Módulo 7 - Chapter 7

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

Engagement
and
stewardship

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

PRESENTATION

• Inside the unit you will find the content epigraphs, with sub headings for a better understanding.
• All the units have been made following the ease of exposure criteria.
• The contents include, in this sense, five types of attention calls which expedite and facilitate their
understanding:

Example Keep in mind Remember Description Law

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

Chapter 7:

Asset classes

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

Describe approaches of engagement across a range of asset classes

Although most stewardship codes assert that they are intended to apply to all asset classes, their language and approach
seems very much based in the world of public equity investment. This chapter has reflected that tendency of thinking first
of public equity investment, but its application is much broader. That is because the codes (and this chapter) are written
in terms of principles, which can be applied with good sense and intelligence across the full range of asset classes.

The concepts of engagement need to be applied in a different way to respond to the circumstances and the levers of
influence that are available. Because engagement is usually about influence rather than control, investors should have
some scope for engagement success whichever formal structure they invest through.

Although, in these cases, investors will not generally have a vote and do not have formal sanction on the parties,
the sanction of selling a position or being unwilling to invest in future opportunities remains. That is clearly a powerful
sanction in most circumstances (especially if the asset owner is a large one) and is certainly enough for the investor’s
counterparty to pay attention to concerns that are raised.

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

CORPORATE FIXED INCOME

Fixed income investors may ultimately be concerned with the likelihood of default, but ESG factors can impact credit
ratings and affect spreads leading to short-term changes in value. Companies that regularly raise capital in fixed
income markets are becoming more conscious of investors’ interest in ESG as a material factor in their valuation.ESG
engagement is also important to private debt, private equity and property and infrastructure investments.

These investments are often illiquid, relatively long-term and involve close partnership between the investor and investee.
As a consequence, there is both motive and opportunity for ESG engagement.
In relation to fixed income, the PRI’s guide to ESG engagement for fixed income investors15 recommends that investors
should prioritise engagement based on:

• The size of a holding in the portfolio.


• Lower credit quality issuers (with less balance sheet flexibility to absorb negative ESG impacts).
• Key themes that are material to sectors.
• Issuers with low ESG scores.

The greatest opportunity to push for conditions and disclosures around ESG is likely to be pre-issuance. This can be
difficult to implement in fast-moving public markets, but is easier to effect in private debt issuance.
Investors also comment that company contact on fixed income matters tends to be with treasurers and CFOs and to
focus more on technical aspects of the proposed bond issue and less on a company’s overall strategic direction, which
may be where ESG considerations more easily sit.
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15 Principles for Responsible Investment (2018). ESG engagement for fixed income investors: Managing risks, enhancing returns. Available at:
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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

SOVEREIGN DEBT

The stewardship interaction with sovereign debt issuers is likely to be much more limited. Here, only the largest investors
are likely to have any scope to influence the stance of nation states, and even then, the influence may be minimal.
Therefore, the ESG approach usually applied in this asset class is screening or an ESG tilt in the investment process
rather than engagement.

There are early signs of steps to advance investor activity in this area, and the PRI has produced a guide for those
seeking to engage with sovereign issuers16.

This guide makes clear the fledgling nature of engagement in this area and is focused on learning how engagement
might happen rather than on highlighting successful case studies. There is a particular focus on educating sovereign
issuers about the value of green bonds and the strong market appetite for such instruments.

16 PRI, ESG Engagement for Sovereign Debt Investors (2020). Available at: www.unpri.org/download?ac=12018

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

PRIVATE EQUITY

Within private equity investments, direct ESG engagement will be undertaken by the general partner (GP, the private
equity house) rather than the limited partner (LP, the asset owner), although individual LPs may wish to engage with their
GPs on the ways in which they are monitoring and acting on ESG issues across their portfolios.

PRI REPORT, ESG MONITORING, REPORTING AND DIALOGUE IN PRIVATE EQUITY.

As the PRI report,17 ESG Monitoring, Reporting and Dialogue in Private Equity points out:

The process of portfolio monitoring has value protection and enhancement potential in itself, as a systematic
approach for identifying material ESG issues, setting objectives and regularly tracking progress.
It enables GPs: to identify anomalies and achievements; support regular engagement with the portfolio
company on these issues; and strengthen company reporting practices that could have implications at exit.

Given that private equity provides a form of share ownership, the logic of extending the principles of the Stewardship
Code to such investments may come more naturally. That’s especially true when the companies are early stage and the
investor has a more substantial influence

17 Principles for Responsible Investment (2018). ESG monitoring, reporting and dialogue in private equity. Available at: www.unpri.org/download?ac=4839
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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

INFRASTRUCTURE

Infrastructure investors are exposed to ESG across the economic lifetime of their assets. These exposures extend
beyond issues related directly to a specific asset, such as health and safety, supply chains, and environment, to such
factors as climate change, bribery and corruption, and the social license to operate.

The PRI recommends18 that investors consider eight potential mechanisms to act as engaged owners in infrastructure:

1. Use ESG assessments undertaken during due diligence to prioritise attention to ESG considerations and potential
for improving profitability, efficiency and risk management.
2. Include material ESG risks and opportunities identified during due diligence into the post-acquisition plan of each
asset/project company and integrate this into asset management activities.
3. Engage with and encourage the management of the business to act on the identified ESG risks and opportunities
using the mechanisms available.
4. Define and communicate your expectations of ESG operations and maintenance performance to the infrastructure
business managers.
5. Ensure ESG factors identified as material during due diligence are explicitly woven into asset-level policies.
6. Advocate a governance framework that clearly articulates who has responsibility for ESG and sustainability.
7. Set performance targets for preserving or improving environmental and social impact, including regular reports to
the board and investors.
8. Where possible, make ESG information and expertise available to the asset or project company to help it develop
capacity.

18 Principles for Responsible Investment (2018). ESG monitoring, reporting and dialogue in private equity. Available at: www.unpri.org/download?ac=4839
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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

INFRASTRUCTURE

Like private equity and property, many investors in infrastructure will work through specialist managers. In these
situations, the investor’s responsibility is to monitor and engage with the manager. Australian Super, one of the country’s
largest pension schemes has been investing in infrastructure since 1994. In a 2012 case study19 for the PRI, they
reported that one of their infrastructure managers had used detailed questionnaires based on the Global Reporting
Initiative to analyse the impact of ESG issues for each of its 28 existing assets. This analysis and benchmarking across
the assets enabled the fund manager to:

➢ Improve the governance at each of the boards on which it sits;


➢ Arrange for four Australian airports to work together to develop market best practice health and safety processes
based on practices from each of the airports; and
➢ Measure the electricity and water usage and carbon emissions of each its assets on a regular basis. This enables
the identification of energy savings for many assets.

19 Principles for Responsible Investment (2012). ESG and the long-term ownership of infrastructure assets. Available at: www.unpri.org/infrastructure/esg-and-the-
long-term-ownership-of-infrastructure-assets/129. article

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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

PROPERTY

Like fixed income, there is good evidence of the positive effect of ESG on returns to real estate investments. Friede,
Busch and Bassen’s 2015 study20 showed that 57% of equity studies showed a positive effect, but the positive share for
bond studies was 64%, rising to 71% for real estate.
A 2014 INREV study21 showed that there was a 2.8% difference in return spread between the top 10% and the bottom
10% of GRESB-rated properties. Regulatory changes are also driving a need for greater engagement in relation to ESG
in real estate.
Investors should engage indirectly by requiring their managers to report on the frameworks and metrics that they should
use to monitor holdings. In addition, UNEP FI recommends22 that real estate investment stakeholders:

➢ Engage, directly or indirectly, on public policy to manage risks.


➢ Support research on ESG and climate risks.
➢ Support sector initiatives to develop resource to understand risks and integrate ESG.

20 Bassen, A., Busch, T. and Friede, G. (2015). “ESG and Financial Performance: Aggregated Evidence from More than 2,000 Empirical Studies”. Journal of
Sustainable Finance & Investment, 5(4), pp.210-233. Available at: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2699610

21 INREV (2014). Transparency and Performance of the European Non-Listed Real Estate Market.
Available at: https://www.inrev.org/library/transparency-and-performance-european-non-listed-real-estate- fund-market

22 UNEP Finance Initiative et al (2016). Sustainable Real Investment & Framework for Action. Available at:
www.unepfi.org/fileadmin/property/SustainableREI_DirectInvestment.pdf
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ENGAGEMENT AND STEWARDSHIP

ASSET CLASSES

FUNDS

For funds of funds as an asset class, engagement with fund vehicles, covering any underlying asset class, sometimes
becomes a little more complex, but there is typically a fund board which should be there to represent investor interests
and which can be subject to engagement. Investors are often distanced from the underlying assets but the role is then to
hold to account the managers of the fund for their own investment and stewardship efforts.

Closing the agency gap in these sorts of vehicles can be harder and take more effort but as long as the investor has in
mind that this is the aim there is certainly a role for engagement to play.

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