Under-priced climate risk plagues pension portfolios

Climate risk remains systematically under-priced, the world isn’t on course to meet net zero and investors must prepare for the risks of climate and environmental change.

So warned Nicola Ranger, executive director of the Oxford Martin Programme on Systemic Resilience and a senior research fellow at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at Oxford Martin School, opening the second day of Sustainability in Practice at the University of Oxford. She said that climate risks are coming thick and fast, with a direct impact on assets, labour productivity, patterns in demand, supply chains and markets.

Ranger urged asset owners to re-evaluate climate risk and bring this analysis into their decision-making. For example, few asset owners report on the physical risk of climate change in their portfolio.

“Not managing this risk means the wider economy is not getting the economic signals it needs to create changes. Financial institutions need to price risk properly, and signal to the wider economy that it needs to adapt.”

If governments and countries meet all their pledges, she predicted global warming could be capped at 1.8 degrees, below the threshold for catastrophic tipping points. But she also described a much more pessimistic view based on progress to date and the fact global emissions keep climbing and still haven’t peaked. “We are not on course.”

The risks of climate change are already visible. For example, high temperatures is causing deaths, disrupting transport networks and leading to floods and drought as rainfall patterns change, impacting agricultural systems. She flagged implications for water-dependent industries and big increases in volatility of commodity prices. “Sixty percent of our food comes from five countries,” she said, predicting shocks to supply chains and impact on sovereign credit ratings.

Sponsored Content

Investors have a role to mobilize finance across geographies, countries, sectors, infrastructure and agriculture. But she warned that many investment decisions are not building resilience. For example, new infrastructure investment doesn’t always consider climate-related risk. “We are still building physical infrastructure that economies depend on, but we are not doing it in a way that is considering climate risk, risking both investors and society,” she said. Similarly, she flagged the much of the estimated annual $6 trillion invested in agriculture doesn’t consider future climate risks.

Ranger urged asset owners to take a holistic approach to managing risk and align their portfolios with resilience. They should ensure they “do no harm” and manage risk in their own portfolio to ensure it doesn’t create risks for society. For example, she said water companies have a significant impact on water scarcity.  Elsewhere she noted that data centres are exposed to climate risk like heat, and they are also water dependent. Adaption can bring returns from investing in new technology, but adaptation also incurs long term costs. For example, retrofitting buildings requires upfront investment.

“We, as a society, are mismanaging climate risk. We are putting insufficient emphasis on our safety and not properly valuing the impact of climate change or logging or exploitation of the soil. Many things doing that are impacting environment that are impacting on us.”

Leave a Comment

Returns, resilience and reinvention: What private markets’ top brass are worried about

Returns, resilience and reinvention: What private markets’ top brass are worried about

Senior executives from some of the world's largest private market managers gathered in Berlin this month with a collective understanding: managers who move slowly on AI face not just weaker returns but the risk of owning businesses that have been competitively displaced before they can exit.

Sort content by

Change management in action: CalSTRS lays out how it’s integrating AI

In a recent board meeting, CalSTRS staff outlined how they are integrating AI into the investment process in line with its commitment to be an early adopter of the technology, including writing a set of generative AI policies and guidelines, conducting a cost-benefit analysis and identifying scalable use cases.

Large language models to spark ‘sea change’ in investment analysis

Andrew Lo, finance professor at the MIT Sloan School of Management, believes large language models can bridge the gap between fundamental and quantitative investing in a way that was unfathomable five or 10 years ago, and create ‘quantamental’ investment strategies which would bring together the best of both worlds.

GIC ups US equities allocation despite valuation worries

Singapore's GIC boosted its US equities allocation in the year to March 2025 despite the expectation that high valuations could "provide a challenging backdrop for forward returns”, according to the fund's latest annual report released on Friday. 

TRS eyes threat of retail investors in private markets

The growing amount of capital from retail investors flowing into private equity and real estate has consequences for institutional investors. The private markets team at the Teacher Retirement System of Texas pondered the risks in a recent investment committee meeting.

Sydney University’s private asset portfolio under scrutiny for defence ties

An external panel has recommended that Australia's Sydney University minimise investments in defence and security-related industries within its A$770 million ($510 million) private asset portfolio rather than divest and book a A$67 million loss. 

Norway’s KLP drops defence groups because of weapon sales to Israel

As geopolitical uncertainty leaves many European pension funds exploring how to invest more in defence, Norway's KLP has just divested two listed defence companies for selling weapons to Israel because of human rights concerns in Gaza.

Previous