Morgan Stanley accused of "schizophrenic" climate change policy
Report finds some of Wall Street's titans are guilty of promoting green
investments at the same time as blocking climate-related shareholder resolutions
Hostility from the mutual fund industry towards climate change related
shareholder resolutions is receding, according to a major new report, but some
high profile investment banks are continuing to block resolutions despite their
vocal support for green issues.
Released yesterday,
the report
from environmental investor coalition
Ceres claims
that Morgan Stanley and
State Street Global Advisors are particularly
guilty of "inconsistent behaviour", having boosted their climate change related
business activity at the same time as voting against resolutions demanding
companies they hold stakes in disclose more information on their climate
strategies.
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The study found that Morgan Stanley's mutual funds supported none of the 215
climate resolutions they faced between 2004 and 2007, while State Street Global
Advisors' mutual funds opposed all 54 resolutions they faced over the same
period.
The report claimed this "schizophrenic" behaviour is exposing the firms to
financial and reputational risk and urged them to adopt "more sensible proxy
voting policies on climate change".
Mindy S. Lubber, president of Ceres and director of the
Investor
Network on Climate Risk, said there was a strong business case for mutual
funds to support shareholder resolutions demanding greater disclosure on climate
change as it would help them identify climate related risks within their
investor portfolio.
"Investors should be scrubbing their portfolios for climate risks just as
they're now scrubbing them for hidden sub-prime risks," she said. "Mutual funds
that are ignoring climate resolutions aimed at boosting corporate disclosure of
climate risks are failing in their fiduciary responsibilities and failing their
customers."
The report's study of almost 1,300 mutual funds found that overall they are
softening their stance on climate related resolutions. Between 2004 and 2007
opposition to resolutions dropped from three quarters of fund votes to less than
two out of three, while the number of abstention votes has more than doubled.
Goldman Sachs was singled out for
praise after supporting 49 per cent of the shareholder resolutions faced by its
mutual funds last year.
Lubber said investment firms should now look to integrate their growing
awareness of climate related risks into their business activities, including
their proxy voting policies.
The study comes just days after a
report
from the Institutional Investors Group on
Climate Change, similarly
concluded
that investment firms should step up efforts to ensure rhetoric on climate
change is being translated into changes to their investment processes and
policies.
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