Print this article
Mind The Gap: ESG Investing Grows But Investors Bemoan Patchy Data
Tom Burroughes
14 February 2019
The weight of money in environmental, social and governance-themed investment is growing, but it is still a relatively niche area. Asset managers complain that patchy and insufficient data hampers efforts to make this approach more mainstream, a new report says.
The number of ESG-based assets rose by 37 per cent year-on-year in 2017, reaching $445 billion, outpacing the 23 per cent rise in the MSCI World Index of developed countries’ equities. Twice as many ESG-themed funds were launched in 2017 than was the case in 2014, with exchange-traded funds proving a popular channel.
On the face of it then, ESG is on a roll but a new report warns that while there is lots of progress, poor data is a drag factor.
The , the consultancy, said that environmental, social, and governance strategies are becoming increasingly adopted by the wealth management sector. “Overall, individual firms’ approaches can vary significantly, along with the extent to which investment analysis is performed. But there is a growing recognition that ESG factors can be material to investment performance, as well as risk, and that integrating such factors into the investment process aligns with a long-term investment horizon,” Aite said.
Uneven figures
The WRI report said that available information about firms’ conduct is uneven and incomplete, with many businesses silent on their environmental practices; reporting methods are not consistent; sustainability data appears to be unreliable, with too many firms choosing to tick boxes rather than give more detailed answers and ratings from data firms are not consistent or reliable.
More positively, there are efforts to improve consistency and reliability of information, with global frameworks such as those given by the Global Reporting Initiative and Sustainable Accounting Standards Board proving beneficial, the report said. A number of investor initiatives to drive change are in place, such as a ShareAction report (February 2017), Banking on a Low Carbon Future, which explains how investors can engage with banks on climate change.
“ Standards for sustainability reporting,” it said.