Responsible Investments Hit Major Milestone
New Report: Responsible Investments Hit Major Milestone, Representing Vast Majority of all New Zealand Investments
Responsible investment in New Zealand has hit a major milestone, with a new report finding the vast majority of professionally managed investments are now invested as responsible investments, with total assets under management having more than doubled in just two years.
Environmental, social, corporate governance and ethics considerations now sit alongside financial as critical components informing the investment decisions of the majority of New Zealand’s professional investors.
The 4th annual New Zealand Responsible Investment Benchmark Report 2018 (KPMG), the most comprehensive review of the sector, reveals the industry hitting new heights with $183.4 billion now managed as responsible investments, up from $131.3 billion in 2016[1] and $79 billion in 2015.
“The single most significant driver of growth in responsible investment is coming from the demand and desire from clients to align investments to their values - which we can track to the 2016 revelations of many KiwiSaver funds being invested in weapons and tobacco,” said Simon O’Connor, CEO of Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA). “In that short amount of time, we have seen nearly the entire investment industry move to put in place a responsible investment approach, from 2.5% of the industry two years ago.
“Excitingly this has now gone well beyond weapons and tobacco exclusions. We are now at a stage where climate change, human rights, corporate culture, diversity and a whole range of other important issues of our time are right at the forefront of consideration by New Zealand’s finance community, and where investors are engaging directly on these issues to positively influence corporate behaviour.”
O’Connor explained the uplift in assets was largely due to mainstream investment funds making a switch to incorporate responsible investment, such as incorporating negative screening, and systematically assessing environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors.
“In 2017 we have seen a move by investors to go beyond just screening out harmful industries, to a more proactive approach to responsible investing, driven in large part by a growing understanding that a responsible investment approach delivers better investment outcomes.”
Broad Responsible Investment
·
Broad responsible investment approaches, whereby an ESG
integration is the principle responsible investment
strategy, continue to make up the largest portion of total
responsible investment AUM, with $97.0 billion in assets
under management
· These organisations span community
trusts, investment managers and asset owners including crown
financial institutions
· The second and third most
cited drivers of growth after client demand were linked to
the understanding that ESG factors underpin stronger
investment performance
Core Responsible
Investment
· Core responsible investment
strategies, specifically the use of negative screens, have
emerged as a significant part of the total responsible
investment AUM, jumping up substantially for the second year
running by 100% to reach $86.4 billion AUM
· This
increase is due primarily to the ongoing implementation of
screening of weapons and tobacco companies in 2017 where
this has moved beyond just KiwiSaver funds, to other managed
funds
“The public focus on the underlying
investment holdings of the KiwiSaver market in 2016 started
this significant shift in investment markets, but the
industry has taken that momentum and run with it, now
putting in place sophisticated responsible investment
strategies across screening, ESG integration as well as
corporate engagement and voting practices.”
For the
first time the report looked at the performance of Core
responsible investment funds against relevant benchmarks and
found very strong performance:
· Core responsible
investment New Zealand share funds as well as multisector
balanced funds both outperformed the relevant benchmarks
across all time periods: one, three, five and 10 years
·
Core responsible investment international share funds
outperformed their relevant benchmarks over the three and 10
year time horizons
· Whilst analysed from a small sample
in New Zealand, in similar markets such as Australia with
larger samples, performance is similar
“While it’s hugely positive to see responsible investment now with the lion’s share, our aspiration is to see capital increasingly align with delivering a better society and environment for NZ that supports strong long term portfolio returns.” concluded O’Connor.
To learn more
about how to find investments that align with values visit:
ResponsibleReturns.co.nz
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