The Freshfields’ team reviewed trends and developments for the 2025 proxy season, summarizing the key takeaways and guidance across the following core areas: shareholder proposals; board and director and senior management trends; SEC updates; ESG proposals, executive and director compensation; Anti-ESG legislation and litigation trends; shareholder activism; investor updates and proxy advisory firm updates.
An overview of the takeaways is outlined below, and the full report can be found here. We hope this serves as a helpful resource to navigate evolving regulation changes, investor and stakeholder expectations and regulation as companies prepare for the upcoming engagement and 2026 proxy seasons.
- Fewer Proposals, Less Support. There has been a drastic reduction in the overall number of shareholder proposals, in part due to the SEC’s willingness to grant no-action relief after publication of SLB 14M, coupled with lower levels of shareholder support for environmental and social proposals
- Zeroing In: Following a multi-year trend of shareholder proposals reflecting issues of societal importance, proponents are increasingly tailoring proposals to specific company practices and industry
- Retreat to Comfort & Safety: As the regulatory and global environment becomes more uncertain for institutional investors and other shareholders, there has been a retreat to the relative safety of supporting traditional governance and compensation proposals
- Investors Go Dark: After SEC guidance changed, investors dramatically changed their engagement practices, leaving companies without feedback on topics of interest and raising the specter of an uncertain engagement season this fall
- New Admin Influence Over Proxy Season: A new administration led to significant mid-season changes to the SEC, recommendations from proxy advisory firms and policies and voting of institutional investors, although shareholder proposals generally were submitted before the administration change
- Anti-ESG Is All Around Us: Despite limited support for proposals, anti-ESG considerations continue to be a significant topic for companies and their stakeholders and drive changes in the ecosystem
- Activist In The Boardroom? While large-scale proxy contests were won and lost in 2025, activists also focused their efforts outside of boardroom representation, demonstrating a willingness to wage vote-no campaigns, settle without boardroom representation or settle for unnamed future directors