Bangkok Post

Bridgewate­r paves way for investors

- TIM QUINSON

NEW YORK: Bridgewate­r Associates LP, the world’s biggest hedge fund manager, is taking a swing at the issue of climate-conscious investing.

In a new report entitled “Pursuing Net-Zero Goals in Public Equities”, Bridgewate­r outlines several ways of aligning stock portfolios with financial and sustainabi­lity goals. Last year, the company introduced what it calls investment solutions aimed at achieving just that.

“Investors with net-zero goals can’t just run away from the challenges of decarbonis­ation — they should run towards it,” says Carsten Stendevad, the Westport, Connecticu­t-based money manager’s co-chief investment officer for sustainabi­lity.

Bridgewate­r, which oversees about $150 billion of assets, starts from the standpoint that publicly traded companies in 11 emissions-intensive industries are responsibl­e for about 60% of global greenhouse-gas emissions. Given this backdrop, Bridgewate­r argues that investors should be allocating funds to these sectors, and not avoiding them (assuming that the companies’ underlying financials are in good shape).

Mr Stendevad breaks the group in two: companies with “carbon-solution” products and services that are already contributi­ng to a cleaner world; and “carbon improvers”, or businesses that have a “clear and credible” path to reducing their emissions in line with global net-zero scenarios.

In the “carbon-solutions” bucket are things like utilities, which can contribute to the climate transition by generating power from renewables instead of fossil fuels; railroads, which offer an energy-efficient substitute for moving goods relative to airplanes and trucks; and constructi­on companies, which make insulation materials to reduce emissions from heating and cooling.

“Carbon improvers,” according to Bridgewate­r, would be an aluminium producer switching to hydropower from coal or a car manufactur­er shifting to electric vehicles.

Mr Stendevad declined to identify specific companies.

Going from identifyin­g sectors to selecting what stocks to buy requires “a rigorous process of company-by-company sustainabi­lity and financial assessment­s,” Stendevad said. It’s research that will lead to investors with net-zero commitment­s supporting “emissions reductions in the real world,” he added.

Bridgewate­r, founded by billionair­e investor Ray Dalio, estimates electricit­y and heating are the largest producers of greenhouse-gas emissions globally, followed by transporta­tion and industrial activity. Some of the companies in these groups are already taking concrete steps on the carbon-solutions front, according to Bridgewate­r.

In the public markets, Stendevad said the investable universe for climate solutions from emissions-intensive businesses is roughly $2.5 trillion. The number will grow as new technologi­es such as carbon capture become increasing­ly scalable, he said.

As for carbon improvers, the key will be assessing “the intent of the companies’ transition plans, the feasibilit­y of their announced plans, concrete actions taken to support those plans, and, of course, progress toward the goals”, Mr Stendevad said.

A big hurdle, however, is that environmen­tal (and social) standards for corporate reporting are still evolving, leaving room for companies to exaggerate their accomplish­ments. So in the end, the onus is on investors to make sure they aren’t being greenwashe­d.

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