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Engagement:
KLD and the Companies It Researches
In
April, I participated in two panels for the Conference
Board. My topic was the mirror image of one I often talk on:
How can investors engage companies?
This
time, most in the audience worked for corporations KLD reports on.
Since I was asked more than once whether our researchers would talk
with companies about our reports, I realized we had a communications
problem.
Hence,
my topic this month: Why should and how can companies engage KLD?
Who
KLD Represents and How
KLD
has over 300 clients, all of whom are institutional investors, money
managers, investment advisers and academics. Among their clients
and beneficiaries are over a million -- a very conservative estimate
since one alone has over 400,000 investors -- who apply environmental,
social or governance criteria in their investment decision-making.
KLD
supplies the information about corporate securities issuers on which
those decisions are made. So, it is in a company's interest to do
what it can to see that KLD supplies correct data to its clients.
We
rely on four classes of information:
- public documents including
regulatory filings and corporate reports and publications;
- government databases including the Department of Labor, EPA
and OSHA data;
- published reports of all
types from academic papers to NGO reports to news stories; and
- direct communications
with the company ranging from survey responses to dialogues around
our research reports to visits by company representatives to KLD.
The
order here is significant. It is the order in which we do our research
and the ranking of our sources in terms of where we garner information.
Regulatory
Filings and Corporate Publications
Because
of the consequences to the filer of supplying incorrect information,
we rely to a considerable extent on regulatory filings. They are
our primary sources.
We
read what companies publish in areas relating to environmental,
social and governance issues. The less obviously self-serving a
publication or release is, the more likely we are to take it seriously.
KLD
uses the voluntary corporate reports assembled by organizations
such as One Report, the Global Reporting Initiative and the Carbon
Disclosure Project. However, we amplify them through surveys and
dialogue, as I discuss below.
Third-Party
Reports
KLD
relies on third party sources for the detail in its reports.
Every
day, we do database and internet trawls on the companies on which
we report. Our analysts review the catch for relevance. We also
review dozens of publications in hard copy.
Noteworthy
information immediately gets added to a company's profile. Examples
have included: the announcement of a boycott by an important NGO,
resolution of a civil case involving an environmental issue and
a company's major civic initiative in a community.
For
a description of the rating process that flows out of our data gathering,
please go to our website http://www.kld.com/research/methodology.html
Verification
and Dialogue
One
lawyer for a Fortune 100 company heard me say we relied on third
party reports. She reacted with horror: the press prints things
that aren't true about our company. Do we have a chance to respond?
Absolutely.
And we encourage dialogue and communication with us.
Each
year KLD sends a copy of its report on a company to our contact
at a company, or if we don't have one, to the investor relations
officer. A cover letter invites the company to review and respond
to the report. It directs the company to KLD's analyst who researches
the company. (In our continuous updating process, if we encounter
a significant issue that appears especially controversial, we immediately
contact the company.)
Companies
should want to look at what we write since upwards of ten percent
of shareholders do some form of SRI. Our report may affect a decision
to buy, sell or hold the company's shares.
Our
reason for asking companies to check our work is simple: we want
to eliminate errors in what goes to our clients. The number who
respond increases every year. However, we would like to have 100
percent. I think it is in their interest as well as ours.
A
number of companies regularly visit KLD in Boston. We welcome these
visits, and we are happy to explain our research processes and introduce
our team.
Terms
of Engagement
There
are limits on KLD's willingness to engage with the companies it
reports on or might report on.
For
example, we regularly get questions about what a company must do
to get on our social indexes. We point them to our screens which
appear on our website and in our pocket guide to social investing.
We do not provide company-specific advice to companies we might
rate.
In
short, we want to talk with the companies we research but only in
a context that does not compromise our research team's objectivity.
An
Invitation
KLD encourages
publicly traded companies to tell us to whom to direct our inquiries
and reports. Please contact our Research Director, Eric
Fernald.
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