ESG: A Material Advantage 2- PBA
Kaushik Sridhar
This month, Kaushik Sridhar asks whether ESG investing results in better performance.
˜ESG investing is all the rage. However, aspects can polarise opinion. One of the most heated corners of the debate is the thorny and slippery subject of performance: does ESG investing result in better performance? A seemingly simple question but sadly there isn?t a simple answer.
As ESG considerations are becoming increasingly important in the corporate sector, information on the ?best and worst? global companies is becoming more easily accessible.
The term ESG was first coined in 2005 in a landmark study entitled ?Who Cares Wins.? Today, ESG investing is estimated at over $20 trillion in AUM or around a quarter of all professionally managed assets around the world, and its rapid growth builds on the Socially Responsible Investment (SRI) movement that has been around much longer. Today, thousands of professionals from around the world hold the job title ?ESG Analyst? and ESG investing is the subject of news articles in the financial pages of the world?s leading newspapers. Many investors recognise that ESG information about corporations is vital to understand corporate purpose, strategy and management quality of companies. It is now, quite literally, big business.
Cynics may argue that ESG is just a fad. But a closer look at the forces that have driven the movement over the past 15 years suggests otherwise:
- Technology and the rise of transparency are here to stay. Gathering and processing data will become ever easier and cheaper. Smart algorithms will increasingly allow for better interpretation of non-traditional financial information which seems to be doubling in volume every couple of years.
- Environmental changes, in particular climate change, will with scientific certainty put a growing premium on good stewardship and low carbon practices as natural assets will appreciate in value over time.
- People everywhere are increasingly empowered by technology. ESG investing allows them to express their own values and to ensure that their savings and investments reflect their preferences, without compromising on returns.