Annual meetings are the new frontline in the battle over corporate purpose
Climate, race and inequality are on the agenda
COMPANIES HAVE always had to answer to their investors. But these days shareholders have new questions—lots of them. On April 28th shareholders in three big drug companies, Johnson & Johnson (J&J), Moderna and Pfizer, are set to vote on resolutions filed by Oxfam, a charity, that seek to widen access to covid-19 vaccines. In May Amazon’s shareholders are due to vote on a proposal from New York state’s pension fund, asking for an audit of the e-commerce giant’s policies on racial equity. Carl Icahn, a notoriously fierce corporate inquisitor, has broadened his attention from profits to pigs. He has filed proposals at McDonald’s and Kroger, a grocer, in a quest to end the confinement of pregnant sows.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “The power of the proxy”
Business April 23rd 2022
- Annual meetings are the new frontline in the battle over corporate purpose
- Netflix sheds subscribers—and $170bn in market value
- Big tech wants to bootstrap carbon removal into a big business
- After a fat year, tech startups are bracing for lean times
- Elon Musk’s Twitter saga is capitalism gone rogue
- Startups for the modern workplace
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