Strategy
Schroders Flexes Shareholder Voting Muscle; Sets Out Wealth Growth Targets

The UK wealth and asset manager described how it voted in annual general meetings this year, showing that in some cases it was more willing to vote against company resolutions. It also spelled out its ambitions to grow its wealth management arm.
Schroders voted
against company bosses in 2021 annual general meetings more times
than it did a year earlier, figures show.
The UK-listed firm also voted against a larger number of company
resolutions because it was more concerned about a lack of gender
diversity than it was a year earlier.
Separately, the business set out its wealth management growth
ambitions out to 2025.
The firm disclosed its annual general meeting voting patterns at
a time when such groups are being urged to use their market
muscle to encourage boardroom changes. (See
here for a related story about executive pay and AGM
voting.) Schroders oversaw a total of £76 billion
($103.5 billion) in assets under management, giving it
considerable market clout.
Schroders voted on a total of 1,416 shareholder proposals in the
2021 AGM season, up from 1,206 in 2020.
The pandemic’s disruption to business life in 2020 meant that
many companies retrospectively adjusted remuneration plans for
bosses because targets set early last year were no longer
achievable or relevant, Schroders said.
“We assessed these pay and bonus packages on a case-by-case
basis, taking into account government support received, share
price performance and dividend status, and how performance has
been used to justify awarding bonus pay-outs,” the firm said,
explaining its voting record.
“Our objective is to ensure pay outcomes are still aligned
usefully with performance and reward management teams who have
navigated their company relatively well through the pandemic,” it
continued. “In the US, it has long been company practice to
propose a long-term equity plan that is entirely time-based and
lacks performance conditions. In normal times, we would vote
against these proposals.”
“But given the difficulties that companies have faced when
setting long-term targets as a result of the pandemic, we have
made an exception this year. Provided the company has outlined a
commitment to increasing the performance element of the incentive
in the coming year(s), we have supported long-term plans that are
50 per cent time-based,” it added.
The disclosure of voting records comes at a time when firms are
talking more about how they use financial power. To an extent,
the drive towards ESG investing, and concerns about gender,
racial and ethnic diversity in the boardroom, are driving this.
Debate continues on to what extent these concerns fit the
fiduciary obligation of capital managers to maximise shareholder
returns.
Wealth growth ambitions
With its wealth management joint venture with the UK’s Lloyds
Banking Group, and its strategic stake in Sandaire, the
multi-family office, Schroders is targeting an audience ranging
from the mass-affluent to ultra-high net worth space.
It wants to have a total of £115 billion in assets under
management by 2025, the group said in an update on its wealth
business progress. It has four franchises: Cazenove Capital;
Schroders Personal Wealth (its Lloyds JV); Schroders Wealth
Management, and Benchmark Capital. Now a global organisation,
Schroders has booking centres in the UK, the Channel Islands,
Switzerland, Hong Kong and Singapore.
Its presentation refers to four opportunities: wealth creation in
the UK regions; fragmentation of family offices; declining UK
advisor numbers as people retire from the sector, and the need
for clients to have a single picture of financial
affairs.
At present, wealth management business accounts for 16 per cent
of the Schroders group’s total pre-tax profit; this business has
a higher margin on assets (56 per cent) than for its asset
management side (37 per cent).