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Fiduciary Duty to Consider ESG Issues? New Study Indicates "Yes"
by Peter D. Kinder
Do fiduciaries
- especially pension fund trustees - have a duty to consider environmental,
social and governance (ESG) issues in their investment decision-making
process?1
I argued, in a paper initially
published last year, that the Securities & Exchange Commission's
2003 proxy voting rules would lead fiduciaries under its jurisdiction
to consider ESG issues when monitoring their investments.2
I also argued that US law allowed fiduciaries more latitude in integrating
non-financial criteria than is commonly acknowledged.
New UNEP FI Study
A comprehensive study prepared
by the major international law firm, Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer,
and published by the United Nations Environmental Program's Finance
Initiative (UNEP FI)3 on October 25 goes considerably
farther."Conventional investment analysis focuses on value, in the
sense of financial performance. ...[T]he links between ESG factors
and financial performance are increasingly being recognised. On
that basis, integrating ESG considerations into an investment analysis
is clearly permissible and is arguably required in all jurisdictions."4
A Global Study & Conclusion
UNEP FI asked Freshfields
to determine whether the integration of ESG "issues into investment
policy (including asset allocation, portfolio construction and stock-picking
or bond-picking) [is] voluntarily permitted, legally required or
hampered by law and regulation; primarily as regards public and
private pension funds..."5 in seven major capital
markets jurisdictions.
The seven countries were:
the US, the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain and Japan. Freshfields
also looked at Australia and Canada.6 The surveyed countries
represent two distinct legal traditions: the Anglo-American common
law system and the Roman-French civil law system. Nonetheless, Freshfields
found all permitted consideration of ESG issues.
The unanimity of these nine jurisdictions makes it difficult to
argue that including ESG consideration in the investment decision-making
process is a fringe concept.
Emphasis on Process
Trustees must consider these
factors "because there is a body of credible evidence demonstrating
[they] often have a role to play in the proper analysis of investment
value."7 So, they cannot be ignored - in the proper
context.
"One element of the
law governing investment decision-making", concludes the report,
"that is common to all the jurisdictions is the requirement
that decision-makers follow the correct process...."8
Nothing about the consideration of ESG criteria modifies that rule.
Nor does it alter the trustees'
discretion in assigning a weight to these factors. Fiduciaries remain
free to decide that, for instance, they will have no material effect
on the investment's performance. But, Freshfields argues, they must
assess them. And that assessment must take place within the disciplined
investment process courts expect of fiduciaries.
Significance of the Study
The legal conclusions Freshfields
reaches are foreshadowded in other papers and law journal articles.
What is different is the comprehensiveness of their survey. Investors
and stakeholders interested in SRI or ESG should see that this 150
plus page report reaches trustees and their lawyers.
The source of the study is
also significant. Although it has a limited presence in the US,
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer is a top international law firm based
in Germany and the UK. The team it assigned, headed by partner Paul
Q. Watchman, produced the quality of report one would expect from
such a firm.
That said, one familiar with
the US situation will find emphases to disagree with.
I would argue, for example,
that the Uniform Prudent Investor Act's negative commentary on the
duty of loyalty and SRI fall well outside the mainstream, especially
in its failure to admit the existence of contrary authority. Freshfields
should have explored its implications.
I would also argue that Modern
Portfolio Theory, which has become embedded in the law of trusts,
provides less comfort to those advocating incorporating ESG criteria
than Freshfields thinks. It has led many to assume - not wrongly
- that safety comes from conformity, from making sure one's discipline
varies little from the norm.
But, these are quibbles with
a study that alters the course of the debate in precisely the direction
SRI has urged for 35 years.
A Prediction
Klaus Topfer, UNEP's Executive
Director, predicts, "As the world's largest pension schemes
... and foundations adjust, this will set in train a new dynamic
along the investment chain. When these large institutional investors
move on ESG issues, the broader market will listen and react."9
I agree. We owe our deepest
thanks to UNEP for commissioning the study and Freshfields for carrying
it out.
1. "ESG" is a phrase
devised to allow institutional investors to talk about investing
using non-financial criteria similar if not identical to those used
by social investors but without using the descriptor "socially
responsible investing" which is anathema to them.
2. See Peter D. Kinder, "Pensions & the Companies
they Own", paper delivered at the University of Colorado Leeds
Business School Symposium on Business & the Broader Culture,
"Corporate Retirement Security: Social & Ethical Issues",
March 11, 2005. http://www.kld.com/resources/papers/UniversityOfColorado_050311.pdf.
For a discussion of what "ESG" refers to and where the
phrase came from, see Peter D. Kinder, "Socially Responsible
Investing: An Evolving Concept in a Changing World", pp. 32-42.
http://www.kld.com/resources/papers/SRIevolving050901.pdf.
3. Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer, A legal framework for the
integration of environmental, social and governance issues into
institutional investment (New York/Nairobi: UNEP FI, Oct. 2005).
Available at www.UNEPFI.org
4. Id., p. 13.
5. Id., p. 6.
6. Id., pp. 6-7.
7. Id., p. 11.
8. Id., p. 10.
9. UNEP, 'Press Release: Institutional Investors' Legal Responsibilities
on Environmental, Social and Governance Issues under Spotlight',
New York/Nairobi, Oct. 25, 2005, p. 1.
Mercer
Investment Consulting Releases SRI Survey
In October 2005 Mercer Investment
Consulting sent out a survey on socially responsible investing aimed
at the US investment community. Mercer hopes to complete the survey
by the end of the month.
Building on a trend in investing,
the purpose of Mercer's survey is to develop some concrete data
on the extent socially responsible investing has penetrated the
industry. The survey is aimed at a wide range of investment entities
from not-for-profits to public funds to pension plans. The idea
is to get as broad of a response as possible. The survey focuses
on four substantive sections: socially responsible investing, assessment
of the use of environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria,
shareholder engagement, and minority and emerging managers.
We look forward to the results
of Mercer's survey.
Senior
Analyst Updates
From Liz Ulmas:
Nike recently made a big decision
to disclose its factory base. Five months later, Levis followed
suit, with a soon-to-be-named company making a similar announcement
any day (that company's CSR report is imminent but the information
is not public yet, so I won't name names). That's a big shift in
transparency in a short time.
An equally interesting example
of transparency emerged this month when Freeport-McMoRan, an embattled
mining company with very controversial operations in developing
countries, released a social audit it had commissioned the International
Center for Corporate Accountability (ICCA) to conduct of its mines
on Indonesia's Papua island. The report contained some pretty negative
assessments.
Business Week called the release
of the social audit a "major development", "gutsy",
and pointed out that no other major oil or mining company had "come
close" to this kind of transparency. Human Rights Watch, while
welcoming the independent assessment, was more critical of the company
for not having earlier addressed the problems found in the audit.
Companies like Freeport will
continue to be very controversial, and for every revelation - including
self-revelation - of major human rights violations in a particular
corner of the earth, sad to say, there are lots of serious rights
abuses connected to these corporations that the outside world will
never find out about. But what if Business Week is right, that Freeport's
social audit could end up "setting the standard" for multinationals
on human rights assessments? It's worth close scrutiny over the
next couple of years, and there's even evidence that at least parts
of the mining industry - not known for being progressive - are starting
to listen to human rights groups and social investors.
In the meantime, the Non-Transparency
Award of the Month goes to British American Tobacco; the UK's Guardian
broke a story last week that BAT had been secretly operating a factory
since 2001 in North Korea, one of the most repressive regimes in
the world.1 In a country where people are starving, BAT
feels OK about manufacturing cigarettes there, apparently for local
consumption. BAT is a member of the Dow Jones Sustainability Indexes.
As for Wal-Mart's planned
changes on energy efficiency, employee health insurance coverage,
labor standards and women/minority contracting, we'll have to watch
these carefully in 2006 to know how much is real substance.
1Ian Cobain and
David Leigh, "Tobacco firm has secret North Korean plant,"
The Guardian, October 17, 2005.
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