Analysing ESG policy, market and portfolio construction considerations

Kartik Chawla, Martina Macpherson, Alexis Royer and Daniel Ung

Since the early 2000s, investors have increasingly considered environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria within their investment decisions to meet their varying expectations, such as using ESG as an expression of personal ethics and values, as a means of downside risk protection in the investment portfolio, or as a new source of investment alpha. Since the launch of the European Union Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), regulators are demanding that investment managers classify and disclose their sustainability risks. This chapter will evaluate the developments in sustainable investing, both in terms of the size of the sustainable investment market and the approaches that investors commonly adopt. It will also examine how ESG can be incorporated into the portfolio construction process, and look at how controversies can potentially negatively impact investment performance.

OVERVIEW OF SUSTAINABLE INVESTMENT MARKET AND STRATEGIES

Market and regulatory developments in brief

A study by the CFA Institute (Fender et al, 2020) that surveyed its global members base highlighted that sustainable investing has entered the mainstream, and is now increasingly

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