Bureaucrats must be targeted on climate change: Mercer

Institutional investors need to get more serious in their engagement with policy makers by targeting specific people in environment departments and defining an action plan to tackle climate change risk, according to global head of research, responsible investment at Mercer, Danyelle Guyatt.

Guyatt, who was the primary researcher and project manager for Mercer’s recently released and much anticipated global co-operative climate change report, says investors need to engage with policy makers as part of a number of strategies she recommended to combat climate risk.

She says the collaborative efforts of groups such as the International Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) have determined the right frameworks and have been effective in collaboration, and now those efforts are  being bolstered.

“Now investors need to get more specific, define action plans and what they’re asking from whom,” she says.

As a result of Mercer’s recent study – Climate Change Scenarios: Implications for Strategic Asset Allocation – Guyatt says it is now obvious that climate change presents a real risk to institutional investors’ portfolios.

Mercer says that traditional approaches to modelling strategic asset allocation fail to take account of climate change risk, primarily because they rely on historical quantitative analysis.

Sponsored Content

The report uses scenario analysis to model climate change risks using a TIP framework – technology, impact and policy – and found that as much as 10 per cent of a portfolio’s risk could be attributable to climate policy.

Under this new strategic asset allocation, Guyatt says a breakdown of risks found that the equity risk premium is 72 per cent, technology (carbon) is 1 per cent, illiquidity premium 5 per cent, policy (climate change) is 10 per cent and credit risk premium is 12 per cent.

With this in mind she says institutional investors need to look at diversification across sources of risk, not traditional asset classes.

“Enhancing the approach to asset allocation, using a factor-risk framework is one action investors can take to combat these risks,” she says, adding an allocation to climate-sensitive assets and engaging with policy makers are also essential.

“For those investors managing money inhouse, instead of not investing because of climate change issues, they need to engage with the various departments, get connected and ask questions. It is intensive but it could pay off from a risk perspective,” she says.

Guyatt said her Canadian colleague, Jane Ambachtsheer, talks about these risks in a budget allocation framework, and challenges investors to consider if climate policy can account for up to10 per cent of portfolio risk, then that should account for one-tenth of the time.

The Mercer study, the first of its kind to apply specifically to asset allocation, took more than one year to complete and was conducted in a three stage process including Grantham Research building the scenarios, mapping the evidence and reviewing the investment impact, capital market assumptions and decision-making process.

The process analysed four scenarios and their impact on asset allocation and portfolio risk:

1. regional divergence, which was the most likely scenario and concluded there was an uneven process on cutting emissions with strong relationships in some regions, high uncertainty in investments and assets, making country selection important

2. business as usual until 2020, which would mean a bumpy market transition producing high volatility, high anticipated costs and lower risk premiums

3. “Stern” action, which had a low probability but the best outcome from an investment point of view, and included clear policy with smooth adjustment, and new investment opportunities

4. climate breakdown, which was a continued reliance on fossil fuels and high carbon emissions and meant real assets would be very risky in the future, but there would be low immediate asset allocation impact.

Mercer charted the difference in the portfolio risk from each of these scenarios that would be needed in order to achieve a 7 per cent return and found: regional diversification had risk of 11 per cent, delayed action 14 per cent, Stern action 9 per cent, and climate breakdown 12 per cent.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

What does an effective board look like?

Pension fund boards are complex, evolving, collective bodies and the individuals that serve them face unique challenges. The Rotman-ICPM Board Effectiveness Program is a week-long course designed specifically for pension fund trustees that showcases how an effective board looks and behaves. Pension management beneficiaries are delegating to a body that then delegates to an executive,

ESG rethink can add 40 basis points per month: Hermes

Rigorous Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) management can deliver an extra 40 basis points per month according to Saker Nusseibeh, CEO and head of investment at Hermes Fund Managers. “Where it [ESG] really matters for performance is in consistently avoiding bad governance. You can add 40 basis points per month… Per month!” Nusseibeh told a

International reaction to QSuper’s innovation

Australian fund, QSuper’s creation of eight different investment cohorts for its 440,000 default fund members this month has sparked curiosity and admiration from defined contribution experts in the US, the UK and New Zealand. The investment strategies for each group will be focussed on an estimated retirement outcome for that segment, taking into account the

Investors ignore liability matching at their peril

Two high profile pension funds, ATP of Denmark and HOOPP of Canada, have been very successful in managing their assets in two distinct portfolios. But the practice of fund separation, a portion of the portfolio for liability hedging and another for alpha generation, is not common in pension management. It should be. For these two

Home bias in corporate engagement revealed

Investors should take care in selecting corporate engagement firms to ensure the engagement reflects their portfolio holdings, warn academics at Oxford and Maastricht Universities following a new study which reveals a home bias in such activity. As the investment portfolios of large institutional investors become increasingly global, it is particularly important that they carefully select

The power of benchmarking: GRESB comes of age

Now in its fifth year GRESB, the benchmark that measures the sustainability performance of real estate portfolios, has been influential in changing the sector’s performance and environmental impact. Now Nils Kok, executive director of GRESB and associate professor in finance at Maastricht University, says that infrastructure and private equity assets are ripe for a benchmark

Previous