Is sustainable investing just a marketing ploy? | CNBC Reports - YouTube

Channel: CNBC International

[0]
Environmental, social and corporate governance. Or E.S.G.
[6]
These are the trendiest words in finance.
[8]
Supporters say that being ethical and being profitable need not be mutually exclusive,
[14]
benefitting stakeholders, society and the planet.
[19]
But critics argue that these products are not that different from other investments,
[24]
and complain that it can be hard to measure  whether a company is actually doing the right thing.
[30]
So, is ESG just good branding?
[38]
The idea of investing based on a set of principles,
[41]
and not merely for profits, is as old as the concept of investing itself.
[46]
In the 18th Century, Christian groups such as the Methodists and Quakers articulated this idea
[53]
with clear guidelines to their followers, and it has been gaining ground ever since.
[58]
The pressure to avoid giving capital to South African companies between the 1970s and 1990s
[65]
is seen as a factor that contributed to the end of apartheid.
[70]
More recently, the impact of our day-to-day lives on the environment has been the center of attention.
[76]
And that is affecting how investors allocate their money.
[80]
There is this increasing understanding in society that we need to care about the climate,
[84]
about social conditions of employees, so this has shifted the focus also
[88]
of the investment management industry. And second, the understanding based on academic research
[93]
that if you integrate ESG factors, you can generate higher performance and lower risk.
[98]
This awareness has led fund managers to create financial products which invest
[103]
in companies that meet their criteria of being ESG-friendly.
[108]
And more investors are adding ESG funds to their portfolios.
[113]
The share of global investors that applied ESG criteria to at least a quarter of their total investments
[120]
jumped from 48% in 2017 to 75% in 2019.
[127]
In the U.S., professional investors are expected to expand their holdings of ESG assets
[134]
from $12 trillion in 2018 to $35 trillion by 2025, or 50% of their total investments.
[147]
These numbers were calculated before the coronavirus pandemic,
[151]
but the health emergency could further accelerate this trend.
[155]
Has Covid in a way impacted this interest in ESG in any way?
[159]
Do you think it could actually make investors even more interested?
[163]
Absolutely yes, it’s certainly served to elevate and really put a spotlight on the way companies operate.
[173]
This emphasis that we have been hearing about for some time, this idea of corporate purpose,
[178]
you know, intentionally contemplating the needs of a broader universe of stakeholders,
[182]
broadening the aperture of how you think about enterprise risk, opportunity, disruptions
[187]
that could compromise your ability to meet your strategic objectives.
[192]
And Covid has certainly put that sort of set of considerations in the spotlight.
[196]
So, how does an ESG fund actually work?
[200]
The principles of ESG are really an underpinning for how stocks are selected.
[204]
Looking at ‘G’, the governance, of how the management of those companies works.
[209]
Looking at the ’S’ has become incredibly important during the pandemic,
[213]
thinking about how the company is interacting with all its stakeholders,
[216]
including the communities it operates in and its employees.
[220]
And then the environment and environmental policies and actions by companies.
[225]
So really, it’s become a much more thorough and integrated part of the evaluation of companies
[231]
that get put into portfolios that become ESG funds.
[235]
The investment profiles of the world’s four biggest ESG funds have changed over time.
[241]
For instance, about a decade ago,  they included substantial stakes in major oil firms.
[247]
In 2007, the largest ESG fund had almost 13% of its total investments in companies
[255]
such as Royal Dutch Shell, Total and ExxonMobil.
[260]
But this has fallen in the years since, and the share of oil companies featured
[265]
in this particular ESG fund’s holdings has shrunk to less than 3% as of July 2020.
[273]
But how can funds that claim  to promote sustainability 
[277]
ever support oil firms,
[279]
which are widely seen as responsible for soaring levels of pollution?
[284]
When you think about the composition of ESG funds it’s first of all important to remember
[288]
they are still meant to be a fund invested to get a return for the portfolio
[294]
and so they can tilt based on industry groups, based on sector views
[299]
and that may or may not relate to an ESG view.
[302]
Ultimately, ESG funds, like all other investments, are meant to generate profits.
[308]
In fact, ESG funds have slightly outperformed other funds over the last two years,
[315]
at least in part thanks to their holding of tech stocks which have rallied strongly.
[320]
But a portfolio manager told us investors need to think about returns in the long-term.
[327]
As a believer of ESG as a firm, I like to read all these articles,
[331]
but I think it is a bit of bias in terms of the analysis simply because these ESG products,
[336]
they have lower energy exposure, and the energy sector was hard hit this year because of Covid.
[342]
On the other side, many of the tech companies, they get a high ESG score because they had already in place,
[347]
you know, working from home policy, they are more keen in terms of, you know,
[351]
taking care of their employees because that’s what they have, right, all of these tech companies, so they score high.
[357]
Since 2010, the fourth-largest ESG fund in the world has increased
[362]
its exposure to tech giants from about 8% to more than 17% within a decade.
[369]
Online retail giant Amazon was one of these big tech firms seen as ESG-friendly,
[376]
even though the company registered a carbon footprint of over 50 million metric tons of CO2 in 2019.
[385]
And with emissions rising by 15% compared to the previous year, the environmental concerns aren’t going away.
[394]
We don’t have clear standards on what is good, what is bad in terms of ESG.
[398]
Which also means that for investors looking into these funds, they need to look carefully at how they define it.
[404]
So if you look at Amazon as an example, maybe one fund says they are doing a fantastic job in terms of ESG
[411]
and another one may say, ’well we disagree,‘ but because there are not these obvious standards,
[417]
you know, you see even in high ESG funds, very different portfolio shares of firms like Amazon.
[423]
In the case of Amazon, its commitment to reduce its carbon emissions and become carbon neutral by 2040
[430]
is seen by some asset managers as a reason why the stock meets the definition of being ESG-friendly.
[438]
We could look at companies and say ‘your carbon footprint today is not satisfactory’.
[443]
The old way that investors addressed that was often by taking their money out of those companies.
[449]
Today divestment isn't seen as the optimal way to push for change.
[453]
Engagement and stewardship by investing and asking for a clear timeline for improvements
[459]
in things like carbon footprints is a much more, we will call it 2.0 way,
[463]
of thinking about using capital in the ESG space.
[467]
These subjective judgments  give rise to another criticism 
[471]
leveled at ESG investing:  it often lacks transparency.
[476]
We look, at a company level, at about just over a thousand different data points,
[482]
and when I say a thousand different data points, this is what we really look for companies to publish.
[487]
Now what we observe is that companies don’t publish all of those data points
[492]
and actually how much of their data is published in itself
[495]
tells us a number of important insights into how companies implement ESG.
[503]
Do you care about a carbon footprint of a particular company?
[507]
Absolutely. So, the carbon footprint comes actually in at several levels.
[511]
Because one of the things we are very conscious of is when people can, or companies can very much
[517]
hide their carbon footprint by outsourcing certain parts of their production process
[523]
to other companies or other jurisdictions and that in itself is not a good,
[528]
not a good sign, not a good thing.
[530]
Organizations such as the United Nations and the European Commission
[534]
are promoting common standards to address these concerns.
[538]
At the moment, some feel  there’s not enough disclosure 
[542]
from fund managers about why their products should be considered ESG-friendly. 
[548]
Investors may also need to  do some more background work
[551]
to ensure they’re putting their money in funds that meet their ethical objectives.
[557]
And this is where further regulation could add some more clarity.
[561]
We've largely seen the regulatory momentum taking place in Europe.
[566]
We're starting to see some momentum in the U.S., but I do think that U.S. companies,
[570]
absent regulation, are not waiting. And I think companies certainly see
[575]
that there are broader global trends, there's opportunity, this is not going to be just a compliance exercise.
[583]
Hi everyone. Thank you so much for watching.
[586]
Would you invest in an ESG fund? Let us know in the comments section
[591]
and don’t forget to subscribe. I’ll see you soon.