How real assets provide real solutions: investing sustainably for a better world
Investments in real assets are valued for providing diversification benefits, inflation protection, and stable yield—they also have the potential to be part of the solution to some of our most urgent global challenges.
“Our world is facing three pressing global challenges: the climate emergency, the loss of nature and growing inequality. Each of them, on its own, can endanger the safe operating space for humanity and the planet, as well as the license to operate for business.”
“Time to transform,” World Business Council for Sustainable Development, March 25, 2021.
Real assets have long been recognized for their investment merits. More recently, we’ve seen accelerated interest in them for another reason altogether: to address global environmental, social, and governance (ESG) challenges. A rare silver lining to emerge from the grueling COVID-19 pandemic may be a heightened awareness of the interconnectedness of these challenges.
Manulife Investment Management has long believed that real assets represent part of the solution to these issues: Real assets such as agriculture, timberland, and real estate innately contribute to meeting basic human needs for food, materials, and shelter, while infrastructure contributes to essential water, energy, and transport services. These asset classes can play a critical role in addressing three important issues—climate change, nature loss, and rising inequality.
Real assets and climate change
Climate-related risks are a systemic threat to societal, environmental, and financial stability, and investors focused on sustainability are leading global efforts to define new paths for shared action. Manulife's own climate goals include reducing the emissions footprint of operations, where we’ve already achieved net zero due to the carbon removals from our substantial owned and operated forests and farmland.
Investment in sustainable timberland and agriculture can provide low-cost, natural climate solutions that may also act as a first line of defense for protecting and enhancing biodiversity, and these solutions represent 37% of the opportunity to deliver the emissions reductions needed to limit global warming to 2˚C or below—and they’re available now. As carbon measurement practices continue to evolve and more investors and companies begin to explicitly value carbon sequestration and other ecosystem services, we believe that carbon sequestration will become a more valuable attribute of both timberland and agriculture.
Renewable energy, a critical means for our global society’s transition to cleaner energy, is a key feature of infrastructure assets’ opportunity to reduce the effects of climate change. And technological advances, such as in precision agriculture that achieve greater efficiency in the use of scarce inputs, reduce emissions, and minimize waste, are essential to achieving a reduction in the farming sector’s carbon footprint. Meanwhile, real estate assets are vital to reducing the built environment’s carbon footprint, and we believe investors will increasingly demand building efficiency improvements, fuel switching, and renewable technology that support carbon reduction goals. For landlords, the benefits of having healthy buildings include attracting quality tenants is a benefit, but a strong benefit in our mind is the ability to attract tenants who are demanding sustainable space and may be willing to pay higher rents for such space.
Real assets and nature loss
Protecting healthy ecosystems provides immense value to the vitality of communities and economies, with nature loss consistently identified by business leaders as one of the top risks to the global economy. There’s increasing recognition of the dual crisis of nature loss and climate change, and we expect that policy will increasingly tackle the problems of these two issues simultaneously. Sustainable agricultural and timberland investing is once again at the forefront for providing solutions: Managing timber plantations to produce wood products lessens the need to harvest more sensitive forests. Sustainable farming can restore nutrient deficiencies, reduce pest and disease vulnerability, and increase soil’s water holding capacity.
The investment community understands the scale of the problem of nature loss, yet a knowledge gap still exists about how to manage the risks and opportunities associated with biodiversity. Investors need to understand nature-related dependencies, risks, and impacts and for this, they need robust, reliable information and measurements that are standardized and comparable. The University of Cambridge’s Institute for Sustainability Leadership has built a framework for identifying nature-related financial risks that classifies the type of risk (physical, transitional, or liability), what causes the risk, its impact on companies, and the resultant financial risks. The great value of these frameworks is that they can connect the natural and financial worlds from a risk perspective and provide a basis for establishing financial risk exposures.
Real assets and rising inequality
The pandemic has highlighted, and sometimes exacerbated, preexisting challenges such as income inequality and discrimination, and we believe that alleviating socioeconomic inequality now represents the next frontier for ESG-focused investors. Social inequality represents a systemic risk to societies and economies as a whole, and the Task Force on Inequality-related Financial Disclosures is now developing an explicit systemic risk management framework to reduce inequality created by the private sector by providing metrics for companies and investors to measure and manage their effect on inequality.
Many real assets are uniquely positioned to tackle socioenvironmental challenges such as global warming and food security that will have the most impact on those who are least equipped to deal with them. We're developing metrics to monitor and benchmark our progress in addressing these challenges. Infrastructure provides essential services; real estate can provide community engagement and safe, healthy buildings; and farmland and timberland can provide raw materials to meet basic human needs (e.g., shelter, food), as well as rural employment opportunities, recreational open spaces, and clean water resources.
Accelerating interest in sustainable real assets
Factors spurring interest in real assets include investor demand to meet net zero objectives, greater corporate transparency, and stakeholder accountability. Asset owners and managers now routinely account for the effects of climate change, biodiversity loss, and socioeconomic inequality as fundamental components of effective risk management. And as regulators across the world enforce stricter sustainability directives, real asset investments have come to the fore as a viable route to a net zero, nature-positive, equitable society. Whether investing in healthy buildings, renewable energy, sustainable agriculture, or forests—the lungs of the planet—these assets represent a critical route toward the transition to a low-carbon economy.
Private sector net zero commitments
Investors have long valued diversified real assets to help build portfolio resilience, and now ever-growing numbers view them as a way to aid their path to net zero while putting their capital to work in a way that generates important contributions to our global society. Manulife Investment Management believes that the potential benefits offered by sustainable real asset investments will only increase in value going forward—not only for investors, but for society at large.
This material is for informational purposes only and is not intended to be, nor shall it be interpreted or construed as, a recommendation or providing advice, impartial or otherwise. John Hancock Investment Management and our representatives and affiliates may receive compensation derived from the sale of and/or from any investment made in our products and services.
The views presented are those of the author(s) and are subject to change. No forecasts are guaranteed. This commentary is provided for informational purposes only and is not an endorsement of any security, mutual fund, sector, or index. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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