SRI is Becoming Mainstream for Corporate Pension Funds

With asset owners playing a fundamental role in influencing SRI practices, Eurosif’s 2011 Corporate Pension Funds Study shows that 56% of surveyed corporate pension funds have an SRI policy in place today and that about a quarter of those without an SRI policy intend to have one on the coming year. A greater majority feel that environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors affect the long-term performance and their integration into investment decisions is part of investors’ fiduciary duty. Equities, bonds and real estate are the most popular asset classes in the implementation of SRI policies.

Created with the support of DB Advisors and HSBC Global Asset Management, Eurosif’s study is the first comprehensive EU-wide examination of to what extent and in what manner corporate pension funds across Europe have adopted sustainable investment practices.

Based on a survey of 169 respondents from 12 EU Member States, the study finds that 56% of corporate pension funds have an SRI policy in place. A higher percentage, 60%, consider that ESG factors affect pension funds’ long-term performance. Similarly, 66% of respondents feel that having an SRI policy is part of their fiduciary duty.

François Passant, Eurosif’s Executive Director, states: “For the first time on this scale, it has been shown that the inclusion of ESG factors in the investment philosophies of European pension funds is, overall becoming mainstream with such high percentages of European pension funds already having or planning to have an SRI policy in place. Certainly, there is still a long way to go but the study clearly shows that pension funds take their fiduciary duty seriously. The debate thus moves from whether or not a pension fund should have an SRI policy to how to design the most appropriate SRI policy.”

The study also reveals that the most meaningful inputs to their SRI policy for corporate pension funds are the pension fund boards and the funding company CSR policies; 85% of the study respondents feel that the CSR/sustainability policy of the funding company is a significant input for the formulation of the SRI policies.
Not surprisingly, equities and bonds, along with real estate, are the most popular asset classes for the implementation of corporate pension fund SRI policies. Conversely, commodities, a topical asset class, are covered by only 7% of the survey respondents.

Finally, the study shows that the three instruments most commonly used for SRI policy implementation are voting, negative screening and integration, with country variations. Voting is widespread among Spanish, Dutch, and British, funds, while negative screening is frequently used in Austria, Spain, and Sweden. Engagement is most common in Austria, the UK, and the Netherlands.
The 2011 Corporate Pension Funds & Sustainable Investment Study is available for download at: http://www.eurosif.org/research/corporate-pension-funds

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