SDGs remain the roadmap out of crisis

APG’s Claudia Kruse reflects that the climate emergency, COVID and conflict has put SDG delivery at risk. But the SDGs remain the best roadmap out of crisis and the investor’s Asset Owner Platform has become an important tool supporting its quest to invest with impact.

At APG sustainability and digitisation are overarching themes shaping strategy. Recently, the giant Dutch asset manager combined these twin pillars in a Sustainable Development Investment (SDI) Asset Owner Platform, driven by AI technology.

Developed together with PGGM, the platform sifts through reams of structured and unstructured data to gauge the extent to which companies’ products and activities meet the SDGs. “The platform combines the core themes running through APG of sustainability and digitisation,” said Claudia Kruse, managing director, global sustainability and governance, APG, speaking at FIS Maastricht “These are the skills sets for the future.”

SDGs under threat

The UN says the SDGs are the world’s roadmap out of the crisis and remain the most compelling global and all-encompassing blueprint for those seeking to achieve real world sustainable outcomes.  Meanwhile investors are increasingly incorporating risk, return and impact in a three dimensional model. But Kruse countered that the climate emergency, COVID and conflict has put SDG delivery at risk.

APG began integrating the SDGs in 2015 following requests from its major client pension fund ABP whose beneficiaries work in the government and education sectors. The platform, launched in 2020, is designed to deliver on the SDGs and support positive outcomes. It has been created by investors for investors, and is shaped around innovation and cooperation. It has also become a crucial tool in APG’s target to invest 20 per cent of its AUM in the SDGs.

The platform is used for monitoring achievement, risk management and accountability and includes progress reviews and a forward looking lens, she said. SDG analysis on the platform initially began with equities but now covers fixed income.

Sponsored Content

The platform scores companies’ products and services rather than corporate conduct, the traditional ESG lens. Enthusiasts argue that SDG scores are better at integrating impact. For example, research shows that some companies with poor SDG scores can secure good ESG scores and ESG ratings can struggle to reflect positive impacts.

Human judgement

Data is a crucial part of SDG analysis, but so is human judgement. The platform’s AI component uses natural language processing and algorithms modelled to specific topics to score and rank companies. But human judgement is important to assess platform insights on allocations with a negative contribution to the SDGs but important support for the climate transition, like transition minerals.

Analysis is focused on companies making a positive or negative contribution to the SDGs. But she noted every investor looks at the process from their own perspective and asset owners use the platform in different ways. For example, APG’s own internal portfolio managers have integrated the technology but other investors use the platform to monitor their external managers, using it to set them targets. Others use it for risk assessment and reporting.

The platform also provides key insights for investor engagement. She noted that investors have clear exclusion policies. However, the case for divestment is usually the consequence of unsuccessful engagement over time.

 

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

G20 urged to develop policies to support long-term investment

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium (FIS) at Harvard University has identified several of the key barriers to pension funds, endowments and sovereign wealth funds adopting more effective long-term and sustainable investment strategies, and is preparing a communiqué to the upcoming meeting of the G20 to convey its concerns and its policy requirements. FIS, organised and hosted

Negative real interest rates a clear sign of financial repression

Sylvester Eijffinger, a Tilburg University professor and renowned international monetary policy expert said “financial repression is everywhere in the OECD” in a keynote address to the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Amsterdam. Eijffinger says “the globalisation of monetary policy makes it very hard for emerging economies to shield themselves from these influences”. Eijffinger points to negative

No sustainability in European equation

Asset owners seeking comfort regarding Europe’s growth prospects had their hopes dashed by an expert panel speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Amsterdam. Recovery in Europe, and with it implications for the stability of global market forces, the investment allocations of investors and the political and social well being of EU residents, is still

Pension design, regulation barriers to long-term investing

Fundamental questions of pension system design and regulation are serious barriers to fulfilling the global long-term investing agenda, according to a panel of major European asset owner heads at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Amsterdam. Eloy Lindeijer, chief of investment management of €140-billion ($191-billion) Dutch investor PGGM said “maybe politicians still don’t realise that there

PFZW: new beliefs
for a new world

The €140-billion ($191-billion) Dutch pension fund PFZW is in the midst of completely rethinking its investment philosophy, Jaap van Dam, managing director of PGGM, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Amsterdam. PGGM manages the investments of PFZW and has traditionally guided them. Van Dam explains that ownership of the investment strategy is to shift decidedly

Worst case portfolio keeps HOOPP on track

The enviable surplus of the $47.4 billion Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan, HOOPP, is down to a key focus on what David Long, senior vice president and co-chief investment officer at the fund, attributes to a “single strategic objective:” namely to pay benefits at a reasonable cost to the fund’s 247,000 workers in Ontario’s hospital