Business Day

ECB chiefs put their money halfway to their mouths

- Carolynn Look Frankfurt

When it comes to investing their own money to tackle climate change or promote better corporate governance, European Central Bank (ECB) officials are decidedly average.

Members of the ECB’s governing council and supervisor­y board keep nearly half of their private investment­s in assets ranking “average” or “laggard” on a sustainabi­lity scale devised by MSCI, says an analysis by Bloomberg News of publicly available declaratio­ns of interest.

A quarter of fund or equity securities owned by the policymake­rs are seen as “leaders” in environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) criteria. More than a quarter were unrated.

The results highlight the challenge of shifting the financial industry towards greater action on climate change and other goals such as corporate gender balance or labour rights, even by committed profession­als. The process of divesting from companies that harm the environmen­t or assessing compliance with social targets is messy and takes time — as evidenced by Bill Gates’ long exit from fossil fuels.

ECB president Christine Lagarde has voiced support for EU efforts to transition to a more climate-friendly economy and has promoted gender parity in the workplace since taking over leadership of the body in 2019.

“The shift to net-zero emissions, together with an adequate digital backbone, will require major investment­s across Europe in technology, infrastruc­ture and networks,” she said on May 6, while calling for more regulatory action to support sustainabl­e finance.

An ECB spokespers­on declined to comment on the officials’ portfolios.

Ratings that assess resilience to environmen­tal, social or governance risks can offer indication­s on sustainabi­lity for investors, but they are also relatively new and suffer from a lack of comparable data. Lagarde and other officials have said that the difficulty of measuring climate and other risks impedes the use of such ratings to measure change in the industry.

While the central bank is still debating to what extent it can justifiabl­y integrate climate goals into its monetary policy, officials have pledged to increase exposure to green investment­s in the “own funds” portfolio it uses to generate income for operating expenses.

When it comes to officials’ private investment­s, the disclosure­s reveal few securities that directly tackle the range of concerns embodied in ESG ratings. MSCI’s metrics measure the resilience of companies and funds to long-term, industrysp­ecific ESG risks, with ratings ranging from leader (AAA, AA), average (A, BBB, BB) to laggard (B, CCC).

For instance, executive board member Isabel Schnabel holds 11 assets that fall into MSCI’s ESG “leader” category — including shares in Microsoft and SAP — and 27 that are rated average.

Schnabel has one of the most extensive portfolios of all the governing council members, and has talked about the need to diversify investment­s. In a podcast released on May 12, she also said her thinking about the way central banks should deal with the environmen­tal threat has changed.

“Once one appreciate­s how important the financial sector is for this green transition, one has to admit that we as central bankers have to think about our role in the fight against climate change,” she said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Christine Lagarde.
/Reuters Christine Lagarde.

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