Saturday, May 21, 2022

Introduced In The U.S. Senate: "Investor Democracy is Expected (INDEX) Act" To Regulate BlackRock et al. Proxy Voting

As Bill Clinton's campaign strategist James Carville might have said: "It's the voting, Stupid."
All the rest of the arguments against index funds pale in comparison, or are actually in error.
It's the proxy voting that gives BlackRock the real power and it's the voting of proxies issue we focus on.

From the Senate Banking Committee, minority press room, May 18:

Toomey, Sullivan Introduce Bill to Return Corporate Voting Power to Shareholders

Washington, D.C. U.S. Senate Banking Committee Ranking Member Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) today joined U.S Senator Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) in introducing the Investor Democracy is Expected (INDEX) Act to address problems stemming from the consolidated corporate ownership and voting power within Wall Street’s largest investment advisers and their index funds. With passive investing exploding in popularity over the past two decades, these firms have quietly become the largest owners in almost all public U.S. companies. As such, they are able to leverage the investments of millions of index fund investors into the dominant voting bloc at shareholder meetings.

“In recent years, a small handful of large index fund managers have used a quirk in securities law to vote shares purchased with other people’s money,” said Sen. Toomey. “The INDEX Act returns voting power to the real shareholders — retail investors who put their own money at risk. Further democratizing investing and diminishing the consolidation of corporate voting power are concepts members of both parties should get behind.”

“The American people deserve the opportunity to vote on behalf of their investments, including those made in index funds. Massive Wall Street firms should not be able to coopt this voting power to essentially control our entire public market,” Sen. Sullivan said. “Currently, the three largest investment advisers vote nearly one-quarter of all shares cast at annual meetings, and are the largest shareholders in over 90 percent of S&P 500 companies. The INDEX Act would correct this extreme market distortion by simply requiring that the power to vote shares resides with the fund investors, not the advisers. This would democratize corporate governance and largely eliminate the influence that these firms wield at shareholder meetings, often to push political agendas. It would also remove these firms as a gateway for special interest groups who push radical agendas through corporate governance that they could not otherwise achieve through the traditional political process.”....

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If interested see the links in last week's ""Meet the three university friends that want to give voting rights to BlackRock shareholders"