Strategy
OCBC Trumpets Big Sustainable Finance Ambitions

The momentum behind sustainable investment - however one defines it - appears to be as strong as ever. The Singapore-based lender aims to hit the $25 billion AuM market by the middle of the decade.
Singapore-based Oversea-Chinese
Banking Corporation wants to manage more than $25 billion in
sustainable finance by 2025 after beating its initial $10 billion
target earlier this year – a sign of how environment-based
investing remains a hot area.
The $10 billion AuM figure, achieved in the first quarter, was
recorded two years ahead of schedule, the lender said, according
to a report by The Straits Times. OCBC is the parent of
Bank of
Singapore.
Environmental, social and governance-themed (ESG) investing, and
its “cousin” of impact investing have been strong growth areas
over recent years, driven by a desire to use financial muscle to
achieve goals such as cutting carbon emissions, improving clean
water supplies, making companies more open and helping reduce
crime and poverty. However, delivering accurate and meaningful
data to clients on how ESG adds value to portfolios and brings
about change, has been demanding. One worry at times has been
so-called "greenwashing" - firms broadcasting their ESG
credentials without necessarily delivering concrete results.
“The bank has seen a significant increase in the demand for
sustainable financing in recent years due to better awareness and
heightened efforts to combat climate change,” OCBC was quoted as
saying.
A number of banks in Singapore and elsewhere, for example, have
launched “Green bonds” – loans that finance
environmentally-driven projects. United Overseas Bank and fellow
Singaporean bank DBS have broadcast their work in this field (see
here
and here).
Another recent
player is Ping An of China Asset Management (Hong Kong), and
one
more is HSBC.
The report said that last year OCBC had seen a strong demand for
green and sustainability-related borrowing. It participated in
over 20 such loans, acting as sustainability advisor or
coordinator for more than 10 of them. Last April, the bank said
it would not finance new coal-fired power plants any
longer.