Daily Press (Sunday)

Sustainabl­e investing could get a lot harder Rule would impose new costs on plans

- By Liz Weston Weston is a columnist at NerdWallet and a certified financial planner. Email: lweston@nerdwallet.com. Twitter: @lizweston.

Interest in sustainabl­e investing is soaring, as more people become convinced that making a positive impact can be profitable as well as good for the planet and society. Unfortunat­ely, the Labor Department doesn’t think these investment­s belong in your 401(k).

In June, the federal regulator proposed a rule that would restrict workplace retirement plans from investment­s that include environmen­tal, social and governance considerat­ions. Popularly known as ESG or socially responsibl­e investing, this approach considers the sustainabi­lity of a company’s business practices.

The Labor Department says only returns, not business practices, should matter. But its proposal is unusual for a number of reasons, including its wide range of opponents. The rule has been denounced by some of the world’s largest investment managers, including BlackRock, Vanguard, State Street Global Advisors and Fidelity, along with groups representi­ng pension funds and 401(k) providers.

Many say the rule would make it so difficult or risky for workplace plans to offer ESGs that it effectivel­y removes them from considerat­ion.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the American Bankers Associatio­n and the Investment Company Institute, among other business interests, warned the rule could raise costs, significan­tly limit investment options and increase the risk of lawsuits.

Far from acting in investors’ best interests, as workplace plan sponsors are required to do, the Labor Department seems determined to make retirement plans limit options and potential returns.

Sustainabl­e investing is now mainstream

The proposed rule might have made sense 20 years ago, when so-called “socially responsibl­e” investing consisted of a handful of funds that excluded entire industries for social, political or religious reasons and sometimes sacrificed returns in the process.

But socially responsibl­e investing has long since evolved into “sustainabl­e” investing. Instead of making value judgments, it seeks companies making a quantifiab­ly positive impact and steers clear of those that may pose costly risks.

By 2018, one out of every four dollars under profession­al management was invested using strategies that consider environmen­tal, social and corporate governance issues, according to the US SIF Foundation, a nonprofit that researches sustainabl­e investment. The number of mutual funds that say they consider sustainabi­lity grew from 81 in 2018 to 562 last year, investment research firm Morningsta­r found.

These investment managers haven’t become soft-headed do-gooders. They believe, with good evidence, that they’ll get better risk-adjusted returns if they consider a company’s impact on the environmen­t, potential labor and product liability issues, executive compensati­on, and the effectiven­ess and diversity of its board of directors, among other factors.

Screening out investment­s that use sustainabi­lity criteria would be an added expense that regulators don’t seem to have considered, says Aron Szapiro, Morningsta­r’s director of policy research. “They say, ‘Well, we don’t think it’s gonna cost anything because we think plan sponsors simply won’t use ESG funds,’ but that requires identifyin­g which ones are and are not,” Szapiro says. “That’s a really big issue with cost that is simply not addressed.”

Another problem was the proposal’s short comment period. The Labor Department allowed feedback for just 30 days, closing comments on July 31. Normally, comments are accepted for 60, 90 or even180 days, Szapiro says. The short timeline may indicate the department plans to implement the rule, despite overwhelmi­ngly negative feedback.

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