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Brief

Sustainability and ESG in 2023

Sustainability and ESG in 2023

Looking ahead through the eyes of investors.

  • min read

Brief

Sustainability and ESG in 2023
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Company executives and boards of directors have become more attuned to the external reporting aspects of sustainability. Less noticed is the messier and increasingly relevant fact that environmental, social, and governance (ESG) topics exist both inside and outside of investors’ portfolio decisions. It can thus be challenging for companies and their boards to discern if they are being asked by investors to achieve operational sustainability outcomes that will drive portfolio decisions—whether in publicly offered funds or among private equity or credit vehicles. This distinction matters because of an evolving issue that is currently under the radar but will soon demand the attention of every executive team and board director: the increasingly sophisticated approaches by which investors assess and employ sustainability-related information in portfolio decisions and the attention being paid to the decisions of company boards about these same topics.

Capital markets in the middle

The current debate over ESG and sustainable investing is noisy and sometimes rancorous, and the temptation is strong to just tune it out until it’s better resolved. But, in the end, leaders must resist this urge and accept that it’s a relevant discussion: Sustainability considerations in investing appear here to stay, and not just in narrowly focused ESG funds.

Among the most discussed aspects of these changes is the seemingly rapid embrace across investing asset classes of sustainability and ESG. Since ESG topics now regularly feature as a baseline even in many investor portfolios that are not ESG dedicated, we can skip revisiting the oft-cited statistics about the growth of dedicated ESG funds and forgo debate around which funds should be counted as ESG. Instead, let’s examine the centrality of capital markets to sustainability and the learning available as a result of this development. 

Even just five years ago, capital markets and the tools employed in them were not considered central to sustainability. Long-standing engagement between large shareholders of publicly held companies and boards of directors established a mechanism that linked asset managers of commingled funds, and by extension asset owner preferences, to company oversight and managerial decisions.

The expansion of the corporate governance and engagement agenda to more proactively include environment and social topics coincided with regional policy shifts that create both incentives and penalties for certain sustainability topics. The result is the somewhat murky environment we now experience.

Publicly held companies may be uncertain if the questions received from stakeholders, and especially from investors, are salient for investment and portfolio decision making, or if they’re instead part of corporate governance expectations—which may or may not be linked with specific portfolio decisions. It is also unclear as to when the aforementioned factors might be concurrently true.

At the same time, privately held companies and infrastructure and real estate projects are now part of the same basic dialogue. This means that market mechanisms are rapidly being revisited, expanded, and changed, and so, in many cases, are the assumptions embedded in them. In short, 2023 is poised to be a defining year, and executives and board members must be prepared. 

Incorporating sustainability in asset allocation can influence investors’ portfolio decisions

Even as debates over the utility of ESG rage, investors are absorbing the abundance of new information that is available and using it to assess how they should embed sustainability-related considerations into portfolio decisions. We see this playing out in two ways. Asset owners ask general partners (GPs) and portfolio managers (aka public and private market investors) what information they possess regarding how to differentiate better performing or more resilient businesses from laggards both in general and in terms of sustainability topics (see Figure 1). Implicit in such questioning is the idea that more sustainability-related information may influence decision making.

Figure 1

Carbon, ESG are often embedded into strategic, whole portfolio decisions

Carbon, ESG are often embedded into strategic, whole portfolio decisions

The second way this plays out is when fund managers, in turn, direct these questions to company executives and board members—in some instances because they genuinely seek a clearer understanding and in others because they wish to satisfy those who allocate assets to them for management.

Company executives and boards who are queried in this way often suspect they’re being asked box-ticking ESG questions such as, “Do you have a policy or ‘commitment’ for x, y, z?” Leaders can be left with the (perhaps misleading) sense that ESG is entirely distinct from their operational and strategic decisions, or that they are being asked questions that are too far into the future compared with existing business planning cycles.

However, a recent survey of public market investors Bain conducted with our partner Rivel suggests that it would be wise to treat such questions as potentially relevant to investment decisions and not merely motivated by compliance concerns. Most of the investors surveyed said they do not currently have specific carbon or emissions targets and thresholds in their portfolio decisions. But 19% of utilities investors had emissions targets and 16% of oil & gas investors were considering carbon targets (see Figure 2).

Going forward, executive teams must watch to see if or when investors in other sectors and asset classes begin embedding carbon or ESG into portfolio decisions and proactively decide what this may mean for strategy, funding, and operations. And, in a recent study Bain and the Institutional Limited Partners Association conducted, 70% of limited partners (LPs) report that their investment policy statements already include some form of ESG consideration.

Figure 2

Investor portfolios may have explicit carbon or ESG plans

Investor portfolios may have explicit carbon or ESG plans

Some investors target ESG in portfolios

The breadth of information available for investors to use as they build portfolios, whether classified as “sustainable” or just “investment insight,” will continue to grow. Indeed, the use of less traditional data insights in portfolios was already growing rapidly before ESG became common in portfolios to augment due diligence and/or valuation decisions by private equity investors, with their in-house data teams, and public market investors, both fundamental and quantitative. The two developments together mean that investors of all kinds are increasingly looking at a broader and more diverse set of inputs to inform analyses and decision making. 

At the same time, executive teams—especially those in global businesses or with significant exposure to Europe—are acutely aware of regulatory shifts that impact both company and investor disclosures. The years 2023 to 2025 will bring enhanced corporate disclosure requirements for 49,000 publicly listed and privately held businesses domiciled in the European Union; investors will eagerly look to these mandated disclosures for several reasons. For portfolios subject to their own sustainable disclosure requirements as outlined in the EU taxonomy, there will be fund-level reporting to do based on these corporate inputs. The compliance imperative aside, investors will scour the trove of new information made available in search of anything that might help inform portfolios. Active investors continually seek, and are incented to find, new insights. Sustainability is one of many topics they assess to learn if there might be unique ways to better understand and differentiate company performance.

The possibility that investors may uncover something new and informative to alter how they position portfolios should motivate executives and boards as they approach sustainable topics with their investors—perhaps there can be something more than a compliance exercise taking place with ESG (see Figure 3).

Figure 3

Investors have the challenge and opportunity to find new, relevant, decision-useful information

Investors have the challenge and opportunity to find new, relevant, decision-useful information

Don’t look away

For executives and boards alike, 2023 is already a complex year for which to plan. Given macroeconomic and industry business cycles, not to mention current geopolitical and inflation concerns, it may seem as if environment, climate, and social considerations are fading into the background. But don’t be fooled: They aren’t, regardless of whether they’re called ESG or something else.

Look closely at these issues instead of looking away. Boards and executives teams who have already made public specific environment, climate, or social commitments, or are considering them, may wish to build analytics into decision making to link these topics to operations and strategy. Wherever you may fall on this spectrum, don’t take the risk of letting investors assess and act on your ESG outcomes before you do.

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