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In practice, however, it is not always clear that investors rank climate change as close to economic concerns on their priority lists. Many investors are still strongly motivated by the desire to deliver short-term returns to their clients. There are even some well-publicized examples of companies being pressured by their investors to maintain the status quo, rather than pursue transformation to more sustainable business models.
Investors may not push for change if they believe they are sufficiently diversified at a portfolio level in terms of their sustainability-related risks. In this situation, they may not be particularly concerned about risk diversification at an individual company level. So they encourage certain investee companies in exposed sectors to concentrate on maximizing value for as long as they can through their current business models rather than transition to new business models.
Investors who were interviewed also argue that there is a lack of historical correlation between sustainability objectives and financial performance, which makes it hard for them to evaluate sustainable investment performance. This is partly due to a lack of high-quality disclosures and data, but it is also down to evolving approaches to sustainability over the past 30 years.
The link between the say-do gap and investors’ focus on short-term performance was already evident in the 2022 EY Global Corporate Reporting and Institutional Investor Survey (pdf). Most relevant to this was the claim by more than three-quarters (78%) of investors surveyed that companies should make investments that address ESG issues relevant to their business, even if doing so reduces profits in the short term. Yet 53% of large companies surveyed for the same study revealed that they faced short-term earnings pressure from investors, which impeded their long-term investments in sustainability. Furthermore, 20% described investors as being “primarily focused on quarterly earnings and indifferent to long-term investments such as sustainability.”