ESG Integration Flashcards

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1
Q

An investment firm may have several different aims and objectives for integrating ESG into an investment process, name them?

A

A. meeting requirements under fiduciary duty or regulations;
B. meeting client and beneficiary demands;
C. lowering investment risk;
D. increasing investment returns;
E. giving investment professionals more tools and techniques to use in analysis;
F. improving the quality of engagement and stewardship activities; and
G. lowering reputational risk at a firm level and investment level.

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2
Q

United Nations Environment Programme Finance Initiative (UNEP FI), along with legal firm Freshfields and the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UN PRI), analysis (across jurisdictions) argue that the fiduciary duties of investors require them to:

A
  1. Incorporate ESG issues into investment analysis and decision-making
    processes, consistent with their investment time horizons.
  2. Encourage high standards of ESG performance in the companies or other entities in which they invest.
  3. Understand and incorporate beneficiaries’ and savers’ sustainability-related preferences, regardless of whether
    these preferences are financially material.
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3
Q

Is ESG analysis quantitative or qualitative?

A

Either or…or even both at times.

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4
Q

How is Qualitative and Quantitative ESG Analysis typically utilized?

A

Qualitative likely used in investment processes that is based on company-specific research, fundamental analysis, and stock-picking:

A. Investment teams analyse ESG data to form their opinion on the ability of the firm to manage certain ESG issues.
B. They combine this opinion with their financial analysis by linking specific aspects of the company’s ESG risk management strategy to different value drivers (such as costs, revenues, profits and CapEx requirements).
C. Analysts and portfolio managers then seek to integrate their opinion in a quantified way in their financial models by adjusting assumptions used in the model, such as growth, margins or costs of capital.

Quantitative usually in quant models where they can factor in an ESG score alongside other factors such as size, momentum, growth, volatility, etc.

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5
Q

Different types of systematic investing aka quant trading…

A
  • High frequency
  • Algorithmic
  • Trend based
  • Risk Parity
  • Beta Strategies

The approach tends to use heavy mathematical modelling, computing power and data analysis potentially including machine and natural language learning processes. Some firms solely use these approaches and some
use them to supplement human decision-making.

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6
Q

Different types of internal ESG research fall into what categories/methods?

A
» materiality frameworks;
» ESG-integrated research
» dashboards
» strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) analysis with ESG factors
» scenario analysis
» relative rankings
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7
Q

Describe the difference between a company ESG analysis and a security/bond ESG assessment of that same company?

A

A company analysis typically examines fundamental properties of a business, such as its competitive advantages (or lack of), These properties could appear in the company’s products or services, suppliers, employees,
management, organisational structure, incentives, corporate cultures or its resources (natural, intellectual or innovation). Many of these properties could be considered as under an ESG category.

While stocks and bonds can have properties that companies do not, such as stock beta or volatility, which are potentially expressed in different ways.

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8
Q

What are the different methodologies used for the gathering of ESG information at the Research stage of ESG assessment?

A

Gathering company and financial information from different sources including but not limited to 3rd party sources, company reports, questionnaires, mgmt interviews, emissions data.

Materiality assessment to identify ESG issues that are likely to have an impact on company financial performance. Materiality should be measured in terms of both likelihood and magnitude of impact and is important to note that there is evidence to support that non-material factors do not impact financial/company performance.

Evaluation of Tangible vs Intangible factors

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9
Q

What is one framework for evaluating different forms of ‘capital’ or tangible or intangible factors?

A

International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) - certain companies report to, acknowledges the following forms of both tangible and intangible capital:

Financial
Manufactured
Human
Intellectual
Social/relationship
Natural

Note that many of the non-financial capitals would be considered under ESG, with a large number also intangible.

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10
Q

From an ESG perspective, how can investors generate ideas?

A
By looking at data and incorporating a screen or multiple ESG factors to narrow down universe of acceptable investments. Essentially best in class investing or positive screening.
Another starting point is thematic investing.

From here, incorporating any material red flags that my exist. This could be quantitative ( e.g. carbon intensity) or qualitative (e.g. experience of mgmt team)

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11
Q

One way to take a qualitative judgment of a factor and put a form of quantitative score on it? How do you develop a scorecard?

A

Scorecards…ESG ratings agencies may provide scores and a form of scoring is typically used in commercially available ESG ratings services. These can be used raw or adjusted by practitioners to reflect their own views.
These scores can then be compiled for use in assessment or idea generation. The scorecard technique could be used on private companies as well public companies. (Challenges to creating
private company scorecards is that there is less likely to be a rating agency score for a private company,)

summary, to develop a scorecard:
1. Identify sector or company specific ESG items.
2. Breakdown issues into a number of indicators (e.g. policy, measures, disclosure).
3. Determine a scoring system based on what good/best practice looks like for each indicator/issue.
4. Assess a company and give it a score.
5. Calculate aggregated scores at issue level, dimension level (environmental, social or governance level) or total
score level (depending on the relative weight of each issue).
6. Benchmark the company’s performance against industry averages or peer group (optional).

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12
Q

Name the two types of material ESG risk…?

A

1) Unmanageable risk: Risk that can not be addressed by mgmt
2) Management Gap: Represents risk managed by a company through suitable initiatives but has not been implemented yet.

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13
Q

How does one determine which ESG issues are material to a company or sector?

A

No consistent method because it is not an exact science, and there might be important differences between what each investor considers most material, even when analysing the same company.

This is because it is typically a forecast of judgment on how much one ESG or risk factor will impact a financial metric such as future cash flow.

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14
Q

After the research stage and any relevant risk and materiality mapping, practitioners assess the impact of material financial and ESG factors on the corporate and investment performance of a company.

This can lead to what adjustments in valuation?

A

▶ forecasted financials;
▶ valuation-model variables, such as cost of capital or terminal growth rates in discounted cash flow analysis;
▶ valuation multiples;
▶ forecasted financial ratios;
▶ internal credit assessments; and
▶ assumptions in qualitative or quantitative models.

Example)
For example, a company’s environmental management processes and policies are judged strong or weak. After this judgment, the cost of capital used to discount cash flows in a DCF analysis is adjusted down or up by 1% to account for this. This can also be on a country- or sector-basis, where a country or sector ESG risk factor may contribute to a change in a cost of capital or terminal value growth assumption. For example, the coal sector
may be judged to have a negative environmental impact.

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15
Q

Besides valuation adjustments, name other practices that may be utilized?

A
  • adjustments can be made directly to the balance sheet or capital expense lines.
  • explicit sales or margin assumptions may be adjusted.
  • adjustments to PE ratios
  • adjustments to traditional financial analysis:
    Example)
    The judgment of an intangible ESG factor, such as employee relations, complements an analysis of customer satisfaction and the assumptions that lead into a model of sales growth (a traditional financial factor).
    → high customer satisfaction (judged by high net promoter score);
    → higher sales growth than competition;
    \
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16
Q

If a company is not disclosing relevant ESG data does this indicate a potentially risky investment?

A

Not necessarily, Disclosure varies by geography and is influenced by company size (due to company resources) and industry practice. Certain ESG data may be easier to collect and disclose, but may not be considered material by investors. Although in terms of ESG reporting, data might be important to other stakeholders (even if it is not material to investors), and so, a company may choose to disclose this non-financially material information.

That said, a lack of disclosure could be an indicator of poor management and many investors prefer to see relevant disclosure so judgments can be made. One common technique is to ask company management, often
investor relations, to disclose, where possible, missing ESG data or explain why it might be missing. Other issues are that an ESG disclosure, when revealed, might be unaudited, incomplete or incomparable to other companies. While poor disclosure is a challenge to market efficiency, this relative inefficiency could arguably be a source of superior risk-adjusted return for the skilled investor.

17
Q

Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB), founded in 2009 provides:

A

a composite of peer group information;
▶ overall portfolio key performance indicator (KPI) performance;
▶ aggregate environmental data in terms of usage and efficiency gains;
▶ a GRESB score that weights management, policy and disclosure, risks and opportunities and monitoring and
Environmental Management Systems (EMS);
▶ environmental impact reduction targets; and
▶ data validation and assurance

18
Q

Fixed income investors in corporate bonds may use similar principles in materiality and ESG frameworks to equity investors, but differ how..?

A

Bond investors may find ESG factors that impact balance sheet strength (and hence, the risks of debt defaults) more material than equity investors who might be concerned more about future growth opportunities.

Also The opportunity side of ESG may be less relevant for bond investors as it is typically the impact of ESG factors on a company’s ability to pay its debt obligations that are foremost in a bond investor’s analysis

19
Q

There are many hurdles and challenges for ESG integration. These include:

A

▶ Disclosure and data-related challenges, such as:
» data consistency;
» data scarcity;
» data incompleteness; and
» lack of audited data.
▶ comparability difficulties, such as:
» lack of comparability between ESG ratings agencies;
» comparing across different accounting and other standards;
» comparisons across geographies and cultures; and
» inconsistent use of jargon terminology.
▶ materiality and judgment challenges, such as:
» judgments that are difficult and uncertain; and
» judgments that are inconsistent.
▶ ESG integration challenges across asset classes:
» different types of assets and different strategies integrate ESG using different techniques

20
Q

What are 4 of the m most common criticisms of current ESG integrated investing??

A
  1. Too inclusive of poor companies. ESG mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) often hold investments in companies that may be acknowledged as ‘bad actors’ in one or more of the ESG spaces
  2. Dubious assessment criteria. The criteria used for selecting ESG factors are too subjective and can reflect narrow or conflicting ideological or political viewpoints. Non-material or socio-political factors may be over-
    emphasised. Materiality assessments might be considered flawed.
  3. Quality of data. The information used for selecting ESG factors often comes (unaudited or assured) from the companies themselves. This complicates the ability to verify, compare and standardise this information.
  4. Potential lack of emphasis of long-term improvements. Some financial advisers screen investments first for performance and only after that for ESG factors. This initial emphasis on performance can exclude companies
    with high ESG practices that focus on longer-term performance.
21
Q

The considerations that investors could take into account when choosing ESG providers include what aspects and which techniques:

A

Key aspects:
▶ the number of companies covered;
▶ the length of history of datasets;
▶ the languages used;
▶ the stability of methodology;
▶ the regularity of updates;
▶ asset class coverage;
▶ the quality of methodology;
▶ the range of datasets; and
▶ the range of tools and services offered
Techniques:
▶ raw or partially transformed data (e.g. absolute carbon emissions, or carbon intensity which is emissions or sales);
▶ ratings based on backward looking reported data;
▶ ratings or information based on internet, third-party and web-reported data, aiming to be current; or
▶ aggregators of data or ratings.

22
Q

What some of the positives and negatives to the low correlation among ESG providers? What are the explantions why?

A

Negatives:

  • hard to properly evaluate companies
  • ESG performance is less likely to be reflected in the prices of assets because there is no uniform nonfinancial preference
  • hampers the ambition of companies to improve their performance
  • poses a challenge to empirical research including comparisons
  • hard to establish credibility in the market

Positives:
- High correlations could present a risk of group lead thinking, good to have a distinction between raw data and ratings

Explanations:

  • Completeness of the coverage varies from providers
  • Relevance of certain ESG data
23
Q

What are the primary and secondary data sources used to aggregate/analyze ESG ?

A

Primary data can be sourced from companies directly:
▶ surveys;
▶ direct company communication
▶ company reports, presentations and public documents
Alternatively, the source may be indirect, via:
▶ news articles
▶ third-party reports and analysis
▶ investment and consulting research

Secondary data sources typically involve transforming the primary ESG data in some way and creating new scores, assessments or ratings based on these transformations. These are available from commercial
organisations both financial and non-financial, regulators, NGOs and non-profit or charitable bodies

24
Q

What are some real-time dynamic analysis techniques being incorporated into ESG data analysis?

A
▶ using geospatial data to track:
» de-forestation;
» mining
» construction
» shipping
» traffic
▶ using natural language processes to track social sentiment on the internet
25
Q

Broadly speaking, ESG factors can affect the price performance of a bond and its credit risk at two levels, company and industry/geographic, Name these factors?

A

▶ Issuer and company level: These are risks that affect a specific bond issue and not the whole market. They are
related to factors such as:
- the governance of an issuer
- regulatory compliance
- the strength of its balance sheet and company-specific items, such as brand reputation

▶ Industry and geographic level: These risks stem from wider-ranging issues affecting the entire industry or

region. They can be related to:
- regulatory and legal factors
- technological changes associated with the business activity the company is involved in, and the markets it sources or sells to.

NOTE: For some investors, there is an assumption that some ESG factors may impact a bond’s price performance, but they may not actually influence an issuer’s creditworthiness. This is because an ESG factor might not be
considered to impact bankruptcy risk, even if it might have a potential impact on price performance. This would highlight a difference between a rating analysis and an asset valuation.

26
Q

Typically, credit risk agencies (CRAs) assess the predictability and certainty of an issuer’s ability to generate future cash flow to meet its debt obligations. To this end, they look at whether companies can sell their assets to cover obligations (and
certain assets might be impaired through ESG concerns, e.g. coal assets).
The levels of litigation risk are often analysed as well, including:

A

▶ environmental litigation;
▶ employment litigation; or
▶ human rights violations (e.g. modern slavery laws).
To that degree, ESG risk, which comes to litigation, has always been incorporated into CRA analysis.
On the quantitative side, CRA analysis focuses on:
▶ the issuer’s overall bankruptcy risk;
▶ the strength of its balance sheet; and
▶ how it compares to other issuers.

Using standard credit ratio analysis, CRAs may test:
▶ how ESG factors affect an issuer’s ability to convert assets into cash (profitability and cash flow analysis);
▶ the impact that changing yields – due to an ESG event – may have on the cost of capital, depending on the
share of debt used in the issuer’s capital structure (interest coverage ratio and capital structure analysis);
▶ the extent to which ESG-related costs dent the ability of an issuer to generate profits and add to refinancing
risks; and
▶ how well an issuer’s management uses the assets under its control to generate sales and profit (efficiency
ratios).

27
Q

What is considered in a sovereign credit risk assessment?

A

▶ resources (including population trends, human capital, education and health);
▶ emerging technologies; and
▶ government regulations and policies.

Beyond this though, a CRA is typically most interested in a government’s ability to generate enough revenues to repay its financial debt obligations.

28
Q

ESG ratings in the credit area may suffer bias as we observe in other asset classes. There are three key types of bias typically encountered….

A
  1. Company size bias, where larger companies may obtain higher ratings because of the ability to dedicate more resources to non-financial disclosures.
  2. Geographical bias, where there is a geographical bias toward companies in regions with high reporting
    requirements or some other cultural factor (e.g. higher unionisation in Europe).
  3. Industry and sector bias, where ratings providers oversimplify industry weighting and company alignment.

Bias can potentially also be seen in how certain industries (e.g. technology) are assessed in comparison to other industries, or through the lens of other factor labels, such as ’growth’ or ’value’.

29
Q

Name the various elements of ESG analysis?

A

1) Red Flag Indicators: Securities with ESG risks are further investigated or excluded.
2) Company Questionaires or Mgmt interviews: If there is insufficient available information/data.
3) Bring in outside experts: Ask industry thought leaders
4) Create a watch list: For increased monitoring
5) Internal ESG research: including materiality frameworks, research, relative rankings, etc.
6) External ESG research: 3rd party
7) ESG discussions at CIO meetings: ensure an ESG section as a standing item at committee meetings. This may ensure scrutiny from senior level investors and signal importance to the investment firm.

30
Q

Elements of ESG Integration:

A

▶ adjusting forecast financials, for example revenue, operating cost, asset book value or capital expenditure;
▶ adjusting valuation models or multiples, for instance discount rates, terminal values or ratios;
▶ adjusting credit risk and duration;
▶ managing risk, including exposure limits, scenario analysis, value-at-risk models;
▶ ESG factor tilts;
▶ ESG momentum tilts;
▶ strategic asset allocation, including thematic and ESG objective tilts;
▶ tactical asset allocation; and
▶ ESG controversies and positive ESG events.