The Hamilton Spectator

Sustainabl­e funds back up claims with data

Providers releasing more details as investors seek transparen­cy

- IAN BICKIS

There’s no one way to define sustainabl­e investing, but more fund providers in the space are beginning to provide hard numbers to back up their claims.

The trend toward increased disclosure comes as sustainabl­e investing sees both rapid growth and increased scrutiny by regulators and investors amid concerns the environmen­tal credential­s of funds are being overstated.

Wealthsimp­le Inc., for one, recently revealed the results of a climate audit on their two socially responsibl­e investment funds after an advocacy group asked how they shaped up.

Ben Reeves, chief investment officer at Wealthsimp­le, said they had initially set out parameters on the funds such as not investing in fossil fuels and cutting out the top emitters in other sectors, but that they were deficient on hard data such as how the funds actually perform climate-wise.

“If you’re going to try and invest in a socially responsibl­e way, you really need to understand the details of what you’re investing in and why,” he said.

Reeves said that he found many of the ratings around sustainabl­e investing were an aggregatio­n of so many factors that they were unreliable, so Wealthsimp­le went with measures around carbon emissions for the companies in their funds.

An audit by shareholde­r proxy firm Institutio­nal Shareholde­r Services showed that the two Wealthsimp­le funds have a carbon intensity measure — how much carbon dioxide companies generate compared with revenue — well below market benchmarks. The companies were also aligned with the goal of keeping global warming to 1.5 degrees, compared with a benchmark of around 2.5 degrees of warming.

The latter measure, known as the temperatur­e alignment score, is becoming more relevant among the many ways to measure climate impacts, said Hernando Cortina, head of index strategy at the ESG division of ISS.

Cortina said the measure, like all such indicators, requires assumption­s on a range of factors, such as the actual carbon emissions for firms that don’t report, as well as the reliabilit­y of company commitment­s and how effective their carbon reduction policies might actually be, but that it’s becoming more reliable as disclosure­s increase

NEI Investment­s, which bills itself as Canada’s “leading provider of responsibl­e investment solutions,” is also looking to provide more climate data on its funds, but it’s still struggling to find the right measuremen­ts, said John Bai, chief investment officer at NEI.

“We’re trying to wrap our heads around what the best providers are, and what the right context for all of that is, because it’s not just a simple metric as far as we’re concerned.”

There’s been growing calls for more disclosure so that investors can make decisions that factor in sustainabi­lity measures.

Eight of Canada’s largest pension funds representi­ng $1.6 trillion in assets issued a joint statement last year urging more data on environmen­tal, social and governance informatio­n to strengthen decisionma­king and risk assessment­s.

“We call on companies and investment partners to help drive lasting change by placing sustainabi­lity at the centre of their planning, operations and reporting,” the said.

The calls come as the sustainabl­e investment sector has seen tremendous growth with Canadian investment­s hitting $26 billion in the second quarter for a year-over-year growth of 130 per cent, said Morningsta­r Inc.

Regulators have also shown increased interest in the sector.

“If you’re going to try and invest in a socially responsibl­e way, you really need to understand the details of what you’re investing in and why.”

BEN REEVES

CHIEF INVESTMENT OFFICER AT WEALTHSIMP­LE

In the European Union, new laws came into force earlier this year that require more climaterel­ated disclosure­s by companies, as well as requiring more justificat­ion of sustainabi­lity claims.

The U.S., too, is cracking down. The Wall Street Journal reported last month that the Securities and Exchange Commission and U.S Justice Department are investing claims that Deutsche Bank AG’s asset-management division, DWS Group, overstated the sustainabi­lity credential­s of their funds.

In Canada, the Ontario Securities Commission did a review this year of a few dozen funds to see how well their marketing claims around sustainabi­lity matched the investment products. A report on the review noted that it didn’t find any problems, though there is also limited regulatory guidance in Canada on what constitute­s a sustainabl­e investment.

Regulating sustainabi­lity claims won’t be easy however, because there are so many different approaches in the space.

NEI’s strategy, for one, has focused more on board engagement by investing in companies like Suncor Inc. and pushing them to improve their practices through shareholde­r resolution­s and conversati­ons with management rather than simply not own the stock, so a metric such as carbon intensity score doesn’t capture what they’re trying to do.

“Just because you’re not investing in these companies doesn’t mean their carbon impact is going away,” said Bai.

“We’ve taken the other stance, in that we’ll own the company and engage with them, say that its really important that they begin to transition their operations to a net-zero world.”

Reeves said Wealthsimp­le is not making grand claims about how much the funds will help the environmen­t, rather that the ETFs are designed for investors who want to participat­e in the parts of the economy that are not actively contributi­ng to the climate crisis.

He said people can help the environmen­t much more effectivel­y by taking actions like by voting for leaders who are going to fight climate change, by improving the energy efficiency of their home, or paying a green premium when shopping.

“If you really want to be part of the solution, you need to take action yourself. Don’t just buy ETFs.”

 ?? OMAR MARQUES GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? Eight of Canada’s largest pension funds representi­ng $1.6 trillion in assets issued a joint statement last year urging more data on environmen­tal, social and governance informatio­n to strengthen decision-making and risk assessment­s. The calls come as the sustainabl­e investment sector has seen tremendous growth with Canadian investment­s hitting $26 billion in the second quarter.
OMAR MARQUES GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO Eight of Canada’s largest pension funds representi­ng $1.6 trillion in assets issued a joint statement last year urging more data on environmen­tal, social and governance informatio­n to strengthen decision-making and risk assessment­s. The calls come as the sustainabl­e investment sector has seen tremendous growth with Canadian investment­s hitting $26 billion in the second quarter.

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