

Safeguarding shareholder rights leads Q1 Active Ownership report
The ongoing battles that investors are having with companies and regulators to secure their shareholder rights leads the Robeco Active Ownership team’s latest report
まとめ
- Preserving shareholder rights amid corporate resistance remains a high priority
- Engagement work to get Australian states aligned with federal policy on climate
- Reports on payouts for transiting executives and on human rights in conflicts
Engagement work on Australia’s climate transition, the thorny issue of another kind of transition – large payouts for when CEOs move jobs, and preserving human rights in conflict areas round up the summary of the team’s work in Q1 2026.
The report begins with Robeco’s attempts to counter the continuing erosion of shareholder rights seen with barriers to voting, blocking resolutions at AGMs, and corporate self-interests that fail to protect minority shareholders in public markets.
“Strong shareholder rights act as a foundation for effective stewardship, sustainable value creation, and well-functioning capital markets,” says Engagement Specialist Diana Trif. “But they are being increasingly eroded by regulatory reforms and corporate actions on issues like shareholder resolutions or voting.”
“Key priorities include removing barriers to voting, improving AGM practices, enhancing shareholder proposal processes, and safeguarding minority rights,” adds Engagement Specialist Lucas van Beek. “Through targeted engagement with policymakers in key jurisdictions, Robeco aims to promote transparent and consistent governance standards that support long-term investor influence and sustainability outcomes.”
In a country the size of Australia, whose states and territories are larger than many nations, climate transition depends on strong alignment between federal ambition and state-level implementation. But there is now a divergence between national climate policy and what the states are doing, leading Robeco’s specialists to engage with representatives at the regional rather than federal level.
“Implementing ambitious climate transition policies requires everyone to sing from the same hymn sheet,” says Engagement Specialist Ghislaine Nadaud. “But this doesn’t always happen on the ground.”
“Queensland has shifted away from earlier ambition and Western Australia lacks transparency and pace, while Victoria has been more credible in reducing transition risk. These contrasting pathways highlight why regional engagement is essential for assessing climate policy credibility and long-term risk.”
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Executive transition pay
The perennially sensitive issue of excessive executive pay often rears its head when they are fired, change jobs naturally, or join new employers with large golden handshakes.
“CEO succession planning and their transitional pay packages have become central governance issues amid rising CEO turnover,” says Engagement Analyst Manuel Sobral. “Boards are increasingly challenged to ensure that severance packages and sign-on awards are aligned with long-term shareholder interests.”
“With transition-related awards gaining prominence in Say on Pay voting outcomes, investors are scrutinizing whether compensation reflects disciplined decision making rather than reactive responses to leadership change.”
Human rights in conflict areas
Finally, Robeco’s prior engagement on human rights due diligence in conflict-affected and high-risk areas is entering a new phase, following the continuance of wars in Gaza and Ukraine.
“Rising global conflicts and evolving regulations for sourcing supplies from war zones have increased expectations for companies to better manage their risks,” says Senior Engagement Specialist Yumi Fujita.
“Building on lessons from the first engagement cycle, the new phase targets companies with exposure to the Israel-Hamas war and other conflict zones, emphasizing how improved transparency and supply chain traceability can strengthen corporate resilience and mitigate risk.”
It’s about active ownership
In summary, the report shows how the new year has begun with many of the same issues as the past – shareholder rights, climate change, executive pay and human rights – requiring a continued but changing adaptation to evolving issues.
“We’re off to a great start to the year with engagement at the heart of what active ownership actually is – being able to use our influence as a shareholder or bondholder to improve sustainability at investee companies,” says Head of Active Ownership Peter van der Werf. “Yet, shareholder rights are still being gradually eroded to the detriment of investor value.”
“As we enter what is already shaping up to be another eventful year for engagement, corporate governance and stewardship, we look forward to updating clients and stakeholders with our active ownership work as we continue our deep commitment to sustainability.”
重要事項
当資料は情報提供を目的として、ロベコ・ジャパン株式会社(以下「当社」)が独自に作成、または当社のグループ会社(Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V.およびその関連会社を含む)から提供された資料を当社が編集・翻訳したものです。資料中の個別の金融商品の売買の勧誘や推奨等を目的とするものではありません。記載された情報は十分信頼できるものであると考えておりますが、その正確性、完全性を保証するものではありません。意見や見通しはあくまで作成日における弊社の判断に基づくものであり、今後予告なしに変更されることがあります。運用状況、市場動向、意見等は、過去の一時点あるいは過去の一定期間についてのものであり、過去の実績は将来の運用成果を保証または示唆するものではありません。また、記載された投資方針・戦略等は全ての投資家の皆様に適合するとは限りません。当資料は法律、税務、会計面での助言の提供を意図するものではありません。 ご契約に際しては、必要に応じ専門家にご相談の上、最終的なご判断はお客様ご自身でなさるようお願い致します。 運用を行う資産の評価額は、組入有価証券等の価格、金融市場の相場や金利等の変動、及び組入有価証券の発行体の財務状況による信用力等の影響を受けて変動します。また、外貨建資産に投資する場合は為替変動の影響も受けます。運用によって生じた損益は、全て投資家の皆様に帰属します。したがって投資元本や一定の運用成果が保証されているものではなく、投資元本を上回る損失を被ることがあります。弊社が行う金融商品取引業に係る手数料または報酬は、締結される契約の種類や契約資産額により異なるため、当資料において記載せず別途ご提示させて頂く場合があります。具体的な手数料または報酬の金額・計算方法につきましては弊社担当者へお問合せください。 当資料及び記載されている情報、商品に関する権利は弊社に帰属します。したがって、弊社の書面による同意なくしてその全部もしくは一部を複製またはその他の方法で配布することはご遠慮ください。 商号等: ロベコ・ジャパン株式会社 金融商品取引業者 関東財務局長(金商)第2780号 加入協会: 一般社団法人 資産運用業協会

























