Jupiter Value Equities Team: 2023 Stewardship Report - Global Value
In their annual stewardship report, the Value Equities team provide an insight into how they have engaged with the companies in which they invest.
- Record of engagements
- Successful vs unsuccessful engagements
- Poor governance and the implications
- Remuneration and the importance of getting it right: UK vs US
- Carbon Emissions: how we stack up against last year
Record of Engagement
2021 | 2022 | 2023 | |
Shareholder Meetings | 48 | 53 | 57 |
Voted Against/Abstained* | 9 meetings (19%) | 28 meetings (53%) | 27 meetings (47%) |
*Voted against or abstained at, at least 1 meeting
On the Jupiter Value Equities team, we believe that direct active company engagement is crucial to be able to understand issues and help drive positive change of our investee companies. We think Environmental, Social and Governance factors are part of the financial analysis process and are impossible to disaggregate. We conduct the ESG analysis ourselves as part of our integrated investment process and are aided by a dedicated in-house stewardship team who run analysis in parallel to us. In 2023, we held over 50 engagements with actual/potential investments. Most engagements cover multiple topics. In the chart below we have highlighted the split of engagements to indicate the main areas of discussion and debate.
Percentage of company engagements
Each category is defined below, including a list of some of the companies we engaged with on these topics:
Capital allocation: acquisitions, capital expenditure and balance sheet strength.
- Centrica, M&G, First Group, ITV, Sky NZ, Card Factory, Mobico, Synthomer, CLS, BT, Schaeffler
Remuneration: executive and employee pay
- Pearson, QinetiQ, Ashmore, Aviva, WPP, Kyndryl, TI Fluid Systems and Harley Davidson.
Climate: de-carbonisation and other GHG reduction plans
- Centrica, Toagoesi, Land Securities, easyJet, Covestro, First Group, Johnson Matthey, BT, South 32
Management: executive and non-executive
- Bayer, Kingfisher, IDS, Smith & Nephew, BAE, Ashmore, Western Union, WPP, ITV, Shaftesbury, M&G, Kyndryl, Tyman, Tiger Brands, BT and Kato Sangyo
Sustainability: health & safety, product design and supply chain
- Bayer, Kingfisher, IDS, BAE, Nokia, Covestro, Synthomer, S32, easyJet, IDS, Nokia
Successful vs unsuccessful engagements
It is very difficult in our view to assign direct causality between engagements and outcomes. Change at companies comes from numerous sources – internally, customers, society, regulation – as well as from the shareholders. We act on behalf of our customers to try and push for change at companies where we believe it will make a difference. Crucially we need to explain and justify this course of action. The examples below are where we think we have had some success or have failed. We don’t want to presume that it was our actions alone though, but we hope that we can at least make some difference.
Successes: We have had two instances where we have made our views clear to the board that we didn’t want certain acquisitions to take place. Sky NZ and ITV both made announcements about potential acquisitions they were interested in. Sky NZ wanted to diversify away from the core pay TV model and ITV was potentially interested in an acquisition that we thought would place too much pressure on its balance sheet. In each case we felt that capital shouldn’t be deployed and spoke to the Chair of each company. We were pleased that neither acquisition took place. Clearly, we can’t prove that we were correct as the acquisitions might ultimately have been successful but we do believe that material moves in capital allocation add significant risk.
Failures: We have been engaging with South32 on health and safety for many years. The remuneration is now far better aligned to reflect poor health and safety and yet the fatalities still occur. In our view there is no shortage of management or board commitment to reducing fatalities. Should we see this as a failure? It could be interpreted that way when considering the underlying data in comparison to Rio Tinto but when extending that comparison to Sibanye-Stillwater (South African exposure) its less clear.
Fatalities | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 |
South32 (9,616 employees) | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | Fatalities | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
Rio Tinto (54,000 employees) | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Sibanye-Stillwater (84,481 employees) | 24 | 6 | 9 | 21 | 5 |
Source: Rio Tinto Health, Safety & Wellbeing 2022, South32 sustainable development report 2023, Sibanye-Stillwater 2022 performance-safe-production report
Poor governance and the implications
During the year we engaged with the Board of Tiger Brands Limited. Tiger Brands has a very strong consumer franchise in South Africa, but in recent years the business has been struggling. Many of the challenges Tiger has faced have been beyond their control: their customers have had less money in their pockets, the South African Rand (ZAR) has weakened, and a dysfunctional national electrical grid has made production tricky. However, Tiger had been disproportionately impacted relative to peers and had been losing market share which suggests to us that the business was being poorly run.
We initially bought shares in the business in June 2022. In our view, the business has a very strong collection of brands and a strong balance sheet. We thought there was material upside in the shares if management could execute a successful turnaround and stem the market share losses. Tiger had appointed Noel Doyle as CEO in early 2020 but he had been an internal appointment (he was formerly the CFO) and there was very little evidence of a turnaround when we purchased the shares. For example, the group lost market share in 10 out of 19 core categories in 2021. It seemed unlikely to us that a successful turnaround could be implemented by the incumbent management team and so we purchased the shares in the knowledge that a change in CEO would probably be necessary to make money in the shares.
In 2023 we engaged with the Tiger Brands board to push for management change. Agitating for management change is difficult because it requires many shareholders to hold similar views. For that reason, we don’t want to take any credit for the news that Tiger had hired a new CEO: we were probably one of many shareholders making our views known to the board. However, it seems that the market in aggregate agreed with our assessment because on the day it was announced the shares jumped as much as 18% on the day. It remains to be seen whether the new CEO can deliver the turnaround that is needed at Tiger but he at least he now has a mandate for change.
Remuneration and the importance of getting it right: UK vs US
As stewards of our clients’ capital, we need to think very carefully about how the CEO’s of the companies in which we invest are remunerated. This is an area with a clear conflict of interest between management and shareholders. It is usually in shareholders’ best interests to keep remuneration low, as any money spent on paying management is not available to shareholders in the form of profits and ultimately dividends. However, it is also important to ensure the best people are attracted to run the companies in our portfolios, so the right answer is not totally straightforward.
For this reason, we spend a lot of time engaging with our companies on the topic of remuneration. Recently, an area of particular focus has been the gap between CEO compensation in the UK relative to the US. Many of the companies we have engaged with have argued for higher pay for UK based CEOs on the basis that they might leave to run US companies where the remuneration is higher.
For example, Pearson, the UK-listed publisher, engaged with us this year before putting forward proposals to significantly increase CEO pay for this exact reason. We voted against the proposals on the basis that the quantum was far too high. Evidently, we weren’t the only ones to think this with 46% of votes cast voting against the remuneration policy (albeit the policy still passed with a simple majority). In this instance it appears that Pearson won the battle but lost the war: CEO Andy Bird announced his departure soon after the AGM.
Pearson is by no means the only company where we have voted against management proposals at the AGM. Over the past 3 years, we have done so at 31 separate AGMs. Of these, 22 involved a vote against remuneration. It is by far the single biggest cause for us to vote against management proposals at AGMs.
However, we think the objective statistics understate the amount we have had to push back against remuneration. This is because an AGM ballot is often changed in advance following consultation with the major shareholders. It is embarrassing for any board to have shareholders vote against their recommendations. Shareholder votes are very public. For this reason, even the threat of a vote against can lead to meaningful change. Another company in our portfolios engaged with us this year on a similar issue. They are a global company and their divisional heads in the U.S. are paid more than the London-based CEO. They were proposing to rectify this by increasing the CEO’s pay but there must not have been sufficient support from shareholders because the proposal was pulled in advance of the AGM.
Clearly this is not just the case for remuneration but in all AGM voting matters. One tangible example of this from a few years ago was a FTSE 100 Chair deciding not to stand for re-election after we had made it clear we would be voting against them at the upcoming AGM. Since then, the new Chair has dramatically improved the corporate governance at the firm. Despite the improved governance, however, our investment in the shares wasn’t profitable which shows that investing is rarely about any single thing. We also think the examples above highlight another point: shareholders have significant power in deciding how a company is run and these responsibilities should not be taken lightly. At Jupiter it is the fund managers who decide how to vote on behalf of the clients rather than a centralised corporate voting team. Doing it this way is by no means ubiquitous across the City but we feel that it is vitally important for us to be able to vote in the manner which maximises the value of our clients’ interests. The right answer is not always obvious and a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach is unlikely to work. Doing it this way consumes a reasonable amount of our time and resources but we think it is worth the effort involved.
Carbon Emissions: how we stack up against last year
The decarbonisation progress of our strategy is unlikely to be linear; we continually recycle capital into the pockets of the market where we see the most ‘value’, which may well be carbon-intensive industries. Our preference is therefore to assess emission reduction momentum for each individual holding, as a tool to inform our engagement activities. Our focus is only on Scope 1 & 2, as the emissions most directly controlled by our portfolio companies, rather than Scope 3 where data quality and coverage are poor.
For the 90% of current holdings that have reported data for Scope 1 and 2 emissions every year since 2019, the absolute reductions in carbon emissions are as follows:
2021 - 2022 | 2019 - 2022 | ||
Absolute Emissions Reduction | |||
Average Holding (mean) | -2% | -15% | |
Average Holding (median) | -6% | -13% |
The portfolio holdings in the above data set are as at November 2023. We have looked at how they performed over 2019-2022, though some holdings may not have been held in the portfolio for the whole period. This has been done to show the trajectory of the current portfolio. We have ensured the data is as up to date as possible and have adjusted the MSCI dataset to reflect the most recent company reports where appropriate and have then used the company restated numbers where applicable. Restating numbers is a manual task where we inevitably assume risk regarding the consistency of company methodologies and the potential for human error. Total refers to the overall emissions change for the strategy assuming a constant portfolio; average holding looks at the equal-weighted average of emissions reductions for each holding.
Two-thirds of holdings reduced their carbon emissions over 2021-2022. Despite this, the mean change was positive. This was materially influenced by a >200% increase in emissions at airline easyJet, as COVID-19 restrictions diminished significantly during its fiscal year ending September 2022 compared to the year prior.
Since 2019, more than half of the companies held in the portfolio have reduced Scope 1 and 2 emissions by over 20%. This is a striking number, but there are some important caveats to consider. As political focus on carbon has intensified over the past few years, companies have likely tackled the easiest opportunities for decarbonisation first, such as buying renewable energy certificates. This may lead to a period of large year-on-year improvements after which the pace of change is more moderate. Equally, though we endeavour to exclude emissions figures that are not sufficiently comparable between years, there may be instances where companies have different thresholds for restating their emissions in the event of a divestment.
Four companies increased their emissions over the 2019-2022 period. Fresnillo is the only of these that is considered ‘High Climate Impact’ in accordance with Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) definitions. The company have explained this increase as less ore grade at some of its mines, requiring a higher level of mineral processing. The approach to net zero is a key engagement topic for us with this holding.
Conclusion
Stewardship is embedded into our process and something we take very seriously. This document is designed to highlight any areas of particular interest that we have engaged on over the year and that often means it may be slightly controversial as it focuses on where we are actively pursuing improvements/ changes. With the regulatory landscape ever evolving and the implementation of the UK Sustainable Disclosure Requirements (SDR), further reporting on ESG will undoubtedly progress and we look forward to updating you.
2 Source: Bloomberg, as of 13.02.24
3 As of 1.11.2023.
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