The upsurge of interest in environmental, social and governance (ESG) investing could prove a major business opportunity for European asset and wealth managers, according to a report from PwC Luxembourg.
Entitled “The growth opportunity of the century”, the report
described ESG as representing a “paradigm shift”, the largest
fundamental change in the investment landscape since the introduction of
exchange traded funds.
The consultancy forecast that European ESG assets will reach between
€5.5trn and €7.6trn by 2025, making up between 41% and 57% of total
mutual fund assets in Europe, an increase of 15.1% at end-2019.
PwC Luxembourg ascribed this partly to Europe’s strong regulatory
environment (encapsulated in the European Commission’s sustainable
finance action plan) and said this could help the continent further
increase its position in the global ESG space.
Combined with a strong asset performance, this would see Europe’s
share of global ESG assets amount to between 71% and 74% by 2025.
Olivier Carré, financial services market leader at PwC Luxembourg
said: “As global capital becomes increasingly channelled towards
sustainable projects, Europe is well positioned to act as the global ESG
hub, creating new jobs and opportunities.”
The study covered 200 asset managers, 300 institutional investors
with European operations, and over 800 European retail investors,
representing an estimated $14.3trn in assets under management (AUM).
The consultancy noted that investors allocated a record-breaking
volume of assets to ESG funds during the pandemic; ESG fund flows
accounted for almost a third of all European fund flows in Q2 2020,
according to Morningstar.
‘Fundamental disconnect’
According to PwC Luxembourg, the vast majority of European
institutional investors expect a convergence between ESG and non-ESG
products by 2022, with 77% of them planning to stop purchasing non-ESG
products in the same year.
But while asset managers agreed there would be a convergence, only 14% planned to stop launching non-ESG products by that date.
“You cannot have your cake and eat it. For asset managers, you cannot be both ESG and non-ESG”
PwC Luxembourg
“Therein lies the fundamental disconnect,” said the report. “You
cannot have your cake and eat it. For asset managers, you cannot be both
ESG and non-ESG.”
And it warned: “While ESG is commonly considered a rapid and
significant development, many managers see it as just another product,
similar to smart-beta or factor investing. Our data and market views
will prove these sentiments wrong.”
The report identified seven key actions that managers should consider
from both strategic and operational perspectives in order to take
advantage of the ESG opportunity.
These include repositioning their organisation, for which PwC set out
three options: retaining the status quo; maintaining both ESG and
non-ESG investment approaches; and becoming a “sustainable asset
manager” by integrating ESG at all levels of their organisational
structure.
The report said the latter route would allow asset managers to emerge
as potential leaders within the new ESG competitive landscape.
Asset managers would also need to restructure their risk management
frameworks to mitigate ESG-related risks, said the report. This would
include adopting and implementing expert risk identification and
management practices, both internally and within underlying corporates.
Further suggested actions for managers included being credible and
consistent in their ESG approach; integrating ESG at product level; and
restructuring their reporting to investors, with those going beyond
minimum requirements likely to be the “biggest winners”, the report
said.
The full report can be found here.
IPE
© IPE International Publishers Ltd.
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