Mercer’s plan for integrating ESG

How to implement ESG into portfolio construction and implementation is an ongoing challenge for asset owners. Mercer has come up with a number of strategies including the best way to use ESG ratings, active ownership, and tailored strategies that play to sustainability themes, including its own unlisted investment solution. Amanda White spoke to Jane Ambachtsheer, global leader of responsible investment and Nick White, global director of portfolio construction research.

 

Much of the advancement in sustainable investing implementation has been at the big end of town; among large sophisticated asset owners with the ability to devote resources to the risks and opportunities.

But a back to basics approach by Mercer is now making ESG integration accessible for all investors, and has resulted in a new paper, “An investment framework for sustainable growth: capturing a broader set of risks and opportunities – integrating ESG and sustainable themes”, which outlines adoptable methods for ESG integration. (download the paper here ESG Framework)

“We wanted to take a step back to first principles and make sure we were not leaving too many people behind,” says Jane Ambachtsheer, global leader of responsible investment.

While there are still big regional differences both in sustainable philosophies and regulatory requirements, Ambachtsheer has seen a lot more interest in the implementation of ESG ideas in asset owner portfolios.

Sponsored Content

She stresses that no matter the path chosen that the first part of the process is a beliefs and implementation plan to make sure ESG takes on an appropriate role.

Essentially sustainability can be implemented through three tools: risk management, active ownership, and specific investment solutions.

From a risk management perspective, there are now up to 5,000 strategies with ESG ratings from Mercer, with only 10 per cent receiving the highest ratings (ESG1 or 2).

Nick White, global director of portfolio construction research, says investors need to understand what is going into those ratings, and how they can be used.

“A manager with a highly rated portfolio of ESG stocks might not be a good performer because it is not making the most of that,” he says. “By the same token we ask whether a quality manager, which has a great level of robustness, can be strengthened further by strengthening ESG.”

Mercer first began using ESG ratings within the responsible investment team in the late 2000’s. It soon became evident the ratings would be more powerful if they sat with the analyst and in 2010 they were integrated into research at the manager level.

Ambachtsheer’s team produced a lot of documentation around the expected investor behaviour for high rated ESG managers, and prepared case studies and questions for the researchers to ask. There was a lot of education and training of the Mercer analysts as the ESG ratings were integrated.

Now White says the ESG ratings are a complement to the conventional manager assessment, and while they are not an absolute determinant of an overall manager rating, if there are two A-rated managers, the one with the higher ESG rating will be preferred.

One of the services Mercer will engage with a client is a benchmarking, and gap analysis of their portfolio’s ESG ratings.

This then identifies the managers that are not performing and gives clients tools to either turnover the manager or influence them to change through engagement.

Engagement is the second tool that Mercer says that clients can use to implement sustainability, and Ambachtsheer says this comes back to the asset owners beliefs and priorities and it is important that time is spent on those so that engagement is not reactive.

“Engagement has made the most progress for asset owners,” she says, pointing to recent engagement by asset owners with oil and gas companies over expenditure on new reserves research. “But it is difficult to decide to engage until you have thought through your own position.”

The third area, and one where Mercer has spent a lot of time, is capturing the sustainability theme within investment solutions.

It is now in the manager selection stage of an unlisted global sustainability product that includes infrastructure and private equity around a broad range of sustainability themes including water, waste and natural resources.

It is essentially the implementation of Mercer’s Climate Change Asset Allocation Study.

“ESG is a factor like momentum or value. Targeting a sustainability theme is looking at where the growth is coming from,” White says. “We think it’s about understanding how the world is changing.”

There is a massive spectrum of understanding among investors about ESG, and White says the scrutiny around proof is so much more emphasised than in other sectors, but he believes there is a lot of evidence to say there is alpha in ESG, and points to the DB Advisors paper on Sustainable_Investing_2012.

“Alpha is revealed in different forms, for example it looks at ESG funds and shows they have lower cost of capital and higher accounting and market based performance,” he says.

Mercer is also seeing a lot of innovation in passive investment and is reviewing in detail the processes of passive managers, and will produce ESG ratings of passive managers later this year.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Adding value through risk allocations

2013 was a great year to add value by using risk to assign asset allocation, according to chief investment officer of Windham Capital, Lucas Turton, whose fund added 300 basis points above benchmark last year by dynamically allocating according to risk.   Windham Capital Management’s style is to focus on measuring and understanding risk to

Alternatives increase as investors manage to outcomes

Investor allocations to alternatives will increase over the next three years as the focus on outcome-oriented investments heightens, according to respondents in the annual conexust1f.flywheelstaging.com /Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO sentiment survey. The second annual survey, which included respondents from 56 asset owners with combined assets of $3 trillion, showed an accelerating trend to moving

Organisational change: asset owners 2.0

A key ingredient for success in any organisation is strong leadership. It is common in the corporate world for the chief executive to change every five to 10 years as the organisation evolves. Are the same principles true for large institutional investors?     Roger Urwin, global head of investment content at Towers Watson, who

The rise of the foreign trustee

Which developed world pension fund will become the first to have a Chinese national sit on its board? The debate on board diversity has focused on gender, race and age, but in future it could extend to having representatives of the countries your fund would most like to invest in. As funds travel along the

Economic growth outlook positive but integrity needs work

The outlook for economic growth this year is markedly positive, compared to last year, but capital market integrity is not improving, according to the opinions of more than 6,000 CFA Institute members. The CFA Institute global markets sentiment survey, measures the views of its members on market integrity and economic issues. This year’s survey, which

World Economic forum identifies global risks

The World Economic Forum’s 2014 Global Risk report, has implications for investors.   The report, released ahead of next week’s meeting in Davos, highlights how global risks are not only interconnected by also have systemic impacts. The risks were broken down into economic, environmental, geo-political and social. The seven economic risks were: fiscal crises in

Previous