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Putting your money where your values are

15 September 2023

Vanessa Stevens
Put your money where your values are

As well as seeking healthy returns, investors are increasingly considering non-financial factors balancing traditional investing with sustainable investing to improve long-term outcomes.

Tying personal beliefs to investments can be a meaningful way to help reach your financial goals. Today, more Kiwis are seeking investments with targeted environmental, social and governance (ESG) standards that aim to have positive ESG goals with financial returns.

Responsible investment assets under management reached a record $179 billion in New Zealand in 2021. That’s up from $111 billion in 2019, according to the latest benchmark report from Responsible Investment Association Australasia.

Senior Sustainability Analyst Vanessa Stevens says a couple of factors are facilitating a shift to sustainable investing: clients are increasingly focused on companies’ environmental and societal impacts, and escalating government regulation is driving corporate change. The Global Sustainable Investment Alliance estimates that the value of assets invested with some sort of sustainability focus has increased by at least 250% to $US35trillion, from 2012 to 2020, this demonstrates the increasing importance of sustainable investing to investors. “New Zealand is the first country to require climate-related disclosures,” says Vanessa. “Worldwide, we’re seeing more and more ESG related regulations come into play, so you’ve got pressure from the top and from the bottom. Company leaders can’t ignore the fact that people are examining sustainable aspects of their organisations.”

ESG regulations over last decade

From exclusions to more active choice

Many clients previously had a ‘no-buy’ list for investment portfolios that included weapons, alcohol, tobacco, gambling and animal testing. Today, Vanessa says investors have broadened their outlook to consider pro-environment, pro-social policies encompassing a range of issues such as clean energy, gender equality and climate action, as well as healthcare and technology access during the pandemic.”

Vanessa says political issues and conflicts such as the overturning of Roe v Wade in the US and the war in Ukraine affect Kiwi investors’ behaviour. Even during market downturns, she says clients continue supporting ESG standards. “Of course, people become worried, but you don’t throw away your values overnight because something’s not performing well.”

Craigs Investment Partners has developed its own sustainability scoring framework which considers a range of non-financial measures to build a company’s comprehensive sustainability picture. Each organisation gets an environmental, social and governance score, and an overall combined sustainability score out of five reflecting that each client has different values and therefore may be interested in how a company performs in a specific area. Analysts also provide a sustainability overview highlighting key issues for investors.

Vanessa says Craigs’ research and leadership in the ESG arena give the firm a chance to engage with New Zealand companies if analysts find information gaps. This encourages organisations to become more upfront and accountable to shareholders and to the wider community.

“Over the past few years we’ve seen a shift with more clients interested in the ESG aspects of their investments. With every dollar you’re investing, you’re effectively endorsing what the company does and how they go about it so I think investors are paying more attention to the non-financial attributes of an investment.”

Not a one-size-fits-all approach

Our advisers partner with clients to tailor portfolios using the sustainability framework in a way that aligns with each clients’ values. “It’s important to note that it’s not a one-size-fits-all approach when it comes to how sustainability considerations are used. It’s not our role to tell clients what they should value or care about. The sustainability scores act as a starting point, and how much weight each of us personally places on the E, the S or the G is an individual decision,” she says.

ESG factors

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Vanessa Stevens

Vanessa Stevens

Senior Sustainability Analyst
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Keep up to date with our fortnightly Market Insights enewsletter. Our research team provide timely and regular commentary and analysis on market developments, understanding investment jargon, and the impact of current events.

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