Embracing ESG and sustainable growth measures: Reporting, risk management and return optimisation

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2019 saw a real focus on the importance of sustainability in business activities, highlighted by the dramatic and direct Extinction Rebellion campaign, the UN's Climate Action Summit in September and the high profile actions of individuals such as Greta Thunberg. After a relatively slow start, the investment funds industry is beginning to acknowledge the importance of sustainability in its dealings with clients and investors, and in the development of product ranges. 2020 is likely to see that pace increasing further with a number of measures being taken at the national and international level.

As policymakers have become more interested in how asset managers achieve their non-financial goals, we are seeing a long-term trend emerge of environmental, social and governance (ESG) / sustainable, responsible and impact investment (SRI) standards driving regulatory compliance. ESG and SRI are also beginning to influence standards of care, with investors and lenders increasingly using ESG/SRI measures to evaluate the performance of investments.

Legal and regulatory environment

There is strong local and global political drive for responsible and sustainable business conduct. In November 2019 the EU adopted a package of measures on sustainable finance, coming into force from 10 March 2021. The reform's key tenets are taxonomy, disclosure, investor duties, benchmarks and suitability. Asset managers will be required to integrate sustainability risks into their operating models, provide more detailed disclosures on ESG policies and sustainability risks and increase due diligence on the ESG profile of funds.

This legislation has a much shorter implementation period than most other EU financial services legislation, with affected firms only having 15 months to become compliant (with a delay until January 2022 for the first annual reports containing ESG/sustainability information). Further, as EU delegated legislation is expected to impact Mifid II and IDD suitability testing, firms should also be prepared to take ESG considerations and preferences into account in the suitability assessments they undertake to see if proposed investments are appropriate for a client.

A growing number of investors and managers are signatories to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment. This involves a manager's commitment to six voluntary and aspirational investment principles, including: considering ESG issues when making investment decisions; seeking disclosures from ESG entities in which they invest; and reporting on ESG activities. Another framework likely to gain more recognition in the funds industry is the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) Impact Practice Standards for Private Equity Funds, a checklist designed to integrate impact into fund design and execution.

Side letter provisions are becoming more common, for instance that the manager maintains and/or introduces appropriate ESG strategies to the management of portfolio investments.

Clarity and challenges

Policymakers are keen to provide clarity on what sustainable investments are by creating an EU-wide classification system to provide a common language to identify economic activities that can be considered environmentally-sustainable. The new taxonomy should give greater transparency for end-investors, allow better comparison between products and reduce opportunities for "green-washing". We expect this EU-centric taxonomy to become the global language of mainstream impact investment.

Regulatory consistency across the various standards, to avoid duplication or divergence, is key. Other challenges include specifying appropriate time horizons (particularly since many climate-related risks may crystallise beyond a firm's typical planning horizon) and modelling and methodological difficulties.

Conclusion

We are seeing sustainability becoming more central to managers' and investors' considerations. 2020 will be a crucial year for codifying and embedding the EU sustainable finance measures, alongside similar initiatives emanating from the UK and other jurisdictions. The current investment landscape presents an opportunity to align operating, legal and governance approaches to ensure long-term value through sustainable business conduct. 

 

Matthew Baker is partner and Chris Ormond is associate director at global law firm Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner