Talk:State Street Global Advisors

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Extended content
State Street Global Advisors
Company typeSubsidiary
IndustryFinancial Services
Founded1978
HeadquartersBoston, Massachusetts, United States
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Cyrus Taraporevala
Products Equity, Fixed Income & cash, multi-asse & alternative asset classes, in vehicles including ETFs, mutual funds, co-mingled pools, and separately managed accounts.
AUM$2.73 trillion* (as of June 30, 2018)
Number of employees
2600+
ParentState Street Corporation
Websitewww.ssga.com

State Street Global Advisors is the investment management division of State Street Corporation and the world’s third largest asset manager, with nearly $2.72 trillion (USD) in assets under management as of 30 June 2018 in Equity, Fixed Income & Cash, Multi-Asset, and Alternatives.[1] State Street Global Advisors employs 2600 people in 27 locations around the world.

The company services financial clients by creating and managing investment strategies for governments, corporations, educational institutions, non-profit foundations, and financial advisors around the world.

State Street Global Advisors created many of the world’s first ETFs, including the first in the U.S.,[2] and was among the first investment management companies to pursue index, quantitative, and ESG investing strategies. Launching its first index fund in 1978, today the company tracks over 500 indexes and is the number three ETF manager in the world.[3]

The company’s mission is to “invest responsibly to enable economic prosperity and social progress.”[4] In March 2017, the firm commissioned a statue, Fearless Girl by Kristen Visbal, and located it temporarily in the Financial District, Manhattan, to draw attention to the asset manager’s policy to vote against companies in its investment portfolio with no women on their boards.[5]

    • AUM reflects approximately $32.9 billion (as of June 30, 2018), with respect to which State Street Global Advisors Funds Distributors, LLC (SSGA FD) serves as marketing agent; SSGA FD and State Street Global Advisors are affiliated.

History

1970s and 1980s Established in 1978 as State Street Bank’s asset management arm in Boston, Massachusetts, the firm launched one of the industry’s first index equity funds.[6] In 1984, the company introduced its first active quantitative strategy, with the goal of helping investors seeking alpha returns manage risk in a systematic way. In 1986, the company launched its first active ESG mandate, giving investors the ability to apply environmental, social and governance criteria to their investments consistent with other objectives. This was followed by the introduction of the firm’s first ESG equity index mandate in 1988.

1990s By the 1990s, State Street Global Advisors was formed as a separate entity from State Street Bank and opened its first offices outside of US, in London and Hong Kong. Working with the American Stock Exchange, the company launched the first ETF in the US in 1993 – the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (Ticker: NYSE Arca: SPY). Shortly after, the company launched its first sector ETFs and first ETF in Asia outside of Japan – the Tracker Fund of Hong Kong, developed in partnership with the government of Hong Kong and at the time the largest IPO in the region’s history. The company also introduced its first smart beta and multi-asset class investing strategies to help employers more closely align their retirement plans with risk, return and cash-flow objectives. In 1999, the firm launched its first fixed income ESG mandate. 2000s During the 2000s, State Street expanded its ETF business to different regions—including European ETFs, Australia, China, Singapore, Taiwan, Latin America—and began introducing ETFs with different partners, such as the World Gold Council and Executives' Meeting of East Asia and Pacific Central Banks (EMEAP), a collective of 11 Pan Asian central banks in response to a liquidity crisis impacting eight Asian markets. During this decade, the company also created a dedicated group to serve the investment needs of sovereign wealth funds, governments and central banks.[7]

2010 As the decade began, the company reached $2 trillion in AUM for the first time. It acquired a series of operations, including the Bank of Ireland[8] asset management, opening an office in Dublin, which became the firm’s 10th global investment center from which investment teams manage client assets. State Street also acquired GE Asset Management, adding new alternatives, fundamental equity and active fixed income capabilities, and outsourced chief investment officer (OCIO) services.

The company launched a number of ESG products developed in partnership, including the SPDR S&P 500 Fossil Fuel Free ETF (Ticker: NYSE Arca: SPYX) with the U.S. Natural Resources Defense Council to allow investors to eliminate that own fossil fuel reserves,[9] and SPDR® SSGA Gender Diversity ETF (Ticker: SHE) with the California State Teachers’ Retirement System (CalSTRs), which allowed clients to invest in gender diverse companies.[10][11] Other products developed include the company’s first active fixed income ETF,[12] SPDR DoubleLine Total Return Tactical ETF, and the company formed an Investment Solutions Group (ISG) to develop custom portfolio solutions.

In 2012, the firm also became a signatory to the United Nations-supported Principles for Responsible Investing, committing the company to integrating ESG into its investment process, organizational activities and asset stewardship efforts.[13]

In recent years, State Street has become a key asset manager and counsel to governments in the UK and Europe, launching Timewise target retirement funds for UK pensioners in 2014. That same year it was selected by European Central Bank to help manage its asset-backed securities purchase program.[14]

Asset Stewardship

State Street Global Advisors practices what it calls “Asset Stewardship” — a process by which the investment manager helps companies in its investment portfolio better understand the impact that environmental, social and governance ESG issues have on long-term shareholder returns.[15]

State Street Global Advisors called on 3,500 companies in its portfolio in 2017 to elect at least 1 woman to their board of directors.[16] As a result, the firm used its proxy voting power to vote against 500 companies that took no action. In response, 150 companies added a woman to their board or committed to in the year ahead. State Street Global Advisors became the first major asset manager to develop such a policy. In 2017, the company voted in support of 26 climate-related shareholder proposals; since 2013, it had engaged more than 1,800 companies in its global portfolio on ESG issues. In an opinion piece in the Financial Times, CEO Cyrus Taraporevala stated that the company utilizes these practices in 82 countries around the globe.[17]

Lawsuits

In October, 2007, several pension funds sued State Street Corp. for the alleged mishandling of several bond funds managed by SSGA.[18]

In 2008, State Street Bank was sued by Trust Co. for Fixed Income Funds Investment. The case was settled in 2010.[19]

In April 2009, a class action suit was filed against State Street, alleging SSGA chose illiquid, leveraged, and risky securities in their short-term, liquid fund products.[20]

In October 2017, six months after the installation of the Fearless Girl statue on Wall Street, State Street Global Advisors faced criticism when it agreed to pay over $5 million in settlement over gender pay discrimination during the years 2010-11.[21] In response, then-CEO Ronald O’Hanley said he disagreed with the methodology used to arrive at the settlement but that the company “welcomed” criticisms because Fearless Girl “was never supposed to be a statement of accomplishment … it’s a statement of aspiration and of purpose.”[22]


External Links Segal, Julie “[How State Street Global Advisors Became an Unlikely Activist,” 1 May 2017, Institutional Investor

Further Reading

References

  1. ^ "Home | SSGA". ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  2. ^ Loder, Asjylyn (22 January 2018). "As First ETF Turns 25, Exchange-Traded Funds Dominate Investing World". Wall Street Journal.
  3. ^ "ETF League Table As Of July 11, 2018". ETF.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  4. ^ "Mission & Guiding Principles". ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  5. ^ Leung, Shirley (9 March 2017). "There's no bull in the message behind 'Fearless Girl' statue". Boston Globe.
  6. ^ ""History of Innovation | SSGA"". www.ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  7. ^ ""History of Innovation | SSGA"". www.ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  8. ^ "State Street Global Advisors Completes Acquisition of Bank of Ireland Asset Management". Business Wire. 10 January 2011.
  9. ^ "State Street launches fossil fuel-free ETF, cites climate worries". Reuters. 2 December 2015.
  10. ^ "State Street Global Advisors Launches Gender Diversity ETF to Help Investors Seek a Return on Gender Diversity". Business Wire. 7 March 2016.
  11. ^ Sullivan, Paul (4 March 2016). "In Fledgling Exchange-Traded Fund, Striking a Blow for Women".
  12. ^ "TOTLSPDR DoubleLine Total Return Tactical ETF". ETF.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  13. ^ "ESG Investing" (PDF). ESG Investing. April 2016.
  14. ^ ""History of Innovation | SSGA"". www.ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  15. ^ ""Asset Stewardship | SSGA"". www.ssga.com. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  16. ^ "Corporate Governance Symposium". UDaily. 15 March 2017.
  17. ^ Taraporevala, Cyrus (July 24, 2018). ""Index funds must be activists to serve investors,"". Financial Times.
  18. ^ Appell, Douglas (October 15, 2007). ""SSgA defends its 'low-risk' funds"". pionline.com.
  19. ^ ""State Street Bank and Trust Co. Fixed Income Funds Investment ERISA Litigation"".
  20. ^ Williamson, Christine (April 8, 2009). ""Class action sought in State Street suit"". pionline.com.
  21. ^ ""Firm Behind Fearless Girl Agrees to $5 Million Pay Discrimination Settlement"". Fortune. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  22. ^ "The Conference Board – Live from the Women's Forum Breakfast of Corporate Champions 2017". Retrieved 16 July 2018.
  • Explanation of issue: Much of the article in its current state includes misinformation and confuses this company with State Street Corporation. As the Social Media Manager at State Street Global Advisors officially I am requesting these edits to make the page factual and accurate.
  • Please contact StateStreetGA@ssga.com with any questions.

StateStreetGA (talk) 18:15, 27 March 2019 (UTC)StateStreetGA[reply]

Reply 27-MAR-2019[edit]

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Regards,  Spintendo  19:20, 27 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]