The Seven Asset Owner Approaches to ESG (2024)

What role do asset owners have to play in environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing?

Quite a big one. And as ESG investing continues to rise in popularity and prominence, the size and influence of that role will only increase.

Indeed, spread across seven asset owner types, institutional investors are a force to be reckoned with. They control over $85 trillion in assets under management (AUM) — more money than the aggregate GDP of the United States, China, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, India, France, Brazil, and Canada combined.

And these asset owners have already demonstrated, in both word and deed, that they care about ESG considerations and have made addressing them a priority. The CFA Society of New York’s 2018 ESG Summit made this especially clear. The dialogue, led by Hiro Mizuno, CIO of Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), the largest pension fund in the world, and Dave Jones, the former California Insurance Commissioner, among other industry leaders, offered insights into how asset owners approach ESG issues and integrate ESG criteria into their investing plans.

Representatives from over 70 fiduciary asset-owning institutions across every asset owner type will again explore their ESG strategies at the 2nd Annual Climate and ESG Asset Owner Summit in New York on September 23–24,the latestAsset Owner Series™ (AOS) event organized by CFA Society New York, in partnership with the United Nations–supported Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), and facilitated by hundreds of committed CFA Institute member volunteers around the world. Upon the conclusion of the Summit, the AOS will have featured fiduciary asset owner and institutional investment consultant speakers from organizations that cumulatively oversee in excess of $72 trillion of assets under ownership or advisory.

Ahead of the forum, we thought it’d be helpful to provide our analysis of the various forms ESG investing takes, addressing both their strengths and shortfalls as well as the positive changes they have brought about in the markets and across the globe.

1. Negative Screening

Negative screening is the most well-known and perhaps the most common ESG strategy.

It’s a pretty simple concept: If a firm’s or industry’s practices run counter to your values, you screen it out of your investment portfolio. It’s like a boycott, but with investment capital. And history shows it can exert an influence and help change things for the better. In the 1970s, for example, companies withdrew investments in South Africa in order to fight the Apartheid regime and played a role in its eventual demise.

Of course, as AQR’s CEO Clifford Asness and others have noted, negative screening does not necessarily generate superior returns. But the profit motive isn’t the only motive. Asset owners — like all of us — have goals that extend beyond the bottom line, and many would trade a few extra basis points (bps) for a smaller carbon footprint or other ESG-associated benefit.

Indeed, since they are accountable to their communities and seek to reflect the values of those communities, asset owners will continue to screen out companies and sectors that don’t align with their evolving standards. As an example, the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund, Norges Bank Investment Management, divested from tobacco producers, among other businesses, byact of the Norwegian parliament. The trustees of New York City’s $200-billion pension system have also set a goal ofdivesting from fossil fuels within five years.

As with doctors and their Hippocratic Oath, asset owners have shown with negative screening that their first priority is to do no harm,

2. Climate Change

It is impossible to talk about ESG investing today without addressing the elephant in the room: climate change. The phenomenon is the primary ESG challenge and the space’s top priority, according to the PRI.

Of course, such a nuanced and complicated dilemma is not easily solved, and there is no one rubric that asset owners have embraced to counteract it. But certain themes have emerged.

CalPERS and CalSTRS, for example, have both championed a multi-pronged, holistic approach that combines policy advocacy, corporate governance, and investment as a means of facilitating energy efficiency and CO2 trading.

Of course, investors can only manage something that can be measured. And a variety of climate-change related metrics are being developed. The UN Joint Staff Pensions Fund (UNJSPF), for example, adopted sophisticated models to assess the portfolio-wide impacts of various emission scenarios.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB)’s Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) has a host of worthwhile recommendations and has helped propel ESG’s evolution in relation to climate change. The TCFD helped inspire the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan (OTPP) inaugural Climate Change Report, which assesses how it is managing climate change-related issues.

3. Diversity and Inclusion

The benefits of diversity in the workplace and in investing have been amply demonstrated. Numerous studies have shown that diversity — of gender and ethnicity, among other factors — yields tangible positive results. Yet whether in the boardroom or the C-suite, actual personnel demographics have failed to catch up to the science. Key decision-makers remain predominantly male, for example, and often do not reflect the make-up, ethnic or otherwise, of the larger population. And compensation gaps, even in the same job, are common.

Addressing these shortfalls has become a central focus of ESG investing.

In 2018, asset owners representing more than $6 trillion in AUM unveiled the G-7 Investor Alliance. The partnership’s ESG priorities ranged across a variety of initiatives, but opening opportunities for women in finance and investment worldwide was among its main goals. To help operationalize the approach, CFA Institute and its global network of societies were selected to establish programs to help eliminate gender inequality.

In CFA Institute identified 20 specific strategies to address the diversity deficit in the finance sector.

4. ESG Indexation

The active vs. passive debate is playing out in how asset owners approach ESG and is influencing their policy portfolio in a variety of ways.

The New York State Teachers Retirement System (NYSTRS) explicit domestic equity targets an allocation of 20%/80% active/passive. Since institutional-scale ESG index funds have been available since at least the launch of the Vanguard Social Index Fund in 2000, the widespread embrace of such vehicles by asset owners was all but inevitable.

CalSTRS, meanwhile, has put its capital to work at the crossroads of gender diversity and smart beta indexing, emerging as a cornerstone investor in State Street Global Advisor (SSGA) SHE ETFs. It turns out, right now only about 190 companies out of the largest 1,000 publicly traded US companies meet the ETF’s diversity standards.

At last year’s Asset Owner ESG Summit, GPIF’s Mizuno discussed investing in FTSE Blossom Japan Index and MSCI Japan ESG Select Leaders. Over the last 12 months, GPIF expanded S&P/JPX Carbon Efficient Series and MSCI Empowering Women Index, among other specialized funds, and now has over $25 billion invested in ESG-related strategies.

5. Frameworks and Standards

One of the key questions ESG investing seeks to address is how to promote long-term sustainability. Large sovereign wealth funds, the NZ Super Fundamong them, have indicated that a clear One Planet framework is a necessity.

The One Planet framework focuses on climate change, in particular, and has specific recommendations for countries based on their stage of economic development, with an emphasis on voluntary action.

Leading asset managers such as SSGA have embraced this framework as a practical way to align with their clients as well as their peers. As ESG develops, its standards and terminology will continue to evolve, with APG, CalPERS, CalSTRS, NYCERS, OTPP, and TIAA, among other asset owners, playing active leadership roles as part of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB).

6. Active Ownership

Shareholder democracy is another critical instrument in the asset owners’ ESG toolbox.

As owners and potential owners of company stocks, they can leverage their real or potential equity to influence that company’s policies.

The Council of Institutional Investors (CII) has explored and shaped how asset owners engage with the boards and management of the companies in their portfolios since 1985. Its influence is considerable: The CII is composed of 135 asset owners with AUM totaling $4 trillion.

The Enron and WorldCom scandals of the early 2000s, not to mention the global financial crisis, have accelerated the paradigm shift toward active ownership. Portfolio companies — and society as a whole —are well served by clearly articulated corporate governance principles, like those espoused by the Florida State Board of Administration.

While active ownership comes with a price in terms of both time and resources, the efforts are worthwhile, particularly in the ESG context. Indeed, active ownership is one of the most effective risk mitigants and enhancers of investment returns, according to PRI.

7. Integration

What is ESG integration?

At a broad level, it refers to “the explicit and systematic inclusion of ESG factors in investment analysis and investment decisions,” according to Guidance and Case Studies for ESG Integration, published by PRI and CFA Institute. What that means is, “It is a holistic approach to investment analysis, where material factors — ESG factors and traditional financial factors — are identified and assessed to form an investment decision.”

The emphasis on holistic is essential. Integration means ESG criteria influence investment analysis at every level, from security selection, to asset allocation, and beyond.

Moving Forward

Positioned as they are at the summit of the investment industry, asset owners are poised to better inspire and drive ESG action.

How ESG investing develops will be shaped in large measure by the management teams and stakeholders of asset owners from across the globe, many of whom will converge on New York City for the 2nd Annual Climate and ESG Asset Owner Summit.

ESG investing is still in its infancy and a novelty to many investors, and how it evolves in the years ahead is far from clear. But while its future is unwritten, through their varied approaches to ESG, the world’s largest asset owners have already rendered their judgment: Whatever it looks like, ESG is the future of investing.

For more on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing, check out Handbook on Sustainable Investmentsfrom the CFA Institute Research Foundation.

If you liked this post, don’t forget to subscribe to theEnterprising Investor.

All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.

Image credit: ©Getty Images/Vito Palmisano

The Seven Asset Owner Approaches to ESG (2024)

FAQs

Which asset managers are focused on ESG? ›

We've ranked the top ESG fund managers on factors including ESG investment strategies, performance, transparency and commitment to sustainable practices.
  • BlackRock.
  • Amundi. ...
  • SSGA (State Street Global Advisors) ...
  • Vanguard Group. ...
  • Nuveen (a subsidiary of TIAA) ...
  • Charles Schwab. ...
  • Fidelity. ...
  • Allianz Global Investors. ...
May 15, 2024

What are ESG investment approaches? ›

An ESG investment strategy motivates investors to put their money into businesses that have a positive environmental and social impact, while being operated by management teams who prioritise reaching corresponding objectives through transparent corporate governance practices.

What is the ESG strategy approach? ›

The purpose of an ESG strategy is to ensure that the company has a plan for how it operates in a sustainable and responsible manner, considering not only financial performance but also the impact of its activities on society, the environment, and the impacts those activities have back on their business.

Does BlackRock support ESG? ›

BlackRock's ESG integration framework is built upon our history as a firm founded on the principle of thorough and thoughtful risk management.

Who are leaders in ESG? ›

The 2023 Most Influential ESG Leaders Share What the Industry Can Do to Achieve ESG Outcomes
  • Serena Advani. Founder and CEO. ...
  • Ziad Ahmed. CEO and Founder. ...
  • Saad Amer. Climate Activist, Founder and CEO. ...
  • Tarang Amin. Chairman & Chief Executive Officer. ...
  • Jake Bjorseth. Founder and CEO. ...
  • William C. ...
  • Kerry Docherty. ...
  • Suvi-Elina Enqvist.
Sep 8, 2023

Who are the key stakeholders in ESG? ›

Below is a high-level list of different stakeholders in ESG and sustainability. Use this as a guide when you are building your own stakeholder assessments.
  • Employees. ...
  • Customers. ...
  • Investors. ...
  • Suppliers. ...
  • Communities. ...
  • Regulators. ...
  • Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) ...
  • Academic institutions.

What are the three pillars of ESG? ›

If you're new to the term, 'ESG' stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance. ESG speaks of the triple bottom line – profit, people, and the planet. It's about assessing how your company's operations impact the world and ensuring these actions are aligned with your values and the values of society at large.

What are the three principal ESG strategies? ›

The three pillars of ESG are:
  • Environmental – this has to do with an organisation's impact on the planet.
  • Social – this has to do with the impact an organisation has on people, including staff and customers and the community.
  • Governance – this has to do with how an organisation is governed. Is it governed transparently?

What are ESG methodologies? ›

ESG describes the Environmental (E), Social (S), and Governance (G) metrics that are evaluated to inform security selection. ESG analysis evaluates risks and opportunities beyond the scope of traditional financial analysis.

What is the new name for ESG? ›

The ESG moniker has become so politicized that it now prevents clear-headed thinking, said Alex Edmans, who teaches at London Business School. He's instead proposing the term “rational sustainability.” It may be bland, he said, but sustainability is about producing long-term value—and that's hard to politicize.

What is the ESG controversy? ›

An ESG controversy case is defined as either an event or an ongoing situation in which company operations and/or products allegedly have a negative environmental, social and/or governance impact.

Why is BlackRock closing ESG funds? ›

BlackRock Inc., along with a slew of other firms, has recently shut down funds that overtly focused on ESG (environmental, social and governance) initiatives as the movement faces backlash from conservatives in the U.S.

Does Goldman Sachs use ESG? ›

Goldman Sachs manages $145 billion in ESG investments across a broad and diverse suite of capabilities.

Which industries are most focused on ESG? ›

Some of the sectors impacted by the ESG theme are aerospace, defense & security, automotive, construction, consumer goods, financial services, foodservice, healthcare, insurance, mining, oil & gas, packaging, power, retail & apparel, sport, technology, media & telecoms, travel & tourism.

Which investors care about ESG? ›

First, institutional investors generally are more likely to be strongly driven by ESG ratings. Consistent with our expectations, large blockholders and activist investors are less motivated by these ratings.

Which companies care about ESG? ›

2024 Top-Rated ESG Companies List
37 Interactive Entertainment Network Technology Group Co. Ltd.Software & Services
Adobe, Inc.Software & Services
Advance Auto Parts, Inc.Retailing
Advance Residence Investment Corp.Real Estate
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.Semiconductors
15 more rows

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