BusinessLine (Delhi)

Norway’s wealth fund pushes for more women on emerging market company boards

The fund’s push could be a challenge in countries where the pool of candidates is smaller than in the developed world

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Norway’s $1.6 trillion sovereign wealth fund, the world’s largest, will call on emerging market companies in which it invests to appoint more women to their boards, top officials told Reuters, making the policy global for the first time.

One of the world’s largest investors, the fund holds stakes in around 8,800 companies globally, owning about 1.5 per cent of all listed stocks. It has set the pace on a range of issues in the environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) field.

Since 2021, the fund has pushed companies to boost the number of women on their boards and to consider targets if fewer than 30 per cent of directors are female, focusing first on Europe and the US, and expanding the policy to Japan last year.

The policy will now be applied to companies in emerging markets such as India, South Africa, Brazil and Egypt, the fund said in its updated voting guidelines shared with Reuters ahead of their publicatio­n on Wednesday.

It would mean that companies such as Qatari telecoms firm Ooredoo, Indonesian industrial company ESSA and Brazilian logistics firm Hidrovias do Brasil, which have currently no female directors, could be affected.

The fund’s push could be a challenge in countries where the pool of candidates is smaller than in the developed world, and comes amid some signs of a public backlash in the US against the drive to bring diversity to the top of organisati­ons.

Since 2021, the fund has seen “great improvemen­ts” on gender diversity on boards, its chief governance and compliance officer, Carine Smith Ihenacho, said in an interview, highlighti­ng Europe, where a combinatio­n of State regulation and best practice guidelines has boosted female director numbers.

In practice, this means that if a company in emerging markets does not include at least one director of each gender, the fund will vote against the election of the chair of the nomination committee or the chair of the board if there is no nomination committee — at an annual general meeting.

LAGGARDS

In developed markets, the fund will continue to vote against if the board does not include at least two directors of each gender.

The new voting guidance is expected to affect some 5 per cent of companies in the fund’s equity portfolio, said Amy Wilson, the fund’s head of stewardshi­p.

“Our voting policy is there to address laggards and bring up the lowest performers, to close the gap up with our expectatio­ns,” said Wilson.

Overall, around 60 per cent of companies in the fund’s portfolio are still below the expectatio­n of at least 30 per cent representa­tion of each gender on boards, she said.

So far, the fund has not divested from a company because it did not respect its gender diversity requiremen­t and nor is it planning to, Smith Ihenacho said.

“I think on this issue it is much better to be a vocal investor,” she said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? IMPACT, A view of the Norwegian central bank, where Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is situated, in Oslo. The new voting guidance is expected to affect 5% of companies in the fund’s equity portfolio
REUTERS IMPACT, A view of the Norwegian central bank, where Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is situated, in Oslo. The new voting guidance is expected to affect 5% of companies in the fund’s equity portfolio

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