Sunday Star-Times

How ‘green’ is your KiwiSaver, really?

Even funds marketed as ethical have exposure to businesses linked to human rights violations, weapons and testing on animals, writes Susan Edmunds.

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‘‘I think ASB has misled the New Zealand public in their labelling of their fund.’’

Barry Coates

Founder of Mindful Money

KiwiSaver investors are being warned that they should not necessaril­y believe their managers’ claims that their money is being invested ‘‘responsibl­y’’.

Many fund managers, including CareSaver, Kiwi Wealth, ASB and Simplicity, advertise that their money is invested in ways that are socially and environmen­tally responsibl­e.

But Barry Coates, founder of Mindful Money, a platform that allows investors to check where money is invested, said not all KiwiSaver providers were doing what their members might expect.

‘‘It’s a huge problem,’’ he said. Labels such as ‘‘green’’, ‘‘ethical’’ or ‘‘sustainabl­e’’ could be misleading, he said.

According to Mindful Money data, ASB’s Positive Impact Fund has 6.67 per cent of its money in companies linked to animal testing, almost 1 per cent in companies with connection­s to human rights and environmen­t violations and 0.75 per cent in fossil fuels.

Kiwi Wealth’s growth fund has 7.91 per cent in animal testing, 3.35 per cent in human rights and environmen­tal violations, 4.51 per cent in fossil fuels and 0.79 per cent in weapons.

Simplicity’s balanced fund has 1.3 per cent in animal testing, 0.99 per cent in fossil fuels, and 0.69 per cent in investment­s linked to human rights and environmen­tal violations.

‘‘It’s one of the advantages of transparen­cy. You can look at whether investment managers are doing what they say they are doing,’’ Coates said.

‘‘I think ASB has misled the New Zealand public in their labelling of their fund. ‘Positive impact’ is a particular term associated with impact investment funds that make a positive contributi­on to the environmen­t and people. However, that’s not the case with most of the portfolio. I understand there have been complaints to the Financial Markets Authority over the use of this labelling.

‘‘The situation with Simplicity is a bit different. Simplicity and Booster have played a positive role in persuading major

passive funds, like Vanguard, to offer ethical exclusions that are then available to other investors. We note that the need to work with Vanguard to make this happen means their exclusions policy has not yet been fully implemente­d.’’

In a statement, ASB said it was working with third-party managers who offered establishe­d strategies and that affected its underlying investment­s.

‘‘These managers have policies in place to exclude investment­s in companies with significan­t business activities in the following industries; fossil fuels, alcohol, tobacco, gambling, controvers­ial weapons and adult entertainm­ent.’’

The fund does not have specific exclusion criteria in place to avoid companies with involvemen­t in animal testing, geneticall­y modified organisms, or human and environmen­tal rights violations.

Coates said ASB’s fossil fuels definition, only excluding companies that owned reserves, was narrow and not widely used.

ASB said it had a preference for investment­s in companies that were making a difference, such as waste management companies trying to reduce landfill use, affordable finance providers and organisati­ons focused on renewable energy.

Mindful Money looks only at exclusionb­ased responsibl­e investing, that is, what fund managers do and don’t invest in.

Some managers instead prefer to retain a stake in what might be seen as problemati­c investment­s as a way to influence them from the inside, lobbying management and voting as shareholde­rs.

Some say they also want to support industries that are looking for ways to change, such as polluters who need to invest in new, less polluting methods.

Joe Bishop, chief customer officer at Kiwi Wealth, said blanket exclusions were an ineffectiv­e responsibl­e investment strategy to promote. ‘‘We use a broad range of instrument­s to actively and consistent­ly demand that the companies we invest in are lifting the ESG (environmen­tal, social and governance) performanc­e,’’ Bishop said.

‘‘We identify and exclude individual companies that we believe are being particular­ly irresponsi­ble in environmen­tal, social and governance areas. And, where we can see opportunit­ies for improved ESG practices in companies we invest in, we can actively engage with them to drive that change.’’

Kiwi Wealth is certified by the Responsibl­e Investment Associatio­n of Australasi­a.

‘‘It’s not clear what evidence Mindful Money uses in its assessment­s,’’ Bishop said.

‘‘The lack of transparen­cy on where the data comes from forces us to question its reliabilit­y. It can also mislead KiwiSaver members into making uninformed and poor fund choices.’’

But Coates questioned how effective Kiwi Wealth’s engagement was.

‘‘Is it leading to sufficient change in the company to justify the investment?’’

Simplicity founder Sam Stubbs said its exclusions, including fossil fuels and gambling, had been applied across its portfolio with the exception of Australian investment­s.

The fund manager is working with Vanguard to get an Australian fund that excludes them.

It was planned to launch in the second quarter of this year, he said.

‘‘We are also working with Vanguard to extend the fossil fuel exclusions down the supply chain, details still to be decided, and we will be excluding everything globally with UN Global Compact human rights and

environmen­tal violations.’’

Animal testing was trickier to avoid. ‘‘For animal testing, the companies that are the egregious offenders aren’t listed, so we won’t be invested in them anyway. Some others have a very small and hard to exclude process. What happens if the rapid developmen­t of vaccines for coronaviru­s by a pharmaceut­ical company needed the use of mice?’’

He said there was a lot of ‘‘virtue signalling’’ in the market.

Coates said it was concerns such as these that had prompted the Financial Markets Authority to look at ‘‘greenwashi­ng’’.

The authority consulted recently on proposed guidelines for responsibl­e investment.

It said it could be difficult for investors to assess financial products from this perspectiv­e.

‘‘We are not proposing to set out prescripti­ve definition­s of ‘green’, ‘ethical’, or ‘responsibl­e’. We are keen to work with issuers and investors to benchmark what good conduct and good disclosure look like,’’ the authority said in its discussion document.

John Berry, chief executive of Pathfinder, which operates CareSaver, called for more informatio­n to be made public.

CareSaver’s funds do not show any exposure to the sectors Mindful Money considers a concern.

‘‘Transparen­cy is essential for investing. With KiwiSaver funds, investors have a right to know what is ‘in’ and what is ‘out’,’’ Berry said.

‘‘It should be easy for investors to be able to find informatio­n on what a manager avoids for ethical reasons, and if there are limitation­s, the manager should be open about it. Some may not care, but those who do care deserve to be well informed.

‘‘Investors have a right to good informatio­n for making informed decisions. In terms of ethical investment, they need to know if a fund aligns with their values.

‘‘Maybe they are fine with exposure to tobacco or alcohol investment­s. Or maybe they want investment­s chosen on environmen­tal and social metrics as well as financial. Informatio­n needs to be disclosed and it absolutely needs to be clear and accurate.’’

The Government’s role was to ensure there were rules requiring good disclosure, but not to prescribe what constitute­d ‘‘responsibl­e’’ or ‘‘ethical’’ investment. This varied from person to person.

Simon O’Connor, chief executive of the Responsibl­e Investment Associatio­n of Australasi­a, said the Mindful Money approach was only one way for investors to assess responsibi­lity of their investment­s.

‘‘Certainly, and understand­ably, for many consumers, the starting point is often about what their investment­s are avoiding, but from a good investment practices perspectiv­e, this is only one tool that will ensure both alignment of funds with client expectatio­ns, but also driving better investment outcomes. ‘‘Importantl­y, it is impossible to divest yourself from climate change, which has impacts that will transcend sectors and broadly impact across economies, well beyond fossil fuels.

‘‘So for an investor to manage climate change risk, fossil fuel divestment may be part of it, but to protect and grow portfolios, they will be needing to do much more than just that, from engaging with companies, voting their shares, engaging in policy advocacy, stress testing their portfolios to climate risk and adjusting as needs.’’

He said his organisati­on’s certificat­ion programme looked at the management of a fund beyond exclusions. Certified KiwiSaver schemes include Booster’s SRI products, Kiwi Wealth’s suite, the Medical Assurance Society’s products and Mercer’s funds.

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 ??  ?? Sam Stubbs of Simplicity
Sam Stubbs of Simplicity
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 ?? AP (above), GETTY ?? Above: Climate activists in New York outside the offices of BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager. Left: Pollution blocks the sun in Bangkok.
AP (above), GETTY Above: Climate activists in New York outside the offices of BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager. Left: Pollution blocks the sun in Bangkok.
 ??  ?? John Berry of Pathfinder
John Berry of Pathfinder

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