IR Monitor – 22 April 2026
In this week’s newsletter:
The stories that investor relations professionals need to read this week:
US ESG shareholder resolutions plunge in face of Republican pressure, Reuters reports
WSJ: companies would need to disclose stablecoin holdings under FASB proposal
Wave of $15bn US IPOs runs headlong into war’s new phase warns Bloomberg
The Times asks: could US-style 1,000% bonuses be heading to the City? Fears that London is losing its competitive edge will be at the back of shareholders’ minds as they weigh up the benefits of massive salary boosts for bosses
The Economist on the pros and cons of stretch goals: setting really tough targets encourages risk-taking, for good and bad
And finally … AI is rewriting corporate lingo. The use of a certain, cliched sentence structure has doubled in US company documents, reports Barrons
US ESG shareholder resolutions plunge in face of Republican pressure |
The number of ESG shareholder proposals filed at US companies has almost halved this proxy season, dropping to 184 from 355 at the same point last year. Reuters reports that this significant decline reflects a mix of political and market pressures. Although companies have shown a greater willingness to negotiate privately with investors to avoid public votes, regulatory changes in Washington have made it harder for activists to advance resolutions or force them onto ballots. Measures introduced by the Trump administration have restricted access to key filing tools and given companies more discretion to exclude proposals. To counteract this disparity, some investors are shifting tact from formal filings to direct engagement, with a big focus on AI related topics such as data centre governance. Additionally, support for ESG measures has weakened, with certain investors arguing that companies have already made progress, while ESG critics say momentum has stalled. The shift suggests a quieter, more negotiated approach to shareholder influence, where fewer public resolutions do not necessarily mean less pressure behind the scenes. |
Wall Street Journal: companies would need to disclose stablecoin holdings |
The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) are proposing new rules that would require companies to report stablecoin positions as part of a wider push to show what sits inside reported cash-equivalent balances. According to the Wall Street Journal, under this plan, companies would disclose the dollar value of the main items in those balances each year, including assets such as Treasury bills, money-market funds and, where relevant, stablecoins. The proposal reflects growing demand for clearer treatment as digital tokens become more common in company treasury operations. The FASB also indicated that some stablecoins may sit alongside cash equivalents where the issuer holds enough readily available assets and the investor can claim a set sum of cash. The issue has gained traction as Coinbase Global recently changed how it classifies certain stablecoins, lifting its 2024 cash and cash equivalents figure from $8.5bn to $9.3bn. Therefore, as balance sheets become more complicated, the detail behind reported cash is becoming more important to explain clearly. |
Wave of $15bn US IPOs runs headlong into war’s new phase – Bloomberg |
A wave of US IPOs aiming to raise more than $15bn is meeting renewed geopolitical tension, as bankers bring deals to market despite an uncertain backdrop, Bloomberg warns. Around a dozen companies have launched or filed listings within days of a ceasefire, with as much as $4.6bn expected to price in one week, potentially the busiest peak since a $7.2bn IPO completed in December. Notable transactions include a $2.23bn offering from Madison Air Solutions and a $10bn float linked to Bill Ackman, with many issuers backed by private equity firms now seeking exits after longer holding periods. However, conditions remain fragile with a US blockade of the Strait of Hormuz raising concerns about inflation and market disruption. Returns have varied widely, with average gains of 4.6% for 2026 IPOs but sharp losses for several large deals. Banks are responding by lining up cornerstone investors, offering fewer shares at launch and setting more cautious valuations, leaving companies to navigate a market where timing and positioning carry as much weight as fundamentals. |
The Times: Could US-style 1,000% bonuses be heading to the City? |
London-listed companies are increasingly pushing US-style executive pay, setting up more direct confrontation with investors over remuneration, The Times reports. At Unilever, the remuneration committee highlighted the difficulty of recruiting global talent under current UK pay levels, while proposing to raise CEO Fernando Fernandez’s potential pay significantly, subject to performance and share price growth. This reflects a broader trend, with companies such as Rolls-Royce, Shell and Pearson seeking shareholder approval for higher pay and expanded bonus schemes. Variable pay opportunities in the FTSE 100 have already risen sharply, with many companies increasing long-term incentives and benchmarking against US peers. For investors, however, support remains conditional. Shareholders and proxy advisers continue to scrutinise whether higher pay is justified by global competition and fully aligned with performance. Upcoming AGM votes will be a key test, underlining a more active and contested relationship between boards and investors over executive remuneration. |
The pros and cons of stretch goals |
Stretch goals remain a powerful, if double-edged, tool in corporate strategy. As highlighted in The Algorithm by Jon McNeill, Elon Musk institutionalised the use of extreme targets at Tesla, from compressing a 64-click online purchase journey to just ten – driving exponential growth in digital sales. Such ambitions can catalyse innovation by forcing organisations to rethink entrenched processes rather than incrementally improve them. However, The Economist suggests that evidence suggests the outcomes are highly variable. While ambitious targets can unlock superior performance, they can also increase potential execution risk. Historical precedents, such as aggressive expansion strategies in financial institutions, and experimental research in simulated business environments, show stretch goals can lead to instability, or even failure, when operational complexity outpaces an organisation’s capacity. For investors, the implication is clear: stretch goals should be assessed in the context of governance, balance sheet resilience & execution discipline. A blended approach combining core deliverables with aspirational targets offers a more sustainable framework. While “unreasonable” ambition may drive breakthrough innovation, consistent value creation typically depends on a calibrated balance between risk and realism. |
And finally… AI is rewriting corporate lingo
Corporate buzzwords have a new favourite outfit, and it fits suspiciously well on both humans and machines. From Progressive Corporation to Synopsys, executives are leaning hard into the phrase “it’s not X, it’s Y,” a rhetorical flourish that sounds profound while doing some heavy lifting. Is it human? Is it AI? Plot twist: it’s often both. As Barrons highlights, this linguistic trend has exploded alongside the rise of generative AI tools like ChatGPT. And before we accuse the robots of stealing the spotlight, remember, humans love a catchy contrast too. The real story isn’t just about phrasing – it’s about process. AI is becoming the co-pilot in corporate communications, helping draft, edit, and brainstorm how best to land corporate narrative. Still, the final polish (and accountability) remains firmly human. The best communicators avoid being too reliant on AI-tools; it’s about building trusted relationships using an authentic tone of voice.
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