Quarter of Companies Align with 1.5°C Pathway

CDP’s latest assessment of climate transition plan disclosures shows a “significant and much needed stride” towards corporate accountability.

Corporates are increasingly on the right track towards enhanced transparency and accountability on climate transition plans, a new industry survey has shown. In its latest analysis, environmental disclosure platform CDP found that one in four (5,909) of the 23,200 companies using its framework claimed to have 1.5°C-aligned climate transition plans…

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IGGiQ Targets Level Playing Field for UK Pension Funds

Data-driven platform seeks to empower mid-tier trustees and sponsors with rollout of ESG-focused module.

The information shortfalls facing smaller pension schemes when developing sustainable investment strategies are the inspiration for Independent Governance Group’s (IGG) recently released IGGiQ tool, which aims to improve ESG data integration and management. The UK-based pensions trusteeship and governance services provider has partnered with ESG data and investment solutions firm…

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Time to Break Down Closed Doors

Tesla is under pressure from investors, as former employees strain against arbitration ties. 

Multi-billionaire Elon Musk has never been one to shy away from the spotlight.   In recent weeks, he dominated headlines again as shareholders in his US-based automotive and clean energy company Tesla gathered for its annual general meeting (AGM) on 13 June to vote on the CEO’s proposed historic US$56…

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Standards Review Puts Labour Issues Centre Stage

GRI takes a human-rights based approach that will form the basis for the wider revision of its Labor Topic Standards.

Inconsistent and insufficient reporting from companies on workforce pay and conditions is a long-term source of frustration for investors, but standards-setters’ and policymakers’ increasing focus on the issue could change the game. Last week, the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) published exposure drafts for the first phase of its Topic Standard…

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EU Approves Nature Restoration Law

Austria’s unexpected support means the flagship biodiversity legislation will pass despite opposition from farmers.

EU member states have approved the bloc’s central biodiversity policy, the Nature Restoration Law, after Austria made a surprise last-minute decision to back the legislation. As a result, EU members will now be subject to the most comprehensive set of biodiversity targets in the bloc’s history. The unexpected twist will,…

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Impact Investing Emerges as Priority

UK-based asset manager Schroders has been named as one of the “best-in-class” for this type of investment strategy. 

Investors’ management, measurement and monitoring of impact investing strategies has been steadily improving.  This is according to intelligence provider BlueMark’s fifth annual ‘Making the Mark’ report, which assessed the best practices and trends of impact investment strategies worth a total US$234 billion in combined assets – equivalent to 20% of…

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Take Five: Balance of Power

A selection of the major stories impacting ESG investors, in five easy pieces. 

A stark message in Bonn underlined the tensions between electoral cycles and long-term sustainability.  

Climate “collusion” – Republican politicians faced off against US institutional investors on Capitol Hill this week, in the latest round of the war on ‘woke’ capitalism. Having published a report claiming “bullying” of members by the investor-led Climate Action 100+ (CA100+) coalition, the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Administrative State, Regulatory Reform, and Anti-trust heard from investor network Ceres, shareholder advocacy group As You Sow and CalPERS – the US’s largest public pension fund. Ceres CEO Mindy Lubber opened her testimony asserting: “Climate change, water scarcity and pollution, and nature loss … pose material financial risks to investment portfolios, business operations and supply chains, thus to the long-term stability of our markets and the economy.” As a member of its global steering committee, Lubber was also representing CA100+, which insisted its members “act as independent fiduciaries, responsible for their individual investment and voting decisions”. The stated purpose of the hearings was to decide whether current laws are sufficient to “deter anti-competitive collusion” to promote ESG-related goals in the investment industry. A legal memo recently secured by the US Sustainable Investment Forum found that firms and investors acting in concert on climate risks “are not violating fiduciary duty and are at negligible risk for anti-trust claims”. Even so, the hearings could be contributing to rising outflows from sustainable investment vehicles, with investor behaviour in the US diverging from elsewhere. Among the evidence cited for reduced appetite was the closure of several funds by BlackRock, some sustainability focused, others – less so, including one targeting opportunities arising from remote working. But it’s far from clear whether the world’s largest asset manager has given up on sustainable investing, given its launch this week of a series of climate transition-focused exchange-traded funds.

Slightly right – The rightward shift of the European Parliament following last week’s elections has prompted divergent views on its implications for the Green Deal that MEPs spent much of the past five years constructing. Centre- and far-right parties swelled their presence largely at the expense of the Greens and the moderate liberal Renew grouping – albeit with voting outcomes contrasting vastly across member states. There is scope for this new cohort to weaken some measures that are still being finalised, such as the

A Virtuous and Self-sustaining Cycle

Early-stage investors must focus on the ocean economy to make waves in the climate race, according to Ed Phillips, Investment Director at Future Planet Capital. 

As we move into the summer months, we can expect headlines to be filled with record-breaking temperatures and unprecedented wildfires driven by climate change. While what happens on land will make our changing climate visceral to many, the damage happening to our oceans may continue to go unheeded and unnoticed.

This year’s World Oceans Day was therefore a helpful moment to reflect on the need for action and to put our oceans higher up the climate finance agenda, not only to mitigate the damage happening to this vast and important resource, but to also capitalise on the solutions it offers.

The ocean, which covers more than 70% of our planet, is the natural engine room when it comes to climate management. It produces 50% of the world’s oxygenabsorbs 30% of global carbon dioxide emissions, and captures 90% of the excess heat produced by these emissions.

Beyond these capabilities that must be protected, we should also be turning more to the ocean’s additional climate potential. Ocean-based climate solutions, such as ocean-based renewable energy and utilising low-carbon food from the ocean, hold the potential to reduce the emissions gap by up to 35% on a 1.5ºC pathway.

The economic argument is also strong. The global ocean economy is estimated to sit at around US$1.5 trillion per year, making it the seventh-largest economy in the world. With the right expertise, motivated investors could access ocean assets that total out at an estimated US$24 trillion!

Despite all this, what has been labelled the world’s greatest ally against climate change, still finds itself snubbed when it comes to investment. The ocean receives less than 1% of all climate finance, and the UN’s fourteenth Sustainable Development Goal – Life Below Water – remains the most underfunded of all.

Clear blue future

As headlines will remind us, there is a clear imperative to unlock the potential of our ocean if we are to take timely strides against climate change. But vast amounts of capital are still required to achieve this. So, how do we get more capital floating into the ocean economy?

Part of the solution might seem quite simple – putting the ocean at the forefront of the global climate change regime. Given its known importance – and potential – you’d be forgiven for thinking this was already the case. Not

Data in Financial Analysis and the Use of AI

Rhodri Preece, Senior Head of Research, CFA Institute, says emerging technologies can help investment professionals draw insights from unstructured ESG data.

Data is being generated at an exponential rate, and the technology powering the algorithms used to parse it is growing just as fast, opening up both new opportunities for investing and innovative ways to leverage alternative data. Investment professionals are now navigating a landscape supplemented by unstructured, alternative, and open-source data. A survey on alternative and unstructured data conducted by CFA Institute in July 2023 revealed that more than half of investment professionals are incorporating unstructured data into their workflow, and 64% indicated using alternative data. This shift has prompted a reevaluation of analytical methodologies and frameworks within the industry.

Over the past few decades, the predominant approach to financial analysis has centered on leveraging structured, numerical data. As the digital revolution continued, new alternative data providers sprouted up, capitalising on the notion of data being the ‘new oil’. The exponential growth of unstructured data boosted demand for methods to process and extract valuable insights, leading data science to emerge as a highly sought-after domain of expertise within investment firms.

Understanding data in financial analysis

The first level of distinction in defining the data used in investment decision-making processes is understanding the various generators of the data, which include companies, governments, individuals, and satellites and sensors.

Company data include, for example, financial statements, operational metrics, strategic plans, and data that arise when individuals or entities interact with the company’s products and services. Examples of such interaction data include credit card transactions, app download statistics, and email receipts. Government data include economic statistics on the health, performance, and status of a country’s economy, while government interaction data include data that are generated from the day-to-day functions of government activities, including business permits, patents granted, and public service usage, such as transport ridership and facility utilisation. Individuals generate data through their online activities, such as social media engagement, consumer reviews, and search engine queries. Lastly, technologies such as satellites and sensors generate data in the form of geolocation information, satellite imagery, and internet of things (IoT) devices, like manufacturing equipment usage patterns.

The second level of distinction is the type of data, which refers to whether the data is traditional or non-traditional. Non-traditional or alternative data is defined as any data that differs from traditional investment sources, such as financial statements,