Skip to content
Finance Investment, Women

HESTA urges ASX300 companies to prioritise key issues ahead of AGM season

HESTA 2 mins read

1 September 2025

To help grow and protect its members’ retirement savings, HESTA is calling for Australia’s largest companies to strengthen their focus on three priority areas including a new investment focus on global resilience, alongside the themes of climate change and natural capital, and gender equality and decent work. 

In its sixth annual letter to ASX300 companies ahead of AGM season, the $99 billion industry fund signalled these priority areas would be at the forefront of its engagement with companies this financial year. 

HESTA CEO Debby Blakey said the outreach to Chairs and CEOs formed part of the fund’s commitment to active ownership in support of the delivery of strong long-term returns.  

“Our commitment to responsible investing is vital to how we aim to deliver strong, long-term investment performance for our members,” Ms Blakey said.  

“We are increasingly focused on global resilience and how companies adapt to both global risks and emerging opportunities, driven by geopolitical conflicts, economic shocks, cybersecurity threats, and transformative technologies such as AI.  

“With new risks and opportunities quickly emerging, we encourage companies to ensure their Boards have the right mix of skills to handle these challenges and to plan for a range of future business scenarios.  

Building strong companies and a resilient economy requires leadership to recognise these risks and develop a culture that embraces change.” 

Ms Blakey said a continued focus would be required by companies and investors to help accelerate decarbonisation, and to halt and reverse nature loss.  

“Through our investments we directly engage with company leadership to push for greater climate action and transparency. This year a focus of our climate engagement will be encouraging companies to advocate for ambitious national targets and set strategies aligned with upcoming sector decarbonisation pathways. 

“We also urge companies to assess their exposure to nature-related risks and opportunities, including how these intersect with climate change, to better understand their material impacts and dependencies.” 

The letter also details the Fund’s focus on advancing gender equality and supporting decent work for the delivery of value to both companies and the broader economy. 

“Prioritising decent work - including flexibility and fair conditions - and actively managing human rights risks in operations and supply chains - alongside adopting 40:40:20 gender targets across boards, executive teams, and workforces by 2030, is critical to building sustainable businesses,” Ms Blakey said. 

“These efforts not only attract and retain talent but also foster innovation, help close the gender pay gap and drive stronger financial performance and economic growth. 

Ms Blakey said the fund greatly valued its ongoing engagement with board directors and senior management as a core part of its active ownership approach.  

“We look forward to continuing our constructive engagement with companies throughout the year ahead on behalf of our members," she said. 

Ends.

 

About HESTA

 

HESTA is one of the largest superannuation funds dedicated to Australia’s health and community services sector. An industry fund that's run only to benefit members, HESTA now has more than one million members (around 80% of whom are women) and currently manages approximately $99 billion* in assets invested around the world.

 

*Information is current as at the date of issue. 

 

 

Media

More from this category

  • Finance Investment, Political
  • 10/12/2025
  • 14:15
Super Members Council

Low- and middle-income Australians with super should not foot the bill for compensation scheme cost blowout

The Government should not push the bill for compensation scheme cost blowouts onto low- and middle-income Australians with super and make them pay for misconduct in unrelated high-risk financial services and products. The Super Members Council urges the Government to rethink its proposed approach to the levy for the Compensation Scheme of Last Resort, warning it would drag low-income Australians with super into paying for growing dangers elsewhere. This year, everyday Australians with super would be forced by Government to pay $6 million to fund compensation for dangerous high-risk schemes. The CSLR was createdto compensate victims of financial misconduct as…

  • Contains:
  • Finance Investment, Women
  • 10/12/2025
  • 11:26
Monash University

New Australian study shows devastating impact of coerced business debt

A pioneering national study, conducted by a Monash University expert in collaboration with consumer advocates, has shed light on the hidden toll of coerced business debt, revealing how business structures are being weaponised to perpetrate financial abuse, resulting in long-term economic hardship. The study – led by Associate Professor Vivien Chen of Monash Business School and Jasmine Opdam, Senior Policy and Advocacy Officer at Redfern Legal Centre’s Financial Abuse Service NSW, and conducted in collaboration with the Economic Abuse Reference Group – is the first national study of its kind. It highlights how women in heterosexual relationships are disproportionately the…

  • Business Company News, Finance Investment
  • 10/12/2025
  • 10:03
Hnry

Fintech Hnry Raises $30m to Accelerate Push into Australia and the UK

Key Facts: Hnry raises $30 million in fresh capital. Hnry will use the funds to grow its Australian and UK markets. Movac’s Growth Fund…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.