Opportunity for FI to be more impactful

In this Fiduciary Investors Series podcast, Amanda White talks to Andrew Parry, head of sustainable investment at Newton Investment Management about the complexity of sustainable investment, and the role of the finance industry in guiding investors to choose companies that have relevant business models for a changing world.

Now is the time to embrace the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), according to head of sustainable investment at Newton Investment Management, Andrew Parry, with the COVID crisis exposing a lot of the frailties in our society and economic system.

“This is very much a social crisis, a human crisis,” he said in a Fiduciary Investors Series podcast. “It has helped galvanised attention on this issue, and brought together a broad range of partners across private and public sector and [the SDGs] present a way of recovering from the crisis if executed well.”

September this year marked the fifth anniversary of the SDGs, a period of time that Parry says represented a very slow take up in the SDGs.

“If anything it was a labelling exercise. But a lot of people have been calling this out and saying it has not been integrated into business plans it or is not being seen as part of the transformation we need in the economy. The COVID crisis brought all of that home. Now there is a chance for restorative, transformative allocation of capital. It’s very exciting.”

In addition the very low levels of interest rates around the world provide a unique opportunity for the finance industry to be innovative to meet the needs outlined by the SDGs.

Sponsored Content

“I think the finance sector has gone beyond a re-mapping of the goals, and is beginning to understand that the SDGs represent an enormous opportunity,” he says.

In particular he says there is an opportunity in the fixed income market to accelerate its participation in achieving the goals.

“In the fixed income market one of the measures of impact is additionality. They can bring additional capital to bare to help tackle and fund these needs. One of the really interesting areas is how do we take the learnings from green bonds and apply it to the SDGs and bring new capital to bare,” he said. “The investment world is crying out for attractive investment opportunities if done with the proper public private partnership it’s a tremendous opportunity for the fixed income market to be impactful investors.”

Parry believes one of the biggest obstacles in aligning portfolios to the SDGs is understanding what it represents.

“If you don’t get beyond the 17 goals you’re not doing your job, you need to have a deep understanding. There is a rich body of understanding coming out of the UN agencies of what the goals and targets represent and how to be accessed. This helps you build your own view and taxonomy.”

Parry, who has worked in funds management for more than 30 years, believes the industry needs to be careful in its nomenclature, citing “non-financial” as a bit of a misnomer.

“It’s just a time scale,” he says. “There’s a tension over the short term between economic and financial returns, social consequences and environmental impact but over the the long term they do come together. We need a well-functioning prosperous society living in a vibrant world to support economic returns which drive financial returns.”

This is where it is important that asset owners look through the lens of systems thinking and long-term thinking so the three concepts of environment, people and financial returns all come together.

“There is a lot of dynamism in this and the world is constantly changing. I ask people if ESG didn’t exist as a concept, would you carry on investing in the way you would today under those labels? I would. They are fantastic ways to look at the way the world is going, it’s expanding your world and frees you from the dead hand of the index, and frees you to look at the world and where it is going.”

Parry says the role of investors is to navigate clients through a changing world and identify relevant business models for that.

“Social norms are unstable over time, which is good because we’re seeing such a dramatic shifts in certain things, like gay marriage. Companies that anchor to the past, or have the arrogance to think they will always be relevant will be marooned.”

By way of example he points to the FTSE index which only has 26 names still in it from the 1980s.

“Businesses need to think about the world as in adaptation. There is a very different construct in the FSTSE in names but also the businesses that reflect society. No business model is designed to last forever because things succumb to changing norms. Being relevant in a changing world is a powerful concept. Darwin didn’t say survival of the fittest, he said survival of the most adaptive.”

 

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