ExxonMobil Shareholders Back Texas Move, Reject Proxy Adviser Pressure.

(Akiit.com) Last week ExxonMobil shareholders voted overwhelmingly to “redomicile,” or relocate, the company’s legal headquarters to Texas. The decision marks an undeniable rebuke of the proxy adviser cartel and New Jersey’s corporate tax scheme, the highest in the U.S. at 11.5%.

To be sure, the move is a smart, financially responsible decision for Exxon and its investors. The company has maintained its operational headquarters in the Lone Star State for nearly 40 years. About three-quarters of its employees live and work there, including its executive leadership.

Then, of course, there is Texas’ business-friendly climate. Unlike New Jersey, where officials try to shake down companies for every penny they can, Texas has put out a welcome mat. It is no wonder the state has been voted the most pro-business state in the nation for over 20 years or that companies and workers are flocking there in droves.

ExxonMobil Shareholders Back Texas Move, Reject Proxy Adviser Pressure.

Darren Woods, Exxon’s chairman and CEO, put it well: “Texas has made a noticeable effort to embrace the business community” and built “a policy and regulatory environment” that will allow the company to maximize shareholder value.

That Glass Lewis and Institutional Shareholder Services — the proxy adviser duopoly that control 97% of the market — recommended against the move speaks volumes. Institutional investors hold approximately 70% of the outstanding shares of U.S. publicly traded companies and often outsource corporate proxy decisions to the foreign-owned duopoly.

These proxy advisers engage in a purposely opaque process with a powerful result. A recent study found that Glass Lewis and ISS recommendations can swing a shareholder vote by as much as 30%. Another study found that 175 asset managers controlling over $5 trillion in value voted with ISS more than 95% of the time.

These proxy advisers use their extraordinary power to peddle left-wing dogma. In the Exxon shareholder vote, the devious duopoly supported a high-tax state over investors’ interests.

A company’s top priority should be to maximize shareholders’ returns, not to push kumbaya policies that come at the expense of hardworking families.

Unlike corporations, which have a fiduciary obligation to investors, the proxy adviser cartel operates in a regulatory Wild West. They provide “consulting services” to coach companies on how to sell the policies they concoct to shareholders. In other words, they spoon-feed businesses progressive policies and then direct them on how to spin it to investors.

What’s more, proxy advisers are not required to disclose conflicts of interest. They may be selling snake oil that’s good for their political agenda, even though it’s bad for investors.

During President Donald Trump’s first term, his Securities and Exchange Commission introduced new regulations that would have required more transparency from proxy advisers. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce called the Trump administration’s “middle-ground” approach a “step in the right direction.”

Yet the Biden administration gutted the rules, allowing proxy advisers to continue to run amok. And why not? These supposedly objective advisers hocked the left’s ideology and bullied businesses into adopting Democrats’ socialist agenda. Of course they were allowed to run amok.

It’s time the Trump administration and Congress finally rein in proxy advisers. Bills like the Protecting Americans’ Retirement Savings from Politics Act, which was introduced by Congressman Bryan Steil in April, would impose the kind of oversight that’s needed. This commonsense legislation should receive support from individual investors and institutional investors alike.

But the president shouldn’t wait for a legislative fix, which Democrats will undoubtedly fight tooth and nail. His SEC should revisit the regulatory framework introduced during Trump 1.0 to shine a light on this murky industry.

Exxon’s shrug-off of these proxy bullies’ recommendations is not only a prudent business decision, it’s proof that Trump’s end to his predecessor’s culture wars is working. Companies are bailing off the sinking ship of wokeism and getting back to the business of doing business. And they are putting proxy advisers’ directives where they belong: in the trash bin.

Like New Jersy politicians and their liberal allies — who tried to block Exxon’s move over phony claims it would reduce shareholder rights — the Glass Lewis-ISS proxy duopoly does not care about individuals and families who invest hard-earned money with companies to see it grow. They only care about promoting the left’s progressive ideology, even if it costs ordinary people.

Exxon’s courage to do right for its shareholders is a major indicator that the proxy advisers’ power is cracking. We should all hope that it shatters entirely.

Written by Ken Buck 

Official websitehttps://x.com/RepKenBuck