Climate change expert upbeat on post-Copenhagen opportunities

Global head of climate change investment research at DB Climate Change Advisors, Mark Fulton, has a contrary view to most observers, post-Copenhagen. He spoke to Amanda White about the climate change market and the asset allocation implications for investors.


Most analysis post-Copenhagen has concentrated on the seeming lack of tangible results – no legally binding agreement or an agreed emission reductions target – inferring negative connotations only.

But the climate change investment group at DB Climate Change Advisors, led by Mark Fulton, has more of a “glass half-full” perspective citing the countries that are the largest emitters agreeing to take action as a positive step.

“Very few people expected a legally binding deal, and to come out with an accord where the largest emitters are signed up, that is positive,” Fulton says.

Fulton believes there is never going to be an accord that is a one-size-fits-all and concedes there is some disappointment there was no hard emissions target in the developed world. He still supports the view that a carbon market is a necessary development.

But he stresses investors need to remain very focused on what drives markets, and that local level and country level targets are the key to that.

Sponsored Content

Despite the lack of results at Copenhagen, Fulton contends there are still plenty of opportunities for investors who take a global view.

DB Advisors produced a global tracker document last year, which included an aggregate risk rating of countries based on key mandates and supporting policy frameworks. The belief is that investors will become increasingly concerned about regulatory risk, and countries that deploy a transparent, long-lived, comprehensive and consistent set of policies will attract global capital.

According to the report China, Germany, France and Australia all have lower risk profiles for climate change investments because their governments have strong incentives in place, along with a consistent approach.

Notably the US, UK and Canada are moderate risk as they rely on a more volatile market incentive approach, and in the case of the US have suffered a stop-start approach in some areas, such as the production tax credit.

“For a global investor there are plenty of good, well-constructed policies creating markets and driving capital,” Fulton says.

DB’s mantra when it comes to climate change investing is that investors want transparency, longevity and certainty.

In its latest report, examining asset allocation implications, DB argues that climate change investment is growing rapidly relative to the broader market, providing a distinct and identifiable source of alpha.

The report also outlines a strategic asset allocation to consider climate change as part of portfolio construction. It uses an aggressive overweight of a 6 per cent allocation to climate change sectors, compared to a 2 per cent global market capitalisation weight.

It concludes, conservatively, that an ongoing assumption would be a 5 per cent excess return for climate change sectors, which would give an additional 0.4 per cent to the total portfolio.

For large investors the easiest way to access climate change opportunities has been through private equity and venture capital in the form of new technology and climate change technology investments.

However Fulton sees many opportunities in other asset classes including infrastructure and the lesser recognised public equities.

He believes there will be a lot of development within energy and water and expects to see a proliferation of renewable infrastructure funds.

DB estimates in the next five to 10 years there will be more than $10 trillion of investment in infrastructure with more than half going to water.

Within portfolios, DB Advisors tends to look at climate change as a theme when analysing potential investments, rather than a sector.

“Sometimes clean tech is the closest thing to a sector, but it’s really a smaller subset of climate change, the difference is we see climate change as having more agriculture in it,” he says.

“Overall we see climate change as a theme in the major asset classes and you can create specific strategy or product or see it as an investment factor.”

Within its own equities team Deutsche has made a carbon risk management analytical tool, provided by RiskMetrics, available to portfolio managers through its platform.

DB hasn’t published any research on the carbon beta tilt, but Fulton quotes research by Innovest, now owned by RiskMetrics, that shows a positive effect on returns.

He is also aware a lot of investors are taking a wait and see approach, conceding there is not a deep product market yet.

However DB is making significant inroads in order to make investors more comfortable, including the development in February of a clean tech index in conjunction with NASDAQ.

The index is comprised of 110 companies identified by DB from a global universe of more than 4,000 that have at least a third of revenues derived from clean technology, that have investable geographies and exchanges identified by NASDAQ QMX.

The index has a price return and a total return version.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Sovereign debt’s grave new world

Bonds have been the saviour for institutional investors in the global recovery, but a new bout of risk-aversion induced by concerns about sovereign risk threatens the stability of the traditionally defensive assets. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

I tweet, therefore I am

The rise of new forms of communications over the past 20 years is generally regarded as a positive development for most, if not all, businesses. Productivity has risen across the board, right? mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Ahoy! Opportunities in dock for shipping investors

Signs that the global shipping industry has hit the bottom of its current cycle provides a good case for opportunistic investing in cargo vessels, Mercer says. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

How active contrarian realism saved the UN

mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

SWFs surprise as they debut in ETFs

The institutional usage of exchange-traded funds is booming around the world, putting paid to any lingering doubt that the vehicles are meant for retail investors. Michael Bailey reports. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

BP oil sinks UK domestic portfolios…

UK home-biased equity portfolios have lost almost 3 per cent due to the BP oil crisis, in contrast to diversified global equity portfolios which have lost only 0.33 per cent, according to a MSCI research paper. Since the BP oil crisis began on April 20, the company’s share price has halved, and the impact on

Previous