ESG continues to be top of mind for asset owners, but investment consultants say recent high-profile political skirmishes have many asset owners seeking more data to evaluate risks vs. potential rewards.
A growing number of states are putting environmental, social and governance investment practices under the microscope, with some states putting limits on how state pension plans can invest in ESG funds.
For example, the $8.2 billion Missouri State Employees' Retirement System in October pulled $500 million from funds managed by BlackRock Inc. over its approach to ESG investing. The concern, the retirement system said, was over BlackRock's public statements and record of prioritizing ESG initiatives over shareholder return.
But other state pension funds continue to move toward greater ESG information gathering and integration.
According to meeting minutes from Nov. 14, the $124.7 billion Minnesota State Board of Investment in fiscal year 2022 had its consultants and data providers conduct "portfolio-wide surveys to gather ESG information from managers with a particular focus on climate change risk management and diversity." The goal of these surveys, the board said, was to "establish a baseline so that the SBI can better monitor changes to its long-term risk exposures."
If it seems like the response to ESG is all over the board, it's because it is. Viewpoints about the utility of ESG strategies in investment portfolios fall across a wide continuum for both regulators and allocators, investment consultants said. BlackRock has emerged as something of an example of this continuum. Even as conservative states divest, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander, fiduciary for the $242.4 billion New York City Retirement Systems, recently wrote to BlackRock CEO Larry Fink pushing him to do more on ESG issues and said pension dollars could be at stake.
As a result, consultants that are tasked with tracking ESG investment strategies, frameworks and investment rules are facing heightened demands from investors for ESG education and information. They are also conducting their own surveys to track allocator sentiment and interest in ESG.
"ESG has become much more political," said Greg DeForrest, San Francisco-based senior vice president and manager of Callan's West Coast consulting team. "The politics are masking investment metrics and merits behind considering ESG factors when you look at investing in any category of investments or securities specifically."
Over the summer, Callan, which advised on $4.18 trillion in total U.S. institutional, tax-exempt assets as of June 30, according to Pensions & Investments data, conducted an ESG survey of 109 institutional investors including public and corporate retirement plans as well as foundations and endowments.
The survey pool was a mix of Callan clients and non-clients and their responses highlight the broad variance in how investors are thinking about ESG.
In a November webinar on the survey results, Thomas H. Shingler, a senior vice president and Callan's ESG practice leader, pointed to a decline in the number of institutional investors considering ESG.
Some 35% of respondents said they were considering ESG factors in their investment decisions, down from 49% in 2021. That decline likely reflects the additional scrutiny ESG strategies are under from regulators as well as pushback against the use of such strategies in pension fund portfolios, industry sources said.
The reasons given by respondents underline a growing divide among investors. For pension funds and other investors that do use ESG in investment decisions already, half of the respondents said they thought it aligned with fiduciary responsibility. For those that do not incorporate ESG, 47% said they thought that the benefits of ESG were unproven and unclear.