The dangers of funding sedition

Scott Kalb and CalSTRS’ Aeisha Mastagni discuss what is next for investor action in sustainability. They reflect on the dangers of funding sedition following the 6th January riots. Investors rarely consider the risk of investee companies financing extreme groups, but it threatens the very system on which institutional investment relies.

Asset owners face the uncomfortable prospect that the companies in which they invest could be funding extremist groups, some engaged in sedition. Speaking at “Sustainability Digital: A Planet in Trouble,” Scott Kalb, director of the Responsible Asset Allocator Initiative (RAAI) at think tank New America, told delegates that they might have unknowingly invested in companies funding the siege of the capital. ESG doesn’t address political spending risk, he said.

Kalb said it was a risk that asset owners need to take seriously. He said screening out political risk required better asset owner education and investors using their proxy voting power to improve corporate disclosure on political spending.

“Asset owners should adopt policies on political spending as part of an ESG framework and put their asset managers on watch to the risk, notifying them that they won’t tolerate investment in companies spreading disinformation or engaged in violent activity.”

Moreover, he said these groups threaten the very system on which institutional investors rely like the rule of law.

“If you are a good steward of capital, investing in companies that have poor transparency regarding political funding contravenes good governance.”

Sponsored Content

He said that political spending poses a systemic risk to capitalism if companies can influence an election result “to get the rules in their favour.” Adding that it is incumbent on investors to protect capitalism and the institutions that underpin it and to think about “how portfolio companies are impacting the world and externalizing costs onto stakeholders.”

 

Fellow panellist Aeisha Mastagni, portfolio manager at US pension fund CalSTRS agreed that funding sedition was something investors should be looking at, adding that the events of January 6th had cast political spending and contributions into the spotlight, and necessitated strong corporate board oversight.

CalSTRS directs its active stewardship to four key areas that it believes are relevant to the long-term performance of its portfolio – targeting policy makers to promote sustainable markets, corporate board effectiveness, the low carbon transition and responsible firearms.

Tools include proxy voting and engagement in a strategy that Mastagni described as a “continuum,” with CalSTRS increasingly deploying more resources to influence change.

“We pair our role as an engaged, constructive shareholder with deep financial analysis and a path to value creation,” she said.

For example, CalSTRS will support an alternate slate of board members at ExxonMobil being put forth by active ownership organization Engine No. 1, explained Mastagni.

Activists want the oil giant to ramp up investments to clean energy and adapt to the rapidly changing energy landscape.

Although CalSTRS is not part of this solicitation, she said the pension fund plans to vote and support the alternative slate.

“Now is the time to change, and we need significant change in this boardroom,” she said.

Reflecting on the work of the RAAI Kalb explained that the initiative identifies the top 25 institutional investors leading responsible investment. Asset owners are rated based on 10 principles and 30 criteria like integration, transparency and disclosure.

“We are looking for evidence of real action, trying to create a standard of excellence people can aspire to,” he said. He explained to delegates that most of the cohort is focused on climate change.

“There is an understanding that as long-term investors they have an obligation to savers and stakeholders to not invest in companies that might harm their interests,” he concluded.

Leave a Comment

Climate the No.1 priority for 2021

Climate the No.1 priority for 2021

Climate is by far the number one sustainability priority for investors in 2021 according to a poll of asset owners from more than 32 countries which came together for the Top1000funds.com online Sustainability event in March.

Sort content by

Bridgewater on the impact revolution

Integrating impact alongside risk and return is a revolution that will see more diversification among investor allocations to asset classes such as commodities. Elsewhere, it requires using multiple data sets to analyse stocks and sovereign bond allocations to see the real-world impact of a company’s product or services, and which governments are heading to net-zero. Bridgewater’s head of investment research Karen Karniol-Tambour explains.

Diversity doesn’t work without inclusion

Achieving diversity requires data, new recruitment practices and nurturing inclusion. And the financial industry must get its own house in order to better put pressure on investee companies.

Diversity uncut

In a fireside chat, Gloria Steinem reminds us why diversity is such an important issue for investors to understand, why it impacts society, business and investments so fundamentally, and why there is still so much work to do.

Sovereign engagement is the new frontier

Robeco chief executive Gilbert van Hassel opened the 'Sustainability Digital: A Planet in Trouble' conference with a reminder of the opportunities in sustainability and the importance of working with others. At Robeco this now includes engaging directly with sovereign governments.

Regulation and economics converge in ESG

Investors from Schroders, Trillium and PensionDanmark discuss how a changing regulatory picture and the economics of sustainable investment are coming together to create a tipping point in ESG, but they warn their peers to look beyond the label to what is on the inside.

Principles of a climate-impact dashboard

The climate-impact dashboard is part of a 3-D investment framework that balances risk, return and impact. This includes total portfolio thinking, long-horizon investing, impact investment strategies, system-level engagement and strategic partnership between asset owners and asset managers. Here Tim Hodgson lays out eight guiding principles to help shape a climate-impact dashboard.

Previous