Out of 256 investors surveyed, only 7% – and 13% of large investors with more than $25bn (€20.7bn) in assets under management – reported that their hedge fund and liquid alternatives managers offered “high integration” of ESG principles in their investment processes.
The hedge fund industry is lagging its peers when it comes to
integrating ESG investment factors, according to a survey conducted by
specialist consultancy bfinance.
bfinance found that these figures are low relative to other asset
classes, and even lower considering that 45% envisage that ESG adoption
will be associated with some degree of relative outperformance among
hedge funds over the next three years.
That expectation of relative outperformance rises significantly over
the longer term, bfinance said. Over the next 20 years, 64% of asset
owners expect that ESG integration will be positively associated with
hedge fund outperformance, compared to 88% in equities, 85% in private
equity and real assets (real estate, infrastructure) and 80% in bonds.
What that ESG integration looks like, however, will vary
significantly across different hedge fund strategies, some of which may
remain largely untouched by sustainable investment considerations,
bfinance said.
But the consultancy found that many hedge funds are still reluctant
to make ESG integral to their investment processes. “The additional
monitoring and reporting requirements are not yet typical of most hedge
funds, nor do many have the capability for active engagement with
portfolio companies to drive change,” it added.
Hedge funds may also reject the applicability of ESG considerations
to the investment universe or strategy, such as short-term trading. Some
argue that ‘ESG trades’ are overly crowded or are unwilling to accept a
reduced investment universe.
bfinance said the answer lies in the nature of the strategy. The
survey has shown a high-level split between so-called micro assets –
individual equity or credit names – being more ESG-relevant than macro
assets – index futures, forwards, ETFs and options.
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This division typically carries through to specific strategy labels
as well: equity and credit long-short strategies, for example, are
highly adaptable to ESG screening, whereas CTA and discretionary global
macro strategies present more of a challenge.
However, even some of the largest practitioners of systematic trading
and macro strategies have begun to adapt their approaches to reflect
increased awareness of ESG, bfinance said.
London-based Aspect Capital, which began integrating ESG factors in
November 2020, uses company-specific ESG data as a source of “useful
information on the future outperformance” and implements an overlay that
creates a portfolio-level tilt towards “good” ESG assets.
“It’s no longer enough to say ‘ESG isn’t relevant to our strategy,’”
said John Springett, Aspect Capital’s director of investor relations and
marketing.
The rise of ‘green’ securities
The report also found that hedge fund managers are starting to use
new products, services, securities and data to advance ESG integration.
In fixed income, the green bonds market is expanding rapidly as
governments seek to mitigate the economic shock of the COVID-19 pandemic
and embed sustainable development goals.
Last September, Germany issued its first-ever green bonds,
with a 10-year maturity, in a heavily oversubscribed floatation that
raised €6.5bn. Germany now plans to create a green sovereign bond curve
ranging from 2 to 30 years.
France and Italy have also ramped up their issuance of green bonds, and in March, the UK announced plans to issue two tranches of “green gilts” worth a total of £15bn this year.
By far the largest issuance of green bonds will come from the EU
itself, however, with the inauguration of the €750bn Next Generation EU
(NGEU) programme, which expects to launch its inaugural bond in June
2021, after which it will remain a regular issuer until 2026.
With a planned total issuance of €240bn in green bonds over the next
five years, NGEU will soon become Europe’s largest non-sovereign issuer
in the public sector.
Chris Stevens, director – diversifying strategies at bfinance, said:
“Hedge fund firms may be coming late to the revolution, but their
tardiness does confer a singular advantage. Their managers can look to
see where mistakes have already been made by some mainstream asset
management houses and avoid those missteps.”
He added: “When hedge fund firms, as an industry, decide to embrace
ESG integration and move to meet investor demand, we expect the
transition to happen swiftly.”
IPE
© IPE International Publishers Ltd.
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