Skip to main content
Logo
  • Explore Green Finance
    • Explore
      Explore Green Finance
      Green finance is the financing of investments that provide environmental benefits in the broader context of environmentally sustainable development. Explore how the financial sector can serve the long-term needs of an inclusive, environmentally sustainable economy.
      EXPLORE
    • Investment
      The latest information and insights for asset owners and managers
      Lifelines: The resilient infrastructure opportunity
      How Stock Exchanges can Grow Green Finance: A voluntary action plan
      Changing Course: A comprehensive investor guide to scenario-based methods for climate risk assessment, in response to the TCFD
      Strengthening Shardara Multi-Purpose Water Infrastructure in Kazakhstan
    • Banking
      The latest information and insights for the banking sector
      Roadmap for Financing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
      Sustainable Banking Network: Global progress report
      Aligning Investments with the Paris Agreement Temperature Goal: Challenges and opportunities for multilateral development banks
      Mobilizing Sustainable Finance for Small and Medium Sized Enterprises: Reviewing Experience and Identifying Options in the G7
    • Insurance
      The latest information and insight for the insurance sector
      Inclusive Insurance and the Sustainable Development Goals: How insurance contributes to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
      Self-insurance Against Natural Disasters: The use of pension funds in Pacific Island countries
      Advancing TCFD Guidance on Physical Climate Risks and Opportunities
      Reducing Risk, Addressing Climate Change Through Internal Carbon Pricing: A Primer for Indian Business
    • Sectors
      Featured Sectors
      Agriculture
      Energy
      Forestry
      Water
      All Sectors
      • Agriculture
      • Buildings
      • Energy
      • Fisheries
      • Forestry
      • Metals and Minerals
      • Tourism
      • Transport
      • Waste
      • Water
    • Themes
      Featured Themes
      COVID-19
      Climate Change
      Gender
      Natural Capital
      All Themes
      • COVID-19
      • Cities
      • Climate Change
      • Digital Finance
      • Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)
      • Gender
      • Impact Investment
      • Indicators and Measurement
      • Infrastructure
      • Microfinance
      • Natural Capital
      • Risk and Resilience
      • Standards and Regulations
      • Stewardship
      • Stock Markets and Regulators
      • Sustainable, Green, and Social Bonds
      • Trade and Supply Chains
    • Countries
      Explore by Country
      Explore by Region
      • Africa
      • Asia
      • Europe
      • Latin America & the Caribbean
      • North America
      • Oceania
  • Knowledge
    • Global Library
      Most Recent Global Library
      The Asian International Bond Markets: Development and Trends
      The Wave of Change: The role of companies in building a water-secure world
      Point of No Returns Part V - Leading Practice: A guide to current leading practices by asset managers on responsible investment
      A Framework for Tracking Cooling Investment
      View All
    • Research
      Most Recent Research
      The Asian International Bond Markets: Development and Trends
      The Wave of Change: The role of companies in building a water-secure world
      Point of No Returns Part V - Leading Practice: A guide to current leading practices by asset managers on responsible investment
      A Framework for Tracking Cooling Investment
      View All
    • Policies and Regulations
      Financial Measures Database
      The Green Finance Measures Database consolidates 500+ policy and regulatory measures to promote the development of green finance, bringing together instruments from 75 developed and developing countries. Policy and Regulatory measures are searchable by asset class, country, theme, and objective.
      Explore Green Financial Measures Database
    • Tools and Platform
      Most Recent Tools and Platform
      Circular Transition Indicators (CTI)
      Portfolio Impact Analysis Tool for Banks
      Ceres Aqua Gauge: A comprehensive assessment tool for evaluating corporate management of water risk
      Investor Water Toolkit
      View All
    • Guidance
      Most Recent Guidance
      Guidelines for Building a National Landscape of Climate Finance
      Catalyzing Private Sector Investment in Climate Smart Cities
      Financing Disaster Risk Reduction in Asia and the Pacific: A Guide for Policy Makers
      SDG Ambition Benchmark Reference Sheets
      View All
    • Case Studies
      Most Recent Case Studies
      Portfolio Climate Risk Management
      Metropolitan Shenzhen: Rail plus Property for Transit-Oriented Development
      Metropolitan Mexico City: Megalopolitan Integration to Combat Black Carbon
      Metropolitan Medellin: Somos10—Integrating Ten Municipalities into One Metropolis
      View All
  • Engage
    • Webinars
      Most Recent Webinars
      UN-Oxford Panel Discussion - Are We Building Back Better?
      Mobilising Private Investment in the Great Green Wall
      World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Webinar -The Dasgupta Review: Transforming the global economy for a nature positive future
      LSE GRI Webinar - Financing a Green and Just Recovery from COVID-19
      View All
    • Insights
      Most Recent Insights
      Undeterred by Pandemic: Four trends in global climate action to watch in the coming decade
      The Biden Administration’s potential impact on climate finance
      An inclusive digital green economy in the making
      Insuring Systemic Resilience: Mobilising public-private insurance action to deliver pandemic and climate resilience
      View All
    • Events
      Most Recent Events
      Working Together to Build the Financial Case for Return on Sustainability Investment (ROSI™)
      Women Financing a Resilient Asia: 6th Annual MIGA Gender Leadership Award
      Beyond Petrostates Report Launch
      UNEA 5 Side Event: Green Forum Global Launch – Pursuing Collaboration at Scale
      View All
    • Courses
      Most Recent Courses
      Governing Sustainable Finance
      TCFD Knowledge Hub - Climate-related financial disclosure online courses
      Carbon Taxation
      Earth School
      View All
    • Multimedia
      Most Recent Multimedia
      ICMA Podcast - The Role of The Sustainable Bond Markets in Promoting Biodiversity
      China’s new Green Bond Catalogue
      ICMA Webinar: The impact of COVID-19 on the debt capital markets in South Africa
      Accessing the Indian Capital Market
      View All
    • News
      Most Recent News
      2021 UN Global Climate Action Awards
      Diversity, inclusion and belonging – supporting the agenda in the post-pandemic workplace
      State of Finance for Nature - Open Call for Best Practices
      GGKP launches Green Forum to advance collaboration on sustainable economy
      View All
    • Jobs
      Most Recent Jobs
      Vacancy at GGKP: Green Finance Platform Community Engagement Consultant
      Vacancy at IIED: Senior Researcher - Climate Finance
      Vacancy at GGKP: Part-Time Community Support Consultant
      Internship opportunity with GGKP
      View All
  • Partners
  • About
Search

You are here

Home > Insights > ESG and alpha: the mainstream argument for ESG integration in China

Share:

 

Margarita Pirovska.PNG

Margarita Pirovska

Head of Fiduciary Duty in the 21st Century
United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI)

You are here

Home > Insights > ESG and alpha: the mainstream argument for ESG integration in China

ESG and alpha: the mainstream argument for ESG integration in China

18 March 2020

The integration of ESG issues into investment practice and decision making is an increasingly standard part of the regulatory and legal requirements for institutional investors around the world. In China, two key drivers have recently prompted interest in responsible investment: a government effort to promote green finance, and the increasing globalisation of China’s investment market. New research by the PRI shows there is a third driver for responsible investment in China: that ESG integration is a source of investment value.

Two years ago, the PRI published the first report on ESG and alpha for the US market. Based on a time series of 15 years of ESG data from developed markets, the report showed that ESG information offers an alpha advantage in the construction of equities portfolios. While ESG data in China does not offer the same depth and history as the one used in the US study, preliminary analysis led with MSCI ESG data in China and emerging markets, and case studies by local and international investors, similarly suggest that ESG is a source of alpha in China.

Why this matters in China

China is seeking to align economic and environmental performance and build a green financial system. This transformation started in 2016, with a government-backed surge in green bonds, green credit and lending. Greening investments has followed suit, with the first guidelines published by the Asset Management Association of China (AMAC) in 2018. ESG integration has become a known investment concept to many market participants, while only recently market participants were linking that topic with philanthropy.

Over the past two years, the number of PRI signatories in China has increased from seven to 37, with most of these new signatories being asset managers and services providers. One key motivation for asset owners to step up their responsible investment strategies is the efficacy of ESG investment.

Two main drivers for responsible investment: regulation and globalisation

Since the release of the Guidelines for Establishing a Green Financial System in 2016, Chinese regulators and policymakers have made great efforts to promote green finance and sustainable development. China is a world-leading green bond issuer, with US$ 31.2 billion green bond issuance in 2018. The central bank added green credit into the macro-prudence assessment framework in 2017. The National Development and Reform Commission updated the national industrial catalogue to clarify standards for green industry and green projects. In 2020, securities regulators and stock exchanges are expected to establish a mandatory ESG disclosure framework for listed companies.

At the same time, the Chinese investment market is opening up to global investors. In 2019, the State Council of China released a series of policy measures aiming to lower the barriers for global investors to invest in China and for Chinese investors to invest abroad. This policy reform implies that domestic investors need to be familiar with concepts of ESG integration, climate change, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which are now key topics, and evaluation criteria for global institutional investors and asset owners.

To embrace the opportunities and challenges from ESG regulations and the influence of global asset owners, financial institutions in China need to be prepared. AMAC has conducted an investor survey for Chinese asset managers in 2018, which found although more than half (58.2%) of the surveyed asset managers are considering ESG issues in investment processes, only 1.2% have already established a responsible investment strategy at a firm level. However, 94% of the managers surveyed agree that ESG considerations are important to improving investment returns, and 68% view ESG integration as an alpha-generation method.

ESG and alpha

The quantitative analyses in our new report, ESG and alpha in China, are based on MSCI China ESG Leaders, MSCI China ESG Universal, MSCI Emerging Markets ESG Leaders, and MSCI Emerging Markets ESG Universal indexes, and use available data from June 2013 to June 2019. Analysis indicates that both best-in-class and tilting strategies using ESG scores deliver alpha and relatively lower maximum drawdowns over their respective benchmarks. In addition, the efficacy of ESG factors in delivering stronger risk-adjusted returns is more pronounced in the MSCI China universe than in wider emerging markets.

The limitations of current A-share ESG data does not stop investors’ exploration on ESG incorporation strategies in China. Some asset managers already incorporate ESG factors into their investment processes, and some are using active engagement as a tool to better understand companies they invested in. The report presents concrete examples from investors in China (China Asset Management, E Fund Management, Harvest Fund Management, Hwabao Fund Management and BNP Paribas), illustrating how ESG issues and data are analysed and integrated into investment research when investing in Chinese companies.

The key message from this research is that it makes sense financially for Chinese investors to incorporate ESG issues in investment decisions. It also makes sense for asset owners to mandate ESG incorporation with their managers as markets are opening up and ESG risks and opportunities affect corporate performance in China and abroad. It is, after all, their fiduciary duty to take account of all value drivers, including ESG issues, in investment decision making.

From a policy perspective, the main message is that with better data, investment managers can make better investment decisions and generate better returns for their clients. A standardised, mandatory ESG disclosure framework is key to mainstreaming responsible investment in China.

Themes: 
Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)
Countries: 
China


The opinions expressed herein are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official views of the GGKP or its Partners.

Subscribe

Get our email newsletter
 
 
 
Connect with Us
  • TwitterTwitterTwitter
  • Facebook
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube
  • Flickr
Green Growth Knowledge
Contact
Terms of Use
Credit
Green Growth Knowledge
Green Industry Platform
© 2012-2021 Green Finance Platform. The content on this site does not necessarily represent the views of the individual partners.
  • Global Green Growth Institute
  • The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
  • The United Nations Environment Programme
  • United Nations Industrial Development Organization
  • The World Bank