Norway's $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund steps up 'no' votes on CEO pay

The world's biggest wealth fund wants stricter and clearer rules in companies it invests in

Mikael Holter
Monday 27 November 2017 11:12 GMT
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Norway is home to the world's biggest sovereign wealth fund
Norway is home to the world's biggest sovereign wealth fund

When Norway’s $1 trillion (£748bn) sovereign wealth fund said it wanted companies to curb excessive and opaque top-management pay, it meant business.

Since releasing a position paper in April, the world’s biggest wealth fund has increased the number of votes against management compensation proposals in the companies it invests in, Carine Smith Ihenacho, its global head of ownership strategies, said in an interview in Oslo.

It has this year voted against pay plans at Alphabet, Google’s holding company, offshore driller Noble and media company Liberty Global, among others.

The fund was unable to provide aggregated statistics on its publicly available votes, but plans to do so in connection with its annual report on responsible investment, due in February.

Built on the country’s petroleum income over the past 20 years, Norway’s wealth fund has more than doubled in size since 2012 and crossed the $1 trillion mark earlier this year. It owns about 1.5 per cent of all listed stocks in the world and invests in almost 9,000 companies, having opted to hold equities, bonds and real estate abroad to avoid spurring inflation in Norway.

Ethical Guidelines

The fund operates according to a set of ethical guidelines that span from human rights to environmental issues, and has cut its investments in tobacco and certain weapons producers, as well as in mining and in utilities that rely heavily on coal. It’s also taken on a more activist role in voting on management proposals, after flagging preferences such as the separation of CEO and chairman positions.

The fund earlier this year urged companies to ensure that a “substantial proportion” of annual pay be provided as shares that are locked in for at least five years, but preferably 10. Pay practices should also be simple and total remuneration should be transparent.

The fund has strict guidelines of its own. For example, it bars its senior executives from receiving performance-based bonuses and sets management wages at “competitive levels” while avoiding becoming the market leader. Its chief executive, Yngve Slyngstad, earned $810,000 last year.

NBIM regularly talks to individual companies, including about pay, Smith Ihenacho said, declining to comment on how the fund plans to vote in the next big round of general meetings in May and June next year.

“We have issued a position paper on what we believe to be good remuneration practices,” she said. “We’re primarily hoping that companies will follow those, rather than us finding a lot of companies to vote against.”

Bloomberg

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