Norges’ 1-stop shop for risk data

Norges Bank Investment Management has developed a proprietary database allowing it to assess non-financial risks across the 9000 portfolio companies in which it invests. The database gives its risk team and portfolio managers the ability to make more in-depth decisions around the sustainability of a company’s business.

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at INSEAD, Patrick du Plessis, global head of risk monitoring at Norway’s NOK7.93 trillion ($940 billion) NBIM, explained the large investor’s approach to environmental, social and governance (ESG) risk and integration.

“Most investors are familiar with traditional investment risks and use these as the starting point for analysis, but we think to get a holistic picture of a company’s risk profile you need to take into account other risks, those that are below the surface and harder to identify,” du Plessis said. “We believe that what gets measured gets managed, and non-traditional financial data has been slower to become available.”

To counter this, the fund built its own database, which incorporates non-financial data alongside financial information.

“We don’t just look at financial data for opportunities; we think you need to look at ESG considerations as well, and that works for risk mitigation and investment opportunities,” du Plessis explained. “We need to consider all externalities and understand what they mean, because we are running a global fund.”

The database includes non-financial information on issues such as carbon, climate change, waste, water, child labour, corruption, and health and safety, at the country, sector and company level. The NBIM risk team incorporates the data into relevant systems, analyses and processes to facilitate a more comprehensive assessment of risk exposure. The data relies on company-reported ESG information, which is supplemented by other service providers, such as Trucost, MSCI and CDP.

Sponsored Content

This all allows for a deep dive on certain ESG themes. For example, all countries could be assessed on greenhouse gas risks. Risks can be viewed across countries and sectors, so a matrix could assess a risk threshold between countries and sectors, du Plessis said.

“The intention is to create a one-stop shop,” he said. “In one place we have traditional valuation metrics, benchmark-relative positions and a standalone ESG tab that looks at company ratings, fossil fuel compositions and inherent country and sector risk. The risk team and portfolio managers can use the tool and find much of what they need. The intention is to create a good dialogue between the risk team and portfolio managers.”

NBIM can look at specific ESG risk related to a certain theme, such as conventional electricity in the US. The database will spit out those companies with an inherent risk related to that theme that could affect the sustainability of business models. The risk team can then focus on 60 or 70 companies specific to that threat.

“This is not a discussion about ethics, it’s about the sustainability of business,” du Plessis said. “We are not just looking at income statements but other things below the surface of the iceberg. This is the quantifying and formalisation of ESG in the business analysis process.”

Risk and portfolio managers get a more holistic company profile, including traditional and non-traditional factors, on which to assess companies.

NBIM has three pillars to its responsible investing approach:

  1. Standard setting: It collaborates on global standards and expectations. Because of the sheer size of the portfolio (9000 companies) the fund can’t engage with all of them. Standard setting, and expectations documents, create an opportunity to affect them all.
  2. Active ownership: NBIM engages on specific ownership issues with the most material holdings.
  3. Risk: the entire portfolio of 9000 companies is examined on a risk basis. The database is a key tool for this.

Separate from this ESG risk analysis, NBIM is mandated by the Norwegian Ministry of Finance to implement certain exclusions, including coal, on ethical grounds.

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

Danish pension fund goes beyond home bias

Affluent small European nations such as Denmark easily count among the world’s most outward-looking places, and DKK 95-billion ($16.4-billion) investor Unipension clearly casts its eyes far and wide from its headquarters in suburban Copenhagen. While nearly all investors look for some exposure in the world’s key markets, Unipension has enhanced its international focus by actively

The fund behind London’s tube shifts

Transport for London, the organisation behind the network of buses, underground or “tube” trains, trams and bicycles that keep the United Kingdom’s capital city on the move, has a reputation for its generous employee benefits. But of all the staff perks on offer, including 30 days holiday a year and subsidised travel expenses, membership of

Buoyant mood at West Yorkshire fund

The richest seam in the UK’s pension landscape traces the M62 corridor, a motorway that threads east to west across northern England beginning in Liverpool and taking in Manchester, Bradford and Leeds. These cities are home to the biggest local authority pension schemes in England and custodians to a vast cluster of wealth. “Merseyside, Tameside,

Exploring the depths of sustainable investing

Many institutional funds boast responsible investing credentials, but Switzerland’s Nest Sammelstiftung has taken the extra step of molding its investment strategy around a sustainable template. The sustainable agenda is more than just a focus for Nest. It forms the very ethos of a fund that markets itself to potential members as “the ecological and ethical

Wallach takes long view cross the Mersey

Peter Wallach, head of the United Kingdom’s Merseyside Pension Fund isn’t overly worried about the recent fall in equities. “Markets are being driven by liquidity from central banks; this is more about central banks just needing to reassure investors,” he says. “It is bonds, to our mind, that are over-valued in the medium to long

Caution, luck and overlays propel Swedish fund

A solvency ratio of 157 per cent is a clear mark of success for a pension fund at a time when so many are battling deficits. Remarkably, Sweden’s SEK90-billion ($14 billion) KPA Pension has gained this funding cushion without fully embracing the range of new asset classes or strategies often touted as the solution to

Previous