ESG needs better data, better ratings and better products

Mass PRIM is involved in an MIT initiative to improve ESG with better data, ratings and ultimately products. Executive director and CIO explains how the ambiguity around ESG ratings creates acute challenges for investors trying to achieve both financial and social return.

Rating agencies often capture the wrong or bad data and products in the market are not robust from an impact or investment perspective, according to Michael Trotsky, CIO of Mass PRIM.

This ambiguity around ESG ratings creates acute challenges for investors trying to achieve both financial and social return. He said Mass PRIM has analysed countless products from vendors and “they all come up short,” sounding concerns at pervasive greenwashing and commercialisation.

“We are committed and want to do better,” he said.

MIT’s involvement in trying to find a solution to the “bad data problem” involves Roberto Rigobon, Professor of Applied Economics at the MIT Sloan School of Management, renown for developing maths techniques to make noisy data actionable.

“He is not an ESG sceptic, he is a staunch ally and wants to make an impact,” said Trotsky, reiterating that ESG ratings are the Achilles heel of the sector which requires more robust techniques to “do ESG better.”

Sponsored Content

Boston-based Mass PRIM is partnering with the MIT Sloan Sustainability Initiative to improve the quality of ESG measurement and decision making in the financial sector, charting a course toward more rigorous, coherent methods for ESG integration.

Speaking at Sustainability in Practice Trotsky, who oversees around $100 billion in pension assets, outlined how the project includes development of an app that will allow beneficiaries to prioritise their different ESG preferences, listing which issues they care most about.

The hope is it will allow the investor to find common ESG themes that unite its diverse beneficiaries to then weave into strategy. The Aggregate Confusion Project aims to reliably assess investor preferences to enable ESG indices to be more customised and attuned to investors’ values, said Trotsky. He said the initiative is a consequence of current ESG indexes being crafted without consideration of investor preferences, and a growing belief that ESG investment urgently needs to better capture values.

 

Mass PRIM’s involvement in the initiative is linked to the investor struggling to find which ESG issues its 300,000 diverse beneficiaries in the pension funds it manages (ranging from teachers to firefighters and policemen) collectively care most about.

In what Trotsky described as Mass PRIM’s stakeholder problem, the broad range of views of its beneficiaries make it difficult to find commonality. Moreover, since the fund’s board also mirrors these broad views, it is similarly split.

“We hope to solve this problem by finding agreement on ESG values and attribute preferences,” he said.

Fellow panellist Bill Lee, chief investment officer of New York Presbyterian Hospital, overseeing its $9.5 billion investment program noted although the asset owner has started a bit later than others in ESG investment it is benefiting from learning from the more advanced efforts of other portfolios.

“We will catch up as we have great examples ahead of us,” he said.

He also noted that better technology and data will lead to more optimal positions, adding that data reveals which managers and companies are truly committed to improving sustainability, making it possible to better discern ESG laggards.

Asset Owner:Massachusetts PRIM

Leave a Comment

America’s net zero opportunity

America’s net zero opportunity

Research from Princeton University plots a Blueprint for how the US can achieve net zero emissions in the next decade showing the key is overcoming execution challenges including the infrastructure deployment and the mobilisation of capital and labour.

Sort content by

Investors urge SEC to mandate climate reporting

Global investors have overwhelmingly urged the SEC to provide corporate disclosure rules on climate. In submissions to the SEC many investors including CalPERS and CalSTRS said the rules should be mandatory.

Regulation could stifle stewardship effectiveness

Investors around the globe are stepping up their active ownership practices but CEO of PRI, Fiona Reynolds, argues that some regulatory proposals in the US and Australia could create ineffective and burdensome disclosure obligations on proxy advisors.

Net zero commitments make greenwashing more prolific

The proliferation of grand gestures of sustainability, such as net zero commitments, means manager due diligence is even more important and more intensive, according to global head of research at Willis Towers Watson, Luba Nikulina.

Portfolio actions for a sustainable tomorrow

Tim Hodgson imagines a future where portfolios are managed to risk, return and impact goals via a total portfolio approach that puts every investment into a competition to best meet those goals. He outlines some questions to guide portfolio actions to get there.

Measuring what matters

Two decades after financial reporting went through a seismic shift with the agreement of international accounting standards, a similar effort is under way to agree global standards for measuring sustainability.

Smart data centres: a green real estate revolution

The expansion of the digital economy is fuelling demand for data centres, but also raising concerns about their energy use. The solution to this problem comes in the form of an attractive green real estate investment.

Previous