ESG Investing Enters Portfolio Mainstream

Sustainable investing — or investing in pursuit of environmental, social and governance (ESG) goals — isn’t a sideshow anymore, with investment banks, investors and companies moving it into the mainstream.

That’s the message from UBS recently, pointing to the results of its survey of 5,300 investors, across 10 countries, who have more than US$1 million of investable assets. That showed 65 percent of wealthy investors believe it’s very important to “create a better planet.”

It also found that 85 percent of investors in Singapore are interested in sustainable investing, breaking down to 97 percent of women and 94 percent of people in the 18-34 age bracket.

“This is interesting and important demographics because from our own work we do know that millennials will see the largest inter-generational transfer of wealth in the coming decade. We also know that women’s wealth will grow faster than men’s wealth in the next decade,” Tan Min Lan, group managing director at UBS in Singapore, said in a presentation of the survey results a week ago. She also noted that some of the strong performance of sustainable investments may simply be logical. “If a company is truly responsible, truly aligned with ESG values, then they ought to be more forward looking and actually better managed,” she said.

As a sign of the interest in sustainable investing within the region, UBS noted that the private-equity fund it launched two weeks previously in conjunction with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore and his management team, for sustainable investments had already raised around US$50 million in Southeast Asia alone, compared with a total capacity of around US$250 million globally.

The interest may also be driven by a host of studies which have found that investing with strong ESG principles often results in higher returns.

UBS noted it tells investors only that they wouldn’t be sacrificing returns, but it did note that its sustainable cross-asset portfolio, which it launched earlier this year, had slightly outperformed its benchmarks despite a downturn in emerging market assets.

That was due in part to the outperformance of World Bank bonds in the portfolio, which yield a bit more than government treasury bonds, while offering the opportunity to help finance sustainable development, UBS said.

But while it explained the comparative potential returns cautiously, UBS was firm in its belief in sustainable investing.

The Opportunity Of Our Time?

“UBS is very strongly convinced that this is one of the biggest investment opportunities of our time,” August Hatecke, head of UBS’s wealth management for Southeast Asia, said at the same event.