More ESG transparency needed in the super sector
Samantha Freestone
New research shows super funds with an ESG focus have well and truly arrived and now represent the majority of the superannuation market both financially and in terms of the number of funds in the market ? now it is time to hold them accountable.
Super funds investing in the environmental, social, and corporate governance (ESG) space need to be more transparent, says a superannuation research firm following the release of its most recent report.
Research and compliance director at Rainmaker Information Alex Dunnin says its latest Superannuation Benchmarking Report is attempting to quantify exactly what benchmarks are needed for a functioning ESG-committed super fund following huge growth in ESG investment.
?There are loads of funds claiming to have an ESG focus and that is all well and good but I wanted to find out who is doing it properly, and what that actually means, because the ESG offering is huge from a financial perspective and can have international finance implications because of its sheer size,? he said.
Currently ESG-focused funds oversee $1.8 trillion, up from $1.6 trillion last year, accounting for 71 per cent of Australia's market for institutional (APRA-regulated) superannuation.˜
Dunnin said it was time to get some clarification on who was doing what.˜
?We spoke with politicians, regulators and the investors themselves to find out: what are the markers? Who are the big players?? he said.
What it takes to be an ESG fund leader
As part of the report, Rainmaker launched its inaugural ESG Leader Rating rating to determine those at the top of the field. It used the following evidence points to determine who made the cut:- Governance ? evidence the fund declares itself committed to ESG principles, outlines its commitments to those principles and publishes a statement of values, that the fund has diverse leadership, is an ESG protocol signatory and that the fund actively engages with stakeholders.
- Investment ? disclosure of investments, compliance with portfolio holdings disclosure laws and the publication of proxy voting reports.
- Publishing of environmental impact reports, ESG reports, carbon disclosure, social impact reports, modern slavery act statement.
- Disclosure of investment processes practices including investment screening processes with regards to ESG investments.
- Performance, achievement of investment in a competitive manner, demonstrates investment risk management.