Managers top owners on climate risk

Asset owners have rapidly scaled up their response to climate change to protect portfolios, but they have yet to catch up to the asset managers’ progress on a range of key activities, an annual benchmark report reveals.

The Asset Owners Disclosure Project (AODP) Global Climate 500 Index assesses the world’s 500 largest asset owners – representing more than $40 trillion in assets under management – on how well they disclose and manage climate risks that could affect retirement savings and other long-term investments.

This year, for the first time, AODP also surveyed the world’s 50 largest asset managers, which handle $43 trillion on behalf of their clients – representing more than 70 per cent of assets under management worldwide.

Globally, more investors are factoring climate risk into their decision-making. However, the report finds that although asset owners are making “rapid” progress, asset managers are ahead on a range of key activities.

It shows, for example, that 90 per cent of asset managers have incorporated climate change into their policy frameworks, compared with 42 per cent of asset owners. While the asset owners’ percentage is lower, it has doubled since last year.

The proportion of asset owners with staff focused on integrating climate risk into their investment has increased by more than a third, to 18 per cent. Again, asset managers are a long way ahead, as 68 per cent of those surveyed have dedicated staff.

Sponsored Content

One-fifth of asset managers calculate portfolio carbon emissions, while 13 per cent of asset owners do this – up from 10 per cent last year. Also, 12 per cent of asset managers assess the risk of stranded assets in their portfolio; 6 per cent of asset owners do this – up from 5 per cent last year.

AODP founder and chief executive Julian Poulter says: “Climate change is becoming a central part of risk management around the world, and will transcend short-term political setbacks such as moves by the Trump administration in the US to roll back action on climate change. Once investors adopt prudent risk-management practices, they will not unlearn them.”

Despite the upward trends, 200 asset owners and three asset managers showed no evidence of taking any action to tackle climate risk.

The AODP index assesses asset owners and managers on governance and strategy, portfolio risk management, and metrics and targets. Institutions are graded from AAA (the highest) to A ‘leaders’, down to D-rated institutions taking their first steps on climate risk. Those providing no evidence of action are rated X and classed as ‘laggards’.

In 2017, AODP made some changes to its methodology for constructing the rankings.

“While the underlying questions remain the same as last year,” the report states, “we have calibrated our assessment categories with the [Financial Stability Board] recommendations, to help asset owners and asset managers prepare for potential future reporting requirements. This alignment provides institutional investors with reporting consistency, trend analysis and an effective framework to implement the strategies required to meet – and perhaps more importantly exceed – the FSB’s expected guidelines.”

 

 

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

Nuance the name of the low carbon game

The £30 billion ($38 billion) Brunel Pension Partnership, the asset pool comprising 10 of the United Kingdom’s local authority pension schemes, is finding significant investment opportunities in private-sector renewables infrastructure.

Climate disclosure a bumpy road

Implementing the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures is challenging, fortunately some investors are paving the way, a PRI climate conference heard.

Brunel outlines owner/manager dynamic

The UK’s £30 billion Brunel Pension Partnership has published an asset management accord. The document is designed to clarify what it expects from its mandates and what they can expect from Brunel. A long-term focus, aspects of communication, and responsible investment and stewardship are among the topics the accord covers.

Firearms Principles provide a target

A coalition of 13 institutional investors, led by the California State Teachers’ Retirement System, has crafted principles for engaging with entities that manufacture, sell or regulate guns in a way that fosters a responsible civilian gun industry and reduces risk. The guidelines are intentionally flexible so each organisation can apply them in accordance with its own models for engagement.

Fixed income, ESG start to bond

ESG integration in fixed income is finally starting to happen but the challenges it presents aren’t the same as in equities; for example, bondholder rights and shareholder rights aren’t the same. Have a look at what’s necessary to further blend ESG and fixed income.

The world’s most influential capital

The 100 largest asset owners have a huge worldwide impact. As global markets evolve, they’ll need proactive leaders, the right technology and good public policy to help shape a better economy.

Previous