The SEC may get tougher on ESG claims—shaking things up for investors

As Gary Gensler takes the helm at the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), he’ll face decisions on a raft of high-profile issues—including cryptocurrency, the Archegos meltdown, and the [hotlink]GameStop[/hotlink] short squeeze. But he may have to put them aside a bit to address environmental, social, and governance (ESG) activism. The feel-good era of ESG investing may be yielding to a more strident era of government-pressured disclosure and validation concerning ESG claims.

To date, many of those claims have received little scrutiny from regulators. Asset management firms already have a responsibility to make disclosures in line with the SEC’s climate change rules adopted in 2010. But more recently, interim agency head Allison Herren Lee set the SEC on a collision course with the ESG movement, just as Gensler’s nomination moved forward. In March the agency announced the formation of a Climate and ESG Task Force within the Division of Enforcement to “proactively identify ESG-related misconduct.” That’s a big deal, because when regulators identify “misconduct,” fines and other punishments often follow.

The most prominent topic under the ESG umbrella is climate change. The SEC’s existing rules on climate-related disclosures for public companies initially had the agency taking no position on climate science. As stated in a January 2010 press release: “We are not opining on whether the world’s climate is changing, at what pace it might be changing, or due to what causes. Nothing that the Commission does today should be construed as weighing in on those topics.”

Today, the SEC appears to have left that cautious approach behind. In a speech to a prominent progressive think tank in March, Commissioner Lee told her audience that “climate and ESG are front and center for the SEC” and that that climate policy should be an issue not just for the Environmental Protection Agency but for the Treasury Department, the SEC, and other agencies, as well.

Ironically, this new emphasis may pose a problem for those working in ESG investing. One of the most common refrains about ESG—besides a confident agreement that it’s growing in popularity—is the confusion arising from disagreements over how environmental commitments, much less all other aspects of ESG, should be measured and verified.

Even the finance and research firms being paid significant fees for ratings and analytics by even larger asset management firms have not arrived at a clear, consistent way to produce data to evaluate ESG policies and investment strategies.