What On Earth is ESG? | The Big Conversation | Refinitiv - YouTube

Channel: Real Vision Finance

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ROGER HIRST: What on earth is ESG?
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Twitter is generally less than complimentary with some of the following definitions of
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an ESG practitioner recently taken off Twitter.
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An asset gatherer as opposed to an Alpha producer.
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Someone who doesn't know how to make a profit.
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The new feel good requirement to get new fund flows.
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An online activist with a 401 K. skepticism and cynicism about ESG is alive and kicking.
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But many people think that ESG is about climate change.
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It's not.
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It's about corporate change, potentially sweeping corporate change across many different disciplines.
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And that's the big conversation.
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This year, there's a real palpable shift from a rhetoric to an urgent call for action.
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The shift is coming.
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If you're ahead of that trend and you recognize that trend, there are opportunities to make
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money and the companies that don't measure up are going to suffer financially, in my
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opinion.
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The companies that failed to make that leap, you know, they'll lose on every one of those
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dimensions.
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Finance is gonna be reshaped.
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So what is ESG and why should we care?
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ESG environment, social and governance is not quite the same as socially responsible
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investing or SRI, which really focuses on the social issues regardless of the financial
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impact to investors.
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ESG tries to identify measures which reduce a company's and therefore investors exposure
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to specific risks.
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For investors, it's been easy to dismiss ESG as yet another fad or marketing gimmick.
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Ignoring it has not been that hard to do because its not really had many consequences.
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In fact, until recently, it was fairly difficult to measure the costs and benefits for those
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who are trying to implement these strategies.
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At this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, ESG was by far and away the main topic of
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discussion.
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And this was not just a discussion about ESG investing, but also about ESG corporate compliance.
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A vast number of corporate leaders are now committing their company policy to an ESG
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future, and whether we as investors believe in it or not almost becomes irrelevant.
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There鈥檚 going to be great numbers of opportunities to profit from this trend and potentially
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lose out if ignored, regardless of whether we emotionally embrace this policy direction
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or not.
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But what the hell is ESG?
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Well, as mentioned earlier, ESG stands for environment, social and corporate governance.
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For most people, the focus has been resolutely on the E of environment, climate change, global
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warming, and all those battle lines have been drawn across various forms of social media.
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Of course, the environment is a key pillar, but ESG is also about much, much more than
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just the E as Andre Chanavat of Refinitiv explains.
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E is environmental.
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S is Social.
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G is governance.
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For example, how we categorise E: we've got environmental innovation, we've got resource
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usage and we've got emissions.
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The for social, for example, you'd be looking at human rights, your workforce has a health
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and safety issue.
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As well to think about, also what is your corporate social responsibility strategy?
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And then of course, the G.
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The governance.
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So as a shareholder, what are your shareholder rights?
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What is that?
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How is the board structured?
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So when we talk about ESG, we have over 450 individual measures.
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But, you know, you could go into easily into the thousands.
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In 1993, there were only 50 companies who published corporate social responsibility
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reports or CSRs.
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By 2015, there were over 7000.
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ESG data is now collected and collated into an ESG score of which will have more in the
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next section.
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But this means that companies can now be compared to each other, i.e. this is not just a flowery
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discussion about the ethics of ESG.
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It's a discussion about the metrics.
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And from that we can make a relative evaluation on individual companies.
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And the rise of measurable data allows investors, corporate partners and investors like us to
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make an informed decision about capital allocation.
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With that comes an opportunity for investors to profit from a corporate change which looks
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like it's about to take off.
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Whether you agree with the underlying principles or not, there will be plenty of opportunities
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for sceptics and evangelists alike.
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And that's what we should care about as investors, as outlined here by Audrey Choi, who focuses
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on sustainability for Morgan Stanley.
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We don't even necessarily have to have the conversation about whether you believe in
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climate change or not.
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Let's have a conversation about what are you concerned about in terms of risks and opportunities
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for your portfolio.
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I think traditionally you're right, there's been this sort of tension of do I want to
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be a responsible investor or do I want to make money?
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Think about it another way.
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If I said to you.
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Would you like me to invest your money in a way that ignores a number of factors that
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could affect your business?
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I don't know many investors who say please ignore all those macro megatrend of facts.
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So what does that mean?
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We may choose not to invest based on personal views of the environment or on ethics, but
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at the same time, we don't want to invest in stocks that might get penalized by large
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investors.
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Personally, I do want to invest in stocks that are receiving beneficial flows as a result
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of maybe their ESG score.
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And markets have constantly presented us with opportunities that we didn't have to like,
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but we still try to embrace in order to make a profit.
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For instance, although the tech boom of 1999 was at the time, clearly a bubble to many
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people, though not all, many sceptics still rode that bubble for profit, even though they
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didn't accept that soaring valuations were going to be a new paradigm.
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Today, we dont have to believe in Tesla's accounts or its business model in order to
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participate in the opportunity to make or lose money in the stock.
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Huge volumes there suggested traders and investors are indeed embracing that bandwagon.
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Many argue that the current shift towards passive investing itself has been a catalyst
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for the resurgence in ESG discussions by active managers who are trying to stay relevant in
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the face of dramatic outflows.
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But despite that, there are still many investors who continue to profit from that passive trend.
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Even if they believe that passive investing is ultimately unsustainable, what's key here
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is that the adoption of ESG is not just by institutional investment managers, it's by
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a broad cross-section of the corporate world.
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And 2020 looks like it will be the year when the adoption of ESG policies will reach a
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critical mass amongst key corporate stakeholders.
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It's a sort of tipping point onto which actual investment trends will start to exert themselves.
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We may or may not be individually willing on these changes, and these changes create
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the sort of uncertainty which we actually prefer to avoid.
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But if the corporates are willing to act on these policies, then we can either sit back
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and grumble or we can embrace and profit from these changes.
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And I guess the important question is, will these changes be fast or slow?
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And so far, these changes have been somewhat glacial, but it's clearly gathering momentum.
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Companies like Microsoft and BlackRock have publicly embraced it.
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More will follow.
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Now, this might not affect our portfolios this week or even this month, but ESG will
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increasingly be at the forefront of many investors and particularly CEOs decision making.
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For investors, forewarned is forearmed.
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Even if ESG adoption is approaching a tipping point, it won't necessarily be the catalyst
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for an extreme market move.
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But it might help investors avoid the worst vagaries of such an event.
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So, for instance, a discussion is building about the pricing of a potential carbon correction.
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And what's that, you might say?
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Well, according to Refinitiv data, last year, around about 20 percent of global emissions
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were taxed at around about $28 per tonne and that came to a total of about 220 billion.
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Now, if all emissions were taxed, the number would be about 1.2 trillion dollars higher.
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So it's a big absolute number.
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But when spread across all corporate revenues, that's only an additional cost of about one
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per cent.
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But if the IMF get their way and impose a $75 per tonne tax, then the carbon gap would
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widen to 4 trillion.
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Once again, it may be that policymakers fail to act or don't want to act, but business
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leaders who are increasingly adopting the ESG narrative will still need to factor in
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the possibility that policymakers might act.
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Therefore, monitoring ESG data could help investors avoid the worst drawdowns.
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And this is why corporate change is key.
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Within Refinitiv categorization, emissions only make up 12 percent of the total ESG score
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anyway.
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So it is that ESG is a lot more than just the E. And the key thing to remember is that
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ESG is fast becoming a critical new factor to help investors in their decision making
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process.
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This is not about embracing climate change.
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This is about embracing corporate change.
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Clearly, there's an increasing amount of chatter about ESG, but how is it gonna be measured
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and how can people make informed decisions, particularly investment decisions?
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Companies are now signing up to the ESG protocols.
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And that means that they're providing increasing amounts of data.
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Now, this data can be compared and ranked so that each company can be given its own
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ESG score, which then obviously begs the question, what's an ESG score?
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There's a number of different methodologies and nothing has been standardized as yet.
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But we'll look at one that Refinitiv have put together.
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As outlined in the previous section, environment, social and governance issues are the three
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main pillars under which there are numerous subcategories.
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Environment, for instance, is subdivided into resource use, emissions and innovation.
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Social is subdivided into workforce, human rights, community and product responsibility
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and governance is subdivided into management, shareholders and corporate social responsibility.
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By way of example, within the governance pillar, issues such as CEO compensation linked to
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total shareholder return are also taken into account.
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For instance, if this has been rising to the detriment of other stakeholders, it would
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be marked as a negative and I think most people would probably agree with that sentiment.
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Those 10 ESG themes are then combined across three main categories to provide the ESG score.
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Refinitiv also include an additional category, the controversies score, which has collated
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from media sources and is combined across all the 10 themes in order to discount the
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main ESG score for, as its name suggests, public controversies.
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Together with the main ESG score, this forms the combined ESG score.
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These scores can then be ranked, where a score of zero to 0.08333 gets you a D minus, which
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is the lowest grade whilst a score between 0.9166 and one gets you top marks of A plus.
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Marks of C plus and B minus are a round about middle of the class.
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In terms of the ten categories, the weights are not divided equally.
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For example, emissions have only been allocated 12 percent of the total.
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The two largest weights go to management within that governance pillar at 19 percent and workforce
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within the social pillar at 16 percent.
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And the three pillars environment, social and government social takes a slightly higher
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weighting at thirty five point five percent.
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So ESG scores are therefore taking into account a wide variety of factors.
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And it's not just dominated by climate.
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Even though this drives the majority of the narrative.
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And the ESG score then opens up the discussion about comparing companies with peers within
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and across sectors.
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Some of the large cap energy stocks may be expected to score badly, but that's actually
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not necessarily the case.
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For instance, Royal Dutch Shell scored straight A's across the three pillars of environment,
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social and governance, scoring a maximum A plus in that environment.
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Pillar, which, if you recall, has three subdivisions of resource use, emissions and innovation
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where the company collects an A plus for each of those three themes.
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Now, whilst the basic ESG score for Shell is an A, the combined grade drops to a C plus,
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scoring about 44.6 points because of a poor return within the controversies category,
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where it's polled particularly badly on business ethics and anti-competition.
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And many other energy companies have a similar score.
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Exxon also achieves a combined score of C plus with A's across those three pillars of
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ESG, but another D-minus within the controversies box, where it does score poorly on the environment
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section.
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And it may be a surprise that Tesla, the company, scores much lower than Shell and Exxon with
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a combined score of just under 20 for a D plus grade versus C plus for the energy majors.
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And Tesla only really scores highly in the innovation category of environment pillar.
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So Tesla cars may be eco friendly, but the company is struggling with its ESG score.
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And its rival in the luxury electric car category, Porsche, ranks even worse with combined point
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score of 9.75 for a D grade, the second lowest category.
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At the top of the league, with a combined score close to 93 is a US resort stocks, a
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holiday stock, but also an Italian oil services company, which may be a bit of a surprise.
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There's only a few companies which score below 10.
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But yeah, in fact there are a number of chemical companies around those levels.
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But hopefully it's now clear that ESG scores are not just about jumping on the environmental
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bandwagon.
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It's about recording a vast array of data inputs for corporate decision making.
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ESG scores made up from company filings will increasingly help guide corporate leaders
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within this evolving framework.
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Some investors will use these scores, whilst others will care very little about them, at
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least at first.
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But ESG and ESG scores are here to stay.
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For ESG investing rather than corporate compliance, the ultimate proof will be in the performance.
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Refinitiv have identified a number of ESG investment strategies such as ethical and
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negative screening, to avoid companies involved in unethical activities and positive best
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in class screening for companies that demonstrate a positive contribution to sustainable development.
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But are stocks with a high ESG score going to outperform on a regular basis other stocks
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with lower scores.
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It's too early to say, although there are now an increasing number of ways in which
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we can track the performance of ESG factors.
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But we still have to be aware that stocks with a high ESG score may be outperforming
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other stocks for non ESG reasons.
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Indeed, many of the factors followed by pure quantitative strategies will only have a small
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percentage of a stock鈥檚 out or underperformance that is attributable to one single factor.
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And within a suite of ESG products we are going to see quite a lot of differentiation.
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Some investors may focus on social aspects, others on governance.
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One such index is the Refinitiv Global Diversity and Inclusion Index, which ranks over 7000
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global companies and identifies the top 100 publicly traded companies with the most diverse
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and inclusive workplaces, measured by 24 separate metrics.
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This global index has outperformed MSCI World Index over the last 10 years, though, with
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names like Accenture, Diageo, BlackRock, Novartis, Allianz in that top 10 by market cap, this
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may indicate that large international companies, which will often be the beneficiaries of,
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for instance, passive inflows, are also the ones that have been best placed to address
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the specific ESG topic.
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Both the MSCI World Index and the Diversity and Inclusion Index have been lagging the
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S&P 500.
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In Australia, the Fossil Fuel Free index has also outperformed the broader Australian market
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over the last five years.
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The top 10 holdings of that index, however, lack any of the large cap Australian banks,
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which have significantly underperformed the broader Australian market.
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But for those who want to embrace ESG concepts, there are now many ways to track the data
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to follow some of the investing trends via indices and create personal portfolios that
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follow the ESG protocols.
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Now, whether ESG investments begin to outperform or not, it's worth keeping an eye on these
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concepts and indexes to basically make sure that we're not being left behind by sea change
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in sentiment.