PGGM maps portfolio’s impact

PGGM is one of the global leaders in implementing a framework that aligns its investments to the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

For one, it has developed taxonomies, together with fellow Dutch giant APG, that identify the so-called SDIs (sustainable development investments), which contribute to the SDGs.

It has also helped other Dutch investors and the country’s central bank develop a guide of SDG impact indicators.

And since 2015, it has had a policy of investing €20 billion ($24 billion) using these indicators, specifically in solutions for food security, water scarcity, healthcare and climate change.

As part of that policy, the impact of those investments has to be measurable, and the €220 billion ($268 billion) fund recently embarked on an exercise to see the impact its portfolio was having on people and the planet.

It partnered with the Impact Management Project (IMP), a collaboration of more than 700 organisations, to map its portfolio, showing where it avoids harm, benefits stakeholders and contributes to solutions.

Sponsored Content

One key finding of this process was the revelation that there is a difference between intended impact and real impact, says PGGM adviser, responsible investment, Cedric Scholl.

“This needs to be really measurable, not just [based on intentions],” Scholl says.

IMP’s process involves collecting data and measuring the impact of companies across five dimensions. Investors can then determine whether their impact goals have been met, and work with investee companies to improve their positive impact or reduce their negative impact.

The five dimensions are:

What: What outcomes does the effect relate to, and how important are they to people experiencing them?

How much: How much of the effect occurs in the time period?

Who: Who experiences the effect and how underserved are they in relation to the outcome?

Contribution: How does the effect compare and contribute to what is likely to occur anyway?

Risk: What risk factors are material, and how likely is the effect different from expectation?

The mapping is designed to encourage a business to reduce its negative impact and increase its positive impact. It categorises investee companies in three ways: those that avoid harm; those that avoid harm and also want to generate benefits for stakeholders; and those that aim to avoid harm, generate benefits and to contribute to specific solutions.

The process provides a lens for an investor to understand the impacts different businesses want to make and the extent to which investment in those businesses aligns with the investor’s own intentions.

PGGM’s results

The results of PGGM’s mapping were intriguing.

It found that 4.5 per cent of its portfolio is allocated to investments that are “benefiting people and the planet” and 2.5 per cent is allocated to investments contributing to positive outcomes.

These seem like small numbers considering that PGGM is one of the leaders in sustainable investment.

But the numbers do not show a clear picture. It was difficult for PGGM to classify its investments because of a lack of data, particularly in criteria like how under-served people are who are experiencing the outcomes.

Scholl says one of the biggest surprises to the team at PGGM carrying out the mapping was how difficult it was.

“We put things in the ‘avoid harm’ column, and while a lot of those also contribute to benefiting people, we don’t have any data on [to what extent] so we couldn’t categorise them as such,” he explains. “Lack of data is the biggest problem.”

Olivia Prentice, from advisory firm Bridges, which is the facilitating organisation of the IMP, says PGGM’s experience underscores the need for more data.

“PGGM is far ahead of other investors, for example, by delivering against the SDGs,” Prentice says. “But when they scrutinised their data, they realised they didn’t set impact goals, so they couldn’t measure that. This demonstrates the risk behind [just having intentions]. You have to collect the data.”

While it is not the investor’s job to determine the best data for the underlying company to collect, she says because investors are not asking for it, they are contributing to the problem.

The issue of what data to collect is an enduring problem in impact investing. For example, collecting information on job creation doesn’t measure how a person’s life has changed because they found work. Prentice suggests that more information is needed from the people benefiting from impact investment.

“At the moment, impact investing is…driven by the intentions of an investor, rather than by the people close to the impact,” Prentice says. “We need to give more power to the people close to…where the capital is allocated, including frontline enterprises like charities.”

Scholl says it would be helpful if companies were more active in data collection.

“This is part of our call to action. It is necessary to have more focus on how companies contribute to solutions,” he says. “We hope someday we will favour companies [based on] those indicators, and we hope we can grasp the more positive contributions investments can make. At the moment, we can’t, but we have a desire to make decisions based on this type of information.”

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

Centrica focuses on dynamic decision making

For the Centrica pension fund, which adopts a liability-matching portfolio approach, last year was busy for appraising new opportunities arising out of the fact banks are no longer lending. This year its focus is on being more dynamic. Amanda White spoke to chief investment officer of the £5.5 billion ($9 billion), Chetan Ghosh. The Centrica

HOOPP’s strong funding status driven by liability hedging

The $51.6 billion Canadian fund, HOOPP, returned 8.55 per cent for the 2013 financial year, exactly half the return of 2012. But it finished the year in a better position than the year before, demonstrating that returns are only half the story. Amanda White spoke to Jim Keohane about the funds liability-driven investment style.  

Australian fund leading the way on real assets

The $15 billion Australian super fund for hospitality workers, HOSTPLUS, has a 10 per cent allocation to infrastructure and is aggressively increasing its allocation to real assets. David Rowley spoke to chief investment officer, Sam Sicilia, about what the fund seeks from real assets.   A quarter of the $15 billion in assets held by

ABP considers smart beta benchmarks

APG, which manages ABP’s assets, has been using smart beta strategies for implementation for three years, the fund is taking it a step further and is now considering tilted benchmarks.

Ohio SERS reduces hedge funds

This year the $12 billion Ohio School Employees Retirement System is prioritising projects that fulfil the board’s desire to find income from alternative sources and manage risk, including allocating more to real assets, and initiating an RFP on a risk management system. Farouki Majeed speaks to Amanda White about the fund’s investment program.   With

Integrity integral in search for managers: Mass PRIM

Integrity will form part of the due diligence process at Mass PRIM as it looks for private equity co-investment partners for the first time.

Previous