会让公司更难主张一项决议应该被阻止,因为它对运营进行微观管理。

这鼓舞了激进股东的勇气,决议数量也随之激增。 根据 Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher 律师事务所整理的数据,2023 年代理季期间提交了 889 份提案,连续第三年增长,也是自 2016 年以来提交数量最多的一次 

总体而言,要求美国证券交易委员会驳回股东决议的公司越来越少。就规则变更进行投票的五名 SEC 委员之一马克·乌耶达 (Mark Uyeda) 表示,该机构目前的做法可能阻止了一些公司向 SEC 寻求帮助。

“公司总是可以就股东提案诉诸法庭,但历来将 SEC 视为公平的仲裁者。由于最近的政策变化,这种看法可能已经发生了变化。2022 年成为 SEC 专员的共和党人 Uyeda 在一封电子邮件中告诉路透社。他没有直接评论埃克森美孚的诉讼。

目前有两名共和党委员和三名民主党委员,乌耶达仅表达了他的观点。SEC 发言人拒绝发表评论。SEC 主席加里·詹斯勒 (Gary Gensler) 提出的另一项 待决规则变更 可能会进一步降低决议的门槛。

埃克森美孚发言人表示,SEC 对规则的适用不符合投资者的利益。

“我们只是希望执行已经制定的规则,以防止系统滥用行为增加,”发言人说。他们补充说,该公司的诉讼仅限于有关温室气体排放的具体决议,并且该公司正在与其他股东决议的支持者进行接触。

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埃克森美孚正在争论的决议能否在投票中获得成功还远未确定。

总部位于荷兰的环保活动组织 Follow This 是该决议的发起者之一,但  2023 年其他大型石油巨头(包括雪佛龙 CVX.N、 TotalEnergies  TTEF.PA、壳牌 SHEL )的类似决议仅获得 10% 至 30% 的支持.L 和 BP  BP.L

创始人马克·范·巴尔 (Mark van Baal) 指责埃克森美孚“害怕股东”。

2010 年至 2014 年间,少数公司成功地通过诉讼推翻了股东决议。但这些决议的获胜都是基于技术原因,例如决议发起人是否符合持股要求。

企业游说团体希望法院这次能走得更远。全国制造商协会 已单独要求 位于新奥尔良的美国第五巡回上诉法院裁定,美国证券交易委员会无权强迫公司将股东提案纳入选票。

第五巡回法院的保守派多数 经常阻碍拜登的政策,埃克森美孚也在这里提起诉讼。

向 SEC 提出的不采取行动请求遭到拒绝 https://reut.rs/47R4cYE

 

(Ross Kerber 在波士顿报道,Jody Godoy 在纽约报道,Isla Binnie 在纽约报道,Sabrina Valle 在休斯顿报道,Greg Roumeliotis 和 Marguerita Choy 编辑)


原文链接/oilandgas360

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Investors that use shareholder resolutions to pressure companies on environmental and social issues said they are worried that an Exxon Mobil XOM.N lawsuit bypassing the U.S. securities regulator could undermine their influence.

Under appointees of U.S. President Joe Biden, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has made it more difficult for companies to prevent these resolutions from moving to a shareholder vote by appealing to the regulator.

Exxon sidestepped the SEC and filed a lawsuit earlier this month against two shareholders that had put forward a resolution calling on the oil major to set new targets for reducing some of its greenhouse gas emissions.

Exxon accused the investors in its lawsuit of abusing the process by putting forward resolutions to advance their agenda of diminishing its fossil fuels business, rather than grow shareholder value. It said that 90% of its shareholders voted down a similar proposal last year.

The top U.S. oil producer is seeking a ruling by March 19, and on Thursday asked the judge to fast-track the case. Its proxy statement needs to be filed by April 11, in time for its annual shareholder meeting in May.

“We’re concerned that this action could have a chilling effect, particularly on small investors who don’t have the resources to battle Exxon or other companies in the courts,” said Josh Zinner, CEO of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR). ICCR represents religious investors and other socially-aware asset managers.

Amy Borrus, executive director of the Council of Institutional Investors, whose members include big pension funds and asset managers, said the resolutions play an important role in allowing investors to express their views to a company’s management, board and other investors.

She added that if Exxon succeeds, others may also take their chances in court. Various companies and trade groups have complained that an SEC policy change in 2021 tipped the scales against them. The SEC made it more difficult for companies to argue that a resolution should be blocked because it micromanages operations.

This emboldened activist shareholders, and the number of resolutions jumped as a result. There were 889 proposals filed during the 2023 proxy season, the third consecutive annual increase and the highest number of submissions since 2016, according to data complied by law firm Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher.

Overall, fewer companies have been asking the SEC to throw out shareholder resolutions. Mark Uyeda, one of the five SEC commissioners who vote on rule changes, said the agency’s current approach may have discouraged some companies from turning to the SEC for help.

“Companies could always go to court on shareholder proposals, but historically viewed the SEC as a fair arbiter. This perception may have changed due to recent policy changes” Uyeda, a Republican who became SEC commissioner in 2022, told Reuters in an email. He did not directly comment on Exxon’s lawsuit.

There are currently two Republican and three Democratic commissioners, and Uyeda was expressing only his views. An SEC spokesperson declined to comment. Another pending rule change proposed under SEC Chair Gary Gensler could further lower the bar for resolutions.

An Exxon spokesperson said that the SEC’s application of the rules does not serve investors’ interests.

“We simply want the rules already in place to be enforced to prevent increasing abuse of the system,” the spokesperson said. They added that the company’s lawsuit was limited to the specific resolution on greenhouse gas emissions and that the company is engaging with proponents of other shareholder resolutions.

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It is far from certain that the resolution that Exxon is contesting would succeed in a vote.

Netherlands-based environmental activist group Follow This, one of the resolution’s sponsors, won only between 10% to 30% support for similar resolutions in 2023 at other big oil majors, including Chevron CVX.N, TotalEnergies TTEF.PA, Shell SHEL.L and BP BP.L.

Follow This founder Mark van Baal accused Exxon “of being afraid of its shareholders.”

A handful of companies successfully used lawsuits to throw out shareholder resolutions between 2010 and 2014. But those prevailed on technical grounds, such as whether the resolutions’ sponsor met stock ownership requirements.

Corporate lobbying groups hope courts will this time go farther. The National Association of Manufacturers has separately asked the New Orleans-based 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule that the SEC has no authority to force companies to include shareholder proposals on their ballots.

The 5th Circuit’s conservative majority has often blocked Biden’s policies, and it is where Exxon also filed its lawsuit.

No-action requests to SEC decline https://reut.rs/47R4cYE

 

(Reporting by Ross Kerber in Boston and Jody Godoy in New York Additional reporting by Isla Binnie in New York and Sabrina Valle in Houston Editing by Greg Roumeliotis and Marguerita Choy)