Stabroek News

Activist investors fret over Exxon Mobil’s lawsuit bypassing US regulator

- Mark Uyeda

(Reuters) – 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.

Most shareholde­r resolution­s are not legally binding on a company, even when a majority of investors vote for them. But companies often heed those that win significan­t support, even short of a majority, to show they are responsive to investors’ concerns.

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.

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Mark van Baal

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