24-07-2024 · Visione

SFDR – what asset managers need to know

The EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulations (SFDR) are a set of disclosure rules designed to enhance the transparency and maintain the credibility of sustainable investing. We unpack what it means for asset managers in theory and how it’s evolving in practice.

Robeco's SI Big Book 2.0.

    Relatori

  • Masja Zandbergen-Albers - Head of Sustainability Integration

    Masja Zandbergen-Albers

    Head of Sustainability Integration

A significant step in a larger journey

Regulation is a dirty word in many corners of business and politics, but sustainability regulations are desperately needed to accelerate the transition to cleaner, greener and more equitable economies. The EU has wasted no time in drafting legislative frameworks to steer its companies, industries, and trading partners toward sustainable profits and growth.

The EU Sustainable Finance Action Plan is just one part of the grand plan. Its overarching goal is to channel capital to sustainable investments and development across the 27-nation bloc. It does so through several underlying initiatives including the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulations (SFDR).

The SFDR is designed to ensure that capital intended for sustainable investments flows into bona fide sustainable products. To accomplish this, the SFDR requires asset managers to thoughtfully consider sustainability risks in their investment products, substantiate any sustainability claims based on objective criteria, and disclose those results publicly.

In addition to protecting investors from ‘greenwashing’, more data and disclosure should also arm them with more information to compare the merits and trade-offs of competing investment products.

Common misconceptions

By now, the SFDR’s most famous feature is its classification system. Asset managers are required to classify all investment products as Article 6, 8, or 9.

  • Article 6 products have no sustainability goal but must disclose why that’s the case.

  • Article 8 products must demonstrate they promote environmental or social characteristics.

  • Article 9 products must pursue a clear sustainable investment objective.


Investment managers may be tempted to use these new classifications as a marketing label to increase their attractiveness. However, labels imply that products have been assessed using a strict set of standardized metrics and that’s not the case with SFDR. Though it requires reporting across common subject areas, there is still a wide range of variability between the sustainability features. At its core, the SFDR is a transparency measure that lets investors peer inside a product so they can understand what features make it sustainable.

The SFDR is a transparency measure that lets investors peer inside a product so they can understand what features make it sustainable

Another common error is assuming that Article 6 products are exempt from sustainability disclosures. SFDR requires all financial market participants to assess and disclose whether they integrate sustainability policies into their products, the likely impact of sustainability risk on returns, as well as if they consider the negative impacts their products may have on a special set of EU-defined indicators known as Principal Adverse Impacts (PAIs).1

Comparing Articles 8 and 9

Relative to Article 6, Articles 8 and 9 require more measurement and reporting across a broad range of sustainability metrics. Article 8 products must demonstrate they promote sustainability while Article 9 products must demonstrate they directly contribute to them. In addition, both classes must show they adhere to good governance and report to what extent they are using the ‘sustainable activities’ definitions of the EU Taxonomy.

Beyond these requirements, Article 9 portfolios are mandated to report on any negative effects their underlying securities may have on 18 (of 64) PAIs that include areas such as carbon emissions, waste disposal, human rights, and gender diversity. In contrast, Article 8 products need only to explain whether they consider PAIs in their investments.

Another distinction is that Article 9 must be fully invested in companies that are deemed sustainable, while Article 8 products need only state the share of sustainable investments they intend to make.

Figure 1 – How Robeco determines a product’s SFDR classification

Figure 1 – How Robeco determines a product’s SFDR classification

Source: Robeco, April 2023

More clarity is critical

What constitutes a ‘sustainable investment’ however is not strictly defined. A wind farm investment may be sustainable for a clean energy strategy, but its poor worker-safety record may make it unacceptable for a portfolio focused on high performance on socially oriented factors. That lack of clarity is causing kinks and slowing SFDR’s progress.

Amendments have been proposed which include stricter technical standards and more rigor on PAI
assessments (i.e., not just whether but how PAIs are applied to investments). However, it may take years before these are vetted, approved, and implemented (if approved at all).

The EU Taxonomy’s classification system could provide a speedier solution, given both Article 8 and 9 classes require managers to already report how much their products align with the Taxonomy2. But that can’t be measured until investee companies themselves classify and report their sustainable activities. The CSRD, a separate sustainable finance directed aimed at corporate sustainability disclosure, requires larger companies (more than 500 employees) to report the Taxonomy alignment of their operations beginning already this year.

But given the costs involved, smaller companies still have years to comply. Moreover, the social part of the EU Taxonomy that defines which activities contribute positively to social impact, is still in development. Given these gaps in reporting, using the Taxonomy as an accelerated solution by year’s end is unlikely.

Where we are and where we’re going

For the time being, uncertainty over how rules will evolve has caused many managers to put a pause on further SFDR action plans. Despite the pause, rules are creating lots of dialogue and engagement. Moreover, progress at such scale and with so much impact is better done in increments.

Over time, we believe external pressure from stakeholders combined with technological advances in data capture and processing should push companies and the investment industry toward more integration and disclosure of sustainability risks and impact.

Read more on how sustainability is impacting finance and investments in our SI Big Book 2.0.

Robeco's SI Big Book 2.0.