Branstad: It’s Time to End Pay-to-Play in the ‘ESG’ Movement

Proxy advisors are the hidden force behind the rise of the ESG (environmental, social and governance) movement and its morph into a large-scale grift wherein American companies and investors are the victims.

This little-known industry, dominated by Institutional Shareholder Services and its smaller competitor Glass Lewis, has fundamentally changed ESG. What began as a public relations and marketing effort for corporations to show employees and customers they are responsible actors now functions as a corporate credit score where those who refuse to play the game are denied access to investor capital.

Publicly traded companies have often been slow to fully understand the power of proxy advisors and their affiliates to materially harm shareholder value by merely issuing an ESG rating downgrade.

According to the Forum for Sustainable Investment, approximately $17.1 trillion U.S. investor dollars are invested under so-called “sustainable” investment strategies, which consider ESG ratings. Therefore, a downgrade in a company’s ESG ratings from a B to a C would materially impact the stock price in the same way as a credit downgrade from Moody’s.

Given the power of these ESG ratings, publicly traded companies and retail shareholders must have direct access to how these ratings are calculated. Unfortunately, proxy advisors call that information proprietary and refuse to disclose it. Where they do provide information, their metrics leave them open to lots of qualitative judgments, which can be abused.

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Even more troubling is that ISS currently has a significant potential conflict of interest. They provide ESG ratings and a consulting business that helps public companies improve their ratings. Investors may suffer from wrongly investing in companies that have high ESG ratings because they paid for consulting rather than because they are good corporate citizens.

Anglo American, the parent company of the infamous De Beers Group known for “blood diamonds” and indentured servitude, enjoys top ESG marks and vaunted “ESG Prime” status from ISS. Did it receive its marks because of high ESG performance or because of paying ISS? This apparent conflict of interest leaves investors troubled as to whether ISS’s ESG scores are based on the company’s ESG performance or on the company paying for ESG consulting.

In May, the SEC announced its intention to regulate ESG claims by asset managers, insisting that they observe some level of standardization to prevent abuse. While this is a reasonable step, it fails to address proxy advisors’ significant role in the process. The SEC must regulate proxy advisors in two ways:

First, proxy advisors should be required to spin off their ESG consulting businesses, which present a significant conflict of interest detrimental to investors and public companies that do not engage them. Short of that, proxy advisors should be required to disclose clearly, when releasing ESG ratings, how much money was paid to them by the public company.

Second, proxy advisors should be required to publicly disclose their quantitative and qualitative methodology in calculating ESG scores.

Given the significant amount of money run under so-called sustainable investment strategies, the SEC must take appropriate action to protect American businesses and investors from being victimized by an arbitrary and conflict-of-interest-ridden ESG system enforced by proxy advisors.

Effective SEC action will embolden public companies making the most positive impact, not those willing to pay to play.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.

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