Investors need to get behind materiality

The lines between sustainable investing and investing in general are blurring and will soon disappear. Yet there remains an important barrier to fully integrating a company’s sustainability performance into investment analysis—the lack of reliable, relevant, and comparable data on the different dimensions of a company’s sustainability performance. Today we have a plethora of NGOs working to set sustainability measurement and reporting standards, as well as ESG data vendors whose ratings are poorly correlated with each other.

Fortunately, there is now a very real possibility to solve this problem. The IFRS Foundation (IFRS) has issued a “Consultation Paper on Sustainability Reporting” proposing a Sustainability Standards Board (SSB) which would be a parallel body to the International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), with both being under the direction of IFRS.

One of the issues discussed in the paper and for which comments are requested is the important, complex, and controversial concept of materiality. It proposes that “If established, the SSB would initially focus its efforts on the sustainability information most relevant to investors and other market participants. Such information would more closely connect with the current focus of the IASB.”

We support this approach while at the same time recognizing that there are sustainability issues that are important to the world even if they currently do not have an impact on investor returns.

A good analysis of materiality is presented in another September paper “Statement of Intent to Work Together Towards Comprehensive Corporate Reporting (The Statement)” written by CDP, the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB), the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC), and the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and facilitated by the Impact Management Project (IMP), Deloitte, and the International Business Council of the World Economic Forum (IBC/WEF).

The report provides a conceptual “three-box” framework which is very useful for the proposed SSB. The smallest box represents financial reporting standards, the traditional work of the IASB (and the Financially Accounting Standards Board in the U.S.). It sits inside a box of sustainability issues that are material for enterprise valuation creation, the focus of CDSB and SASB. Here the unit of analysis is the company, just as it is with financial accounting standards. The work of the SSB will be focused on the second box with the IIRC contributing a framework for integrating both sets of standards.

Sponsored Content

This box, in turn, sits inside one representing the total range of sustainability issues, which include the positive and negative externalities of a company’s operations, products, and services that make the world a better or worse place, such as through the lens of the Sustainable Development Goals. This is the domain of CDP, the GRI, and IBC/WEF. This is a system-level unit of analysis and is outside the boundary of work for the SSB, thus making its remit clear.

While some have argued that the SSB should include all sustainability issues and even extend to developing standards for reporting on science-based targets, we think that would be a mistake. One must walk before one runs. Simply establishing an SSB will be a major challenge in terms of funding and establishing the necessary capabilities. It also needs to move quickly, starting with climate and related environmental issues and then swiftly moving on to critical issues such as human capital and diversity & inclusion. Here it can rely on the work done by the authors of The Statement report and their public commitment to harmonize their efforts and, for climate, the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures.

Asking the SSB to take on a broader remit beyond the sustainability issues material to enterprise value creation would be impractical since it would greatly delay the needed global standards for sustainability reporting. A much better solution would be for the SSB to coordinate its work with those organizations that are focused on sustainability issues that are broader than enterprise value creation but very important to the world.

Over time, these issues can indeed became material from an SSB perspective through the concept of “dynamic materiality.” An issue that hasn’t been material to companies can become so for many reasons including system-level effects on all companies regardless of industry (e.g., climate change and inequality), changing social expectations of employees (particularly the Millennials) and customers, and laws and regulations (e.g., carbon taxes and minimum wage rates). When this happens, it will fall in the domain of the SSB.

The SSB is being established to meet the sustainability information needs of investors. Please help the IFRS Foundation help you by submitting a response to the Consultation. Oxford University’s Saïd Business School has submitted a letter that might provide some helpful guidance. Responses are due by December 31, 2020.

Richard Barker is Professor of Accounting and Associate Dean of Faculty , and Robert Eccles (pictured) is Visiting Professor of Management Practice at Said Business School, University of Oxford.

Bob Eccles will be speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium online on December 8. For more information click here.

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

ESG almost an afterthought

Only 26 of 4300 companies surveyed by Governance Metrics International (GMI) have a specific clause that measures executive compensation against a sustainability metric, and institutional investors play a pivotal role in transforming this behaviour. Kimberly Gladman, director of research and risk analytics at the governance research company GMI, says investors should set the expectations that

African fund invests for returns and development

Returns should not be the sole driver of investment decisions as funds should consider the social, environmental and economic impact their capital can have, a senior official at Africa’s largest pension fund says. John Oliphant, head of actuarial and investments at South Africa’s $130-billion Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF), says the fund considers high impact

Ethics not returns drive AP7’s ESG policy

Returns are a secondary consideration to the ethical values of members when framing the socially responsible investment policy of Swedish fund AP7. AP7’s head of communications, Johan Floren, says that the fund is less concerned with socially responsible investment (SRI) as a driver of returns rather than as a reflection of the values and ethics

Investors look to clean energy infrastructure

Despite clean energy public equity investments performing poorly in 2011, there are still attractive investing opportunities in the sector and strong investor interest in financing green energy infrastructure, a Deutsche Bank Climate Change Advisors report has revealed. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Fiduciary duty to push for climate change action: CalPERS CEO

CalPERS chief executive Ann Stausboll told delegates at an investor summit on climate change held in New York this week that the fiduciary duty of pension funds should extend to issues outside the parameters typically understood as being directly related to beneficiaries’ financial interests. Stausboll said it is a fiduciary duty of investors not only

NYC pension funds demand tougher clawback provisions

New York City Comptroller John Liu has rallied NYC pension funds in a call for high profile firms JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to beef up clawback provisions for senior executives.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous