UK funds set RI reporting expectations for managers

A group of 16 UK asset owners with combined assets of more than £200 billion ($269 billion) have developed a guide to responsible investment reporting in public equity. The aim of the guide is to clarify the investors’ reporting responsible investment requirements as they seek to include it in RFPs, manager searches, due diligence and investment mandate terms.

The guide will be used by the asset owners supporting it, to inform their engagement with, and monitoring of, current and perspective managers.

“It is hoped the guide will be particularly useful for smaller pension funds, and once a mandate has been awarded to a fund manager, where reporting will help us to monitor how well the fund managers’ approach to RI is aligned to the broader investment strategy,” the report says.

The purpose of the guide is to encourage improvements in the quality of RI reporting for individual mandates.

While in the past many managers are reluctant to take on more reporting, the asset owners believe long-term benefits that stem from greater transparency and accountability will outweigh any short-term incremental reporting costs.

The report breaks reporting into two parts – ESG integration and stewardship – and outlines the expectations and guidelines for managers in their reporting of these two activities.

Sponsored Content

Within ESG, the guidelines cover both identifying and managing risks and opportunities, and includes benchmarking relative portfolio level ESG analysis, stock or sector decisions, identification of long-term trends and changes to the ESG integration process.

Within stewardship the guide covers both process and outcomes with regard to engagement and voting, looking at progress against engagement objectives and the attribution of engagement to portfolio risk or return.

The asset owners which support the guide believe that better reporting can help to build a better understanding of the extent to which responsible investment factors and activities can help to explain both short and long-term investment risk and performance in public equity.

The guide is designed to initiate discussion and dialogue between asset owners and their managers on the reporting metrics and whether they are applicable to other asset classes.

“Fund managers should regard these reporting expectations as a guide to help kick-start a process of reflection regarding their approach to responsible investment,” the guide says.

The asset owners supporting the guide are BTPS, PPF, Kingfisher, West Midlands, Strathclyde, SAUL, Environmental Agency, Merseyside, Northern Ireland Local Government Officers’ Superannuation Committee, Pensions Trust, Lothian, USS, Unilever, BBC, NEST and RPMI Railpen.

 

To access the guide 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

Focusing on the long term: a guide

Investors say they  like to, and want to, focus on the long term, but they often don’t know how to change their practices to orient their governance and investments to do so. Now, finally, a guide has been developed for investors to use as benchmark for implementing strategies for long-term investment. The guide is an

London investment think-tank

Investment professionals from pension funds, endowments and family offices in the UK and Europe were brought together for an investment think-tank with leading academics from London Business School and Cambridge University to discuss the latest investment thinking and application to institutional investors’ portfolios. The academics presented to the investors who then discussed the outtakes and

2015 could be watershed year for ESG issues

2015 is poised to be the turning point as a number of key issues relating to environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues take centre stage says Fiona Reynolds, managing director of the Principles for Responsible Investment.   First and foremost is climate change. With the Paris talks scheduled for December 2015, it’s an issue that

ESG factors take centre stage in the evolving world of the fiduciary

The modern responsibilities of the fiduciary investor extend beyond what are perceived as the “mainstream” investment issues to those related to environment, society and governance (ESG) factors. But there is a growing understanding among fiduciaries that ESG considerations are now equally important in discharging their obligations. David Wood, adjunct lecturer in public policy and director of the Initiative for Responsible

Investigating long-term mandates

The PRI is investigating the experiences of asset owners that have engaged service providers in long-term mandates, and conducting a literature review on long-termism, in a bid to develop a reference guide on how to implement a long-term mandate and drive long-term behaviour.   Managing director of PRI, Fiona Reynolds, said the starting point, and

Risks are multi-faceted and evolving: Litterman

If Robert Litterman were a CIO of a public pension plan he would not try to hit an “unrealistic return target”. Amanda White speaks to him about risk, quants, asset allocation and climate change. There is a serious problem with US public pension funds and the “unrealistic commitments and unrealistic return targets” they have set,

Previous