Institutional
asset owners are increasingly interested in
behaving, and being encouraged to behave, as active owners of capital. They do so both
to discharge responsibilities as owners, and to safeguard and potentially
improve the long-term performance of underlying assets.
In addition, there is increasing evidence that
environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) factors can have an impact
on the earnings of portfolio companies and therefore on
investment performance 1
. This has led a number of investors to seek ways to
integrate ESG analysis into investment decision-making.
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New research
To meet the needs of our clients in light of these developments, Mercer
Investment Consulting (Mercer IC) has extended its research of
investment managers to assess practices in regards to three new factors:
-
Voting and engagement on corporate governance
issues
-
Voting and engagement on environmental and social
issues
-
Integration of ESG issues into mainstream investment
analysis
An overall score is determined by
our researchers which reflects an investment manager’s performance
across the three categories. This research assesses managers on a global basis
and examines their practices across all of their investment products (i
.e. it does not assess socially responsible investment (SRI)
products).
The findings below reflect the results from the first
phase of this research, which assessed 30 managers that we rate highly for
their UK and/or global equity products. These managers range in size from $134
million to $1.6 trillion USD total assets under management with a bias towards
managers with a majority of their assets based in the
UK.
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First phase of research - initial
findings
These ratings contain both absolute and relative
elements. While we look for characteristic behaviour at each level, we also
score manager performance relative to the universe. As the bar for these
practices rises over time, our expectations at each level will also
rise.
Table 1: Capacity of investment
managers to integrate active ownership and ESG issues into the investment
decision making process*
|
|
Voting and engagement on Corporate
Governance |
Voting and engagement on corporate social
responsibility |
Integration of ESG issues
|
Overall |
++ |
37% |
10% |
13% |
17% |
+ |
37% |
40% |
33% |
40% |
= |
20% |
33% |
33% |
27% |
- |
7% |
17% |
20% |
17% |
* Managers are scored according to
their capacity and capabilities on each factor. Scores range from “++” for
managers that demonstrate “well above average” capabilities, to “-” for managers
that are not able to demonstrate an acceptable capacity in this area, with
scores of “+” or “=”given to managers that fall somewhere in between.
Overall, managers show greater capacity and capability for
voting and engaging with management on corporate governance related issues than
on environmental or social issues, with only 7% scoring a negative for the former
and 17% for the latter. On the positive side, 37% of managers scored the top
rating for their voting and engagement practices on corporate governance, and
74% either + or ++. This compares to 50% scoring + or ++ for environmental and social
factors.
Managers scored worst on their ability to
integrate ESG factors into their mainstream investment decision process. 20% of
managers scored negatively and 33% neutral, totaling 53% for combined negative
and neutral findings. Only 13% of managers were allocated a ++ in this
area.
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Further analysis of the
results
Interestingly, there is no scoring bias demonstrated
towards either large or small firms with our sample containing regional boutique
firms as well as major international managers. There is a small geographic
effect, with firms having a greater concentration of UK assets tending to achieve a slightly better overall
rating.
Just as no relationship exists between firm size and
scoring, there is also no correlation between firm size and the practice of
purchasing external research, with firms small to large both purchasing external
research and achieving positive ratings. As one might expect, there is a
positive correlation between scoring and the number of staff resources committed to corporate governance and environmental/social
factors.
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Regional
biases
As the majority of the managers we assessed held the
bulk of their assets in the UK this group of managers is likely to exhibit a
positive bias towards active ownership and ESG-integration practices relative to
investment managers internationally, given the prominence given to these issues in the
UK.
Research is currently underway across managers in
multiple regions, and we will publish subsequent findings on our website. We
expect overall scores to decrease as the sample size increases, and as we take
in regions that have given less attention to these
issues.
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Reflecting on
findings
In terms of voting
activity, we identified notable differences in consistency of
cross-regional voting practices. Systematic reporting activity is, for example, relatively scarce
across the board. The study reveals that engagement work is typically undertaken
by a combination of specialist SRI teams, central corporate
governance groups, and mainstream analysts/portfolio managers. While investor
networks and initiatives are commonly used by managers to collaborate on ESG
engagement, associated memberships and collaborative methods vary greatly (this
information is detailed in resulting research notes for each
manager).
A number of elements are considered when assessing the
integration of ESG analysis by managers, such as access to ESG research and
mechanisms for integrating this within traditional investment decision making
processes. Where SRI and corporate governance teams exist, they are increasingly
integrating with mainstream analysts and portfolio managers (i.e. SRI research outputs become ESG mainstream
inputs).
While increased availability of ESG research may signal
wider demand from investors, current practices suggest there is still some way
to go before this information is systematically integrated into investment decision
making.
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Associated investor
beliefs
The investors that seek to integrate active ownership
and ESG factors within investment processes are often motivated by the following
beliefs, corresponding to each of our assessment
factors:
Factor |
Associated
investor belief |
Voting and engaging on corporate
governance (CG) |
Ensuring votes are actively considered and cast in a way that is
consistent with protecting or enhancing shareholder value and which fulfil
the obligations of active ownership. Active engagement with companies to
promote sound corporate governance can often be viewed as a responsibility
of ownership, or as a mechanism for mitigating risk and/or generating
higher returns over the long term. |
Voting and engaging on corporate
social responsibility (CSR) |
Engaging with companies to promote sound corporate social
responsibility business practices reflects a commitment to active
ownership, and could lead to enhanced returns or reduced risk over the
long term (eg a mining company’s environmental liability). This factor is
separate from the first, as many managers will focus their voting and
engagement activity only on corporate governance. |
Incorporation of environmental,
social and governance (ESG) factors in investment decision
making |
ESG criteria can have an impact on the
earnings of companies and therefore on investment performance.
Managers with access to good information on ESG criteria and the
ability to analyse this information can therefore use this
information (alongside other analysis), to potentially:
-
avoid (or short) companies with significant ESG downside risk,
-
generate opportunities for higher returns,
-
invest in “bad” companies they believe are about to improve,
or
-
use management of ESG issues as a proxy for overall
management.
Such managers should be able to capitalise on informational asymmetries
believed to currently exist around effective ESG-analysis. |
Overall |
Active voting, engagement and informed
investment decision-making in relation to matters of ESG can help
investors to:
-
reduce downside risk,
-
generate opportunities for alpha generation, and
-
fulfil fiduciary/regulatory
requirements.
|
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Conclusion
Our research allows investors to understand the
practices of their current investment managers, providing a means for them to
undertake dialogue with them where such practices could be improved. It also
facilitates the incorporation of active ownership and ESG considerations into
the selection of future investment managers by allowing a long list of potential
managers to be narrowed based on these
criteria.
We believe our research will become an invaluable tool
to investors interested in this area and may over time help to raise the
bar.
Reference
1. |
In 2004, the United Nations
Environment Program Finance Initiative launched a CEO Briefing entitled
The Materiality of Social, Environmental and Corporate Governance Issues
to Equity Pricing. This study comprised of 11 reports from nine brokerage
houses reflects agreement among contributors that ESG issues can affect
long-term shareholder value. The study is available at
www.unepfi.org/stocks. |
Contact us to learn about your investment managers’ practices or discuss our research
methodology. |