Sustainable investing on the rise
Sustainable investing is not new, but in recent years it’s moved from the green fringes into the mainstream. From climate change to animal rights and gender diversity, more people are interested in aligning their money with their values. Last year alone, Australia’s sustainable investment market increased 20 per cent to a record $1.5 trillion. According to its 2022 benchmark report, the Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) found sustainable investments now represent 43 per cent of total professionally-managed funds. In addition to traditional shares and fixed interest you can buy sustainable investments in a wide range of assets, including property, alternatives such as forestry and farmland, infrastructure, private equity and cash. These days, most big super funds offer a sustainable investment option and some even offer this as their default option. You can also buy sustainable managed funds, including a growing list of exchange-traded funds (ETFs). So what are sustainable investments and how can you tell?
Focus on people and planet
Sustainable investing is also known as ethical, responsible and ESG (environmental, social, governance) investing. But whatever the name, the focus is on people, society and/or the environment instead of an exclusive focus on financial returns. Sustainable investments are selected using a variety of screening methods, including:-
- Positive screening selects the best investments in their class
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- Negative screening excludes harmful sectors, companies or activities such as arms, gambling, animal testing, tobacco and fossil fuels
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- Norms-based investing screens for minimum standards of relevant business practices
- Impact investing has the explicit intention of generating positive social or environment impacts.i
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- Environmental, including air and water pollution, biodiversity and climate change
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- Social, including child labour and labour standards, ethical product sourcing, gambling and human rights
- Governance, including board diversity, corruption, business ethics, corporate culture and whistle-blower schemes.
Performance gains
In the early days, sustainable investing often came at the expense of returns but that is no longer necessarily the case. The RIAA report compared the performance of what it terms responsible investment funds and mainstream investments funds (on average and net of fees) over the past 10 years to December 2021. As the table shows, responsible multi-sector growth funds consistently outperformed mainstream funds and their benchmark over 1, 3, 5 and 10 years. Responsible Australian share funds generally outperformed or were on par with mainstream funds. Only responsible international share funds disappointed, underperforming mainstream funds across all timeframes.Performance of responsible investment funds vs mainstream funds and benchmarks
Fund categories/benchmark | 1 Year | 3 Year | 5 Year | 10 Year |
Responsible investment multi-sector growth funds | 16.1% | 14.0% | 10.6% | 10.9% |
Morningstar category: Australia multi-sector growth | 14.1% | 10.9% | 7.9% | 8.8% |
Responsible investment international share funds | 18.1% | 17.3% | 12.3% | 11.3% |
Morningstar category: Australia Equity World Large Blend | 24.6% | 18.1% | 13.4% | 15.1% |
Responsible investment domestic shares (Aus/NZ) | 16.6% | 14.8% | 11.8% | 11.2% |
Morningstar category: Equity Australia Large Blend | 18.3% | 13.7% | 9.3% | 10.1% |
S&P/ASX 300 Total Return | 17.5% | 14.0% | 9.9% | 10.8% |
Source: RIAA Responsible Investment Benchmark Report Australia 2022