SEC Commissioner echoes Divest Oregon’s message to Treasurer: If you don’t like a company’s governance, don’t buy the shares
In a
July 1 article
Reuters
reported that Oregon Treasurer Steiner wanted guidance from the federal Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) about SpaceX. How should pension funds handle the new company with the giant market valuation? SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda answered Elizabeth Steiner in an interview in
Reuters. One takeaway is his simple point that if you don't like the governance arrangements of a stock, don't buy it.
A message from the SEC's Uyeda: If you don't like SpaceX's governance, don't buy the shares (Reuters Sustainable Finance, July 1, 2026)
Note: The Oregon State Treasury has $6.8 million in exposure to SpaceX through one public equity index fund and one global equity portfolio (Portland Business Journal July 2, 2026).
Divest Oregon has made the same point to Treasurer Steiner, repeatedly. For example, Treasurer Steiner
posted on Facebook on May 6, 2026 that she is “deeply troubled” by the ways ICE contractor Geo Group fails to adhere to Oregon Investment Council (OIC) policy. Divest Oregon
responded: The Oregon Treasury has held stock in private prison/immigrant detention contractors for years, in spite of well-publicized abuse. If a company is violating OIC policy the Treasury has an obligation to sell the stock. In fact, Treasury’s screening process can and should prevent purchasing or holding stock that violates OIC/Treasury standards.
The SEC Commissioner quoted in the
Reuters’ interview about SpaceX also says pension funds have the duty and ability to do such screening:
Question by
Reuters to SEC Commissioner Uyeda: "You write that ‘If prospective investors have concerns with the governance arrangements, then their most powerful tool is to not purchase shares of the stock.’ But critics like some big pension funds say the fast-track addition of SpaceX to big indexes could make them unwilling buyers of the stock. What would you say to such critics?
Response from SEC Commissioner Uyeda: "Large pension funds have choices with respect to their investment decisions as part of their fiduciary duty to the plan. While index funds may have certain conveniences and low costs, there is a trade-off to outsourcing securities selection to a third party. There are alternatives, such as selecting a fund that follows a different index or is actively managed, or engaging in customized direct indexing that would provide more control over the portfolio.”



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