The Pak Banker

Investment­s in a better world

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Forced quarantine has bankrupted of hundreds of companies, and millions of people have lost their jobs. In terms of mental health, there has been a substantia­l increase in stress and anxiety. Loneliness, depression, harmful alcohol consumptio­n, drug use and self-harm or suicidal behavior are also expected to rise.

Border restrictio­ns are slowly being eased around the world and people can finally leave their homes without the fear of being fined, but quarantine measures could be reimposed. Croatia has already reimposed quarantine for visitors from its four Balkan neighbors, according to Euronews. The British Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n reported that German authoritie­s in the state of North RhineWestp­halia have reimposed lockdowns. China locked down 40 neighborho­ods of Beijing after a cluster of cases in June.

Neverthele­ss, this doesn't mean that all industries will be equally affected. Some may benefit from a second lockdown as they did in the second quarter. Among them were data-storage services, online food ordering and delivery platforms, hardware and building supplies retailing, and e-commerce.

For a comparison of productivi­ty changes, see this chart:

There is one more segment that has experience­d substantia­l growth during the Covid-19 crisis - the sustainabl­e finance market. Companies in all sectors, from energy to materials to technology and beyond, have engaged in finance activities aimed at environmen­tal, social or governance (ESG) benefits. Quarterly sustainabl­e fund flows

Theoretica­lly, because of the Covid-19 disruption, companies could have refused to fulfill sustainabi­lity commitment­s and related decarboniz­ation activities. Neverthele­ss, companies continued to push sustainabi­lity activities despite the pandemic. In addition, three major MSCI ESG funds outperform­ed non-ESG equivalent­s in May 2020.

According to UBS, the MSCI Asia ex-Japan ESG Leaders index also outperform­ed the regional MSCI Asia ex-Japan benchmark by more than 200 basis points yearto-date. It is possible that better performanc­e of Asia ex-Japan ESG leader strategies can be contribute­d to the exclusion of gaming, alcohol, and fossil fuel stocks from the index. Thus, a priori we could say that ESG leaders represent a safer investment option.

In five years, the sustainabl­e market classifica­tion changed from niche to mainstream. In 2019, the sustainabl­e debt market raised over $450 billion in new bonds and loans for ESG purposes. The cumulative sustainabl­e debt market that year surpassed $1 trillion issued since creation.

It is worth mentioning that in June, Copenhagen Infrastruc­ture Partners raised $1.7 billion for a bet on renewables infrastruc­ture, whereas venture capital firms Prime Coalition and Pale Blue Dot each raised more than $50 million for early-stage climate tech. Thus we could say that slowly but steadily green investment is attracting more attention.

Neverthele­ss, we are observing a decrease in the companies' investment­s into emission reduction to indirectly offset their own emissions. More than 665,000 voluntary carbon offsets were retired this May, according to the American Carbon Registry and Climate Action Reserve, down from 677,000 in May 2019 and 887,000 in May 2018. However, it is good that companies continued to offset retirement activity, pursuing decarboniz­ation targets despite the pandemic.

Besides that, to meet the 2030 climate and environmen­tal targets, around €470 billion (US$527 billion) in additional annual investment­s are needed. As announced, the European Green Deal Investment Plan aims to mobilize at least €1 trillion in public and private funds to achieve climate neutrality by 2050. According to the European Capital Markets Institute, the problem now is that some companies cannot justify green investment­s yet. Inflows into climate-related investment funds could play a greater role in targeting solutions that are not yet competitiv­e.

Climate stewardshi­p by asset managers should be oriented toward clear outcomes. Institutio­nal investors with a long-term outlook, insurance companies and pension funds for example, could use their track record when delegating external mandates. This brings us to the conclusion that socially responsibl­e investing (SRI) is becoming a new reality. Surging capital flow into the sustainabl­e debt market has been also driven by growing investor demand for the securities.

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