Investors interested in ESG have traditionally favored growth funds, which invest in companies with high expected earnings growth such as technology and healthcare, and which tend to have lower carbon emissions. However in 2022, value funds, which invest in undervalued companies, dominated market performance. This has left sustainable investors wondering if switching to value-oriented holdings for better returns will sacrifice their ESG performance.
To shed light on this, Impact Cubed analyzed the ESG impact of two iShares funds—the iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF versus iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF, to see what the ESG implications really are. The spider diagram below shows the growth ETF (green) plotted against value ETF (black dotted line).
Source: Impact Cubed
We don’t do ratings or scores. ESG impact is no different. We measure ESG impact using tracking error, so investors can easily see and compare impact across their investment collection. Overall, when looking at both funds through our 15-factor corporate model (built from analyzing thousands of business activities), the growth ETF had a net impact of +19 bps versus the value ETF. Additionally, the growth ETF outperforms the value ETF in almost all areas, including carbon and waste efficiency, water efficiency, and SDG alignment.
Source: Impact Cubed. The Net Impact measures how much the fund deviates from its benchmark on its ESG and impact exposures, measured in basis points.
Source: Impact Cubed
Carbon efficiency is a critical consideration for ESG investors, and it’s no surprise that the growth ETF outperforms the value ETF in this regard. This is largely due to the sectoral composition of growth versus value funds. The growth sectors, which are heavier in tech, healthcare, and communications, tend to have lower carbon/water/waste emissions than the energy, materials, and industrial sectors found in Value funds.
Companies in the growth ETF are more carbon, water, and waste efficient, for $1M of revenue generated
The growth ETF emits only 53.98 tonnes of GHG emissions per $1M revenue, while the value ETF emits 226.17 tonnes, indicating that the growth ETF is significantly more carbon-efficient than the value ETF. This trend is also observed for Scope 3 carbon efficiency, with the growth ETF generating only 489.25 tonnes of Scope 3 emissions per $1M revenue, compared to the value ETF’s 1,138.28 tonnes.
Source: Impact Cubed
Water efficiency is another critical ESG factor which makes business sense. 2022’s CDP annual Global Water Report finds that companies who properly integrate water into their business strategy uncover four times more business opportunities than those who don’t.
The growth ETF outperforms the value ETF when it comes to water efficiency. When looking at our comparison, the growth ETF uses 0.63 thousand cubic meters of fresh water per $1M revenue, whereas the value ETF uses a much larger volume of fresh water per $1M revenue, at 14.63 thousand cubic meters. That’s about an x24 difference in water use.
Source: Impact Cubed
The only factor on which the value ETF significantly outperformed growth, is executive pay—with a lower executive:employee pay ratio of 103:1, roughly a third less than growth. This probably isn’t surprising given the fact that CEOs and top management at growth companies are often compensated higher than value companies, for example in the healthcare sector.
We should point out that the only other area where the value ETF outperformed the growth ETF is revenue attributed to social good, with the value ETF having 2% more revenues aligned to socially good activities versus the growth ETF (17% versus 5% respectively).
SDG Revenue Alignment
Source: Impact Cubed
SDG alignment is another significant factor, and the growth ETF outperforms the value ETF here as well in terms of total SDG alignment—with eight SDGs being more aligned with the growth ETF. We can, however, see the expected social elements of the value ETF coming to life here—aligning more with SDGs 3 and 11 than the growth ETF does.
In conclusion, our analysis shows that, as expected, the growth ETF had a more positive ESG impact than the value ETF fund. In fact, the growth ETF outperformed in almost all areas, including carbon efficiency, water efficiency, and SDG alignment. Even when we take into account more social and governmental factors, any expected outperformance by the value ETF was not clearly seen.
Seeing outcome-based data like this enables investors to make more informed decisions about where to invest to get the most ESG impact.
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Contributing author: Mr. Chris Lee is Head of Marketing at Impact Cubed. In this role, he is responsible for leading marketing efforts to help transform the world through sustainable finance. Prior to Impact Cubed, he contributed to the growth of renowned brands like McDonald's, EE, and BT, and executed campaigns for Willis Towers Watson and Goldman Sachs. Mr. Lee earned a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from the University of Leeds.
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