ESG is strategy at PE firm TPG

When private equity firms came under fire recently for the demise of Toys R Us and the harsh treatment of the company’s shop workers who lost their jobs without severance pay, it did little to suggest private equity investors were ESG-minded. Yet in an interview with Tanya Carmichael, managing director and head of global funds at Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, private equity firm TPG revealed it had been integrating ESG for years.

“ESG is a core value focused across the whole range of our business,” said TPG co-chief executive Jon Winkelried at the PRI in Person conference in San Francisco. “It affects how we think about the companies that we invest in, our due diligence process, the composition of our portfolio and how we want investors to think about us.”

TPG, a PRI signatory since 2013, has more than $84 billion in assets under management in buyout and growth strategies, along with a social impact fund named RISE. Winkelried believes ESG is now engrained at a cultural level, defining the firm as a GP.

The strategy is apparent in TPG’s daily work with its portfolio companies, Elizabeth Lowery, TPG’s managing director, sustainability and ESG told Carmichael. Lowery cited efforts to introduce initial cost reductions in portfolio companies around energy use or water waste as typical examples of ESG integration reducing risk and return value. It also focused just as much on the opportunities, building additional value like employee engagement or using renewable energy to save money, something TPG did with investee company Cirque du Soleil, Canada’s iconic entertainment group.

“We worked with Cirque on their touring shows on how to connect to the grid via renewables,” Lowery said. Another example was TPG’s work with portfolio clothing chain JCrew on sustainability in its cotton sourcing when it relaunched its brand.

TPG finds that its portfolio companies are open to integrating ESG.

Sponsored Content

“There is a perception that management teams are resistant about ESG,” Lowery said. “What we found is that ESG is already on their mind and not something to be avoided. We say it is part of how we build a sustainable business and that it is really important to integrate within the firm.”

Winkelried added that he found little resistance from chief executives of TPG’s portfolio companies.

“Companies partner with us in driving positive ESG outcomes. It comes back to the core of our identity,” he said.

In some cases, TPG can play a role in ESG education for limited partners that invest in its funds. It is also a journey that evolves, as more ESG issues such as diversity and inclusion emerge, Lowery said.

One of TPG’s flagship ESG innovations is its Rise Fund. With a $2 billion pool of capital, the fund invests and scales with companies, with real impact. Winkelried attributes part of the success of the fund to the fact TPG doesn’t run a segregated investment team for the Rise portfolio, rather it is managed through the main team.

Carmicheal noted encouraging signs of more convergence between mainstream private equity and ESG best practice.

“Some people are interested and others not,” she said. Continued dialogue and access to a good networking community to allow shared experiences and best practice are important. Carmichael also noted initiatives by the PRI and the Institutional Limited Partners Association to set up resources for investors to allow GPs to improve knowledge on ESG. Greater alignment around reporting would also help, Lowery noted, as would guidance in integrating new frameworks such as SDGs in private equity.

Leave a Comment

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing has come a long way in the past two decades, going from a niche strategy to a $1.5 trillion industry, but there are still challenges for it to reach institutional scale due to the lack of products and insufficient evidence of outperformance in some parts of the market.

Sort content by

At a glance: FIS Cambridge day one

The first day of the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Cambridge University, which brought together more than 70 asset owners from 15 countries, centred around asset owners responsibility to engage with policymakers, the integration of ESG and the sustainable development goals as well as barriers to long term investing.

FIS Cambridge gallery day one

Images from the Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Cambridge 2019, Day one

Long-term investors must engage

Long-term infrastructure investors need to engage with the public and do much more to build trust in the value of their capital, said Brett Himbury, chief executive, IFM Investors (Australia), the global infrastructure manager, owned by 27 leading pension funds with $120 billion AUM.

A practical guide to the long-term

Thinking and acting long-term and holding their service providers to account on long-term risk behaviours and measures, is one of asset owners’ most enduring challenges. Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Cambridge University a panel of experts highlighted important tools asset owners can deploy to ensure they stay focused on the long-term.

A ‘Sputnik Moment’ with China?

Whither United States-China? Stephen Kotkin, Professor in History and International Affairs at Princeton University and adviser to conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com, discusses the changing nature of the complex relationship between the US and China and the struggle underway as these two large economies find their positions in the economic and technological hierarchy. So what should investors watch for?

Dutch fund prioritises labour rights

The €9 billion ($10 billion) Dutch fund for disabled workers, PWRI, has introduced a proprietary index that tilts towards companies that prioritise workers’ rights and health and safety issues. It’s a revolutionary approach to reflect the fund’s distinctive ESG priorities and a guide for other investors wanting to prioritise the “s” in ESG.

Previous