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Glass Lewis considers US investment advisor registration to ease criticism

Glass Lewis' top executive has said that the company may register as an investment adviser in the United States. This would expose it to greater regulation, but could also help ease criticisms from Republican politicians and corporate executives over its proxy voting advice.

Glass Lewis Chief Strategist Cheryl Gustitus said in an interview with The Washington Post on Friday that "we're seriously considering registering as an investment advisor" at the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Gustitus didn't give a time frame for when the company owned by Canada’s Peloton Capital Management, and its Chairman Stephen Smith might make a final decision. She said the issue should be viewed in the context of other steps Glass Lewis took to recast its influential role in U.S. Corporate Governance under Chief Executive Bob Mann who assumed the position last year. Glass Lewis, for example, announced last month that it would end its "benchmark proxy voting" recommendations in 2027. Gustitus also said that clients will have the option to choose between different approaches when conducting research.

Gustitus: "We are trying to evolve. We're not digging into ourselves." Glass Lewis, and its bigger rival Institutional Shareholder Services, have been criticized and investigated by Republicans over their recommendations for how large institutional investors should vote during corporate annual meetings.

Both firms have backed fewer resolutions from shareholders on environmental issues this year as companies increased their climate disclosures.

ISS is a registered investment advisor with the SEC since about 25 years. This gives the Wall Street regulator power to examine things such as how the company handles potential conflicts of interests. Glass Lewis had been registered with the SEC but retracted the status in 2005. The firm said that it was not appropriate because, among other things, the firm didn't recommend its clients to trade, buy, sell, or hold securities. (Reporting and editing by Nick Zieminski, Ross Kerber)

(source: Reuters)