Responsible Investing and Alphabet Soup in the EU

ESG – why’s it important?
Providing accurate, comparable and readily understandable non-financial data as part of a company’s reporting process allows investors to get a broader perspective on a company’s performance. Long-term investors can therefore see which companies are performing well amongst their peers, but importantly they can also see which are performing in a sustainable manner.
Increasing transparency has to be a good thing for the investor, and also for the companies involved, as those that are acting sustainably and responsibly can be rewarded. Global standards are evolving, and it is still early days, but momentum is building, and not just in Europe. To give one example alone, the number of Chinese companies who produce sustainability reports has increased from just 19 to over 3000 in the last 10 years.
ESG – what’s next:
The European Commission’s (EC’s) Action Plan published on 8th March, aims to mobilise green investment and integrate sustainability into all aspects of the financial system. Elements of this plan include a unified EU classification system/ taxonomy for sustainable assets/ activities and a proposal to clarify asset manager and institutional investor duties regarding how they take sustainability into account in the investment process.
EU criteria and labels for green bonds and investment funds are proposed, as is lowering the capital requirements for certain climate friendly investments. The EC has already proposed the inclusion of ESG factors in the mandates of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs). It has also conducted a public consultation on institutional investors' and asset managers' duties regarding sustainability.
If we want to live in a safer, cleaner, greener world, whilst also earning a return on our investments then I hope that you’ll agree that the EU’s HLEG report should be welcomed, as should the pending work of the EC, the ESAs, and the PRI, as we focus on ESG.Trading signals powered by data
Real-time institutional flow data and trading signals for serious investors.
Explore DataDrivenAlpha →Turn this article into a video
Instantly repurpose any DDI article into a professionally produced short-form video.
Try DDI Media →
Tim Fright is the Founding Director of Plenitude. Tim and his colleagues use Hedge Fund-style analytics and Big Data to create an Environmental Social and Governance (ESG) investing framework that can offer responsible investment opportunities with superior risk-adjusted returns. Tim is a graduate of the University of Cambridge and King’s College, London and has more than ten years’ experience in technology and government. He is a communications adviser to, and investor in, several tech start-ups, a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, and was part of a 2008 Antarctic expedition which undertook environmental research analysing the effects of climate change on the Beardmore Glacier. @plenitude.io