Ethical Investment Needs to Keep Its Promises: The Editors

Fund managers have long been eager to satisfy global investors’ appetite for assets that meet “environmental, social and governance” standards. But the ESG movement is facing a backlash — and not without reason. As Bloomberg News has reported, many of the promises made to claim ESG virtue turn out to be meaningless, and corporations issuing “green bonds” aren’t always very green. Former champions of the movement have been speaking out about weak or contradictory assurances, describing an industry more devoted to virtue-signaling than to real action.

The ESG sector does have questions to answer. Many funds are run in a way that will do little or nothing to advance the movement’s stated goals. Even at their best, these efforts are no substitute for wise government policy. Yet prudent ESG investing serves a useful purpose, especially in helping to finance the fight against climate change.

This is no longer a fringe segment of global markets. ESG investments surpassed $35 trillion last year and are on track to reach more than $50 trillion by 2025, roughly a third of the world’s assets under management. That’s a colossal pool of capital. But how dedicated is the sector to genuine ethical principles?

The former chief investment officer for sustainable investing at BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager, has published damning essays dismissing the whole idea as “marketing” and a “dangerous placebo.” Others have decried “ESG Lalaland” and reckless “wishful thinking.” Deutsche Bank’s asset-management arm, DWS Group, is the latest to find itself accused of greenwashing by a former sustainability chief, and is now grappling with reputational damage and regulators’ questions. (ESG accounted for almost two-fifths of DWS’s net new assets in the first half of this year. The firm rejects the allegations.)