GPIF stewardship report highlights power of engagement

Engagement leads to more companies introducing KPIs; corporate Scope 3 emission reporting often results in companies reporting more emissions than they have and measuring nature-related risks is extremely complex. Just some of the key take homes from Japan’s $1.7 trillion (¥245.98 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) 2023 ESG Report.

As a universal owner (82.3 per cent of the portfolio is passive) GPIF is exposed to climate and biodiversity risk across the portfolio. Specific ESG strategies include a ¥17.8 trillion allocation tracking ESG indexes and ¥1.6 trillion invested in green bonds. The giant portfolio that is roughly split four ways between foreign and domestic equity and bonds.

Engagement works

The report finds that engagement has led to companies introducing more KPIs to support ESG targets. For example, GPIF found its engagement on climate change and board structure resulted in an increase in decarbonization targets and the number of independent outside directors at companies.

“Analysis revealed that active engagement by asset managers likely made substantial contributions to overall market sustainability, corporate value and investment returns or improved market beta.

We believe both asset owners and asset managers should continue their efforts to achieve more effective engagement activities,” states the report.

Problems with Scope 3

GPIF flags that Scope 3 disclosure will make it more difficult to analyse portfolio emissions over time and states that data vendors and investors tend to overestimate companies’ Scope 3 emissions, often arriving at larger figures for emissions than the companies have.

Sponsored Content

“It is important for companies to proactively disclose information to ensure that they are properly valued,” GPIF writes.

The report goes on to stress the importance of cost-effective, beneficial disclosures that are not too burdensome.

“We have a high hope for the development of ISSB and SSBJ standards.”

The ISSB standards require companies to disclose material sustainability-related information to help investors make investment decisions based on the single materiality approach.

New climate index

GPIF has moved approximately $20 billion to a new ESG-themed domestic equities index due to concerns over a “large tracking error” with  the former index, MSCI Japan ESG Select Leaders Index which was in place since 2017.

The new index, the MSCI Nihonkabu ESG Select Leaders Index aims “to reduce the risk of tracking error from TOPIX, the policy benchmark, while retaining the basic characteristic of an ESG index including stocks with a high ESG rating.”

As of March 2024, the tracking error of the former index was 2.3 per cent while that of the new index was limited to 1.2 per cent

ESG in alternatives

GPIF has a tiny allocation to alternatives, capped under 5 per cent and currently just 1.4 per cent of total AUM. However, the pension fund insists on ESG integration amongst its alternative managers where a lack of standardization adds complexity. GPIF interviews managers,  requests they answer due diligence questionnaires and uses third-party consultants.

The pension fund references the enduring challenges in measuring emissions in private equity where “only a few” private equity funds report on portfolio companies’ emissions.

GPIF estimates portfolio company emissions using the enterprise value (EV) metric, on that basis “that EV and GHG emissions have a certain degree of positive correlation in the case of listed companies.”

The estimated carbon footprint of the overall private equity allocation was 2.32 million tons in a reflection of the tiny allocation. The carbon footprint of GPIF’s entire equities portfolio was 464.03 million tons. The allocation to private equity industrials had the largest carbon footprint.

GPIF marks a 4 per cent increase in the number of funds in its real estate portfolio which participated in GRESB Real Estate Assessment and says 83 per cent of the funds in the real estate portfolio now use the framework.

Nature dependencies

GPIF documents the challenges of nature reporting and disclosure in accordance with TNFD Framework.

“We feel that measuring nature-related risks is extremely complex and that many unresolved issues remain.”

Using the TNFD, GPIF found  “materials” and “transportation” had the highest nature-related risks in terms of both dependencies and impacts on the domestic equities portfolio, while energy and food, beverage & tobacco were identified for the foreign equities portfolio.

Elsewhere the investor found that research showed that TOPIX companies that have endorsed the TNFD recommendations have better disclosure rates than those that have not.

 

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

Recession likely in six months: index

There is a 70 per cent chance a recession will occur in the next six months according to a new index measuring the state of the economy that uses a statistical method first applied to analysing human skulls.

Scientific Beta critiques TEG benchmarks

Scientific Beta has critiqued the proposals of the TEG on climate benchmarks, arguing they are unduly influenced by commercial interests and do little to discourage greenwashing or support decarbonisation efforts in the real economy.

Minnesota to expand private markets

A strategic and long-term focus sees the Minnesota State Board of Investment CIO, Mansco Perry, adopt a patient and encouraging approach when it comes to climate change and diversity. The $104 billion fund is also looking to expand its allocation to private markets, and double its internal team.

ABP’s climate neutral plan for 2025

The largest pension fund in Europe, the €450 billion Dutch ABP, set out its sustainability and responsible investment plan for 2025 last month. The plan sets out long-term objectives – in line with the goal of a climate-neutral economy by 2050 – as well as the short-term steps to achieve that.

China’s opportunity

The crisis in China is far from over. But the Sustainable Finance Institue’s Huang Zhong and Cary Krosinsky, author of the upcoming Modern China: Financial Cooperation for Solving Sustainability Challenges, argue it is never too early to look at what went wrong. They argue if the Chinese government and its ruling party applied some basic sustainable investment principles, it would have taken a very different approach towards critical stakeholders such as Dr. Li and potentially avoided some of the negative consequences.

Investors’ role in a carbon-neutral 2050

Everyone's talking about it - a carbon-neutral economy by 2050 - but what are investors doing about it? Amanda White reports on the specific climate activities of some of the world's leading asset owners.

Previous