Governance Tops Global Investors' Sustainable Investment Priority Lists

Surveying more than 300 respondents, the firm's latest global asset owner survey found governance is a priority that has "significantly risen across all regions", increasing from one in three (33%) in 2022 to 54% of investors globally in 2023.

For the EMEA region, climate and carbon-related assets has also increased as a priority for investors, jumping from 36% in 2022 to 73% this year.

On the other hand, social themes are no longer as much of a focus for global investors, dropping from 73% last year to 37% in 2023. In EMEA, this has fallen from 65% to 40%.

Pressure mounts on 'out of touch' asset managers over fossil fuel investments

Overall, the level at which asset owners are implementing and evaluating sustainable investments has declined after five years of steady growth. According to the survey, this has fallen from 88% in 2022 to 80% in 2023.

Sylvain Château, global head of product, sustainable finance and investment at London Stock Exchange Group, said: "Our research demonstrates the continual evolution of sustainable investment among asset owners and the differing priorities across the globe.

"While the long-term trend for sustainable investment reflects a very positive trajectory, macroeconomic and geopolitical factors have influenced respondents' short-term sentiment."

Château noted that as sustainable investment strategies continue to mature and a focus on governance grows, "the quest for the right data is likely to become an even greater priority for asset owners".

ESG bond market on track to reach $1trn total issuance in 2023

The survey also revealed the "most significant" challenge sustainable investment adoption is data focused, with 50% of respondents referencing "concerns about availability of data and the use of estimated data".

Lack of confidence in data quality was identified by 58% of investors surveyed one of the most difficult obstacles asset owners must overcome in order to comply with regulatory requirements. In EMEA, this percentage jumps to 64%.

Overall, 42% of asset owners said data gaps with essential information "form a challenging factor", a problem which increased for EMEA-based investors (71%), compared to 34% in APAC.

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