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Donna Anderson, T. Rowe Price’s director of governance, will retire at the end of the year

Donna Anderson, head of corporate governance at T. Rowe Price, and a strong voice in the investment industry on a variety of hot-button issues, plans to retire by the end of the year.

T. Rowe Price is one of the most powerful investment firms in the world, with assets worth $1.6 trillion. Three sources with knowledge of the situation confirmed that Anderson intends to leave the company.

In an email, Eric Veiel told us that Donna Anderson informed T. Rowe Price of her intention to retire at the end this year. We have started to transition her work to her successor.

Anderson, 56 years old, didn't respond to our request for comment.

T. Rowe Price has not yet named a successor for Anderson, who joined the Baltimore-headquartered asset manager in 2007.

Anderson led T. Rowe Price’s interaction with hundreds of companies for nearly two decades as issues such as chief executive pay and the composition of corporate boards and policies on environmental, social, and governance policies became more important.

Veiel wrote: "She is a highly respected leader not only within corporate governance circles and asset management company boardrooms, but also inside the walls of T. Rowe Price, where she represents the interests of the shareholders of the company." "She will be greatly missed."

Anderson, the executive at T. Rowe Price who helped to make the final decision on the way the investment firm voted in the spring corporate elections, was often the one who made the call.

Anderson was a key player in the tight-knit governance community, where he played a crucial role in defining voting policies. He then made them public at conferences like this week's Council of Institutional Investors in Washington.

Jessica Wirth Strine is the managing partner and chief operating officer of consulting firm Jasper Street Partners. She said: "Donna Anderson was an important force in stewardship and she has always called it as it is." "She is not a follower."

T. Rowe Price invests actively in clients' retirement and college saving portfolios. However, the company is not an activist that forces companies to act on issues of social or public concern.

During Anderson's career, she often competed with prominent investors, including billionaire activist Nelson Peltz, and corporate leaders like Exxon Mobil’s head Darren Woods. But, despite being a luminary of her own, investors, lawyers and bankers said that Anderson never sought to be in the spotlight.

In the governance sector, there have been some other important personnel changes this year. In January, Cristiano Güerra, the former head of Institutional Shareholder Services' special situations research, joined Strategic Governance Advisors, a consulting firm. He was responsible for determining the outcomes of some of America's most heated board battles. (Reporting and editing by Svea Herbst Bayliss.

(source: Reuters)