PRI demands ESG action from consultants

The services of investment consultants need a rethink to include ESG as a standard part of the advice they provide, the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment has stated.

In a new report, Working Towards a Sustainable Financial System: Investment consultant services review, the PRI is calling on consultants to consider and act upon environmental, social and governance factors in their service delivery.

The report states that the full suite of investment consultants’ services should be reviewed from an ESG perspective and there must be a deeper discussion in the industry about including such issues as a standard part of consultants’ advice.

The report is based on interviews with 22 investment consulting firms and industry experts (primarily in the UK, the US and Australia), data from the PRI’s member reporting and assessment framework, and data on investment consultants, their clients, philosophies and staff provided by IC Research.

“It is time to reconsider what investment advice should look like as a part of a sustainable financial system that serves beneficiaries and individual investors,” PRI director of policy and research, Nathan Fabian, said. “ESG must be a core part of investment advice, because ESG is a core part of investors’ fiduciary duties. We see market structure, market practice and regulatory reasons why ESG is not currently a core part of investment advice. Addressing these reasons is a necessary step for a more sustainable financial system.”

The report specifically identifies the barriers to ESG integration in the consulting market. They include issues on the demand – asset owner – side, on the supply side and within the wider regulatory and policy framework in which asset owners and investment consultants operate. The report suggests actions that could be taken to overcome these barriers.

Sponsored Content

Some consultants are more advanced than others when considering, and advising on, ESG. Mercer was the first consultant to include ESG rankings as part of its regular asset manager search and performance data.

 

To read the PRI paper click here

 

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

Benchmarking infrastructure a step closer

The first valuation and risk measurement model created for unlisted infrastructure debt has been developed, with the release of a paper showing the valuation of illiquid infrastructure project debt, taking into account its illiquidity and the absence of market price feedback, can be done using advanced, state-of-the-art structural credit risk modelling. The paper by EDHEC-Risk

Scale and skill in active management

This paper by the Becker Friedman Institute for Research in Economics at the University of Chicago finds that the active management industry has become more skilled over time. But despite this rise in skill, average fund performance has failed to improve. To access the paper click below Scale and skill in active management  mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Smart beta versus smart alpha

With the advent of smart beta it was only a matter of time before the appropriate use of “smart” was analysed and questioned. A paper to be published in the forthcoming summer 2014 issue of The Journal of Portfolio Management looks at the active choices of smart beta strategies and how and when they can

Pension risk in DC funds

Defined contribution plans focus too much on the short-term accumulation of pension assets rather than the longer-term goal of securing an adequate retirement income. This paper by the World Bank, based on case studies from a number of countries, argues that pension supervisors have not properly defined the objectives of DC pension systems It suggests

Australian industry degraded by inflated fees

The Australian superannuation industry is often quoted as among the world’s best. However a new report by the Grattan Institute reveals Australian funds charge on average three times the OECD median rate. The report says that superannuation fee reform is the biggest opportunity for micro-economic reform in that country’s economy. The report, Super sting: how

Cost shifting and the freezing of corporate pension plans

This paper, which examines the impact of the trend in the US of corporate funds freezing their defined benefit funds and offering defined contribution plans, shows that net of the increase in total DC contributions, firms save 2.7-3.6 per cent of payroll per year, and over a 10-year horizon they save 3.1 per cent of

Previous