National Post

Tesla’s swift removal from S&P sparks debate about ESG ratings

Index ‘a scam,’ CEO Musk responds

- TIM QUINSON

A benchmark ESG stock index has removed Tesla Inc., sparking a debate about which companies do — and don’t — pass muster with socially aware investors.

Tesla has grown into a Us$735-billion company on the back of its breakthrou­gh electric-vehicle engineerin­g. Its own carbon footprint is a small fraction of its peers, and its success in the market has pushed the industry overall away from gas-powered vehicles.

But the other components of ESG — the social and governance risks — give investors pause. Chief executive Elon Musk is an unconventi­onal manager, prone to impulsive tweeting, and the company discloses very little informatio­n about its workforce or labour conditions.

That split became material Wednesday after it emerged that Tesla was expelled from the ESG version of the S&P 500 Index. Musk responded by saying ESG is “a scam.” It added to an already bad day for the company, whose stock fell 6.8 per cent amid a broad sell-off in tech shares.

“This all speaks to the big inconvenie­nt fact about ESG: You can’t keep the baby and throw out the bathwater,” said Eric Balchunas, senior ETF analyst at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “You have to accept or reject both.”

In a report, analysts at Bloomberg Intelligen­ce wrote that Tesla’s ESG status remains among the most debated for any company, with many Esg-labelled funds still holding the stock. In fact, the world’s largest Esg-focused exchange-traded fund has about 1.8 per cent of its assets invested in Tesla, according to Bloomberg.

The fund, Blackrock Inc.’s Us$21.9-billion ishares ESG Aware MSCI USA ETF (ticker ESGU), tracks the MSCI USA Extended ESG Focus Index, which still includes Tesla as a member.

Balchunas and BI’S Shaheen Contractor wrote Wednesday that eight of the 15 largest U.S. funds that include ESG in their portfolio filters have significan­t positions in Tesla.

“Though Tesla might fit an environmen­tal focus or impact theme, the company’s social and governance issues make its inclusion in ESG funds debatable and Tesla’s removal from the S&P 500 ESG Index perhaps overdue,” the analysts said in their posting entitled “Is Tesla ESG?”

S&P Dow Jones Indices, which removed Tesla from its S&P 500 ESG Index, said the company’s score on environmen­tal, social and governance standards has remained “fairly stable” over the past year, but it has slipped down the ranks against improving global peers.

The index provider cited concerns related to working conditions and Tesla’s handling of an investigat­ion into deaths and injuries linked to its driver-assistance systems. A lack of low-carbon strategy and codes of business conduct also counted against Musk’s company, it said.

“While Tesla may be playing its part in taking fuel-powered cars off the road, it has fallen behind its peers when examined through a wider ESG lens,” Margaret Dorn, senior director and head of ESG indexes for S&P Dow Jones in North America, said in a Tuesday blog post.

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