The
proposal will outline how ESG funds should be marketed and how
investment advisors should disclose their reasoning when
labeling a fund, according to people who have spoken to the SEC
on the measures.
The proposal would also mandate that investment funds with terms
such as "ESG," "sustainable" and "low-carbon" in their names
disclose the criteria and underlying data used to support the
label, the people said.
While the new rules will affect all funds, their target is ESG
funds which drew a record $649 billion globally through Nov. 30,
up from $542 billion and $285 billion in 2020 and 2019,
respectively, according to Refinitiv Lipper data.
Regulators and activists have become concerned that U.S. funds
looking to cash in on the popularity of ESG investing may be
misleading shareholders over their products' underlying
holdings, a practice known as "greenwashing."
"We are hopeful that the new rule will require fund managers to
follow basic naming guidelines. This will help to eliminate
confusion and misleading marketing," said Andrew Behar,
president of climate activist group As You Sow, who has
discussed the potential rules with the SEC.
He said market participants have to date exploited a loophole in
the current rules when naming funds.
SEC Chair Gary Gensler has said that when it comes to
sustainability-related investing, asset managers might confuse
investors with conflicting names or certain terms or criteria
they use.
Industry groups warn, however, that the agency's aim to
standardize ESG labels could reduce investor choice.
"We object to actions that would ... substitute a regulator's
judgment about investment strategy for that of professional
fiduciaries," said Janay Rickwalder, a spokeswoman for the
Investment Adviser Association, adding that her group has
discussed the matter with the SEC on these themes.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson in Washington and Ross Kerber in
Boston; Editing by Richard Chang)
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