Screening techniques for responsible investing.
Ahh, the quest for an ethical investment portfolio. Well done you! When venturing into the land of responsible investing, it can be tricky getting your head around the ABCs of ESGs. But it’s important to understand the screening techniques for responsible investing.
Knowing a bit about the screens investment managers use to assemble a fund will help you find a portfolio actually walks their talk.
So – what’s the difference between Positive Screening, Negative Screening and Norms-Based Screening? What about Impact Investing or Sustainability Themed Investing? And what are the best screening techniques for investing responsibly? Read on for what you need to know.
What’s Positive Screening?
Positive screening is the process of actively investing in certain sectors or companies that demonstrate environmental, social and governance leadership.
For example, a fund manager might positively screen for companies with great workforce practices and employee safety records. They might screen for certain sectors that show strong environmental leadership. Think: companies on the front lines of renewable energy or those in sustainable product design.
Positive screening is sometimes called ‘inclusionary screening’.
What’s Negative Screening?
Negative screening is the process of actively excluding certain sectors or companies that fail to meet predetermined moral or ethical standards and/or environmental, social and governance criteria.
For example, a fund manager might exclude entire industries that they consider harmful (e.g. tobacco, alcohol, weapons, gambling). Or they might avoid investing in specific companies with a bad rap sheet or notable ethical violations (e.g. human rights abuses, environmental destruction, tax evasion).
Negative screening is sometimes called ‘exclusionary screening’.
What’s Norms-Based Screening?
Norms-based screening is the process of screening investments against minimum standards of business practice, based on international norms.
For example, a fund manager might exclude investments that do not comply with globally-accepted standards like those issued by the United Nations (e.g. the UN’s Declaration of Human Rights and Kyoto Protocol), the OECD or even well-recognised NGOs (e.g. Transparency International).
Norms-based screening is sometimes called ‘minimum-standards screening’.
What’s Best-In-Class Screening?
Best-in-class screening is the process of investing in sectors or companies for their positive ESG performance, relative to their industry peers. For many responsible investors, best-in-class screening is considered problematic when used in isolation (i.e. not in conjunction with other positive, negative or norms-based screening techniques) because it can be used to merely compare ‘the best of a bad lot’.
For example, a fund manager using only best-in-class screening techniques might invest in a tobacco company or brown coal producer, if it’s showing ESG leadership relative to its peers. Unfortunately, this style of screening doesn’t account for the harm caused by, or the overall track record of, the industry itself.
What’s Sustainability Themed Screening?
Sustainability themed screening is the process of selecting investments and screening sectors or assets based on their contribution to social or environmental sustainability.
For example, a fund manager might assemble a low-carbon or sustainable water sources portfolio, designed to achieve a specific sustainability-themed outcome.
What’s Impact Investing?
Impact investing aims to generate positive and measurable social and environmental outcomes, whilst generating a financial return.
There are three main aspects of Impact Investing. Impact Investing is:
- Intentional: Investors actively set out to generate a positive social or environmental impact.
- Measurable: The impact of the investment is measurable and transparent.
- Financially Rewarding: There is a financial return on investment and monetary reward beyond the positive impact on the community or environment.
For example, impact investors might set out to design a ‘gender equity impact investment strategy’ and would look for high-performing companies with a history of women in executive leadership and board roles. Another example might be impact investors coming together to provide microfinance loans and start up or expansion funding for small-business owners in emerging nations.
Impact investing is tied closely to the UN’s 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) which you can read more about here.
Tying it all together.
With appetite for ESG and sustainable investing on the rise, it’s important to remember not all screening methods, funds or fund managers are created equally.
Also, blending multiple screening techniques often gives you a bigger bang for your buck. Combining negative and positive screening techniques, for example, would allow a fund manager to rule out certain types of investments, whilst prioritise others. In this case, they might screen out fossil fuels. Then positively screen for renewable energy providers. Such a blended approach provides a more nuanced and robust take on sustainability screening.
If you’re looking for more information on ESG and sustainable investing, we’ve got lots more here.
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