The Edge Singapore

Abrdn excludes its own vowels but include companies turning ‘green’

- BY KHAIRANI AFIFI NOORDIN khairani.noordin@bizedge.com

For the past several years, in an attempt to uphold their sustainabi­lity chops, many investors turned to a strategy called exclusion screening, where they avoided stocks of companies that do not fit into some environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) criteria. By wielding this “stick”, so the thinking goes, companies will be rewarded for showing that they have achieved certain ESG standards.

As a result, so-called “brown” companies — which are in the midst of their transforma­tion — were cut off from the funding, thereby hampering a bigger number of companies from turning “green”.

But global asset manager abrdn — previously known as Aberdeen Standard Investment­s — believes that investing in companies that are transition­ing from “brown” to “green” would bring about a much bigger change.

“We want to invest in firms that have a very clear plan which demonstrat­es how they would reduce their carbon footprint and water pollution over time. I think this is a bigger, better way to help prevent climate change compared to exclusion,” René Buehlmann, abrdn CEO of Asia Pacific, tells The Edge Singapore.

He adds that this is especially important in Asia, as four of the world’s top 10 greenhouse gas emitters are located in the region, with China and India in the top four. It could also help expedite ESG standardis­ation in Asia, which has lagged compared to Europe.

As Buehlmann explains, abdrn is an active investor that spends time engaging with a lot of the firms looking to transition, and that the firm has ways to specifical­ly identify those with a good transition plan. Via these engagement­s, abrdn can also help shape the discussion, bridge the gap between what its clients the investors should be looking for, and what the companies should do if they are to continue to access the funding.

“We believe that by doing this, we can contribute to the change,” says Buehlmann, who was appointed to his role last March. For nearly three decades, he was with Swiss bank UBS, where he was the group managing director for UBS Asset Management’s Asia Pacific operations between 2014 and 2020.

Moving forward, abrdn is looking to highlight and elevate more sustainabi­lity agenda globally, says Buehlmann. For instance, the firm has worked together with the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) to manage a US$500 million ($695 million) AIBB ESG Enhanced Credit Managed Portfolio, comprising mainly of Asian infrastruc­ture-related bond — including both “green” and unlabelled issuances.

The AIIB ESG Enhanced Credit Managed Portfolio is the first project under the Sustainabl­e Capital Markets Initiative, which aims to drive green and sustainabl­e capital markets across the continent. As at December 2020, more than 37% of the portfolio was invested in either sustainabi­lity bonds or green bonds.

Buehlmann believes that there will always be opportunit­ies to invest in transition­ing companies as regulators, investors as well as society at large further favours ESG-compliant companies. He adds that companies

that make sustainabi­lity a big focus typically have better governance, better structured around understand­ing the implicatio­ns of decisions across the governance structure. This will drive performanc­e in the long-term horizon, says Buehlmann.

Building the ESG skills

As an organisati­on, abrdn has gone through some changes recently. Marking its 30th year in Asia this year, Aberdeen Asset Management was a high-profile fund manager operating out of a modest office along Boat Quay before moving to swankier premises. Under Hugh Young, its long-time managing director, the firm gained a reputation for taking significan­t, long-term stakes in the winners of tomorrow across emerging Asia.

In 2017, Aberdeen Asset Management merged with Standard Life to form Standard Life Aberdeen, one of the largest investment companies at the time with assets under administra­tion of GPB670 billion.

In 2018, Standard Life Aberdeen announced that it was selling its UK and European insurance operation, Standard Life Assurance, to one of UK’s largest insurance services providers, Phoenix Group, in a deal worth GBP3.24 billion. The firm continues to be Phoenix’s in-house manager while its investment businesses are known as Aberdeen Standard Investment­s.

As part of its company-wide rebranding, the firm officially changed its name to the current abrdn on July 5, 2021. This removal of vowels is done to differenti­ate itself from the city of Aberdeen as well as multiple organisati­ons, landmarks and the football club with the same name, says Buehlmann.

When asked about his favourite club, Buehlmann — who is a Swiss — replies: “My favorite football club in the UK is not in Scotland but in England, Liverpool…mostly because until recently they featured a famous Swiss player named [Xherdan] Shaqiri.”

Today, abrdn is essentiall­y focused on three parts — asset management, financial advisor technology provider and wealth management. The firm is also ramping up on its digital offerings, evident by its purchase of online investment platform Interactiv­e Investor last year from shareholde­rs including private equity firm JC Flowers for GBP1.5 billion ($2.6 billion).

“The UK is our home market where we have set up shop for a very long time. Over those years, we have built a lot of digital technology and mobile offerings that we want to bring to Asia as well,” explains Buehlmann.

“Secondly, we want to build our capabiliti­es surroundin­g sustainabi­lity in Asia. abrdn is one of the very first in the region to be focused on ESG. We are an active asset manager that really digs deep into understand­ing the companies we invest in, analysing them across the value chain — ESG has been ingrained from the very beginning,” he adds.

In July last year, the firm establishe­d abrdn Sustainabi­lity Institute, a fully integrated sustainabi­lity innovation hub that brings together experience­d ESG experts from its Asia Pacific business to drive sustainabi­lity outcomes for investors. Buehlmann says the firm had also doubled its sustainabi­lity headcount in Asia over the past six months, on top of hiring an ESG regulatory specialist to help the firm better understand ESG framework developmen­t in the Asia Pacific region.

Additional­ly, the firm has set the ambition to reduce the carbon intensity of all of the assets it is managing by 50% by 2030. To achieve this, it has developed climate analytics tools to allow it to measure a portfolio’s carbon footprint, enabling it to help clients achieve their sustainabi­lity objectives, Buehlmann explains.

Plans in the pipeline

As abrdn continues to help its clients construct more sustainabl­e portfolios, it is also looking to introduce more sustainabi­lity-linked funds. Buehlmann says the firm is working on launching a sustainabl­e real estate product as well as some sustainabl­e fixed income product “fairly soon” before the end of the year.

In 2020, abrdn launched the Asian Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Equity Fund, which is aligned with the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (UN SDGs). The fund seeks to invest in quality companies in Asia Pacific ex-Japan, aiming to outperform the MSCI AC Asia Pacific ex-Japan Index.

The fund invests in companies with a minimum of 20% of their revenue, profit, capital or operating expenditur­e or research and developmen­t linked to the UN SDGs. For companies classified in the benchmark as ‘“financials”, alternativ­e measures of materialit­y are used based on loans and customer base.

The Asian Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Equity Fund also invests up to 20% in SDG leaders. These are companies that are considered to be integral to the supply chain for progressin­g towards the UN SDGs, but do not currently meet the 20% materialit­y requiremen­t.

As at April 30, abrdn’s Asia Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Equity Fund’s top five holdings were semiconduc­tor firm Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co (8.7%), insurance firm AIA Group (5.8%), biotechnol­ogy company CSL (4.2%), financial services company Housing Developmen­t Finance Corp (3.7%) and industrial and property owner-manager Goodman Group (3.2%). Since inception, the fund has provided 2.62% annualised return on the net asset value.

As the firm celebrates its 30th anniversar­y in Asia — having opened the doors to its first office in Singapore in 1992 — Buehlmann is hopeful that the firm can further contribute to making an impact on the ESG front.

“Over the years, we have seen Asia evolve from being the factory of the world into a driver of innovation. We hope this innovation marries both technology and sustainabi­lity. And I think this is really where we have pivoted our business model to adapt and be part of the change, finding companies that help the transition with sustainabl­e business models that incorporat­e new technologi­es,” says Buehlmann.

 ?? ALBERT CHUA/THE EDGE SINGAPORE ?? Buehlmann: We are an active asset manager that really digs deep into understand­ing the companies we invest in, analysing them across the value chain
ALBERT CHUA/THE EDGE SINGAPORE Buehlmann: We are an active asset manager that really digs deep into understand­ing the companies we invest in, analysing them across the value chain

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