DiNapoli: fund focuses on economic growth

Pension funds are “perpetual investors” and should promote long-term, sustainable economic growth through integrating environmental, sustainability and governance considerations into investment decisions, New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli says.

DiNapoli – who is the sole trustee of New York’s $140 billion state pension fund – told attendees at an investor summit on climate change that institutional investors needed to look beyond the current debate about environmental regulation stymying growth.

Climate change was a “chronic injury” to the economy that the market has failed to price, DiNapoli says.

He said institutional investors needed to invest in green technologies not because it was the right thing to do but because it was both in the direct and indirect financial interests of fund members.

“Ultimately our goal is simple: we want long-term, sustainable economic growth,” DiNapoli told attendees at the Investor Summit on Climate Change, which was jointly organised by climate change leadership lobby group, Ceres, and the United Nations.

“We have found that comprehensively integrating ESG considerations into investment processes is essential to achieving that goal.”

Sponsored Content

DiNapoli told the summit that the fund had deployed three-quarters of the $500 million it has allocated to a green investment program.

The fund has instigated a “staff sustainability team” to review all sustainable investments and to recommend further investments.

“As an institutional investor we will continue to focus on these [climate change] issues, not only because it is the right thing to do, but also because it is the smart thing for the one million members of New York’s state and local retirement systems,” he said.

DiNapoli was one of a number of large institutional investors that included the heads of CalPERS and CalSTRS who outlined strong commitments to investing in green technology to mitigate the risks and take advantage of opportunities presented by climate change.

However, Goldman Sachs senior investment strategist, Abby Joseph Cohen, told investors that risk-averse investors had shied away from green investments in the two years after the financial crisis.

“Many investors have looked to green market investing as a bull market phenomena and during a bear market or a more questionable market environment they are thinking more in terms of conservative investments,” Cohen, who is also the president of the Global Markets Institute, said.

“They [investors] are thinking more in terms of dividends and more in terms of immediate cash returns on investments than about long-term return and they are certainly not thinking much about societal returns. That is something for us to keep in mind and we think we may have passed the worst of it.”

Cohen said that, while both investors and corporations have cash sitting in balance sheets waiting to be invested, policy makers had to look at innovative ways to make investors feel more comfortable in taking risk and focusing on the long-term.

The final address of the conference came from BT Pension Scheme’s trustee director, Donald MacDonald, who called for investors not to wait for policy makers to provide regulatory clarity before investing.

“Policy uncertainty should not stop investors and there are many examples of private industry and private capital which are working together constructively to move the agenda forward,” said MacDonald, who is also the chairman of the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change.

MacDonald said many investors doubted the effectiveness of the current investment vehicles and were also looking for leadership from asset managers.

While asset owners have capital to invest, they were conscious of costs, and could not throw the “intellectual powerhouse resources” that big asset manager could deploy to product innovation.

“A lot of people on the asset side of the equation are questioning if we are getting the balance right between risk and reward and where that balance should lie,” MacDonald said.

One area he highlighted was working with governments on long-term investment projects.

But he said institutional investors need to strongly articulate the fiduciary duty requirements that would shape any potential investment.

“We are not just a resource that can be turned off and on again like a tap,” he said.

“We are a resource looking to put major amounts of money into long-term projects but there has to be a reward for illiquidity.”

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Experts mull strategies in slow growth climate

Speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Oxford University’s Rhodes House Fiona Trafford-Walker, director of consulting at Frontier Advisors argues that Australian investors are operating in a changed environment and need to “get used to slower economic growth.” Speaking as part of an expert panel on how the continued environment of slow growth and low

Macro diversification: How do investors diversify risk?

“Geopolitics does matter and how to navigate geopolitical events on a portfolio is challenging,” argues Tom Clarke, partner and portfolio manager at William Blair speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Rhodes House, Oxford University. In a session dedicated to macro strategies for investors to best navigate today’s complex investment universe and diversify risk, Clarke argues that “hiding” from

Oxford Professor urges urgent European reform

The University of Oxford’s distinguished Professor of Economics David Vines predicted the ongoing crisis in Europe will turn into a “train wreck with implications for investors” unless governments undertake significant reforms. He urges for large write downs of the sovereign debt of southern European countries, a loosening of austerity in those countries and a significant

Indexing pressure improves active management

A new study of active and indexed-based mutual funds shows the impact of different countries’ regulatory and financial market environments. The study finds that the average alpha generated by active management is higher in countries with more explicit indexing and lower in countries with more closet indexing. The evidence suggests that explicit indexing improves competition in the mutual fund

Investors need to revamp portfolio construction

Investors should re-consider their investment processes in order to achieve the needed “step-change in efficient portfolio construction” in a low return environment, the chief executive of the A$109 billion ($83 billion) Future Fund, David Neal, says. “It is the investment process that turns the universe of opportunities into a portfolio, and right now that process

Investors need to rethink operating model

A neat little story of investment flows, asset allocation changes, and relationship and service demands is emerging from the third annual Top1000funds.com/Casey Quirk Global Fiduciary CIO Survey. If you’re a CIO of an asset owner what that means is more control but also more responsibilities and the demands of more internal resources. For managers it

Previous