Impact investing on the rise
ESG, short for Environmental, Social and Governance , essentially expresses the social and environmental responsibility of companies. Going one step further is typically Sustainable Investment, which actively invests in specific areas that are considered sustainable. Impact investing goes one step further. In the field of impact investing, the impact is a further investment criterion in addition to or even before the return. of the respective investment. Impact investing prioritizes the social, economic and environmental responsibility of capital in its purest form.
In response to the signing of the Paris Climate Agreement and the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, in 2018 the EU issued the Action Plan: Financing Sustainable Growth. — It sets out the European Union’s roadmap for how private money flows should also be channeled into sustainable investments. It contains both a taxonomy regulation and a strict disclosure regulation.
Currently, for regulatory reasons, true impact funds are largely denied large capital inflows from institutional investors. The main reason for this is that the investment of capital is not at the discretion of the life insurance company or pension fund. While there is greater freedom for large insurance companies since the introduction of the Solvency II Directive than under the investment regulation still applicable to other professional investors, the general investment principles of safety, liquidity and profitability still apply.
The so-called impact funds are of a rather newer nature — investment vehicles that collect capital from third parties in order to subsequently invest it in the spirit of impact. Yet many products exist that even collect capital from small investors to achieve a specific social or environmental purpose, i.e. from investors who do not spend immense financial resources. These include microfinance funds, impact-oriented funds, social impact funds and green bonds. However, the typical subscribers to impact funds are larger private fortunes, such as successful entrepreneurs, high net worth individuals, as well as foundations and family offices — all investors who do not have to deal with the regulatory hurdles highlighted.
The constant presence in the media of major societal challenges, first and foremost climate change, is creating an ever-increasing awareness that something needs to change. The investment volume in impact private equity and impact venture capital has increased more than tenfold in the last five years. In 2020, this figure is expected to exceed EUR 880 million, with a large proportion of the corresponding offers still clearly practicing “finance first” in terms of investment criteria, i.e., the focus is clearly on the profitability to be achieved, and only a small proportion practicing “impact first”. The topic of impact investing in the form of “finance first” will only be able to generate really large volumes if access is also made easier for investors regulated under Solvency II.
Dr. Gerhard Schwartz is Managing Partner of Wi Venture, an impact venture capital fund that invests in climate tech startups to fund innovative ideas to combat climate change. He also works as a lawyer at LPA-GGV, an international law firm focusing on real estate and renewable energy. Gerhard Schwartz has been involved with the topics of energy transition and climate change for over 12 years in various roles with asset managers and as a lawyer for institutional investors, among others. He says he wants to make a contribution to making our planet fit for grandchildren. www.wiventure.de