ESG industry view – Railpen
so than in the ‘S’ of ESG, where the com- panies best-positioned to deliver on this are those that are purpose-led. The strongest businesses are guided and inspired by a purpose which benefits soci- ety. These companies are more likely to have durable franchises, lasting brand value and a greater propensity to with- stand the shocks and stresses of market and economic traumata.
Michael Marshall, head of sustainable owner- ship initiative, and Caroline Escott, senior investment manager, are part of RPMI Railpen’s active ownership team.
As long-term investors, we are more attracted to businesses that have, during the Covid-19 turbulence, rallied around their corporate purpose and their contin- ued drive towards creating value for investors and other stakeholders, such as the workforce and local communities. Over the long-term, we would expect pur- pose-led companies to enjoy a lower cost of capital.
HOW A GLOBAL CRISIS AFFECTS THE WAY WE VIEW OUR PORTFOLIO
The idea of changing roles in the midst of a pandemic sounds uncertain and risky. Yet 6.1% of employed people in the UK moved jobs in the first half of this year, including us. We recently moved from our previous roles and joined RPMI Railpen’s sustainable ownership team. Active ownership is a critical part of our work to build value for our beneficiaries. We have always believed that strong gov- ernance at portfolio companies gives them the greatest opportunity to man- age all risks and opportunities appropriately.
This includes the ‘E’ and ‘S’ issues, but also how those issues respond to and face a systemic and unprecedented crisis like Covid-19. Some commentators have said that the pandemic has changed their view on the importance or relevance of ESG. Though Covid-19 does not necessarily bring new ESG issues to light, it has drawn attention to under-explored
issues and plugged them into a huge ESG amplifier. No more
This pandemic has had a profound impact on many lives. When you scale up to our 350,000 members, that is a huge impact, particularly for those now drawing their pension.
Against this backdrop, we
remain focussed on our core mission of paying members’ pensions securely, affordably and sustainably.
Covid-19 | A corporate litmus test As an investor, we have seen Coronavirus put companies’ governance, controls and adaptability to the test, which influences our approach to: – Cybersecurity - the risk implications for many sectors with a wholesale shift to home-working
– Capital allocation and capital mainte- nance - the need for companies to con- sider the approaches to capital raising, dividends, buybacks and remuneration that make the most sense for resilience and future success
– How much value a company really plac- es on shareholder engagement - how willing they have been to ensure share- holders have opportunities to appropri- ately scrutinise companies in the new virtual meeting and webcast AGM world.
Using the full active ownership toolkit
Our engagement – collective and individ- ual – takes place all year round. As soon as governments and companies started adjusting their behaviour in light of Coro- navirus
and market movements, it
provided opportunities to interact with portfolio companies to understand the impact of the pandemic and to outline our expectations of corporate behaviour. Our sustainable ownership team worked with our trustee, pension committees, internal and external portfolio managers, other investors and pressure groups to make this happen. As well as taking part in collective engagement initiatives such as the Workforce Disclosure Initiative, the PRI’s Covid-19 Participation Groups and deepening our work with other investors on cybersecurity, we also backed up our collective and direct engagement activity with voting action during AGM season. Whilst we were prepared to support com- panies acting responsibly, we also found ourselves voting against companies which we had not moved sufficiently towards a robust and accessible AGM process and against those whose remuneration com- mittees we thought had failed to show adequate restraint in respect of executive pay awards, particularly where employees had been furloughed or other govern- ment assistance had been accessed.
Looking ahead to 2021 How companies have operated during Covid-19 will continue to shape our con- versations and give food for thought in our stewardship programme design and updated voting policies. We know the pensions industry has adapted well to the challenges of looking after its workforce and ensuring continued service for bene- ficiaries. This comes back to being aware of a purpose which, for Railpen, is crystal clear. Like many investors, we were ‘ESG believers’ before the pandemic, but Coro- navirus has ramped up the risk rating in several key areas.
Issue 98 | November 2020 | portfolio institutional | 25
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