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Europe's top money managers start to bring defence stocks in from the cold
FILE PHOTO: Rheinmetall's production plant of military equipment in Kassel, Germany · Reuters

By Naomi Rovnick, Iain Withers and Simon Jessop

LONDON (Reuters) - European asset managers are reconsidering their policies on investing in defence, under pressure from clients and some politicians to loosen restrictions and help fund the continent's race to re-arm.

Under European Union rules, a number of funds badged as sustainable need to ensure their investments 'Do No Significant Harm'. Many have avoided the sector entirely, with even engine maker Rolls Royce and Airbus, which has a big commercial aviation division, judged off limits.

But as the EU now seeks around 800 billion euros ($870 billion) of investment to bolster defence after U.S. President Donald Trump said Europe must take more responsibility for its own security, the sector is too important to ignore.

Britain's largest investor Legal & General is among those planning to increase exposure to defence, saying the sector's appeal has "risen dramatically" amid deeper geopolitical tensions, Reuters reported on Thursday.

Some of Europe's largest fund groups have separately begun to review their policies at board level, people familiar with the companies told Reuters, although the complexity and controversial nature of rewriting sustainability policies to include arms makers make the process tricky, the people said.

Switzerland's UBS Asset Management told Reuters it was reviewing defence sector exclusions across funds while Mercer, a leading consultant to pension funds, said investors were asking asset managers to include defence in portfolios, including those with sustainability aims.

The EU's spending boost has sent European aerospace and defence stocks including Germany's Rheinmetall and Italy's Leonardo to record highs along with the sector index - and left investors without exposure ruing missed opportunities.

"Some (asset managers' clients) are saying, we actually think it's important that... Europe be able to defend itself. And so we'd actually like you to make investments in this sector," said Rich Nuzum, global chief investment strategist at Mercer, which advises investors managing $17.5 trillion of assets.

Exclusions on investing in controversial weapons – such as cluster munitions and biological weapons – are widely held and informed by international treaties. EU and UK rules do not ban investment in most other defence companies, but an investor focus on environmental, social and governance (ESG) helped dissuade big asset managers from doing so, like with tobacco.

"We're coming to a point where the atmosphere is that if you rule out defence, you're the one who has to explain, not the other way around," said Carl Haglund, CEO of Finnish pension and insurance group Veritas and ex-defence minister of Finland.