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The Portfolio Construction and Strategy (PCS) Team share practical insights from recent consultations with global investors on sustainable investing, specifically whether unintended risks are introduced into sustainable model portfolios and why it is important to follow an active, forward-looking approach when using environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors as criteria.
The war in the Ukraine and the subsequent pressure on oil and gas supplies, particularly in Europe, we believe has and will lead to a greater focus on sustainable investing in the future – particularly around localised renewable energy production.
In the case of sustainable investing, an ESG criteria is often considered in the portfolio construction processes. But what if many of these new sustainable portfolios are actually unrecognisable to their traditional portfolios when it comes to regional biases, style drifts, and sector concentrations? Are there unintended risks introduced by a shift to ‘sustainable’ investing?
The inconsistency of risk profiles between traditional and sustainable portfolios is a result of the asset management industry’s product offering still catching up to investor demand for suitable sustainable investment solutions.
For example, an investor in traditional Europe ex-UK Equity or UK Equity has a plethora of strategies available. That same investor looking to mirror this selection in their sustainable portfolio is limited to a much smaller selection, as only 14% of European funds in that Morningstar Category explicitly indicate any kind of ESG impact in their strategy and only 5% of UK equity managers. There is a similar discrepancy within fixed income – where investors severely struggle to find sustainable options for their global flexible managers and tend to invest in traditional corporate bond managers.
The result of this availability challenge for investors is that many sustainable portfolios look and feel different to traditional portfolios and therefore are exposed to a different set of risks.
For example, this is demonstrated in Figure 2 below by taking an average of the moderate portfolio allocations of UK investors based on PCS team consultations. Within equities, the traditional model portfolio includes mainly regional equity allocations, such as UK equities or US equities, while the sustainable model portfolio has a higher allocation to global equity. Within fixed income, the phenomenon is the opposite with the traditional model portfolio fixed income allocation split between UK and global fixed income, while the sustainable model has almost all its fixed income allocated to the UK. We believe these asset allocation shifts – and therefore risk shifts – are attributable to the relative paucity of sustainable strategies in certain categories.
The scarcity of suitable regional sustainable equity strategies is one of the many reasons for the sustainable model being underweight regional equities and overweight global equities. This introduces meaningful return differentials.
Global sustainable strategies experienced a strong surge in performance post-pandemic, however that has been fading year to date as concerns increase about inflation as well as the impact of the war in Ukraine, including rising oil and gas prices which many sustainable strategies will typically not be exposed to. Thus, many sustainable portfolios containing a global equities overweight have been impacted negatively year to date as shown in figures 3 and 4.
The differences between traditional and sustainable solutions are not just attributed to regions. When we look at a sustainable equity portfolio versus traditional, there is a significant difference in the exposure to the growth factor as well as sector allocations.
This large exposure to growth has obvious consequences, especially during periods of market volatility. That is not to say investors should avoid sustainable investments, rather that investors should carefully consider the implications for portfolio construction and make necessary adjustments to balance some of these skews.
In the case example of UK investors, it is important to be aware of sector tilts that can be introduced by an overweight in traditional or sustainable funds.
Comparing the sector exposures of global and UK funds versus their sustainable counterparts, we see global sustainable equity funds tend to have a stronger bias towards the industrials and healthcare sectors (see Figure 6). These sectors generally outperformed in recent years, especially in 2020 as ‘beneficiaries’ of the COVID-19 crisis. Our analysis shows that managers of sustainable funds have typically been less exposed to cyclical sectors, such as energy, relative to broader equity funds.
The key point to understand here is that moving between traditional and sustainable portfolios introduces different risks, which in turn may have implications for returns. Sustainable model portfolios come with their own unintended risks due to a limited number of fund choices at the moment, which may prevent effective diversification given the biases and concentrations in the portfolio.
We believe that sustainability should be an implementation decision, i.e. your overall asset allocation should be diversified in terms of regions, styles etc and then you choose your implementation/managers that fit your asset allocation.
There is no one-size-fits-all solution to sustainable investing. Our Portfolio Construction and Strategy Team partners with global investors to build sustainable portfolios by utilising the whole spectrum of ESG tools and resources at Janus Henderson. We would be delighted to contribute to your conversations on the issue.
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About the Portfolio Construction and Strategy Team
The PCS Team performs customised analyses on investment portfolios, providing differentiated, data-driven diagnostics. From a diverse universe of thousands of models emerge trends, themes and potential opportunities in portfolio construction that the team believes will be interesting and beneficial to any investor.