Looking ahead to the 2019 proxy season, Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS) has its eyes on four areas: external auditor ratification, appointment, disclosure and rotation (and audit committee assessments); director accountability, board gender diversity, and the “one-share, one-vote” principle. Those observations are based on the proxy advisor’s 2018-2019 Annual Global Policy Survey questions, which were released July 30. The survey is a part of their annual development process, addressing potential policy changes for 2019. They are asking institutional investors, companies, corporate directors and other market constituents to respond to the survey. The survey is given in two parts: Governance Principles (this section closes August 24 at 5pm ET) and Policy Application, a more in-depth survey broken down by region about specific voting issues (this section will close September 21 at 5pm ET). Governance principles questions The following survey questions and descriptions are included in the governance principles section: Auditors and audit committees ISS is looking for additional indicators of audit quality, seemingly to expand policy as they mentioned other developed markets have done. Director accountability Some institutional investors are interested in tracking individual directors who have been involved in controversies with respect to one or more of their past or present directorships, particularly where concerns have been raised about shortfalls in oversight. Where identified, such concerns about oversight shortfalls may trigger negative recommendations under current ISS policy. Board gender diversity Globally, gender diversity in boardrooms has increasingly become a topic of interest. After stating that the percentage of Russell 3000 companies with no female board member has decreased by 5 percent in 6 months in the US, ISS is asking surveyors if they are still concerned about the lack of female board members. “One-share, one-vote principle” In the survey, ISS defines the “"one-share, one-vote principle" – the idea that shareholders and long-term shareholder value is best protected by a capital structure in which voting power corresponds to each shareholder's ownership stake and at-risk capital commitment. ISS is considering whether to provide in the future an adjusted analysis of shareholder vote results to show what the results would have been if all votes had been counted under the principle.”
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