IPF Protecting Investments by Keeping the Heat on
Corporate America
During the last few years, thousands of employees of corporations
such as Adelphia and Enron lost their jobs because of their
bosses’ greed and corruption. All Americans saw their
pensions threatened by corporate misdeeds that caused share
prices to collapse and sharp fluctuations in the stock market.
The
financial stability of all pension funds is linked to the
performance of the stock market. BAC members therefore,
through their pension investments, have a direct interest
in the health of American corporations.
The International
Pension Fund’s (IPF) trustees are
among those leading the charge to make sure that corporations
play by the rules and stay responsive to shareholders.
This is being done by actively supporting regulations that
will
require corporations to make more of their financial
information available to investors, and by pushing for
changes in corporate
board structures to make them more accountable to investors.
As an investor, IPF is allowed to make shareholder proposals
on these issues at the companies in which the fund invests – and
it’s doing just that.
BAC Proxy Victories
This year, IPF reform proposals won majority support
at a number of companies. As a result of these reform
proposals,
Albertson’s, Home Depot, and Marathon Oil are
now required to accept common-sense limitations on
executive severance
pay, or “golden parachutes.” At VF Corporation,
an IPF proposal shot down the company’s “poison
pill” that had been used to protect ineffective,
high-paid executives. And at a number of other companies,
BAC proposals
prompted corporate executives to talk to IPF about
its concerns.
IPF will continue to use its status
as an investor to vote proxies and offer shareholder
proposals to
increase
corporate
accountability in the upcoming months and years.
But IPF needs your help. If there’s a company
that you believe should be put on our “watch
list,” let your local
business manager know. “BAC and our funds are
dedicated to making sure that all the companies in
which we’re
invested play by the rules,” says IPF Trustee
and BAC Secretary-Treasurer James Boland.
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