ESG
How Blending Philanthropy, Investment Creates "Win-Wins" – Pictet
This news service recently spoke to a senior Pictet figure about the work it does on sustainability, impact investing, and philanthropy – areas which increasingly intersect.
Blending philanthropy with forms of early-stage investment can
remove some of the risks from projects for a more
sustainable world. This approach appeals to the time horizons of
wealthy clients, a senior figure at Pictet Wealth
Management says.
Pictet Wealth Management’s head of ESG, Rosa Sangiorgio, who is
based most of the time in Switzerland, talked to
WealthBriefing at the firm’s London offices in a
wide-ranging conversation that touched on many facets of
sustainability. These go beyond the usual topic of curbing fossil
fuels, to address subjects such as biodiversity, regenerative
agriculture and management of oceans.
Mindful that the more challenging economic conditions at present
can create headwinds, a major concern about putting money
into sustainability is how to do this at scale and in ways which
bring tangible results, she said. Working with colleagues on the
philanthropy side, Sangiorgio noted how philanthropy can be
married up with forms of investment – for a period. “Philanthropy
can help to de-risk it,” she said.
“We are talking about multi-generational wealth and time horizons
that go well beyond 10 years,” Sangiorgio said. “Clients realise
that their investments are the real economy that they will leave
for their children, their nephews and nieces.”
“Many clients are successful entrepreneurs and they have been
successful because they found solutions to problems,” she said.
“The financial industry is a bridge between people with money and
people with ideas.”
Sangiorgio brings plenty of experience to the role – 22 years of
it. She has worked in structuring, managing, and distributing
traditional and responsible investment solutions for
institutional and private investors globally. Before she joined
the Swiss firm in 2020, Sangiorgio worked for several major
European financial institutions. Since 2012, she has been
concentrating on sustainability and impact investing, most
recently leading the sustainability and impact investing effort
for Credit Suisse Investment Management.
Sangiorgio talked about the approach Pictet takes in private
market investments. This news service put several questions to
her:
Does Pictet have a particular approach to how private
market investments are held and managed from a sustainability
point of view?
“Pictet has more than 30 years of experience in alternative
investments, and around $27 billion of assets under management
invested in private equity. This expertise in private markets,
coupled with our long-term thematic franchise, allows us to
capture interesting investment opportunities. As the risk-profile
of private investment opportunities is different from listed
markets, we are particularly careful to invest in well
diversified portfolios, along with experienced partners in the
space and with dedicated due diligence.
“It's common knowledge that private markets are opaque, with
unlisted companies not required to make the same levels of
disclosure as their listed peers. This is far from ideal for
sustainability where transparency is key. Fortunately, this is
now changing for several reasons including sustainability
becoming a priority for asset owners and companies, growing
interest in democratising private markets, and
regulation around disclosure developing in Europe (green taxonomy
and sustainable finance disclosure regulation), the UK and
US.
“In this journey towards transparency, Pictet is taking an active
role. In 2021, we joined the ESG Data Convergence Initiative
(EDCI) as a member of the steering committee. The objective of
EDCI is to increase transparency and facilitate the comparability
of data between companies and sectors.
“In general, we believe that private markets are well placed to
lead the green transition with private investors exerting direct
control and therefore greater influence on corporate behaviour
and capital allocation decisions (compared with listed
markets). The time horizon is also often longer than that of
investors in listed assets, giving companies more time to act and
succeed.”
Does Pictet WM have a cap on how many flights its staff
take on business to curb C02 emissions, or if it has a carbon
offset strategy, how does this work? Has it found that working
from home or in an office is, in net terms, energy
efficient?
“To significantly reduce the environmental impact of both our
activities and investments is a key ambition for us. We have
established a strategy based on three pillars to meet the
challenge of making operations responsible: infrastructure,
mobility and consumption.
“On business travel, we have forbidden air travel within
Switzerland and encourage employees to travel by train across
France, Italy and Germany. We promote virtual meetings to reduce
travel demand by investing in tools (for both desktop and meeting
rooms) that facilitate remote collaboration. While working from
home automatically results in a reduction of the emissions
generated by commuting.
“At Pictet, our strategy is to reduce emissions first and then
contribute to financing global projects to remove CO2. These
include, for example, projects that sequestrate emissions by
relying on natural processes – e.g., afforestation, reforestation
and revegetation and stewardship of coastal ecosystems – to
enhance natural carbon sinks. As well as projects that use
chemical processes for carbon dioxide removal (CDR) with an
objective to achieve "net negative emissions," i.e., drawing
more CO2 from the atmosphere than the levels emitted.
“Most recently, Pictet has been one of the few financial
institutions with committed and validated targets by the Science
Base Targets initiative. By 2030, the Pictet Group aims to reduce
direct greenhouse gas emissions by 55 per cent compared with 2019
levels.”
Can we talk about some of the ways that clients who are
interested in areas such as, for example, regenerative
agriculture, can put their money to work? Can you offer a few
case studies?
"The latest statistics show the population increasing to around
10 billion by 2030, compounded with a progressively higher
quality of life. This translates into an increasing demand
for food. At the same time, food production accounts for 40 per
cent of land, 70 per cent of water, 47 per cent of pressure on
biodiversity and food systems are responsible for one third of
global GHG emissions; one in five deaths are due to poor
nutrition, more than two billion people are overweight or obese,
and more than two billion people have insufficient access to
nutrition. We believe that food systems are key to optimising
human health and environmental sustainability.
“We see great interest in regenerative agriculture from our
clients to promote better practices, more yield and nutritional
value in the long term, with fewer resources used. Some of our
clients invest directly in agriculture, buying land and
transitioning from conventional agriculture to regenerative
agriculture. However, this type of activity requires a high level
of involvement, a development of competence and a long-term
perspective.
“Others are investing in agritech either directly or through
investment funds. Examples of investments in this field include
leading providers of agriculture integrated equipment – that are
innovating themselves by improving their technology to support
regenerative practices – and smaller innovators producing smart
tools, working for example on highly efficient and precise soil
sampling, or drones for agriculture.”
Data is important and clients need and expect evidence
that their investments are working as hoped. What sort of data do
you collect and how do you deal with the challenge of making it
intelligible?
“Across research, investment decisions, risk management and
advisory services, we place an emphasis on the inclusion of high
quality environmental, social and governance data when evaluating
corporate issuers. As such, and specifically to inform investment
decisions and active ownership activities, we have developed a
proprietary ESG scorecard that provides a focused view of ESG
risks and opportunities.
“We believe investment success results from a rigorous and
repeatable process. It is not about luck or having access to
privileged information. It requires a rigorous and unbiased
method for gathering and analysing information, taking decisions,
and executing them with discipline.
“The Pictet ESG Scorecard is based on a curated set of the most
material data points, across four pillars:
1. Corporate governance: Are
companies managed for the long term e.g., board competence
and independence, executive renumeration, audit and risk
control?
2. Products and services: How
“future-fit/SDF compatible” is their product-mix? Are they
generating revenue at the expense of public health and/or the
environment? Are they offering “clean and safe” products
and services?
3. Operational risks: How do they run
their business? What is the carbon intensity of their operations?
Are they exposed to extreme weather events and other climate
risks? Are they managing other environmental and social impacts
associated with their activities and sup-ply chain?
4. Controversies: Are they 'walking the
talk' e.g., bribery and corruption, market abuse, product
recalls?
“The Pictet ESG Scorecard is underpinned by a robust framework of
data and threshold selection, driven by deep data knowledge,
analysis and experience. Rather than going down the route of
aggregation and risk losing the details that matter, our
investment teams use flags as indicators for their own
fundamental research and decision-making.
“The Scorecard indicates areas of concern from an ESG perspective
through red flags. Meanwhile, areas seen as positive from an ESG
perspective are indicated through green flags.”
On the idea of philanthropy and its “de-risking” of
early-stage investments of certain projects, are there actual
examples?
“Philanthropic money and development finance can offer guarantees
to reduce risk for private finance, and/or create strong
incentives for the private sector to invest in strategic sectors
through supplement grants or technical assistance.”
The world is in a difficult place – high energy prices,
some grim geopolitics (Ukraine, Israel, etc), interest rates are
rising to curb inflation pressures, the mental/physical impact of
the pandemic – do you find these events have increased interest
in sustainability, or have forced people to
adapt?
“There is increasing awareness of the fact that investments
represent the real economy of the future. In today’s challenging
times, this awareness is at the same time frightening and
empowering. Alongside increasing scientific knowledge,
regulators’ pressure and high media coverage, this awareness has
supported investors interest trends towards sustainability.
At the same time, the definition of sustainability has sharpened.
While 10 years ago there was much more demand for exclusions,
today’s investors realise that engaging with companies and voting
at their AGMs is a much more effective transformation strategy.”
When sitting down with clients, typically who is the
first to talk about sustainability – Pictet, or the
client?
“It’s difficult to gather statistics on who initiates the
conversation. Responsibility is one of the guiding principles at
Pictet and one of our long-term investment beliefs, so often we
initiate the conversation on the overall topic and then deep dive
into the specific area of interest for clients. Some clients are
more interested in how we avoid sustainability risks, others want
to know how to leverage upcoming opportunities. Some clients ask
about investing in the energy transition, others want to ensure
they invest in companies with good governance. Each client has
their own perspective and vision.
“My personal experience is that the conversation is unique and
often key to deepening the relationship. It allows the client to
connect with their wealth and legacy and enables us to get to
know them better, and therefore provide them with the most
appropriate investment solutions and services.”
To what extent do you think that sustainability in all
its forms is increasingly forming part of risk management and due
diligence?
“ESG integration is definitively becoming the norm. Together with
increasing regulations and disclosure comes increasing awareness.
For example, on the E side, every company has a climate action
plan, and analysts and portfolio managers are becoming more and
more accustomed to judge whether those are credible or not.
Ignoring that information and those signals is not an option
anymore.
“At the same time, the concept of sustainability, at least in
Europe, is more linked to specific economic activities than to
the overall operations of a company. This is where we see a huge
influence of the “EU Taxonomy” that allows a common definition of
economic activities that can be considered environmentally
sustainable (or not).”
Are there other points you want to make about the work
Pictet is doing in this area and where you see things at the firm
in five years’ time?
“Investing in companies that seek to find the most appropriate
solutions to pressing environmental and social issues is, today,
a concrete way in which investors can contribute to safeguarding
the quality of life – including our own and that of the
generations to come – through the management of their
portfolios.
“But this may not be enough to achieve the ambitious ESG goals we
have set for ourselves. We need to make sure that all companies,
even in the most traditional sectors, change their approach to
more sustainable practices.
“Take the example of companies that produce energy from fossil
fuels: on the one hand, they are an integral part of the supply
chain that allows us to turn on the lights or catch a plane; on
the other, the use of oil and coal are driving the greenhouse gas
emissions that contribute to global warming. What should a
responsible investor do? Sell the shares of such companies?
Numerous studies show that selling or less trading demand has
little effect on the company when it comes to listed secondary
markets. Most likely someone else will buy those shares and the
company will continue to operate without too much drama. In
extreme cases, ownership could even go private, with even less
information transparency requirements and a worsening of the
situation.
“Staying invested and supporting the company as shareholders in
order to transform it is, in some cases, the most responsible
decision. At Pictet we use the tool of active share ownership to
establish a constructive dialogue with management, supporting
their commitment to zero emissions, directing companies to adopt
new processes to produce energy more sustainably, invest in
research and renewable resources, and involve experts who
specialise in climate change in strategic decisions. The goal is
to significantly reduce their carbon footprint over time.
“Excluding these companies from portfolios reduces the investor's
reputational risk, but it is not always the ideal solution if the
goal is to support the transition. The basic ingredients for
success in this type of dialogue are clarity and consistency of
message. If initial engagement efforts are unsuccessful,
investors may consider escalation strategies, such as contacting
the board of directors, resorting to a vote, filing a resolution,
up to and including reducing exposure or divesting.”