4/18/2024
Activist Investors Urge Nestlé to Reduce Reliance on Sugar, Fat, and Salt
City A.M. (04/18/24) McGuire, Laura
A resolution filed by a group of Nestlé (NSRGY) shareholders will vote today at its AGM, demanding one of the world’s biggest food makers reduce its reliance on products with high levels of sugar, fat, and salt. The resolution was co-filed last month by five institutional investors with $1.68 trillion in assets under management, including Legal and General Investment Management, one of Europe’s largest asset managers. Coordinated by responsible investment charity ShareAction, shareholders have put forward a resolution to the maker of KitKat and Quality Street that aims to move the company away from over-reliance on unhealthy products to healthier eating options. They argue that Nestlé, alongside other large food manufacturers, “risk missing the opportunity to meet growing consumer demand for more healthy products and face increasing regulatory pressure from governments legislating to tackle the rising costs of poor health.” Holly Gabriel, registered nutritionist and consumer health lead at ShareAction, who will attend the AGM on Thursday, said: “While Nestlé made assurances that it would set an ambitious target to improve its healthier food offering, the target it released in September last year was inadequate. “It gives investors no reassurance that sales won't continue to jeopardize public health and expose the company to so much unnecessary risk. The trends that have led to shareholders filing this resolution are not going away, and in fact data suggests they are going to get worse.” Some 70% of Nestlé sales in the UK are from foods that are high in fat, salt and sugar, according to new research by Oxford University and BiteBack. Commenting last month, Maria Larsson Ortino, senior global ESG manager at Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) said: “There is a clear link between a poor diet and chronic health conditions, such as obesity, heart disease, and diabetes. As a long-term investor, LGIM believes that health care costs and decreased productivity have significant negative consequences on our clients' assets across multiple sectors.” A Nestlé spokesperson, said: “While we share the common goal of increasing the availability of more nutritious foods for consumers around the world, we disagree with the idea of deliberately limiting growth in specific areas of our portfolio, as this would create opportunities for competitors without yielding public health benefits. ShareAction is targeting the wrong company and using figures that suit them."
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