07 August 2012
The Church Commissioners and the Church of England Pensions
Board have today announced the sale of their shares in News
Corporation on the advice of the Church's Ethical Investment
Advisory Group (EIAG). The total shareholding sold was worth
£1.9 million. As a result, none of the three national investing
bodies of the Church of England hold shares in the company.
The Church of England first raised concerns with the Board of
News Corporation in the aftermath of the phone hacking allegations
that surfaced in July 2011. After a year of dialogue between the
company and the EIAG, the Church of England was not satisfied that
News Corporation had shown, or is likely in the immediate future to
show, a commitment to implement necessary corporate governance
reform.
Andrew Brown, Secretary of the Church Commissioners, said: "Last
year's phone hacking allegations raised some serious concerns
amongst the Church's investing bodies about our holding in News
Corporation. Our decision to disinvest was not one taken lightly
and follows a year of continuous dialogue with the company, during
which the EIAG put forward a number of recommendations around how
corporate governance structures at News Corporation could be
improved. However the EIAG does not feel that the company has
brought about sufficient change and we have accepted its advice to
disinvest."
In 1994 the Church of England established the EIAG, the
independent advisory group which advises the Church of England's
three national investing bodies on its ethical investment
policy. The EIAG engages on ethical and corporate governance
issues with many of the companies in which the Church of England
has its main equity holdings. Between April 2011 and March 2012 the
EIAG held meetings with 40 companies prioritised for engagement,
one of which was News Corporation.
The Church of England already excludes investment in companies
involved in military products and services, pornography, alcoholic
drinks, gambling, tobacco, human embryonic cloning and high
interest rate lending.
The Church of England has three national investment bodies: the
Church Commissioners for England; the Church of England Pensions
Board; and the CBF Church of England Funds. Together they
hold a broad range of assets worth in excess of £8 billion.
The funds are used to sustain the Church's network of 12,000
parishes, 16,000 churches, 8,500 stipendiary priests - and their
pensions - and 10,000 readers and pastoral assistants and to
support the daily work they carry out in their local
communities.
Notes
The Church Commissioners for England The
Church Commissioners manage a well-diversified investment
portfolio, held mostly in company shares and property, to produce
money to support the Church of England's work across the country.
The Commissioners were formed from the union in 1948 of two earlier
bodies - Queen Anne's Bounty and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners -
set up to support the work of the Church.
The Church of England Pensions Board The
Church of England Pensions Board provides retirement services set
by the Church of England for those who have worked for or served
the Church. It was established in 1926 by the Church Assembly as
the Church of England's pensions authority. Subsequently it was
given wider powers in respect of discretionary benefits and the
provision of retirement accommodation to those retired from the
stipendiary ministry and their dependents.
The EIAG The Church of England Ethical
Investment Advisory Group (EIAG) makes recommendations on ethical
investment policy to the Church of England's three national
investing bodies. The EIAG includes representation from the Church
of England's General Synod, Archbishops' Council and Council for
Mission and Public Affairs, as well as the investing bodies. The
EIAG has no investment powers and acts in a wholly advisory
capacity. It is the responsibility of the Trustees of each
separately constituted investment body to decide whether to
implement the advice given.