Catching up with reality: Investment beliefs need a rethink

I don’t know you, so what I say next may not be true … but here goes anyway: your investment beliefs are probably out of date.

If you have revised your beliefs within the last 12 months and have factored in the tsunami of pain that climate change will bring, then please forgive me. You are off the hook.

If, however, your investment beliefs were set five, or more, years ago – when net-zero wasn’t even a ‘thing’ – then I will argue that they need to catch up with a fast-moving reality[1].

In 2022 TAI published a paper titled Pay now or pay later?, which was one of the first papers to argue that climate change was going to hurt portfolio values, whatever we chose to do. Given that kicking the proverbial can down the road appears to be a bankable human trait, we suggested the likely outcome was a rise in temperature of +2.7 to +3C, and a consequent hit to portfolio values of 50-60 per cent.

If that sounds somewhat alarmist consider that “There is a level of warming that will cause a 100 per cent loss of GDP[2], and therefore a complete loss of portfolio value, even if we don’t know what that level of warming is.

In 2023 we ran an investing for tomorrow working group to delve deeper into these matters. The resulting output was a significantly deepened understanding of climate science, climate scenarios, and the understatement of risk in most of them. In 2024 we ran a ‘sprint’ working group to develop a survey tool that investment organisations can use to determine whether, or not, they need to revisit their investment beliefs.

Sponsored Content

In addition to a deeper understanding of climate change, we have continued to apply ourselves to the study of systems. We first wrote about complex adaptive systems in 2008 and so have 15 years or so under our belts. We now consider it an idea whose time has very much come. In 2023 we wrote two papers on systemic risk[3], and in 2024, we have launched our systems curriculum to explore the intricacies of interconnected systems and gain valuable insights into how they shape our world[4]. This advance in systems thinking and the assessment of systemic risk is a further argument for a revisit, and possible refresh, of investment beliefs.

So there are two main arguments behind my assertion that most investment beliefs need to catch up with reality: our understanding of climate, systems and risk has taken a big step forward, and, reality is changing rapidly.

To quote from our paper alluded to above, reality “is simply too big and too complex to understand. And so we build models of it, and in understanding the models, we pretend that we understand reality”[5].

Our investment beliefs are a form of model, in that they are a series of statements that seek to explain how (the investment part of) reality works. Unless those statements are freshly agreed it is unlikely they reflect our current (and partial) understanding of climate risk, biodiversity loss, artificial intelligence, interconnectedness and systemic risk.

If we single out climate, then we can also ask whether any public net-zero pledge your organisation has made should also be reviewed. Why? Is it not widely agreed that the world is heading to net-zero emissions by 2050?

Well, on the one hand, it is true that 196 nations ratified the Paris Agreement, which is legally binding. On the other hand, a 2024 survey showed 77 per cent of climate experts (lead authors or review editors of IPCC reports since 2018) believe the world will warm by at least +2.5C[6]. In other words, they do not see the necessary level of action despite it being legally binding. I assume these climate scientists have a better grasp of current climate reality than I do, and so I can use their knowledge to help my own catch up.

In the investment world we then need to translate that knowledge into a form that is more meaningful for our management of portfolios. The expected temperature rise is essentially the same as the scenario I quoted above from Pay now or pay later?, so is TAI’s heroic estimate of a 50-60 per cent portfolio loss (by 2100) our best guide? I was one of the authors of that paper, and we wrote it two years ago. I can’t speak for all the authors, but I know that my own thinking has moved on in that time. I now see systemic risk as a bigger threat than I did back then, and so I would probably factor in the possibility of even bigger losses.

The point here is not what I think, but what you think. I would therefore encourage all investment organisations to ask themselves whether they need to revisit their beliefs and, possibly, any net-zero pledge. We have a survey tool that could help here. I would also encourage everyone to at least check out our systems curriculum materials. As Buddha told us, “what you think, you become” – and we all need to become better systems thinkers.

Tim Hodgson is co-founder of The Thinking Ahead Institute.

Leave a Comment

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

NZ Super cuts benchmark return expectation on US valuation concerns

A view that the US stock market is overvalued and equity risk premia will be lower over the long term has driven New Zealand Super to lower the return expectations for its reference portfolio following its recent five-yearly review of the benchmark. Co-chief investment officer Brad Dunstan also flags underweight commodity exposure as an area to address and explains why the fund remains sceptical of illiquidity premia despite seeing a growing case for private markets.

Sort content by

NY State Common’s climate plan

The New York State Common Decarbonization Advisory Panel, set up to advise the Comptroller, as trustee of the $209.1 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund, on how best to mitigate investment risks stemming from climate change and maximise opportunities from the new, low-carbon economy, has handed down its report this week. It has clear lessons for all asset owners.

Strategic tilting adds value at NZ Super

Strategic tilting has added 1.1 per cent, or NZ$3 billion, to the New Zealand Super Fund’s reference portfolio over the past 10 years, David Iverson, head of asset allocation at the NZ$41 billion fund says. This is way above the expected return from the program which was set at around 40 basis points.

At a glance: FIS Cambridge day three

An overwhelming number of delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium said the funds management industry was not doing well in innovationMartin Gilbert, who started Aberdeen Standard Investments in 1983 and is now chair, said industry participants needed to innovate and disrupt themselves.

Different ways to navigate risk

Institutional investors are navigating the different risks that can impact their portfolios in different ways, explained chief risk offers speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Cambridge. Arjen Pasma, chief risk officer at Dutch asset manager PGGM noted how risks span investment risk, counterparty risk, liquidity risk and ESG risk. Measuring ESG risk in the manager’s large allocation to private markets where each deal is scored on ESG and climate risk is particularly important, he said.

How to build innovation

Innovation is more important than ever given the uncertain and ambiguous times that lie ahead for institutional investors like climate change, political dysfunction and poor returns. “Returns can only come from an ecosystem that works and we need innovation to do this,” said Roger Urwin, global head of investment content, Willis Towers Watson speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Cambridge University.

Climate change risk to spur stress test

Mercer has quantified a ‘low-carbon transition’ premium in the sequel to its seminal climate change report, showing that a 2⁰C scenario equates to 11 basis points per annum to 2030 in a typical growth portfolio.

Previous