E-mail chatrooms, memorandums of understanding, exclusive clubs that would send out invitations to fellow activist investors: all are being debated this summer as routes to ensure that investors make their voices heard collectively in Britain’s boardrooms.
The debate began when Lord Myners, City minister, laid into big UK shareholders for allowing a culture of “ownerless corporations” to develop, with investors failing to engage with companies or call boards to account for poor performance.

CHINA 

