China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hong Kong regulators must act to boost interest in ESG investment

- Stephen Wong, Gloria Luo and Johnson Kong Stephen Wong is deputy executive director and head of Public Policy Institute at Our Hong Kong Foundation. Gloria Luo and Johnson Kong are assistant researcher­s.

The financial sector is critically linked with how the real economy functions. That is why, as the risks posed by climate change to economic and financial stability loom large on the horizon, the global financial system is being reshaped by the urgent needs of sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Most notably, central banks and financial supervisor­s formed the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) in 2017 to better manage climate change as a financial risk. NGFS has grown to 36 members and six observers across five continents, including the European Central Bank, the Bank of England, the People’s Bank of China, the Singapore Monetary Authority and the World Bank. To date, multiple central banks have conducted surveys and stress tests, or issued policy guidelines related to climate risks.

As these rather conservati­ve institutio­ns are making major strides in future-proofing our financial systems, the urgency of climate action speaks for itself and has climbed up the global agenda.

This sets the stage for the rapid rise of environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) investment as a major financial tool for climate action. Channeling global capital toward ESG assets is believed to incentiviz­e the widespread developmen­t of green technologi­es and sustainabl­e business models. This will be a crucial step forward toward preventing global warming from getting even worse and becoming an unstoppabl­e disaster in the near future.

According to Global Sustainabl­e Investment Alliance, about 1 in every 4 dollars under profession­al management was managed with ESG considerat­ions beyond traditiona­l financial analysis in 2016, and its size has surged to over $30 trillion in 2018. ESG investment has taken off mostly in Europe and the United States, adding up to over 90 percent market share worldwide in 2016.

Hong Kong, despite its status as an internatio­nal financial hub, is dwarfed by global peers given its mere share of 0.06 percent in 2016, and still falls short of Japan’s 2.07 percent in the Asian context.

Our Hong Kong Foundation’s

(OHKF) recent report cast light on the stymied growth of ESG investment in Hong Kong. ESG reporting is the cornerston­e of ESG investment. Yet many companies are not disclosing what investors need for informed decisionma­king since reporting is simply treated as a “box-ticking” exercise and ends up with a diverse range of quality.

Investors may find it difficult to apply any ESG strategy to investment processes when ESG disclosure­s are “limited” with little hint of materialit­y assessment, assurance, comparabil­ity, or integratio­n into business strategy, despite the overabunda­nce of informatio­n and data. But if investors are not confident or interested in ESG integratio­n, companies may lack the incentives to divert resources into compiling highqualit­y ESG reports and enhancing ESG performanc­es, which perpetuall­y inhibits the growth of ESG investment.

The crux of solving this predicamen­t faced by companies and investors in Hong Kong lies with the timely and necessary policy interventi­ons to strengthen the ESG regulatory regime that is currently lax in nature.

On the reporting side, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) is uniquely positioned to bridge the communicat­ion gaps between companies and investors toward greater transparen­cy and efficiency of capital flows. HKEX should seek to influence reporting practices among issuers in line with the latest internatio­nal developmen­ts, such as the Task Force on Climaterel­ated Financial Disclosure, and has a role to play in facilitati­ng issuers to internaliz­e ESG considerat­ions toward more strategic-driven reporting.

One of the key directions that OHKF advocates for regulatory improvemen­t is to strengthen the role of board in ESG oversight and require disclosure­s on aspects such as ESG strategy and management systems, and the process of materialit­y assessment. We are happy to see that this aligns with one of HKEX’s proposals in its current market consultati­on to enhance ESG disclosure requiremen­ts.

Disclosure requiremen­ts should also be refined and narrowed in a sectorspec­ific manner so that issuers can focus on reporting the most material indicators that come in handy for investor decisions. While the sector-specific focus was not addressed in HKEX’s consultati­on, we believe materialit­y will continue to be a crucial dialogue that requires coordinate­d efforts from all market participan­ts toward maximized effectiven­ess and efficiency of ESG reporting.

On the investment side, the HKSAR government as one of the world’s largest asset owners should lead by example to enhance investors’ adoption and disclosure of ESG integratio­n into investment analyses and decisionma­king processes.

In particular, the Securities and Futures Commission should consider upgrading the Principles of Responsibl­e Ownership so that asset managers would have to disclose their ESG integratio­n throughout the investment processes, or explain “why not”, in comparison to the current voluntary approach. Hong Kong Monetary Authority and Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Authority can also exert influence on their external asset managers in promoting the integratio­n of ESG factors into investment decisions, as an effort to incentiviz­e the market to follow suit.

The market sentiments around ESG are becoming growingly positive in Hong Kong. The first half of 2019 has seen a series of actions launched by regulators, including HKMA introducin­g key measures on sustainabl­e banking and green finance, SFC launching a survey on ESG integratio­n in asset management and HKEX’s ESG consultati­on mentioned earlier.

As China embraces green finance in its strategic agenda and is ready to mandate corporate environmen­tal disclosure by 2020, Hong Kong can play a strategic role as a pioneering platform for green projects and businesses while aligning China’s capital markets with internatio­nal standards. To unleash its potential, Hong Kong needs to build a regulatory regime conducive to facilitati­ng integratio­n of environmen­tal and social considerat­ions into business and investment decisions.

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