BusinessMirror

Top ESG Funds in Asia boost returns in market ignored by money managers

- Bloomberg News

ASIA’S top funds are reaping the rewards of investing in Japan, a market largely ignored even by local money managers focused on sustainabi­lity.

Four of the five best performers in the region this year are focused on Japan, boasting total returns of more than 17 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg of ESG funds with at least $250 million in assets. That tops the average gain of 1.1 percent for Asian ESG funds overall, and the 16 percent return for Japan’s Topix stock gauge.

Money managers with sustainabl­e mandates in Japan have generally avoided their domestic market, citing relatively low returns and subpar environmen­tal, social and governance practices. Those that have stuck close to home are benefiting from improved corporate governance, a dose of inflation and an endorsemen­t from billionair­e investor Warren Buffett. That’s compoundin­g optimism about Japanese stocks, which have been among the best performers in the world this year.

The Alma Eikoh Japan and Goldman Sachs Japan Equity Partners join the top Asia ESG funds this year, with returns of more than 20 percent each. The Alma Eikoh fund has seen gains from industrial companies including Japan Airlines Co. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd. The former is raising billions of yen for transition financing while the latter is seeking to use hydrogen and carbon-capture technologi­es to reduce carbon emissions. Almost a quarter of the Goldman Sachs fund’s weighting is in technology firms like Sony Group Corp.

Esg-focused funds comprise investment­s with general attributes including a focus on climate change and clean energy as found in Bloomberg data.

Mid-cap bets

JAPANESE mid-cap stocks meanwhile are helping the performanc­e of the imgp—japan Opportunit­ies fund, which has beaten 90 percent of peers this year, according to Bloomberg data. The Tokyo Stock Exchange’s January push for companies to boost their return on equity and get their prices above book value is geared toward smallto-mid-caps, said money manager Joël Le Saux.

Mid-caps may not be the “best in class in terms of ESG rankings” but that doesn’t mean their ESG performanc­e is poor, said Le Saux, whose so-called Article 8 fund gets its designatio­n from buying portfolio companies that have better ESG scores and emit less carbon than the benchmark.

“They just don’t have the resources to write the nice reports that ESG ratings agencies like” and are penalized for it, he added.

For Japan, the big risk from an ESG perspectiv­e will be environmen­tal as emissions regulation­s kick in, he said. The world’s fifth-biggest emitter has started pricing carbon with a voluntary emissions trading scheme this year.

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