ESG Integrated Portfolio Construction Flashcards
Traditionally speaking how do institutional investors manage systemic macro-economic factors? How is this different than strategic asset allocation?
By coupling asset allocation strategies with asset/liability management (or ALM) which provides investors the tools with which to match the cash flows of assets to payment of liabilities.
Where as strategic asset allocation establishes return targets across asset classes (equities, fixed income, real assets, etc.) and investment strategy types (i.e. alternatives).
What is the difference between strategic asset allocation and dynamic asset allocation? Which is better from an ESG perspective?
A strategic asset allocation approach is constructed over a multi-decade period representing several economic cycles, an investment timeframe that clearly warrants the long-term consideration of financial and non-financial ESG effects like climate risk.
Dynamic asset allocation, on the other hand, establishes an initial asset allocation mix with the aim to continually review and recalibrate this allocation mix under much shorter intervals using traditional factors to maintain the original target mix. The potential risk with continual rebalancing in shorter time intervals may ultimately diminish the value of ESG integration in dynamic asset allocation.
Greater coverage beyond equities and corporate fixed income has now made ESG integration at the strategic asset allocation level more relevant.
Why has ESG’s relevance tended to be muted or at
best underrepresented within multi- and mixed-asset allocation?
Historically ESG has been best understood from an equities perspective. As ESG research improves and a better quantitative understanding of ESG risk implications to the extension into other asset classes beyond equities
and fixed income, its relevance within a multi-asset allocation context should increase.
Portfolio risk can be divided into two portions, what are they and how do they correspond to ESG integration?
What is the most material ESG factor for institutional investors to address within asset allocation strategies?
1) isolated risk of an individual asset or strategy
2) correlation risk that emerges from the combination of assets and/or strategies
Climate change => climate risk is both systemic and company specific
Fun Fact: As well as being one of the key recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) framework, climate scenario analysis is as important in the wider asset allocation process as it is in understanding the micro, macro and ESG sensitivities within a single investment portfolio.
What is Inevitable Policy Response (IPR)?
IPR assumes that, in the current environment where the policy response to climate change is inadequate – ‘business as usual’ – governments may potentially respond to increasing climate-borne damage in a sudden reflex reaction.
The nature and magnitude of IPR may carry considerable implications for an investment portfolio, particularly in the speed and scope of transition risk. Hence, the development of more sophisticated approaches designed
to understand the sensitivity of an investment portfolio to climate policy-related shocks and simulations are warranted as risk measures.
What factors need to be considered by investors when integrating ESG into multi-manager strategies or manager selection?
▶ the existence of an ESG policy
▶ affiliation with investor initiatives, such as the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI)
▶ accountability in the form of dedicated personnel and committee oversight
▶ the manner and degree in which ESG is integrated in the investment process
▶ ownership and stewardship activities
▶ client reporting capabilities
What should be the aspirations for ESG at the portfolio level?
A combination of top-down analytics and underlying ESG analysis to produce a more complete picture of ESG exposure and risk at the portfolio construction and management levels. This includes:
▶ at the highest level, asset allocation decisions
▶ portfolio exposure to non-financial factors
▶ risk management measures
▶ performance attribution
Fun Fact: Data compiled by Mercer Consulting suggests that progress in ESG integration is marked by a high degree of variation depending on asset class and investment strategy type.
What is the challenge that portfolio managers face with respect to ESG integration using research and datasets?
They are largely optimised for security analysis into tools that can better inform portfolio and asset allocation analysis, particularly in understanding where and how ESG contributes to risk-adjusted returns.
To this end, the ESG framework should illustrate a continuity from micro- to macro-forms of analysis, including:
▶ Organising principles and methodologies for ESG analysis;
▶ The identification and analysis of financial and non-financial (ESG) materiality at the individual security level;
▶ Build a composite picture of risks and exposure at a single portfolio level;
▶ Build a mixed asset strategy which may include many different, underlying strategies
Compare ESG integration across a Discretionary investment strategy vs a
Quantitative investment strategy?
ESG integration in discretionary approaches is process-oriented, while quantitative approaches, are generally rules-based and factor-oriented.
What is weighted-average carbon intensity and how is it calculated at the security level? What about the portfolio level?
WACI measures a portfolio’s exposure to carbon-intensive companies on a position-weighted carbon exposure basis. Calculated as the Scope 1 + 2 Carbon Emissions ÷ US$ million revenues for each position within a portfolio.
For portfolio level , Sum of (multiply the above by current value of investment /current value of portfolio.
What is Sustainable Industry Classification System (SICS)?
Modelled after the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS), the SICS system organises companies according to their sustainability attributes, such as resource intensity, sustainability risks, and innovation opportunities.
SASB developed SICS as an improved industry classification standard that speaks directly to ESG materiality.
What is the rationale for asset managers to develop more sophisticated ESG analytics platforms in-house?
The rationale stems from:
- the interest in safeguarding portfolio holdings – particularly
with regard to clients’ segregated investment mandates - also in demonstrating a differentiated approach to understanding and reporting portfolio data.
- in response to the subjectivity and divergence among ESG ratings
providers - developing an approach that incorporates both third party and proprietary ESG data lowers an overreliance to a single provider and creates greater context for discussion when reviewing the risk profile of a
portfolio. - Portfolio tools provide investors with the ability to stress test a portfolio against different ESG criteria (such as a sudden, hypothetical increase in the price of carbon emissions) to understand the sensitivity of the portfolio.
What are the 4 main categories of exclusions based investing?
- universal- represent exclusions supported by global norms and conventions like those from the United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization (WHO).
- conduct-related- generally company or country-specific, and often not a statement against the nature of the business itself. Labour infractions in the form of violations against the International Labour Organization (ILO) principles for example.
- faith-based- are specific to religious institutional or individual investors.
- idiosyncratic exclusions- Uncommon exclusions that are not supported by global consensus. For example, New Zealand’s pension funds are singularly bound by statutory law to exclude companies involved in the processing
of whale meat products.
Fun Fact: Exclusionary preferences are most commonly adopted and applied by asset owners rather than asset managers. While there are certainly asset managers who have formally instituted some form of values-based
exclusionary screens, they currently represent a small minority.
What are transition bonds?
Transition bonds provide financing to ‘brown’ industries with high GHG emissions (such as mining, utilities and heavy industry) to allow these sectors to raise capital designated to the transition towards greener industries.
Because of this fossil fuel exposure, these sectors are generally excluded from raising capital in sustainable finance markets.
What are green bonds? Name the universal green bond framework?
Sometimes referred to as climate bonds, are any type of bond instrument that funds projects that provide a clear benefit to the environment, such as renewable energy projects.
There is none - some common ones include EU Green Bond Standard, Green Bond Principles