ESMA received a total of 154 responses and found 59 ESG rating providers currently active in the EU.
The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU’s securities markets regulator, today publishes a letter to the European Commission (EC) providing its findings from the Call for Evidence to gather information on the market structure for ESG rating providers in the European Union (EU).
Key findings
The analysis of the responses
further indicated several characteristics and trends as follows:
- ESG rating providers – the structure of the market shows that there
is a small number of very large non-EU providers, and a large number of
significantly smaller EU entities. While the legal entities of
respondents are spread out across almost half of the EU Member States, a
large number of these are clustered in a small number of Member States;
- Users of ESG ratings are typically contracting for these products on
an investor-pays basis from several providers simultaneously. Their
reasons for selecting several providers are to increase coverage, either
by asset class or geographically, or in order to receive different
nature of ESG assessments. The most common shortcomings identified by
the users were a lack of coverage of a specific industry or a type of
entity, insufficient granularity of data, and a lack of transparency
around methodologies used by ESG rating providers. However, the
provision of ESG ratings on an issuer-pays basis was also evidenced and
more prevalent than anticipated; and
- Entities covered by ESG ratings dedicate at least some level of
resourcing to their interactions with ESG rating providers, although the
amount largely depends on the size of the rated entity itself. Most
respondents highlighted some degree of shortcoming in their interactions
with the rating providers, most notably on the level of transparency as
to the basis for the rating, the timing of feedback or the correction
of errors.
The feedback received is indicative of an immature but growing market
which, following several years of consolidation, has seen the emergence
of a small number of large non-EU headquartered providers.
Next steps
ESMA will continue supporting the EC in their assessment of the need for introducing regulatory safeguards for ESG ratings.
ESMA
© ESMA
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