Example tooltip content.

Filter

Theme

Country

Working Groups

Theme

Country

Working Groups

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
For all media enquiries please contact:

Filter

Theme

Country

Working Groups

Theme

Country

Working Groups

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Latest

Media Release
|
|
Climate
|
October 31, 2018
|
Member only

Climate change top of list for ESG research in Australia

Executive pay and climate change are among the key issues being researched and valued within the finance industry to inform and drive more responsible investment in Australia. At the 9th Annual ESG Research Australia Awards held at the RI Australia 2018 conference in Melbourne tonight, Citi and Bank of America Merrill Lynchtook out the awards for excellence in ESG research by a broker. A new award from RIAA was also jointly presented to MSCI and the Centre for Policy Development for new ESG research by a non-broker. The ESG RA Awards, attended by Australia’s leading superannuation funds, fund managers and broking firms, recognise excellence in environmental, social and governance (ESG) research published by broking firms. The winners of this year’s ESG Research Australia Awards are: Best Piece of New ESG Research by an Individual Analyst or Team: Bigger, Badder and more Opaque: The Task ahead for Investors Undertaking 2 Degree Scenario Analysis, by Zoe Whitton and Edward McKinnon, Citi Best Piece of Ongoing ESG Research by an Individual Analyst or Team: CEO Incentives and Analyst Expectations for ASX100 Companies, by Sameer Chopra et al, Bank of America Merrill Lynch Best ESG Broking Firm: Citi The 2018 joint-winners for RIAA’s new ESG Research Award – recognising excellence in investor relevant ESG research by a non-broking firm are: Best Piece of Investor Relevant ESG Research (non-broking firm): Climate Horizons Report: Scenarios and Strategies for Managing Climate Riskby Sam Hurley and Kate Mackenzie, Centre for Policy Development (with input from ClimateWorks Australia) AND Alignment to climate regulatory scenarios: A case study of Australian companiesby Brendan Baker and Morgan Ellis, MSCI ESG Research

Media Release
|
|
ESG
|
May 30, 2018
|
Member only

Aussie super funds take up the gauntlet to improve company behaviour

Australia’s largest superannuation funds are ramping up their engagement in responsible investing to drive superior financial performance, reduce risk, and better meet their members’ and beneficiaries’ expectations, a new report from the Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) has found. From backing shareholder resolutions demanding company disclosure on climate risk to divesting from companies with poor governance or engaged in unethical activity, Australian super funds are increasingly flexing their muscle to influence better company behaviour. RIAA’s Super Fund Responsible Investment Benchmark Report 2018 finds that 81% of Australia’s largest super funds are committed to responsible investment (up from 70% in 2016), and 62% report annually on activity, highlighting how deeply responsible investing has become part of Australian investment markets. Australia’s largest superannuation funds are ramping up their engagement in responsible investing to drive superior financial performance, reduce risk, and better meet their members’ and beneficiaries’ expectations, a new report from the Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) has found. From backing shareholder resolutions demanding company disclosure on climate risk to divesting from companies with poor governance or engaged in unethical activity, Australian super funds are increasingly flexing their muscle to influence better company behaviour. RIAA’s Super Fund Responsible Investment Benchmark Report 2018 finds that 81% of Australia’s largest super funds are committed to responsible investment (up from 70% in 2016), and 62% report annually on activity, highlighting how deeply responsible investing has become part of Australian investment markets. The Super Fund Responsible Investment Benchmark Report 2018 presents the results of a survey of Australia’s 53 largest superannuation funds1 – accounting for $1.4 trillion in assets under management.

Media Release
|
|
ESG
|
May 29, 2018
|
Member only

Responsible investment key to meeting member needs & better performance: PC superannuation report

The Responsible Investment Association Australasia (RIAA) has welcomed the Productivity Commission’s draft report Superannuation: Assessing Efficiency and Competitiveness highlighting the importance and benefits of Australia’s superannuation capital being invested responsibly to create the Australia its members want to live in and leave behind. “We agree wholeheartedly with the Productivity Commission’s report that our superannuation system needs to work for all Australians, meeting the needs of members and retirees, and delivering high performance,” said RIAA CEO Simon O’Connor. “Responsible investment provides a critical vehicle for Australia’s superannuation industry to optimise financial returns for its members. Environmental, social, corporate governance and ethical factors have become critical considerations in investment practice, increasingly impacting upon valuations and investment returns. “Responsible investment funds are outperforming their average mainstream counterparts year on year, as the market for responsible investment continues to grow in Australia. RIAA’s 2017 Responsible Investment Benchmark Report shows ‘core’ responsibly invested Australian share funds and balanced multi-sector funds have outperformed their equivalent mainstream funds over 3, 5 and 10-year horizons. Beyond RIAA’s own research, these findings have now been supported by academic and industry research from across the world’s most esteemed universities and institutions. “The bulk of evidence now clearly concludes that to ignore environmental, social, corporate governance and ethical issues blinds investors to some of the key investment risks that are increasingly determining performance of investment outcomes,” said O’Connor.

Sorry, we can't find results for your search.

Try a different search or try our full site search.