Fund Management
ESG-Themed Exchange-Traded Funds, Products Attract Fresh Inflows

The market for such funds and products continues to grow at a time of continued focus on ESG-themed ways of putting money to work.
Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) exchange-traded funds
and products listed globally gathered net inflows of $730 million
during January, taking total assets invested in these channels to
a record $24.71 billion, a rise of 9.97 per cent at the end of
last year, figures show.
Europe-domiciled ETFs/ETPs that track such investment approaches
account for more than half (56 per cent) of assets, while those
in the US account for 36 per cent, according to ETFGI, a research
organisation. It shows that the Asia market for these funds and
products is still in its relative infancy.
(ETFs are typically open-ended, index-based funds bought and sold
like ordinary shares on a stock exchange. They offer broad
exposure across developed, emerging and frontier markets,
equities, fixed income and commodities. Exchange-traded products
are products that have similarities to ETFs in the way that they
trade and settle, but they do not use an open-end fund
structure.)
Wealth managers are developing ESG offerings as a way of
attracting new investors – such as Millennials who are considered
to be more fired up about these issues than their older peers. It
seems now that almost no major wealth manager is without an ESG
offering or is not developing one. To give just one example of a
firm touting its work in the space,
see this interview with Indosuez Wealth Management. Late last
year, the consultancy, Aite Group, said that environmental,
social, and governance strategies are becoming increasingly
adopted by the wealth management sector.