Responsible Investing

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Responsible Investing serves as a holistic resource on Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investing for undergraduate and graduate programs. It provides a thorough background and history of ESG investing, as well as cutting-edge industry developments, introducing the reader to the rapidly evolving field of responsible investing.

Building on the first edition, this second edition provides updates where appropriate, as well as new emphasis on the development of standards in terminology and metrics. Opening with the background of ESG investing, the book discusses the development of ESG risks and provides an overview of ESG rating systems. It outlines the current position of ESG investing in portfolio management through granular analysis, offers insight into common investor concerns about ESG investments, presents qualitative theories, and reviews literature modeling ESG investment performance. Finally, the authors provide readers with a foundation on the development of financial models measuring risk and return, which can be used to evaluate the performance of ESG investments. This edition features updated statistics and a new chapter on regulation, reporting, and taxonomy in ESG investing, as well as new international case studies.

Following a summary approach, Responsible Investing is a valuable textbook, providing a context in which upper-level students of ESG investment and sustainable finance can specialize.

Author(s): Matthew W. Sherwood, Julia Pollard
Edition: 2
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 241

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of figures
List of tables
About the authors
Contributors
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter rubrics
1 Introduction
1.1 Assumptions for this textbook
1.2 Terminology
1.3 Useful features for students
Discussion questions
2 A historical survey of ESG investing
2.1 Progression of investing theories: neoclassical economics encounters human nature
2.2 Socially responsible investing’s historical beginnings: religious and corporate development (1800s–1950s)
2.3 Development era: key milestones in the development of SRI investing (1950s–1990s)
Case study 2A Pilgrims Fund Board
2.4 The modern era: 1990s–today
Learning perspective 1 Handprinting: driving positive impacts
Discussion questions
3 Common methods for incorporating ESG investments into portfolio management
3.1 Exclusion-based ESG investing
3.2 Integration-based ESG investing
Case study 3A ESG integration at J.P. Morgan Asset Management
3.3 Impact-based ESG investing
3.4 Engagement-based ESG investing
Case study 3B Defining engagement – Federated Hermes
Learning perspective 2 ESG proxy voting
Discussion questions
4 The development of ESG risk and the ESG rating system
4.1 Introduction to ESG risks
4.2 Policy risk
4.3 Headline risk
4.4 Performance risk
4.5 Introduction to risk premia
4.6 ESG identification and the ESG rating system
Case study 4A MSCI ESG ratings
Case study 4B Sustainalytics
4.7 The impact of ESG risk on portfolio management
Learning perspective 3 How ESG indexes facilitate the evolution of finance
Discussion questions
5 Regulation, reporting, and taxonomy in ESG investing
5.1 Necessity of precise responsible investing terminology
Case study 5A Sustainable Development Goals
Case study 5B Mexico SDG-linked bond
5.2 Evolution of responsible investing terminology
5.3 ESG-related regulation
Case study 5C EU Sustainable Financial Disclosure Regulation
5.4 Developments in ESG-related data and reporting
Discussion questions
6 The impact of common investment theories on ESG investment trends
6.1 Shareholder theory vs. stakeholder theory
Case study 6A Dodge v. Ford Motor Co. (judicial foundation for shareholder theory)
6.2 Material information vs. non-material information
Case Study 6B Securities and Exchange Commission 17 CFR PARTS 211, 231 and 241 [release nos. 33–9106; 34–61469; FR-82] commission guidance regarding disclosure related to climate change
6.3 Resource-based view vs. Porter’s five forces model
6.4 Universal owner theory
Discussion questions
7 The current role of ESG investing in portfolio management
7.1 ESG investing in developed markets
Case study 7A Breckinridge Capital Advisors
7.2 ESG investing in emerging markets
Case study 7B Hot topic: fossil fuel-free (FFF) investment
Case study 7C SRI investing within hedge funds
Discussion questions
8 Common investor concerns regarding ESG investment strategies
8.1 Return concerns
Case study 8A Passively customized ESG indices by Aperio (BlackRock)
8.2 Policy concerns
8.3 Information concerns
Case study 8B Customized responsible investment policies to evaluate investment products – a case study from Germany
8.4 Regional concerns
Learning perspective 4 Sustainability and financial performance
Discussion questions
9 Commonly held ESG views and practical considerations
9.1 Qualitative vs. quantitative models
9.2 Environmentally focused investing
9.3 Socially focused investing
9.4 Governance-focused investing
Learning perspective 5 The future of capitalism is feminine
Discussion questions
10 Methods for modeling risk and return for traditional investments
10.1 Fundamental analysis
Case study 10A Integrating ESG in DCF valuation: AllianceBernstein’s Global Core Equity
10.2 Quantitative analysis
10.3 Development of common method of risk and return
Discussion questions
Index