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Transcript
‘SUSTAINABLE’ INVESTING
Martin Grosskopf, MES MBA
Associate Portfolio Manager and
Manager of Sustainability Research
Michael Peck, CFA
Vice President, Institutional
June 2007
AGENDA
 Introduction
 Environmental, Social, Governance (ESG) Conundrum
 Research of Significance
 Investment Context: Key Drivers
 Investment Strategies
 Summary
2
ACUITY INTRODUCTION
 Founded in 1990, Acuity is a discretionary investment management firm that offers a full array of
clearly differentiated, value-added solutions and mandates.
 Ownership Structure: Private Firm – Partners own 100%; Partners are all active with Acuity
 Acuity has been a leader in developing client driven sustainable investing strategies since 1991
 Recently awarded Canadian environmental theme mandate from large US Pension plan
 Acuity Resources:
 14 Investment Professionals
 1 Strategist
 5 Portfolio Managers
 8 Investment Analysts
 1 Trader and 1 Assistant Trader
 Assets Under Management: $9.4 billion at May 15, 2007
3
ESG CONUNDRUM: EXAMPLE OF CLIMATE CHANGE
 The world’s climate is changing
dramatically:
 Short term impacts – weather events
 Long term impacts – global warming?
Source: Centre for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard Medical School
4
ESG CONUNDRUM: EXAMPLE OF CLIMATE CHANGE
MAINSTREAM
FOCUS
Commodity Pricing
Energy Use
Weather Events
(Hurricanes)
Climate Change
SRI FOCUS
Investors have approached this environmental
issue from different perspectives
 Mainstream community concerned
with short term weather impacts
and largely ignores longer term
energy use impacts
 SRI community has been focused on
corporate action on Climate Change and
largely ignores short term commodity
fluctuations
5
ESG CONUNDRUM
 Application and weighting of ESG criteria occurs across a continuum of strategies:
Values?
Ethical
Investing
Community
Investing
Performance?
Clean Tech
ESG Issues
Integrated
Sectoral
Themes
Engagement
Strategies
Momentum/
Technical
Trading
 Institutional asset owners in agreement that the ‘G’ is important
 Reasonable discussion in Canada on application of environmental and social issues within the
investment process has been lacking due to preconceived notions
 While many camps would claim otherwise, there is no evidence of a ‘right’ investment
approach! ESG issues should be considered where they are material and this is open (rightly) to
interpretation.
6
RESEARCH OF SIGNIFICANCE
 UNEP Asset Management Working Group (14 asset managers including: BNP Paribas, Citigroup,
Group AMA, HSBC, Morley and Acuity)




Sell side research indicating materiality of certain ESG issues (Goldman Sachs, UBS et al)
Legal research questioning narrow interpretation of fiduciary responsibility (Freshfields report)
Performance studies largely neutral on impact of ESG applications (HSBC)
Most recent publication: Case studies highlighting the roles played by leading pension plans worldwide
concerning ESG issues
 Environment Canada / Coalition for Environmental Cooperation
 Interviews with investment professionals in Canada, U.S. and Mexico indicate lack of drivers for linking
environmental factors to investment performance
 Yale University
 Repetto study of mining industry indicates poor disclosure of environmental risks prior to significant adverse
events
Conclusions:
 There has been little depth or interest in E and S amongst mainstream analysts until recently
 Companies respond to analyst inquiries – they will not routinely offer up ESG data
 E and S factors tend to fly under the radar
 Fund performance is a red herring: no evidence of over/underperformance - depends on the
manager
7
KEY DRIVERS: RESOURCE STRAIN
 Pressures in the long term will rise:
Source: United Nations Population Fund
 It is not the same investment world as in 1960. One billion more consumers every 12 years.
 Environmental/social implications are immense and highly relevant to investment decisions.
 Demand for water, energy, food, materials entails some understanding of carrying capacity.
8
KEY DRIVERS: COMMODITY CYCLE
 Pressures in the short term will increase:
Source: Stifel Nicolaus
 Increased consumption = increased extraction = increased environmental/social impact
9
KEY DRIVERS: CHANGING DEMAND CONTEXT
Source: RBC Capital Markets
Source: BCA Research
 China’s commodity demand is only beginning. As a non-democratic regime, its influence on
social/environmental standards world wide is of some concern.
10
KEY DRIVERS: CHANGING DEMAND CONTEXT
U.S. Crude Oil Imports
100.0%
90.0%
80.0%
% Total Supply
70.0%
60.0%
50.0%
40.0%
30.0%
20.0%
10.0%
19
00
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04
19
08
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12
19
16
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20
19
24
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28
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32
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36
19
40
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44
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48
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52
19
56
19
60
19
64
19
68
19
72
19
76
19
80
19
84
19
88
19
92
0.0%
Source: Energy Information Association
 50 years ago the U.S. imported 12% of its oil needs. Today it is nearing 70%.
 Yet oil is increasingly sourced in regions of the world which are hostile to the U.S.
11
INVESTMENT STRATEGIES
 Common Strategies
 Screening of certain sectors reflecting interests of investor base
 Overweighting of companies with strong ESG performance
 Use of third party research (Jantzi, Innovest etc.) for investment decisions
 Leveraging of ownership stake to drive management change on key issues (may be any of E, S or G)
 Use of assets to influence political decisions (South Africa, Sudan, Burma, CO2, asbestos etc.)
 Uncommon Strategies
 Integration of ESG factors within investment decisions
 Modeling ‘themes’ (sulphur, mercury, water, carbon) – Acuity Clean Environment Funds
 Adjusting ESG factors for small vs. large cap portfolios, growth vs. value
 Buying the laggards who are ‘catching on’
 Using ESG criteria to assist in ‘shorting’ companies
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INVESTMENT STRATEGIES: THEMATIC APPROACH
SULPHUR EMISSIONS
 Sulphur emissions are a major regulatory
issue and significant investment theme
impacting:
Energy Pricing
Energy Use
 Coal utilities: scrubbers, sulphur capture
 Auto: catalytic converters and engine
technology
 Refining: conversion to cleaner fuels
Capital
Expenditures
 Materiality of this issue is significant
(short term and long term) – drives
major capital spending and research
budgets
Air Quality
Sulphur
Regulations
 Relevant to all geographies
 Investment Examples:
 Praxair, Marsulex, Canadian Hydro
Developers, Foster Wheeler
13
CONCLUSIONS: ESG RELEVANCE
 ESG relevant to:
 Fundamental stock selection
 Helps in assessing management quality, particularly in the extractive industries and consumer
products
 Identifying industry trends early
 Sulphur, mercury, cyanide, water etc.
 Risk mitigation
 Avoiding the next asbestos: lead paint, mercury, transfats? Push back on ‘externalities’
 Ensuring proper systems/controls in place – environmental management systems etc.
 Not generally relevant to:
 Top down economic analysis
 Sector rotation
 Technical analysis
 Momentum strategies
 Short term trading strategies
14
ACUITY’S APPROACH TO ESG ISSUES
 Principle #1: Determine the investment impact
 What is the materiality of the issue: magnitude and relevance
 Interpret the qualitative impact – what is the likely public/market reaction to these issues – reputation,
regulatory approvals etc.
 Principle #2: Determine the portfolio impact
 Who is well positioned on this issue
 Principle #3: Relegate ‘ethical’ debates to the background
 Not a question of right or wrong but rather whether the issue has a material impact on the valuation of
the security in question
 Acuity’s internal capabilities:
 Manager of Sustainability Research is a member of Acuity’s Investment Committee. Coordinates all of
Acuity’s initiatives regarding ESG investments. Provides insight on how sustainable criteria can affect
investment alternatives
 Supported by eight analysts, including a dedicated ESG analyst, Rachel Davies
 Acuity’s Scientific Advisory Council, composed of prominent external environmental and business
professionals, provides input on sector-specific issues
 External resources:
 Acuity also works with third party research providers (Jantzi, ISS) to define and apply specific criteria for
evaluation purposes
15
ACUITY’S ESG INVOLVEMENT
Acuity Investment Management offers a range of ESG solutions for its clients.
 Acuity launched the Clean Environment Fund family in 1991 and the Social Values Funds in
2000.
 As a Partner owned independent firm, Acuity invests significant time and money to provide continuing
support of products that further ESG integration
 Acuity was selected as the only Canadian company to participate as a member of the United
Nations Environment Program Asset Management Working Group
 Acuity is a signatory to the UNEP Finance Initiative
 Our firm is a founding member of the Social Investment Organization, a national non-profit
organization dedicated to the advancement of socially responsible investing in Canada
 In 2003, Acuity was awarded the Globe Foundation’s inaugural Capital Markets Award for
Sustainable Investing and Banking
 Member of the Canadian Coalition for Good Governance
 Advisor to Environment Canada and Coalition for Environmental Cooperation
 Signatory to the Carbon Disclosure Project
16
DISCLAIMER and CONTACT INFORMATION
The views expressed here are those of Acuity Investment Management team, and are subject to change. They are being provided for
informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:
Michael Peck, MBA, CFA
Vice President, Institutional
Acuity Investment Management Inc.
Phone: 416-867-2559
Fax: 416-366-2568
[email protected]
17