Press Release
More than 50 Investor Groups, Social Investment Forum Urge SEC to Require Environmental, Social & Governance (ESG) Disclosure
CONTACT:
Patrick Mitchell, (703) 276-3266 or pmitchell@hastingsgroup.com
WASHINGTON, D.C. |
July 21, 2009 |
Requests Mandated Reporting Based on Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) Guidelines; Current Financial Woes Linked to Lack of Transparency.
More than 50 major investment firms and professionals joined the Social Investment Forum (SIF) today in calling on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to help strengthen financial markets and foster sustainable business practices by requiring publicly traded companies to report annually on a range of environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) matters.
The organizations are asking the SEC to require companies to report: (1) annually on a cohesive set of sustainability indicators in accordance with the most up-to-date reporting framework of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI); and (2) on other material ESG matters as they come to light.
The full text of the SIF letter and the list of signatories can be viewed at http://www.socialinvest.org/documents/ESG_Letter_to_SEC.pdf.
In the letter to SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro that accompanied the proposal, the investors said: “The present global economic crisis has made it readily apparent that our existing system for corporate reporting has failed shareholders. We believe that robust sustainability reporting could have mitigated some of the impacts of the financial crisis. These types of disclosures would have promoted longer-term thinking by investors and corporations, and earlier detection of predatory lending and other destructive business practices. There is a tremendous opportunity to learn from these gaps and to construct a system of safeguards to protect investors. We are confident that mandatory sustainability reporting will contribute significantly to rebuilding public trust in corporations as well as the agencies regulating them in the wake of the present crisis.”
SIF CEO
Among the signers is Ceres, a leading coalition of investors and environmental groups that has been working with many of the nation’s largest investors to persuade the SEC to issue guidance on ESG disclosure companies should be providing. “Institutional investors need standardized, comparable reporting on ESG risks and opportunities to integrate this information into their investment decision-making,” said Ceres President Mindy Lubber. “Only with clear SEC guidance on ESG matters can investors avoid costly financial risks in their portfolios.”
The
The proposal notes that several trends are converging that speak directly to the need for a mandatory ESG disclosure rule in the United States:
* An increasing number of investors are integrating ESG factors into their investment decisions and requesting greater disclosure from companies through voluntary initiatives and shareholder proposals.
* Recent legal opinions have come around to the position that consideration of ESG factors in the investment process is not only permissible but also arguably mandatory for fiduciaries.
* Several governments and regulators outside the United States--including those in France, Sweden and the United Kingdom--already require corporations to disclose various ESG factors.
* A mounting volume of literature points to links between ESG factors and corporate financial performance.
The submission to the SEC tracks the rise of investor interest in ESG issues. One example it cites is the more than 560 global investment institutions with more than $18 trillion in assets under management that have signed onto the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment since 2005. As signatories these investors pledge, among other things, to incorporate ESG issues into investment analysis and decision-making processes.
ABOUT THE SOCIAL INVESTMENT FORUM
The Social Investment Forum (http://www.socialinvest.org) is the