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2022 will be the year that ESG 'starts driving markets a lot more,' Jefferies Global Head of ESG says

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A number of catalysts poised to converge in 2022 will give a lift to global sustainable and ESG assets next year, according to a recent note from Jefferies.

“We are seeing 2022 as the year when ESG not only becomes mainstream, but it starts driving markets a lot more,” Jefferies Global Head of ESG and Sustainability Research Aniket Shah said on Yahoo Finance Live (video above). “And the reason why this will happen is because core parts of the financial system, including the central banks, are going to become even more serious about climate change as they are today.”

The market for ESG funds set a record in 2020 and continued to grow in 2021, especially in a robust first quarter. In total, an estimated $120 billion have flowed into ESG exchange-traded funds this year.

U.S. Sustainable Fund Flows as of September 20, 2021. (Source: Morningstar)
U.S. Sustainable Fund Flows as of September 20, 2021. (Source: Morningstar)

In 2022, the velocity of ESG investing is likely to continue with 11 catalytic events propelling the market, according to Jefferies analysts. A majority of the catalysts fall under policy and regulatory changes as national governments and central banks get serious about climate change and decarbonization targets.

“We've seen a lot of action, frankly, on the fiscal side — globally, not necessarily in the U.S. — on renewables and on energy,” Shah said. “We can expect more of that here in the States next year. And I think all around the world, you're going to see more involvement from central banks, which will be a very nice one-two punch.”

The no. 1 catalyst for continued ESG momentum

2021 began with considerable optimism for ESG funds — and flows to boot — on the prospect of significant federal investment in climate adaptation with the incoming Biden administration and Democratic control of Congress.

In anticipation, renewable energy stocks and ETFs rallied hard throughout the second half of 2020. Invesco's Solar ETF (TAN), for instance, rose over 230%, reaching its peak on Jan. 1, 2020.

Barb and Gerald Bauer stroll along a row of solar panels on their farm near Faribault, Minn., on Aug. 20, 2021, They say leasing land for the
Barb and Gerald Bauer stroll along a row of solar panels on their farm near Faribault, Minn., on Aug. 20, 2021. (AP Photo/Jim Mone) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Biden administration took one key step by rejoining the Paris Agreement and Congress passed the $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill. However, some of the optimism has been dampened as President Biden's Build Back Better agenda — which would be the largest effort to address climate change in U.S. history — has all but ground to a halt.

“We see BBB passing in the first half of 2022, with a significant portion of the House-version being passed through the Senate,” the analysts wrote on Dec. 13, acknowledging that a delay from centrist Sens. Manchin (D-WV) and Sinema (D-AZ) would be likely. Should the bill eventually pass the Senate with climate provisions resembling the $555 billion allotted by the House-passed version, “this will provide medium-term tailwinds to renewables, EVs, and CCS-oriented companies.” (CCS refers to carbon capture and storage.)