RI at core of manager relationships

Responsible investment should be at the core of the relationship between asset owners and investment managers. More and more clients want it, regulators demand it and academic and industry evidence supports it.

Discussions around the integration of ESG issues and selection, appointment and monitoring (SAM) of investment managers have transformed since the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) was founded in 2006, when they were considered a “nice to-have”. Now, when leading asset owners work with their investment managers, they are starting to introduce activities such as minimum standards for shortlisting, incorporating clauses into contractual documentation and threatening to terminate relationships due to materialising ESG issues.

Asset managers now expect these types of requirements. But there is still a long way to go until responsible investment is systematically integrated into each step of the SAM journey, and asset owners have been calling out for tools to guide them on this.

That is why this week the PRI published three new guides that focus on each step of the SAM process, and are designed specifically for the PRI’s 550+ asset owner signatories.

The selection guide outlines attributes of leading approaches when selecting asset managers. The appointment guide includes 12 clauses that can be used by asset managers when writing and agreeing contractual agreements. And finally, the monitoring guide includes a set of questions or disclosures that can be used by asset owners during the regular monitoring process.

Encouraging, supporting and collaborating with asset owners is fundamental to the PRI’s theory of change, as this group of signatories plays a key role in influencing the entire investment manager industry. Asset owners, along with their advisers, must be empowered to challenge investment managers on practice, to uncover greenwashing and to really trigger changes in practice across ESG integration and engagement. We therefore hope the guides will support large and small asset owners and their advisers to incorporate ESG factors into how they relate to, co-operate with and challenge asset managers.

Sponsored Content

The guides draw on practices from the 2019 Leaders’ Group, as well as feedback from a series of workshops held during the year, to build a picture of leading practice and initiatives in this area. And I’m pleased to note that these leading practices are not just limited to large European asset owners. Our Asia Pacific workshop discussion on SAM reflects that these are now global practices.

This work program doesn’t stop here. These tools will be followed by SAM introductory guides – these guides have proved popular as a starting point to discover the PRI’s work. We will also be working on mandate design and are interested to hear from asset owners who have started to design mandates which incorporate ESG factors.

I would like to thank all the signatories who contributed to these guides and have been involved in our broader asset owner program. I hope they will contribute to the industry’s technical understanding of responsible investment and empower asset owners around the world to raise the bar on it too, creating a more equitable and sustainable future for our planet.

Fiona Reynolds is the chief executive of PRI.

One response to “RI at core of manager relationships”

  1. Toby Belsom

    Hopefully three practical guides and some useful resources for asset owners to develop their relationships with asset managers with respect to what needs to be a core consideration in today’s world…..follow the links for more details

Leave a Comment

Sweden’s FTN focuses on fees and returns in latest procurement

Sweden’s FTN focuses on fees and returns in latest procurement

Lower management fees and higher returns defined the latest selection process at the Swedish Fund Selection Agency in its latest awarding of active global equity mandates to 12 managers, its largest and most ambitious €20 billion ($23 billion) procurement so far.

Sort content by

CDPQ’s two-way street of efficient external manager relations

Like all good long-term relationships, external fund manager partnerships should be steeped in trust, open dialogue, patience and new ideas. Mario Therrien, head of funds at CDPQ explains the key to external partnership success and the important role external managers play in plugging knowledge gaps.

The challenge of asset owners top-down bottom-up alignment with managers

For pension funds with a large roster of external managers, balancing the integration of top-down strategy with managers’ bottom-up implementation is one of the most challenging tasks says Mark Walker, CIO of Coal Pension. The key is to ensure external managers truly understand the strategic goals for the allocation.

There is no substitute for due diligence

Principal-agent problems in asset management means there is no substitute for sound due diligence of asset managers. But how do you know if a manager is aligned with your long-term goals? Ariel Babcock and Matthew Leatherman from FCLTGlobal have some tips.

What long-term looks like: Tips for structuring mandates

The third edition of FCLTGlobal’s report, Institutional Investment Mandates: Anchors for Long-Term Performance provides a toolkit for mandate processes and behaviours to reorient towards the long term, including a rethink of KPIs that asset owners can use to evaluate their managers.

Cbus Super delivers lower fees, higher returns

The past year has seen Cbus Super bolster its team and systems - adding to its internalisation of investments - continue down the journey of fee reduction and deliver the best return of the fund’s 37-year history. Amanda White spoke to CIO, Kristian Fok.

Net zero commitments make greenwashing more prolific

The proliferation of grand gestures of sustainability, such as net zero commitments, means manager due diligence is even more important and more intensive, according to global head of research at Willis Towers Watson, Luba Nikulina.