View

Investors need to go the extra mile if they want their voices heard

Active investing for the long term takes more than one meeting or a strongly worded letter to a firm’s management

Investors need to go the extra mile if they want their voices heard
Photo: Getty Images

Active ownership is about using your rights and influence as an investor to engage investee companies in a productive dialogue and driving change that can make a tangible difference. Yet the process of engaging these companies can often be hard to quantify and many may be surprised at the timeline over which this can unfold.

As long-term investors, our relationships with investees can continue for many years — decades in some cases. We have a duty to our clients and wider stakeholders in society to monitor and engage with companies for the entire time that we hold their stocks and bonds — and in a way that protects all our interests long into the future.

WSJ Logo
How Trump Got His ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Across the Finish LineExternal link

How Trump Got His ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’ Across the Finish Line