Analysis-Shoots of greenflation spring new challenges on portfolio
managers
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[August 11, 2021] By
Sujata Rao and Simon Jessop
LONDON (Reuters) - From container ships to
cardboard, tighter environmental regulations are stoking shortages and
price spikes as 'greenflation' takes a grip, adding a new twist to
corporate valuations.
For all the inflation-is-transitory messages from central banks, double
or triple-digit cost increases have become common on company balance
sheets, although the green variety has yet to show up in bond markets,
the usual early warning system.
While higher costs are partly down to pandemic-linked supply glitches,
fund managers say a powerful impetus is emanating from stringent new
rules to guide the world's transition to a greener future.
And these may outlast the COVID-19 inflation narrative.
To slash greenhouse gas emissions, the European Union will lift the cost
of emitting carbon for transport and factories, ditch sales of
gasoline-fuelled cars and slap carbon levies on trade partners.
Aluminium, electricity and fertiliser are among sectors targeted, with
others such as aviation in the EU crosshairs.
Investors largely agree greenflation is a necessary risk, because with
the United Nations saying global warming is spiralling out of the
control, the alternative of frequent floods, droughts and forest fires
is worse.
The question facing fund managers is which companies will see a profit
hit, which can pass costs on and which will thrive.
For Peter Rutter, head of equities at Royal London Asset Management, the
solution lies in modelling how, for instance, carbon dynamics may impact
cash flow, revenues and share prices.
"We are big believers in greenflation. There are scenarios that take
assets out of use, like cars that can no longer be driven or ships that
are not allowed into certain ports."
"The other element is the injection of additional costs. If companies
can pass on the costs, it's inflationary. If not, it adds inflation to
production and hurts margins," Rutter added.
Company earnings are reflecting higher input costs. But it is hard to
say which are environment-related.
U.S. retailer Home Depot saw a 35 basis-point hit to gross margins in
the first quarter from a tripling of lumber prices, offsettting a 31%
rise in same-store sales.
And packaged foods company Conagra warned raw material and packaging
costs were hurting profit, a headwind that would not ease until
late-2022.
BofA analysts tallied references to "inflation" during the
latest-quarter earnings calls and estimate they rose 1000% year-on-year
for companies in the S&P 500 and 400% for those in Europe's STOXX 600
indexes.
Graphic: Inflation mentions
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/byprjowgbpe/bofa.PNG
GROWING A TREE
In shipbuilding, for instance, orders have plunged, which officials
attribute partly to uncertainty over which technology to adopt for
alternative fuels..
New vessels take up to three years to deliver and typically operate for
more than 20 years, by which time high-emission ships may be unviable.
And if shipping is added to carbon markets, owners must buy permits or
risk port bans.
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Take away cardboard meal
boxes are seen on a table at chef Jordan Bailey's two-Michelin
starred restaurant Aimsir during preparations to re-open as
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) restrictions begin to ease in
Celbridge, Ireland, June 2, 2021. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File
Photo
Graphic: Ratio of dry bulk ship orders to fleet size has shrunk
https://graphics.reuters.com/CLIMATE-CHANGE/INFLATION/
jnpwegdmjpw/chart.png
That may support already elevated freight costs .
Similarly, tighter forestry regulations and the closure of polluting Chinese
foundries are impacting timber and metal prices, PIMCO fund manager Geraldine
Sundstrom noted.
"It takes time to grow a tree," Sundstrom said. "In a green and digital world,
you need to position in the right place, where there are barriers to entry and
therefore pricing power."
Sundstrom reckons sectors such as integrated forestries and shipping could enjoy
significant price gains "as markets are still betting on prices mean-reverting."
There will be losers too. World stocks could suffer a 20% setback if carbon
prices -- the price companies pay to pollute -- rise by $75 per tonne, recent
research by Kempen Capital Management, which manages 86 billion euros,
estimates.
Within sectors, carbon-intense firms will lose out as border taxes on carbon
kick in, BofA says.
Hydropower-reliant aluminium producers Norsk Hydro, Rusal and Rio Tinto with a
carbon footprint of four tonnes of carbon dioxide per tonne of metal, are better
placed than Chinese smelters with 16 tonnes of emissions, it added.
TURNOVER
So does this mean higher inflation for the broader economy?
Greenflation will not last forever as carbon pricing effects will be spread over
years, while the adoption of renewables should gradually cut power generation
costs.
Yet that "deflationary turnover" will take time, Morgan Stanley analysts said.
Prices for carbon emission allowances have more than doubled this year, which
Morgan Stanley estimated had raised euro zone retail electricity prices by 8% by
June and added 23 basis points to inflation. A rise to 100 euros will boost
retail power prices 12%, it says.
And clean energy faces costs of its own, with electrical equipment, wind
turbines and fuel cells exposed to higher metals and shipping prices.
Michael Herzum, head of strategy at Germany's Union Investment, said price jumps
are inevitable as carbon will be priced at a high enough level to incentivise
change.
While the effect should wane over time, Herzum said that the green
transformation will reinforce a "40 year period of disinflation has come to an
end".
Graphic: Carbon price on the rise
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/gdvzyromwpw/carbon.PNG
(Reporting by Sujata Rao and Simon Jessop; Additional reporting by Jonathan Saul
and Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by Alexander Smith)
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