.............................................................................. 43 United Kingdom: Clear Policies Move the Needle on Stewardship and Engagement .................................... 45 KEY QUESTIONS TO ASK BY SECTOR Taking Investment Lessons from Socrates: Asking
follows: Protection of shareholders' right and fair treatment of shareholders Transparent and fair shareholding structure; Directors, executives and major shareholders do not have conflict of interests or
achieved faster recovery in comparison with other countries in the region. This was evident by listed companiesû operating profits, expansion of domestic consumption, and strong increases in exports
accordance with the 2 following principles: (1) good governance and clear, transparent organizational structure; (2) effective risk management for legal, credit, liquidity, operation, and other risks, with
underwriters by moving the market towards expected approaches to structuring and disclosures that will facilitate credible transactions. The SLBP recommend a clear process and transparent commitments for issuers
methodologies of the SPT? Calculation methodologies must be clear and understandable to all investors. The different data points should be highlighted to explain how the KPI is built and calculated. Referring to
should be consistent with the rule of law, transparent and enforceable. If new laws and regulations are needed, such as to deal with clear cases of market imperfections, they should be designed in a way
? awareness of importance of good corporate governance, announcement of clear proxy voting guidelines will push for better listed company quality. Meanwhile, the guidelines will also be beneficial to other
over appropriate time-horizons, and should be transparently communicated to beneficiaries or clients. 1.6 Transparency and accountability Institutional investors should be transparent and open with their
and Clause 5 or Clause 6, as the case may be; (d) having a plan to report the results of the experiment and progress of service provision to the SEC Office on a continuous basis; (e) having a clear exit