CalPERS examines adopting SDGs

The board of CalPERS has directed staff to look into aligning its $357 billion portfolio with the UN’s sustainable development goals.

The largest pension fund in the US is already one of the global leaders in engaging with companies on ESG risks, but by adopting the UN SDGs it would embrace more specific social objectives, such as ending poverty, hunger and gender inequality.

CalPERS’ chief investment officer Ted Eliopoulos characterised the 17 SDGs as a “gift to investors” at the board’s retreat meeting on January 16 in Petaluma, California. He said investment staff would report back to the board at its July meeting regarding how the goals could connect with CalPERS’ existing sustainability investment plan. Other institutional investors will be invited to that meeting to discuss their experiences implementing the SDGs.

The 17 goals address everything from the environment to various social principles. But Eliopoulos acknowledged in an interview that whether aligning a portfolio with them when they are combined will lead to better returns hasn’t been tested.

“It is definitely a nascent area and the taxonomy that the UN has provided through the sustainable development goals provides a framework for investors that have long tried to consider what subject matters fall under the environmental and social” categories, Eliopoulos said after the meeting.

He called the UN’s SDGs, which 190 nations ratified in September 2015, “authoritative” but said “for investors, it’s a new development and it’s going to take time to digest and understand” how it might relate to portfolios.

Sponsored Content

He said collaboration with other global pensions would help shape the ultimate application of the SDGs. Australian fund Cbus Super and large Dutch pension plan ABP have both made the SDGs part of their investment plans. Other European funds, such as Dutch PGGM, are also incorporating them into their investment philosophy and implementation.

The move towards implementing SDGs at CalPERS came after the board and investment staff heard from UN assistant secretary-general Elliott Harris, who urged CalPERS to adopt the goals. He said that would help the UN.

“We need to understand how best to measure the impact of the SDGs on financial returns, and how best to preserve the goals and targets in ways that attract the interest of private investors,” Harris said.

He explained that while CalPERS’ sustainable investment strategic plan considers factors such as climate change and natural resource scarcity, that may not be enough.

“The concept of risk may well have to be expanded even further to incorporate the lack of progress toward some of the other aspirations of the sustainable development agenda – such as reducing inequities or [achieving] gender empowerment and equity – which themselves have an impact on macroeconomic factors,” he said.

Harris said CalPERS’ leadership would help generate standards of financial reporting that allow for a systemic evaluation of these new risks.

CalPERS investment director for sustainability, Anne Simpson, said in an interview that she believes implementing the UN goals will help the system drive returns. The pension plan has only a 68 per cent funding ratio and is in the process of lowering its expected annual rate of return from 7.5 per cent to 7 per cent because of diminished future return expectations. Simpson called the situation “demanding”.

“The sustainability development goals are intended to build prosperity,” she said. “As an investor, you could say this is how you build opportunity for us and risk gets addressed. So, that’s really why we’re interested.”

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

South Africa’s GEPF mulls proposed liquidity pressures

South Africa's pension funds may have to keep much more liquidity on hand if proposed legislation allows beneficiaries to access their retirement savings early. South Africa's GEPF ponders the implications for long-term investment.

AP7 shifts gears as boosted alternatives allocation comes to life

Sweden’s SEK 900 billion ($84 billion) AP7 can finally invest up to 20 per cent of its assets in alternative, illiquid investments. A new allocation to infrastructure and targets to double private equity are in the offing following the fund dipping a first toe in real estate.

The politicisation of investments at US public funds

Attempts by multiple Republican states to restrict where US pension funds can invest are symptomatic of bad governance. Top1000funds.com takes a deep dive into the quagmire of US state pension funds to assess the impact on CIOs, highlighting the need prevent the politicisation of investments.  

A net-zero check-in – how are we doing?

The net-zero investing journey passed a milestone this May, having already ticked one third of the way towards 2030 goals and one twelfth of the way to 2050 goals. Roger Urwin, co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute, enquires how investors and the real economy are really doing.

Why internal management at Canada’s BCI includes ESG

For pension funds with large in-house teams that are also navigating the risk and opportunity of sustainable investment, a global head of ESG can play a vital role. Jennifer Coulson, the investor's first global head of ESG, explains why.

Costs drive ABP’s switch to passive in public markets

Managing costs is the central driver behind €470 Dutch civil service scheme ABP’s recent decision to switch much of its public market allocation to passive, index-led strategies, according to a spokesperson at the fund. The low-cost strategy at Europe’s largest pension fund is accompanied by sustainability and simplification priorities.

Previous