What is ESG? The latest front in the culture wars

In This Article:

Disney (DIS) and Apple (AAPL) became the latest companies in the crosshairs of anti-ESG efforts after Vivek Ramaswamy, the executive chairman of Peter Thiel-backed Strive Capital, sent letters to the companies urging them to halt diversity audits and avoid making political statements.

In the letter released on Monday, the "Woke, Inc." author railed against the companies and financial institutions for promoting "one-sided political agendas." Ramaswamy has been a vocal critic of the practice of incorporating environmental, social, and corporate governance issues, known as ESG, into corporate and investment decision-making.

ESG has become more entrenched in the financial world. But like everything else these days, it's attracting scrutiny and skepticism from all quarters. In other words: from Wall Street to the Comptroller's office in Texas, ESG has become a lightning rod — and the end game, at this point, isn't exactly clear.

At its core, the ESG approach gauges potential risks and opportunities not usually accounted for in financial measures. These factors range from a company's exposure to climate-related risk to board room diversity.

Folks like Ramaswamy aside, ESG strategies have gained traction. In 2020, 92% of S&P 500 companies and 70% of Russell 1000 companies published an ESG-related sustainability report, according to Governance & Accountability Institute, up from just 20% a decade earlier. And nearly a third of S&P 500 companies mentioned ESG on their earnings calls in the fourth quarter of 2021, Factset reported.

But the acronym has ballooned into a shorthand expression for a variety of different meanings. It could represent an investment framework for risk analysis, corporate responsibility efforts, or an ideological agenda, depending on who you ask. Without uniform standards or definitions, the belief that ESG can serve all stakeholders equally has weakened lately. Even adherents have raised a number of concerns about ESG, including the difficulty in measuring impact, potential interference with business operations, tradeoffs across the three pillars of ESG, and a murky relationship with financial performance.

The Utah State Capitol, rear, is shown behind an oil refinery on Thursday, May 12, 2022, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
The Utah State Capitol, rear, is shown behind an oil refinery on Thursday, May 12, 2022, in Salt Lake City. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

The backlash over ESG has arrived in a number of forums: op-eds, Elon Musk tweets, scrutiny from state politicians, and an anti-ESG fund from Strive Capital backed by PayPal co-founder and Republican activist Peter Thiel that has raised more than $250 million. These politically-charged allegations that ESG is an apparatus for ushering in "woke" capitalism have added to a storm of challenges for the strategy long dominated by an optimistic streak.