Divestment and impact: Detailhandel pioneers participant engagement

It’s often said that one cause of anti-ESG sentiment at some US public pension funds can be traced to external managers and proxy advisory firms pushing climate and social goals in the investment strategy without buy-in from beneficiaries.

In contrast on the other side of the pond, both literally and metaphorically, a unique endeavour to ensure participant buy-in and trust at Dutch pension fund Detailhandel is under way. The results from three beneficiary forums conducted earlier in the year to seek out participants’ ESG opinions and values are now being woven into investment strategy. [See also Dutch fund commits to member preferences.]

Critics of such an approach argue that boards abdicates their responsibility by asking members what they want. But Louise Kranenburg, Detailhandel’s responsible investment manager, is adamant the process has rooted the next leg of the pension fund’s bold responsible investment strategy in trust and credibility to support long term performance.

“ESG also involves values and we need to know what participants’ preferences are and what topics are important,” she says

Detailhandel has already written the importance of beneficiary preferences into its investment beliefs and regularly surveys its membership: in 2019 it used beneficiary preferences to shape a new equity index, for example.

But now a new qualitative process has embellished the binary yes/no questions of a survey to garner context and unearth beneficiaries own preferences. In February and March Detailhandel brought a representative group of 50 of its 1.2 million beneficiaries together in person to deliberate on complex questions, learn from each other and come together as a collective to present recommendations to the board.

Sponsored Content

It takes participant engagement to a new level – even by standards in the Netherlands where mandatory membership of a sectoral or company pension fund means engagement with participants is already pervasive.

“We didn’t want a group that was all sustainability-minded, and we didn’t want to just attract people who are vocal and have the time,” says Kranenburg. “We don’t know what our beneficiaries all feel and this model has allowed us to bring all their opinions together and make sure they come to a common ground.”

Ring in the changes

A suite of new initiative has emerged from the process.

The pension fund already under and over-weights companies in the index according to human rights but will now toughen its stance and remove companies that violate human rights and labour rights, tightening its divestment policy in line with participants’ wishes.

“Participants feel very strongly about these topics, which made the board decide to also formulate minimum thresholds for companies and introduce more strict norms than we currently have.”

She says the process will take time because the team will have to see how it impacts the risk profile.

In another indication of the 10-person board’s commitment to the issue, they have all agreed to undergo human rights training to better understand investors’ responsibilities and international frameworks

Participant engagement has also resulted in the pension fund seeking to invest more in affordable housing.  Currently, 41 per cent of the allocation to housing within the real estate portfolio is invested in affordable housing. “We will have to investigate what is feasible,” she says.

The pension fund is also exploring whether to increase the allocation to impact, currently at 1 per cent. The next step in the process will involve drilling down into the extent to which participants are prepared to trade impact for returns and in what topics and themes they want to focus.

Detailhandel is a mostly passive investor (around 90 per cent of assets are in listed strategies) but uses custom indexes to shape what the market gives to its own preferences. The only exception is the allocation to long duration sovereign debt which doesn’t have an ESG custom index, but does have a sustainable bond objective.

“A custom SDG-index did not make sense because we invest in only a few European countries that score pretty similar on ESG-considerations. So under-/overweighting based on these countries’ ESG-characteristics did not achieve its goal.”

Another project in the pipeline includes integrating forward looking climate data in the custom-built equity index for developed markets.

“We have just started doing the first simulations.”

Private market strategies include allocations to real estate, mortgages, private debt and impact.

Understanding the trade off

Kranenburg explains that during the forums the investment team articulated the trade off and dilemmas around risk and return that come with investment, particularly responsible investment.

“We know from practice that things aren’t black and white; if you are positive on one thing it will affect something else.”

Moreover, she says Detailhandel’s board don’t agreed to all participant demands. In some cases, the board unanimously agrees to the idea, in others they have said it is something they are already doing, and may increase their ambition. Often they say this is not something the pension fund is in a position to solve.

The process has also given the investment team more confidence to divest. Beneficiaries said they prefer engagement but they are prepared to divest if companies don’t respond. Detailhandel is already well versed at engagement, escalation and collaboration. But she says divestment is always a more difficult decision.

“The last step of divestment is a struggle for the board, and this gives us as a pension fund more confidence that we can step up and beneficiaries will support it.”

A model for others

Kranenburg says no other Dutch funds have offered their beneficiaries a similar forum experience, but she reports lots of interest and growing efforts at inclusion.

In many ways it is now just a question of whether the board can keep up. Participants have requested a similar forum experience in two years time.

“This is ambitious because it will take us two years to complete all these actions,” she says.

Leave a Comment

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

How CPP is evolving risk management for a faster, more interconnected world

In an environment where multiple risks are emerging and their effects are compounding on the portfolio, CPP Investments' chief risk officer Priti Singh says the $572 billion fund is rethinking risk management from the ground up, shifting from reaction to preparation and embedding risk thinking earlier in investment decisions. She speaks to Amanda White about the fund's risk approach.

Sort content by

PME’s path to recovery

PME, the €18.8 billion (US$25.6 billion) industry-wide pension fund for the mechanical and electrical engineering sector in the Netherlands, has seen its funding ratio fall 45 per cent over the last year. Kristen Paech talks to the fund about its recovery plan, including the decision not to rebalance equities, and the benefits of using a

CIC creates new investment teams, scouts opportunities offshore

As global markets nosedived and its initial investments soured, the China Investment Corporation (CIC) took the opportunity to reorganise its investment operations and focus on less risky investments at home and in Asia. Simon Mumme reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Equity bias thwarts Irish sovereign fund’s returns

Ireland’s €15.5 billion (US$20.6 billion) sovereign wealth fund, the National Pensions Reserve Fund (NPRF), has been highly exposed to the equity market malaise. Kristen Paech examines the fund’s investment strategy and the Government’s recent decision to use the NPRF to finance the recapitalisation of two of Ireland’s beleaguered banks. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

More in-house management means lower costs, risks for Finnish fund Ilmarinen

The 21.7 billion (US$28.7 billion) Ilmarinen Mutual Pension Insurance Company is adopting a ‘back to basic’ approach to investment and relying on its internal investment team to steer it through unprecedented equity market volatility. Deputy chief executive, Timo Ritakallio, talks to Kristen Paech about the virtues of in-house management. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

UniSuper’s proprietary risk program challenges investment assumptions

UniSuper, the $23 billion Australian pension fund for those working in higher education and research, has developed an in-house risk budgeting and factor analysis program that monitors the extent to which the fund deviates from its strategic asset allocation, and ensure the fund’s active risk is allocated appropriately between managers. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2

NZ Super seeks opportunities amongst the wreckage

While it may not have liabilities to pay out just yet, the NZ$11.2 billion (US$6.26 billion) New Zealand Superannuation Fund is not immune to the liquidity pressures facing institutional investors across the globe. Kristen Paech talks to chief executive Adrian Orr about the challenges facing the fund, and the potential investment opportunities. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content