IR Monitor – 17 June 2026
In this week’s newsletter:
The stories that investor relations professionals need to read this week:
- At the NIRI conference last week, the SEC Chairman doubled down on his proposal for semi-annual reporting. But 70% of analysts and portfolio managers are opposed to granting companies flexibility to determine their own reporting frequency (WSJ)
- SpaceX is challenging the unwritten rules of IPOs: Musk’s very loud IPO quiet period
- Gen Z’s latest career flex: a boardroom seat. This generation can offer boards a perspective on investors which they can’t get from aging executives, suggests Bloomberg
- Investment trust guards itself against activist siege: The Times reports on efforts to anticipate shareholder activism
- Companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs: The Economist reminds us that not so long ago employees were encouraged to binge on the technology as investors saw spending as a sign of innovation
- And finally … companies would like you to know they are doing things on purpose
This week’s news
70% of analysts & portfolio managers opposed to semi-annual reporting
The Wall Street Journal has reported on a new survey from the CFA Institute, which suggests investors have little appetite for reducing corporate reporting requirements. Among 2,500 analysts and portfolio managers surveyed, around 70% opposed giving companies discretion over how often they report financial results, while a majority also rejected replacing quarterly updates with a six-month reporting cycle. Respondents warned that less frequent reporting would reduce transparency, make comparisons between companies more difficult and widen information gaps across the market. Many were also sceptical that fewer disclosures would encourage a longer-term corporate mindset, arguing instead that executive incentives remain the primary driver of management behaviour. Notably, advances in artificial intelligence appear to have strengthened the case for greater disclosure. Rather than viewing additional reporting as an administrative burden, many investors believe new technologies make corporate information easier to process and analyse than ever before. In short, investors appear to be asking for more timely information, not less.
Challenging the unwritten rules of IPOs: Musk’s very loud quiet period
The Information writes that SpaceX’s stock market debut has tested long-standing communications conventions. Traditionally, companies keep a low profile before listing, limit public commentary and rely on carefully drafted prospectuses to avoid regulatory scrutiny. Under the leadership of Elon Musk, SpaceX chose a different route. The company’s filing contains unusually bold claims about its market opportunity and technological ambitions, while senior executives have taken part in high-profile interviews and public events that many advisers would once have discouraged. Musk himself has also continued discussing the business publicly throughout the process. With AI groups such as OpenAI and Anthropic expected to pursue public offerings in future, market participants are watching closely to see how far regulators will tolerate more aggressive pre-listing comms.
Gen Z’s latest career flex: a boardroom seat (Bloomberg)
A small but growing number of Generation Z professionals are securing positions in boardrooms traditionally dominated by far older executives. While directors at large listed companies are, on average, older than they were a decade ago, some organisations are actively seeking younger voices to bring expertise in social media, online communities and new technology, areas many established boards still struggle to navigate effectively. Yet, as Bloomberg reports, the benefits run both ways. Companies gain insight into younger consumers and digital trends, while early-career professionals gain access to influential networks, experienced mentors and, in some cases, substantial comp. As companies place greater emphasis on changing consumer behaviour and shifting patterns of capital markets participation, age may become an increasingly important dimension of board diversity.
Efforts to anticipate activism
Amidst growing concerns about activist investor campaigns targeting UK-listed investment trusts, Lindsell Train IT has made the defensive move to strengthen its governance framework, reports The Times. The trust, managed by veteran stockpicker Nick Train, plans to amend its articles of association to ensure operational continuity if a shareholder revolt results in the removal of all, or all but two, board directors. Chair Roger Lambert said the changes were prompted by recent activist activity and aligned with guidance from the Association of Investment Companies (AIC), who issued recommendations in the wake of New York hedge fund Saba Capital’s siege on UK investment trusts. Whilst Saba said it does not hold a position in Lindsell Train IT, the protective safeguard is being implemented alongside a difficult year for the trust. Annual results showed a 21% decline in net asset value, significantly underperforming the MSCI World Index’s 16% gain.
Companies are scrambling to curtail soaring AI costs – The Economist
The push for employees to maximise their usage of the AI tools that their companies had adopted, informed at least partly by investor appetite and expectations, has proven costly. The Economist explores how ballooning AI costs needed to run increasingly sophisticated models now appear to investors as a cause for concern, rather than a sign of innovation: estimates suggest that corporate AI spending has increased 13-fold over the past year. These costs will only increase as AI model providers roll out power-intensive agents, with certain IPO plans meaning that the pressure to generate profits for shareholders will likely increase prices for customers in the long term. The issue is particularly acute for technology companies, which have been among the earliest adopters. Now, executives are increasingly concerned about controlling costs while maintaining productivity gains, and companies’ efforts are directed at reducing AI costs. Tactics include choosing cheaper but less sophisticated models, or capping token usage.
And finally … companies would like you to know they are doing things on purpose
Executives are increasingly claiming to act “with intention” when discussing strategy, capital allocation and operational decisions in earnings calls and investor presentations. The Financial Times denounces the creeping rise of this corporate jargon term, which, according to market research platform AlphaSense, has been used at least 37 times in US company-hosted calls in Q1. Consumer companies, for example, claim to be “scaling with intention”, “allocating capital with intention” and “executing with intention”. Whilst the FT recognises that the phrase can serve to indicate a wider business strategy rather than disjointed individual activities, they call for companies to come up with more intentional – and meaningful – investor communications.
For further information on the dedicated investor relations team at FTI Consulting, please contact [email protected].
| The views expressed in this article are those of the author(s) and not necessarily the views of FTI Consulting, its management, its subsidiaries, its affiliates, or its other professionals.
©2026 FTI Consulting, Inc. All rights reserved. www.fticonsulting.com |