The Morningstar Sustainable Investing framework

Dec 09, 2021
Jon Hale, head of sustainability research at Morningstar. explains the framework that provides investors of all types a common reference point for understanding its scope and variety.
 

Sustainable investing has grown significantly in just the past five years as more investors have become increasingly concerned about the many sustainability challenges facing the world today. Many investors are concerned about the impact of climate change and other environmental, social, and corporate governance issues on their investments, and they are concerned about the broader impact of their investments on the world. To many investors, however, the world of sustainable investing can be a confusing mix of terms and approaches.

What is sustainable investing?

Traditionally, investing has focused primarily on financial results, with little systematic attention given to ESG issues. Also focused on financial results, sustainable investing applies ESG assessments to improve investment analysis. Beyond that, sustainable investing also considers the broader societal impacts of investments.

What does “driving positive ESG outcomes” mean?

It can mean improving a company’s performance on material ESG issues, which, in turn, can improve company financial performance, and which can also lead to positive outcomes more broadly for people and planet.

It’s important to keep in mind that sustainable investing is investing, first and foremost. It seeks competitive returns. There is absolutely nothing concessionary about this intent when investing in public stocks and bonds. But it also recognizes that investment returns are part of a bigger picture that includes concerns about people and planet, as well as profits.

Our framework

Morningstar’s Sustainable Investing Framework MAP--for Motivations, Approaches, and Portfolios--covers three key dimensions of sustainable investing, organized in an easy-to-understand way that can be quickly grasped by a range of investors.

Investor Motivations: What is motivating investor interest in sustainable investing?

We know that many investors today have sustainability concerns across a range of ESG issues. A growing number of investors have these concerns--and the concerns themselves appear to be growing--especially around climate change.

Perhaps the best way of thinking about it is to consider what happens prior to the investment context: Investors, whether they are individuals or institutional decision-makers, are people, and more people in the world today have sustainability concerns.

They are expressing those concerns more often in the decisions they make--in other words, focusing on the systemic impacts of their decisions--be they consumer choices, career decisions, or location and lifestyle choices. It should come as no surprise that those who are fortunate enough to be investors or who have the responsibility of being investment decision-makers for institutions increasingly want to apply a sustainability lens to their investments.

They wish to do so because they believe applying a sustainability lens to their investments can both improve their investments and improve the world. The two ideas are connected. For investments, a sustainability lens can help control risk, and it can help identify new investment opportunities. For the world, a sustainability lens can help investors avoid contributing to negative outcomes and help advance positive outcomes for people and planet.

Investment Approaches: Sustainable investing covers a range of approaches that are used to apply a sustainability lens to investments.

The assumption that sustainable investing is a single unified investment approach had led to investor confusion and a mismatch between investor expectations and investment outcomes.

Thus, we have identified six distinct approaches and placed them along a continuum ranging from those that lean more toward avoiding negative outcomes, be they investment or real-world outcomes, to those that lean more toward advancing positive outcomes.

Investors can address sustainability concerns by:

  • Applying Exclusions--refers to excluding issuers based on certain products/services, an industry, or certain corporate behaviors, like major controversies.
  • Limiting ESG Risk--refers to using ESG information, usually in the form of ESG ratings of companies, to assess material ESG risks as part of the overall assessment of risk.
  • Seeking ESG Opportunities--refers to using ESG information to identify companies that are sustainability leaders, often by industry or sector, or to identify improving companies, or those that are using sustainability to establish or enhance a competitive advantage. This approach includes what is sometimes called “ESG Best-in-Class” or “Positive Screening” based on ESG ratings.
  • Practicing Active Ownership--refers to seeking positive ESG outcomes via active ownership activities, primarily made possible because asset managers are shareholders in public companies. These activities may include:

--Engaging directly with companies on ESG issues
--Proposing ESG-related shareholder resolutions
--Supporting ESG issues through proxy voting
--Participating in ESG-related Investor Coalitions
--Advocating for public policy measures that address sustainability concerns

  • Targeting Sustainability Themes--refers to identifying investments that stand to benefit from the long-term trend toward greater sustainability in the way we live and work. Such themes may include environmental-related themes like renewable energy, clean tech, and clean water, or those related to social themes, such as gender equity, managing population growth, or health and well-being.
  • Assessing Impact--refers to integrating impact assessments into security selection and portfolio construction. Fixed-income managers, for example, may consider a bond’s use of proceeds, focusing on bonds that finance projects that benefit people and planet. Equity managers may consider whether a company’s  products/services/behaviors support or detract from the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, which many investors and companies are using as an impact framework. At the portfolio level, investors may assess the overall impact of their portfolio holdings in relation to a goal or benchmark.

In the real world, sustainable investors often combine these approaches, as they are interrelated and largely complementary. It is not uncommon to observe an investment strategy in which sustainability plays a leading role using several, or even all, of these approaches to varying degrees in its investment process.

Portfolios

In any given portfolio, fund, or investment strategy, these six sustainable investment approaches may play no role, a supporting role, or a leading role. While the approaches play no role for many funds, they contribute in a supporting role to a growing number of funds, mainly by “limiting ESG risk” or “practicing active ownership.” Funds for which sustainability plays a leading role often combine several, or even all, of these approaches.

For investor portfolios that consist of multiple underlying investment strategies or funds, the framework can be used to target exposure to the approaches most preferred by the investor and can be used to evaluate how much exposure an investor has to each approach.

Our framework neatly defines and summarizes sustainable investing, providing investors of all types a common reference point for understanding its scope and variety. It can be used to better understand investor motivations, identify the most-appropriate sustainable investments for a given investor, and evaluate sustainable funds and portfolios.

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