2024³â 11¿ù 06ÀÏ ¼ö¿äÀÏ
 
 
  ÇöÀçÀ§Ä¡ > ´º½ºÁö´åÄÄ > Business

·£¼¶¿þ¾îºÎÅÍ µÅÁöµµ»ì±îÁö... ³ë·ÃÇØÁø »ç±âÇà°¢

 

Á¤Ä¡

 

°æÁ¦

 

»çȸ

 

»ýÈ°

 

¹®È­

 

±¹Á¦

 

°úÇбâ¼ú

 

¿¬¿¹

 

½ºÆ÷Ã÷

 

ÀÚµ¿Â÷

 

ºÎµ¿»ê

 

°æ¿µ

 

¿µ¾÷

 

¹Ìµð¾î

 

½Å»óÇ°

 

±³À°

 

ÇÐȸ

 

½Å°£

 

°øÁö»çÇ×

 

Ä®·³

 

Ä·ÆäÀÎ
Çѻ츲 ¡®¿ì¸®´Â ÇѽҸ²¡¯ ½Ò ¼Òºñ Ä·ÆäÀÎ ½Ã...
1000¸¸¿øÂ¥¸® Àΰø¿Í¿ì, °Ç°­º¸Çè Áö¿ø ¡®Æò...
- - - - - - -
 

Shareholder Activism Levels Reach Four-Year High Amid Surge in Global Campaigns, According to Diligent

More companies are identifying activism as a risk in corporate disclosures, as campaigns return to pre-pandemic levels
´º½ºÀÏÀÚ: 2024-02-24

NEW YORK -- In 2023, 982 companies were subject to activist campaigns globally, a 4.6% rise compared to a year prior and the highest level since 2019. This is according to the new Diligent Market Intelligence: Shareholder Activism Annual Review 2024 report from Diligent. The findings were released live today at Diligent’s first annual Proxy Season Preview, a leading proxy season conference featuring panels and keynote speeches from the world’s most prominent stewardship specialists on topics including shareholder activism, environmental, social and governance (ESG), executive compensation and more.

According to the report, more companies are identifying activism as a risk in their corporate disclosures. In 2023, 23.4% of Russell 3000 companies disclosed shareholder activism as a risk in their 10-K reporting, up from 21.4% a year prior. Financial resilience and the introduction of the universal proxy card are driving both traditional and nontraditional activists to launch campaigns aimed at remuneration and ESG oversight.

“Market conditions are playing a notable role in shaping activist demands and the companies which activists choose to target,” said Josh Black, editor-in-chief of Diligent Market Intelligence, at Diligent. “Now more than ever, boards need to demonstrate that they are financially resilient and have strong governance practices in place to stay one step ahead.”

Three themes emerge from the report’s key findings that both boards and investors should have on their radar. These include:

Activism goes global as shareholders look to maximize returns:

· In 2023, 550 U.S. companies were publicly subjected to activist demands, a 7.8% rise compared to a year prior, with many campaigns taking aim at costly M&A transactions. The U.S. saw a 20.8% increase in the number of companies subjected to oppose M&A demands, from 24 to 29.
· 220 Asia-based companies were subject to demands in 2023, marking the third consecutive year of increasing campaigns in the region while, in Canada, 69 companies were subjected to demands a 25.5% increase compared to 2022.
· Meanwhile, shareholder activism stagnated in Europe, with 123 European companies publicly subjected to campaigns in 2023, down from a high of 177 in 2021. However, the number of board seats activists secured held steady at 36 in 2023 compared to 38 in 2022, indicating that activists are continuing to push for board representation in Europe.

Market volatility prompts increase in remuneration demands:

· Investors enhanced their focus on remuneration in 2023, keen to ensure companies have robust policies and practices in place to weather market risks. In the U.S., 81 companies faced remuneration-related demands, a 37.3% increase compared to the 59 seen in 2022 and the highest increase of any demand type.
· Shareholder proposals concerning pay are also winning increased backing. Three proposals seeking clawback policy amendments won 36.5% average support at U.S.-based companies, up from five winning 27.5% support a year prior.

Universal proxy provides an avenue for non-traditional activists to launch ESG campaigns:

· The number of ESG demands publicly made by primary- and partial-focus activists increased in 2023 to 132 demands globally, up from 114 demands a year prior, and almost double the 79 seen in 2021.
· In the U.S., the newfound freedom universal proxy offers when casting votes is bringing forth non-traditional activists, seeking board composition changes to remedy ESG shortcomings.



 Àüü´º½º¸ñ·ÏÀ¸·Î

EGGDROP Draws Attention for Production Support of Global Hit Series ¡®Love Next Door¡¯ and ¡®Romance in the House¡¯
AIT Worldwide Logistics releases 2024 Sustainability Report
Global Economies Can Save $3.13 Trillion Annually Using AI to Detect and Prevent Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing
Transition Industries LLC and Mitsubishi Gas Chemical agreed on a long-term Methanol Sales Agreement from the Pacifico Mexinol project in Mexico
AD Ports Group Is a Leading Driver of Economic Diversification and Non-Oil GDP in Abu Dhabi and UAE: New Study
Newmont Suriname Awarded U.S. Secretary of State¡¯s Award for Corporate Excellence
Cross-Generational Leadership in Family Business: New Study from Egon Zehnder and FBN Unveils Strategies for Success

 

Tecnotree¡¯s Strategy Has Delivered Free Cash Flow for a Second Consec...
Starr Insurance Receives License to Operate Branch in Seoul
Xsolla Significantly Expands Payment Solutions in Cambodia and Indones...
MSCI Welcomes Richard Mattison as New Leader for ESG and Climate Busin...
Energy Vault and Enervest Announce Agreement for 1.0 GWh Energy Storag...
PMI Worldwide Brands, LLC (dba, Stanley 1913) Partners with Kinaxis to...
2024 MOKKOJI KOREA on the European Stage

 


°øÁö»çÇ×
´º½ºÁö ÇÑÀÚÇ¥±â 'ãæÚ¤ó¢'
´º½º±×·ì Á¤º¸ ¹Ìµð¾î ºÎ¹® »óÇ¥µî·Ï
¾ËÇÁ·Ò °è¿­ »óÇ¥, »óÇ¥µî·Ï ¿Ï·á
¾Ë¶ã°Ç¼³, »óÇ¥µî·Ï ¿Ï·á
Á¸Â÷´åÄÄ, ±Û²Ã º¯°æ »óÇ¥µî·Ï ¿Ï·á

 

ȸ»ç¼Ò°³ | ÀÎÀçä¿ë | ÀÌ¿ë¾à°ü | °³ÀÎÁ¤º¸Ãë±Þ¹æħ | û¼Ò³âº¸È£Á¤Ã¥ | Ã¥ÀÓÇÑ°è¿Í ¹ýÀû°íÁö | À̸ÞÀÏÁÖ¼Ò¹«´Ü¼öÁý°ÅºÎ | °í°´¼¾ÅÍ

±â»çÁ¦º¸ À̸ÞÀÏ news@newsji.com, ÀüÈ­ 050 2222 0002, Æѽº 050 2222 0111, ÁÖ¼Ò : ¼­¿ï ±¸·Î±¸ °¡¸¶»ê·Î 27±æ 60 1-37È£

ÀÎÅͳݴº½º¼­ºñ½º»ç¾÷µî·Ï : ¼­¿ï ÀÚ00447, µî·ÏÀÏÀÚ : 2013.12.23., ´º½º¹è¿­ ¹× û¼Ò³âº¸È£ÀÇ Ã¥ÀÓ : ´ëÇ¥ CEO

Copyright ¨Ï All rights reserved..