ESG scores amalgamate a broad range of fundamentally different factors, which creates ambiguity. Weak scores in one pillar can offset strong scores in another pillar.
Environmental, social and governance (ESG) scores are becoming an
increasingly important tool for asset managers to design and implement
ESG investment strategies. However, there are drawbacks in using
headline ESG scores that limit their usefulness.
Contribution
We demonstrate an investment strategy based on deconstructing ESG
scores. The strategy focuses on specific underlying ESG categories such
as emissions reduction and human rights. To implement our investment
strategy, we exclude firms with the lowest scores in certain ESG
categories of interest and implement a best-in-class investment
strategy.
This approach helps investors overcome the "aggregated confusion"
inherent in ESG scores. Moreover, it enables investors to better track
the sustainability performance trajectory of their portfolio against
their stated sustainable investment objectives.
Findings
We find that simple exclusions enable substantial improvements to the
headline ESG score of the portfolio. Here, the portfolio's financial
performance only suffers a marginal impact relative to a broad stock
market benchmark. However, the exclusion results in regional and
sectoral biases compared to the benchmark.
To counter this, we adopt a best-in-class strategy that excludes
firms with the lowest category scores and reinvests the proceeds in
firms with the highest scores. This approach helps reduce the tracking
error of the portfolio, and slightly improve its risk adjusted
performance while still yielding a large gain in the headline ESG score.
Abstract
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) scores are becoming an
increasingly important tool for asset managers to design and implement
ESG investment strategies. They amalgamate a broad range of
fundamentally different factors, creating ambiguity for investors as to
the signals of higher or lower ESG scores. We explore the feasibility
and performance of more targeted investment strategies based on specific
categories by deconstructing ESG scores into their granular components.
First, we investigate the characteristics of the various categories
underlying ESG scores. Not all types of ESG categories lend themselves
to more targeted strategies, which is related to both limits to ESG data
disclosure and the fundamental challenge of translating qualitative
characteristics into quantitative measures. Second, we consider an
investment scheme based on the exclusion of firms with the lowest scores
in each category of interest. In most cases, this targeted strategy
still allows investors to substantially improve the portfolio headline
ESG score, with only a marginal impact on financial performance relative
to a broad stock market benchmark. The exclusion results in regional
and sectoral biases relative to the benchmark, which may be undesirable
for some investors. We then implement a "best-in-class" strategy, based
on excluding firms with the lowest category scores and reinvesting the
proceeds in firms with the highest scores maintaining the same regional
and sectoral composition. This approach reduces the tracking error of
the portfolio and slightly improves its risk-adjusted performance while
still yielding a large gain in the headline ESG score.
Full paper
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© BIS - Bank for International Settlements
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