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Fund Name(s):
  • Sarasin Climate Active Endowment Fund
Fund Name SRI Style Product Region Asset Type Launch Date

Sarasin Climate Active Endowment Fund
Environmentally Focused Charities Global Mixed Asset 16/02/2018

Total assets under management: £18745.70

As at: 31/03/23

Contact: Christopher.cade@sarasin.co.uk

Overview

The Sarasin & Partners’ Climate Active Endowment Fund is a multi-asset fund for charities which aims to bring about, and benefit from, action by businesses to strengthen their resilience to climate risks. Specifically, the Fund aims to promote alignment with the international Climate Accord’s goal of limiting global temperature increases to “well below 2C”, whilst ensuring the companies held are positioning themselves for the transition away from fossil fuels. Wherever information is available, the Fund will also take account of the physical impacts of climate change for companies.

 

The underpinning philosophy of the Fund is that it is in shareholders’ long-term interests for companies to be run in a way that supports climate stability

Filters

Fund information

Sustainability

Environmental policy

Sustainability policy

Limits exposure to carbon intensive industries

Resource efficiency policy or theme

Sustainable transport policy or theme

Sustainability theme or focus

Favours cleaner, greener companies

Waste management policy or theme

Sustainability focus

Report against sustainability objectives

Encourage more sustainable practices through stewardship

Nature & Biodiversity

Deforestation / palm oil policy

Plastics policy / reviewing plastics

Unsustainable / illegal deforestation exclusion policy

Climate Change & Energy

Nuclear exclusion policy

Coal, oil & / or gas majors excluded

Climate change / greenhouse gas emissions policy

Invests in clean energy / renewables

Fracking and tar sands excluded

Fossil fuel reserves exclusion

Energy efficiency theme

Require net zero action plan from all/most companies

Encourage transition to low carbon through stewardship activity

Human Rights

Human rights policy

Child labour exclusion

Responsible supply chain policy or theme

Social / Employment

Social policy

Health & wellbeing policies or theme

Labour standards policy

Favours companies with strong social policies

Meeting Peoples' Basic Needs

Water / sanitation policy or theme

Demographic / ageing population theme

Ethical Values Led Exclusions

Ethical policies

Animal welfare policy

Animal testing exclusion policy

Tobacco and related product manufacturers excluded

Armaments manufacturers avoided

Alcohol production excluded

Gambling avoidance policy

Pornography avoidance policy

Animal testing - excluded except if for medical purposes

Civilian firearms production exclusion

Banking & Financials

Predatory lending exclusion

Governance & Management

Governance policy

Anti-bribery and corruption policy

Avoids companies with poor governance

Digital / cyber security policy

Encourage board diversity e.g. gender

Encourage TCFD alignment for banks & insurance companies

UN sanctions exclusion

Encourage higher ESG standards through stewardship activity

Fund Governance

ESG integration strategy

ESG factors included in Assessment of Value (AoV) report

Employ external (fund) oversight or advisory committee

How The Fund Works

Balances company 'pros and cons' / best in sector

Strictly screened ethical fund

Combines ESG strategy with other SRI criteria

ESG weighted / tilt

Focus on ESG risk mitigation

Selection criteria / strategy may alter in adverse markets

SRI / ESG / Ethical policies explained on website

Impact Methodologies

Aims to generate positive impacts (or 'outcomes')

Positive environmental impact theme

Intended Clients & Product Options

Faith friendly

Intended for investors interested in sustainability

Intended for clients who want to have a positive impact

Bespoke SRI / ESG portfolios available (DFMs)

Fund management company information

About The Business

ESG / SRI engagement (AFM company wide)

Responsible ownership / stewardship policy or strategy (AFM company wide)

Responsible ownership policy for non SRI funds (AFM company wide)

Responsible ownership / ESG a key differentiator (AFM company wide)

Diversity, equality & inclusion engagement policy (AFM company wide)

Boutique / specialist fund management company

Integrates ESG factors into all / most fund research

In-house diversity improvement programme (AFM company wide)

Resources

In-house responsible ownership / voting expertise

Employ specialist ESG / SRI / sustainability researchers

Use specialist ESG / SRI / sustainability research companies

ESG specialists on all investment desks (AFM company wide)

Collaborations & Affiliations

PRI signatory

Climate Action 100+ or IIGCC member

Fund EcoMarket partner

GFANZ member (AFM company wide)

Accreditations

UK Stewardship Code signatory (AFM company wide)

PRI A+ rated (AFM company wide)

Engagement Approach

Regularly lead collaborative ESG initiatives (AFM company wide)

Encourage responsible corporate taxation (AFM company wide)

Company Wide Exclusions

Controversial weapons avoidance policy (AFM company wide)

Tobacco avoidance policy (AFM company wide)

Fossil fuel exclusion policy (AFM company wide)

Do not invest in companies with fossil fuel reserves

Climate & Net Zero Transition

Encourage carbon / greenhouse gas reduction (AFM company wide)

Net Zero commitment (AFM company wide)

Working towards a ‘Net Zero’ commitment (AFM company wide)

Net Zero - have set a Net Zero target date (AFM company wide)

Transparency

Publish full voting record (AFM company wide)

Publish responsible ownership / stewardship report (AFM company wide)

Full SRI policy information available on request

Net Zero transition plan publicly available (AFM company wide)

Sustainability transition plan publicly available (AFM company wide)

Policy

The Sarasin Climate Active Endowments Fund operates a screening policy as follows:

  • No investment in companies with 5% or more of their turnover involved in the mining of thermal coal or tar sands
  • Following engagement, no investment in companies that needlessly emit significant quantities of carbon into the atmosphere, or which do not take seriously the transition to a low carbon economy
  • Qualitative judgments to be considered on a regular basis by the Climate Active Advisory Panel
  • Zero tolerance on tobacco production and manufacturing of tobacco related products
  • No investment in companies that generate significant turnover from the manufacture of arms, alcohol, gambling and pornography

 

In terms of implementation, the Fund excludes a limited set of companies that derive the bulk of their revenues from the most carbon-intensive fossil fuels (either in the form of reserves or emissions) where we believe long-term prospects for value creation are poor. In the first instance, the Fund will not invest in companies that have more than 5% of their revenue from carbon-intensive oil sands or thermal coal, but then undertakes a more detailed climate stress test to determine how companies would fare as decarbonisation accelerates in line with the ‘well below 2C’ goal.

 

The Fund emphasises active engagement with companies that may be negatively exposed to decarbonisation (and physical risks where this is measurable), but where we believe there is an opportunity to build resilience such that the investment proposition is protected. In other words, the Fund invests in companies with attractive prospects for long-term value creation, and understands that management teams often have significant opportunities to respond to climate risks such that the company’s prospects are enhanced.

Process

Equities

Our aim is to deliver enduring value for our clients across market cycles. When we invest on behalf of our clients, we look to the long-term prospects of a company. We purchase shares where there is a case for enduring value creation, and where this is currently underappreciated by the market.

We also believe that responsible companies will tend to create more durable economic value. Specifically, we favour businesses that articulate compelling long-term strategies, and take seriously their responsibilities to their customers, supply chain, staff, local communities, the environment, and their shareholders.

Once we become shareholders on behalf of our clients, we believe it is important to build lines of communications with the executives and the Board of Directors. Stewardship is as much about ongoing responsible ownership as to the considered approach to selecting investee companies. We also believe that our clients’ long-term interests are not best served by a narrow focus on relative performance against a market index. The service we offer goes beyond beating a benchmark: first and foremost, we start with our clients’ needs and take a holistic approach. We would not, for instance, deploy capital in a company whose success involves causing significant harm elsewhere, which could damage our clients’ interests. Where we believe we can play a positive role in boosting broader market returns through improved government policies or market practices we will seek to catalyse change.

We aim to invest in companies that benefit from our ‘global themes’, or societal trends such as digitalisation, automation, ageing, emerging consumers and climate change. Further, we seek companies that are able to drive long-term performance through credible strategies to transform these strengths into enduring value, and demonstrating robust governance structures that will protect shareholders’ and creditors’ interests.

Environmental, governance and social factors are considered alongside other value drivers in determining a company’s ‘investment case’ and ‘risks to investment’. Companies’ long-term success depends on strategies that sustainably deliver goods or services valued by customers, such that companies earn an attractive return, maintain their license to operate and prosper. A company’s relations with core stakeholders, from employees, to suppliers, to regulators, to local communities to other groups that are impacted by (and may impact) the company’s operations, as well as its environmental performance, are important considerations.

ESG is, therefore, a required part of our analysis, and where we identify potential material impacts, this must be reflected within our valuation and modelling. This therefore has an impact on portfolio construction as it is part of the fair value and fundamental assessment of a company, which is considered in the investment decision and position sizing.

Once we have bought a stake in a company, we stay close to it. We monitor the business’ strategic outlook and performance, its critical value drivers to ensure their persistence, and our conviction in the stock’s long-term value proposition. Engagement and voting are key considerations throughout our research process in order to communicate with management on ESG and other issues and press where we see a need for change. A considered approach to voting is vital not just because it is a key avenue through which we can express our views, but also because it supports our relationships with the company’s Board of Directors and executives.

 

Fixed Income

Our fixed income investment process contains both top-down and bottom-up elements. It uses a macro-economic research foundation, drawing upon the expertise of the in-house economists with particular emphasis on longer-term structural considerations. This feeds into interest rate exposure management, but may also influence fixed income sector disposition and credit structure preferences. In parallel, and underpinning credit portfolio construction and management, is thorough analysis of each credit using a consistent research process.

Environmental, Social and Governance analysis is integral to our credit review process. Analysts review the ESG risks pertaining to an obligor from a creditor’s perspective. The factors considered vary by sector. However, there are some common elements, such as the commitment to a financial profile that supports the interests of the investor.

 

  • Environmental – climate change, resource input, waste output, indirect exposures, indirect effects
  • Social – labour relations, supply chain labour standards, product safety, regulatory scrutiny, political environment, data breach risk
  • Governance – ownership structure, the board, internal controls, external controls, attitude to bondholders, ratings policy and history, litigation risk and overhang

 

A score from zero to ten for each of the three ESG considerations is allocated. The zero to ten scores indicate:

10:   No impact on Probability of Default or Severity of Loss. The factor will have no impact on credit rating or bond price.

7:     May affect Probability of Default or Severity of Loss. The factor would not trigger a credit rating event but may induce temporary adverse price action.

5:     Somewhat affects Probability of Default or Severity of Loss. The factor would trigger a credit rating event and modest permanent spread widening.

3:     Major impact on Probability of Default or Severity of Loss. The factor would trigger a multi-notch downgrade and major permanent spread widening.

0:     Potential event of default. The factor would trigger default with a low expected recovery rate.

 

Next, the relative importance of E, S & G risks is assessed:

  • Sector norms are established for the E, S and G weights
  • Individual obligor weightings differ from the norm if their profile diverges from the sector average. For example, the ‘Banks’ ESG ratio is used as a starting point for Building Societies, but adjusted to reflect their mutual status
  • As creditors, Governance is often the dominant consideration for a bond investor
  • These weighting allow us to establish the Average ESG Factor Score and Indicated ESG Rating for a security.

If the borrower has an Investment Grade ESG rating and all individual ESG scores exceed three out of ten, the security will be eligible for the portfolio (from an ESG perspective). Those that fail this test could still be eligible for selection, but only if they pass our Stewardship Team’s “Red Flag” Deep Dive Process, offer satisfactory engagement, and if they have an improving ESG trend.

 

Data sources

The vast majority of our ESG analysis is proprietary analysis. We do use a range of providers to supplement this proprietary work, including MSCI, ISS as well as various ESG networks like ICGN, ACGA, alongside sell-side brokers and independent research input. All external data provided assists with our overall research process but in no way replaces or precludes the need for proprietary ESG and stewardship research. Our process is founded on the robustness and soundness of our own research prior to reliance on the data of third parties. For ethical screening, we use MSCI data. We also initiate, sponsor and participate in academic work and discussion to identify and investigate early opportunities, themes and trends.

We also utilise a company’s disclosures, external experts, non-governmental organisations, government publications and discussions. We also have access to the proprietary Sustainability Matrix®, developed and maintained by our parent company, Bank J. Safra Sarasin. The matrix aggregates sustainability data from MSCI ESG, GMI, RepRisk and VigeoEiris. It is maintained by the Bank J Safra Sarasin sustainability team of 12 dedicated analysts, assessing and analysing the data that goes in and out of the matrix.

 

Resources, Affiliations & Corporate Strategies

Internal Resources

All of our analysts and portfolio managers consider ESG factors when discussing stock ideas and building an investment case. Thus, we consider the entire team an ESG resource.

 

The stewardship specialists are directly responsible for engagement efforts, and work with the analysts to help them develop their ESG analysis and ratings for stocks.

 

Whilst the analysts own their ratings, this must be approved by the stewardship team to ensure joint accountability. It is important to note that our stewardship specialists are part of the global equity team, and are involved in team discussions and decisions.

 

We utilise our own framework and ratings systems to represent our proprietary ESG analysis. This analysis is bottom-up and driven by extensive primary research carried out by our analysts, supplemented with ESG data from MSCI, ISS and other sources.

 

Affiliations and Memberships

In addition to the UN PRI, we are signatories to the 2020 UK Stewardship Code – and passed the Financial Reporting Council’s assessment for this in September 2021s. Other memberships / initiatives including those listed below, are often the forum in which we work to improve ESG standards and taxonomy:

 

ENVIRONMENTAL

  • IIGCC Paris-aligned accounting and audit working group (Chair)
  • IIGCC Net Zero Banking initiative (co-Chair)
  • Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM)
  • Taskforce for Climate-related Financial Reporting
  • Climate Action 100+
  • “Say on Climate” Initiative
  • Carbon Accounting Project (PRI)
  • Ellen MacArthur Foundation Plastics Initiative
  • Plastic Solutions Investor Alliance (PSIA)
  • Finance for Biodiversity Initiative (F4B)

 

SOCIAL

  • 30% Club
  • Find It, Fix It, Prevent It initiative (FFP) – Modern Slavery
  • Workforce Disclosure Initiative (WDI)
  • International Accord for Health and Safety in the Textile and Garment Industry
  • Investor Statement of Solidarity to Address Systemic Racism and Call to Action
  • World Benchmarking Alliance Digital Inclusion Collective Impact Coalition

 

GOVERNANCE

  • International Corporate Governance Network (ICGN)
  • UK Corporate Reporting and Auditing Group (CRAG)
  • Advisory Group for International Audit & Assurance Standards Board

 

We also support The Local Authority Pension Fund Forum (LAPFF).

 

Many of these commitments provide us with a network of peers and supporters for key ESG related issues. It is important for us to remain engaged with group advocacy work, collaborative endeavours, such as engagements, but also to keep aware of best practice.

 

Often, we find these networks to be useful sources of data and information either on a broad ESG related issue or on company specific metrics that may not be found in other sources.

While the majority of our company engagements are pursued on our own, as outlined in later responses, we will collaborate with other investors where we are seeking to escalate due to resistance from the board or executives. Often having a larger shareholding united on a matter of concern can be more impactful. Wherever we explore collaboration, we ensure the steps we take are consistent with local laws and regulations. In certain cases, these collaborations link into broader initiatives that we support, such as ICCR Covid-19 engagement; the Workforce Disclosure Initiative; the Ellen MacArthur global commitment on recycling; or Climate Action 100+.

 

Dialshifter

This fund is helping to ‘shift the dial from brown to green’ by…

through our belief that the most crucial way in which we as a firm can have an impact on sustainability is through our stewardship work with investee companies. Responsible investment has the power to deliver enduring value to clients in a way that benefits society. Equally, wealth creation at society’s expense is likely to be ephemeral. Our approach has three tenets:

  • A robust, thematic, global investment process focused on long-term value drivers
  • Active engagement with companies and considered voting to drive positive change
  • Policy outreach where we believe we can play a positive role in shaping markets and regulation.

 

 

Our organisation is helping to support the Paris Climate Agreement and the Race to Net Zero by…

… pressing investee companies to align with the Paris climate goals: 

  • Proactive engagement – we initiate and support dialogue with company boards to make clear our expectation for companies to publish Paris-aligned strategies, including measurable mid-term targets 
  • Voting – we oppose director appointments where individuals are blocking the implementation of a Paris-aligned strategy. We will vote against auditors where we believe the Annual Report and Accounts fail to report material climate risks
  • Divestment – we sell a company’s shares where we believe capital is at risk and leadership is failing to respond appropriately.

We also promote policy through policy outreach and public statements.

Literature

Last amended: 13/06/23 08:56

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05/04/2024