More Levers, Less Volatility
Stocks have offered the most attractive long-term return potential compared to other assets, but they’re prone to short-term volatility and losses. Certainly, equities of all stripes (style, cap size, region, etc.) remain a key pillar in a sustainable portfolio, especially as more companies enter the ESG space and global opportunities expand.
US-based Hexcel, for instance, manufactures lightweight carbon fiber that displaces steel and aluminum in airplanes for better fuel efficiency—a boon to climate goals. Similarly, Adobe profitably empowers companies through its digital enterprise resources, leaving a very small carbon footprint in the process.
Similar alignments to global sustainability themes are also found in bonds, expanding the levers that multi-asset portfolios can use to make dynamic adjustments as markets shift. For example, the popularity of ESG-labeled bonds is exploding, with green bond issuance alone topping nearly US$4 trillion at year-end 2022, according to the World Bank.
Not All ESG-Labeled Bonds Are Alike
It’s important to understand how each ESG-labeled bond can uniquely contribute to a sustainable portfolio. They fall into two broad categories: use of proceeds, and sustainability linked.
Use-of-proceeds bonds finance specific green or social projects. Ørsted, for example, is a Danish energy provider targeting using 99% renewable sources by 2025. Proceeds from its green bonds will fund offshore wind farms and other renewables, conversion of gas and coal plants to sustainable biomass, and clean energy storage. Meanwhile, Scotland-based commercial bank NatWest Group’s social bond proceeds are aimed squarely at funding women-led enterprises.
Rather than financing individual projects, sustainability-linked bonds (SLBs) require that issuers meet specified sustainable key performance indicators within a specified timeframe—at the company level. For incentive, SLB frameworks can stipulate higher coupons if targets aren’t reached. Greece-based PPC, for instance, missed its 2022 year-end decarbonization target, and its coupon was stepped up 0.25% in March 2023 as a result.
Some ESG-labeled bonds may not have specific green or social targets for proceeds, but the issuer has set certain sustainability targets that it seeks to achieve. For instance, US Acute Care Solutions is a physician-owned provider of medicine, hospitals and observation services that strongly aligns with UN SDG health themes. The company is very employee-centric based on a “democratic ownership” model. Its in-network business model offers lower-than-average pricing compared to peers, and it takes measurable steps to ensure patient access to quality care while managing costs and fostering a diverse and inclusive workplace.
Talking Trash… and Trains and Tap Water
The diversification benefits of ESG-labeled bonds can go even further, considering the scope of issuers is much wider than companies, from non-profit agencies and provinces to sovereign nations.
Much like security selection, engagement* is a big part of the screening and integration process. Engagement entails meeting with issuers, reviewing their sustainability goals and even encouraging them to set more ambitious targets to attract investors.
AB regularly participates in early framing of an upcoming bond’s purpose and reach. For example, Canada’s finance department invited us to present our thoughts on a proposed seven-year ESG-labeled environmental bond in 2022, which at C$5 billion ranked it among the country’s largest and most sweeping. Bond proceeds were intended to finance nationwide biodiversity programs, cleaner transportation projects, wastewater management improvements, more renewable energy and other initiatives. AB has continued to engage with the Canadian government on topics such as green bond impact reports and future ESG-labeled bonds and frameworks.
Healthy Stretching: Alternative Assets Play a Role, Too
The traditional diversification benefits of stocks and bonds can’t always be relied on, as we saw in 2022. For this and other reasons, we think sustainable multi-asset investors should consider expanding, albeit selectively, into non-traditional assets, which are a growing part of the ESG world. Such alternatives today include digital infrastructure, such as power-saving smart buildings and renewable energy generation.
Regional exposure also matters, as does a variety of style (low volatility versus growth stocks) and low-correlating factors such as hedge fund premia and options. Integrating measured, complementary exposure among these outliers may especially help offset biases that can slowly creep up. This helps manage short-term volatility while enhancing diversification in issuers that contribute to positive environmental and social outcomes.
Sustainable multi-asset portfolio construction strives to combine the best opportunities across asset classes and the ESG universe. We believe the efficient integration of these ideas, including tactical maneuvers when conditions change, can help manage downside risk and provide a more balanced sustainable investing experience.
*AB engages companies where it believes the engagement is in the best interest of its clients.