HomeNewsOpinionThe tyranny of ESG has run its course

The tyranny of ESG has run its course

The idea of ESG has been changing since the day it was just a twinkle in a marketer’s eye. Now it’s heading into its inevitable end game

October 19, 2023 / 16:03 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
La Défense
La Défense - major business district in France. (Source: Bloomberg)

In 2021, almost two-thirds of respondents said they considered
environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors when investing. In 2022, that number was 60 percent, and this year it’s 53 percent, according to the annual ESG Attitudes Survey from the Association of Investment Companies. Asked why they were over ESG, the top reason given was that performance was more important.

Next up: greenwashing. In 2021, only 48 percent of investors said they were “not convinced by ESG claims from funds.” That number is now up to 63 percent. The same investors look like they are putting their money where their mouths are: The most recent data from the Investment Association showed a third month of outflows from the Responsible Investments category — a record £448 million ($547 million) in August.

Story continues below Advertisement

Anyone in doubt about the market’s attitude toward ESG investing today need only look at the share price of Impax Asset Management Group Plc. It rose 33 times from late 2015 to late 2021 — and is down 70 percent since. Bubble, bubble crash.

The exodus makes complete sense. That’s partly about performance. It’s a lot easier to feel pro-ESG when it’s making you a big pile of money, as it was three years ago. It’s harder when you are underperforming — and when the stuff you were told is absolutely not OK to touch with a barge pole is doing just fine. Note that the S&P Global Clean Energy Index is down 30 percent year-to-date and 12 percent over three years (low interest rates don’t suit the kind of long-duration companies that make up this sort of index). Meanwhile, the S&P 500 Energy gauge is flat year-to-date but up 43 percent over the last three years. In the UK, shares of Shell Plc hit an all time high this week.