In climate change fight, investors beat risks with active role, PGIM study finds
Our planet’s climate trajectory for the next 15 years is already decided, scientists warn—but what actions investors take today can still have tremendous impact. New research by PGIM, the
Chief Operating Officer, PGIM (Photo: Business Wire)
The research, Weathering Climate Change: Opportunities and Risks in an Altered Investment Landscape, draws from the insights of more than 45 investment professionals across PGIM’s fixed income, equity, real estate, private debt and alternatives businesses; interviews with 30 leading academics, economists, policy-makers, scientists and climate change investors; and a proprietary survey of 100 global institutional investors to better understand their current strategies around climate change.
According to PGIM’s survey, nearly
“The humanitarian and economic catastrophe unleashed by COVID-19 revealed investor’s vulnerability to slow-burning risks with unpredictable timing,” says Taimur Hyat, PGIM’s chief operating officer. “Climate change is the next crisis that will radically reshape investors’ risks and opportunities. Investors that take action now can play an influential role in driving the global transition to a low-carbon economy while optimizing their portfolios for a greener future.”
The research demonstrates that markets have only just begun to reflect climate risks in asset prices and predicts that a range of catalysts will accelerate the gradual, or potentially abrupt, repricing of assets to more fully reflect climate risks. This mispricing of climate risks creates opportunities for active, long-term investors. These range from identifying tech-forward companies adept at transitioning to the new “low-carbon economy,” to incorporating physical and transition climate risk in analyzing real assets, to supporting startups engaged with transformative technologies like carbon capture and storage.
Among the research findings:
- Not enough investors use alternative data sources and techniques to better understand cross-portfolio climate risk. Fewer than one in five use alternative data such as satellite imagery, flooding maps, drought data and air quality data. Overlaying the geolocation of key production and supplier facilities with climate data and analytics can reveal which operations are exposed to physical climate risk.
- Expect the greenest firms within brown industries to outperform. The evolution away from fossil fuels will play out over a significantly longer time horizon than many investors might expect. Investors can actively influence fossil fuel users and extractors to employ more sustainable practices and positively impact carbon emission outcomes over the decades-long wind-down period.
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Investors may need to apply a climate change lens to sovereign debt. Nearly
25% of investors view climate as a risk for sovereign debt, while only4% view it as an opportunity. However, countries with similar