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Welcome to Thornburg

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For Institutional / Wholesale / Professional Clients

The content on this website is intended for institutional and professional investors in the United States only and is not suitable for individual investors or non-U.S. entities. Institutional and professional investors include pension funds, investment companies registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, financial intermediaries, consultants, endowments and foundations, and investment advisors registered under the Investment Advisors Act of 1940.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF USE

Please read the information below. By accessing this web site of Thornburg Investment Management, Inc. ("Thornburg" or "we"), you acknowledge that you understand and accept the following terms and conditions of use.

Disclaimers

Products or services mentioned on this site are subject to legal and regulatory requirements in applicable jurisdictions and may not be licensed or available in all jurisdictions and there may be restrictions or limitations to whom this information may be made available. Unless otherwise indicated, no regulator or government authority has reviewed the information or the merits of the products and services referenced herein. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Investments carry risks, including possible loss of principal.

Reference to a fund or security anywhere on this website is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold that or any other security. The information is not a complete analysis of every material fact concerning any market, industry, or investment, nor is it intended to predict the performance of any investment or market.

All opinions and estimates included on this website constitute judgements of Thornburg as at the date of this website and are subject to change without notice.

All information and contents of this website are furnished "as is." Data has been obtained from sources considered reliable, but Thornburg makes no representation as to the completeness or accuracy of such information and has no obligation to provide updates or changes. Thornburg disclaims, to the fullest extent of the law, any implied or express warranty of any kind, including without limitation the implied warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose and non-infringement.

If you live in a state that does not allow disclaimers of implied warranties, our disclaimer may not apply to you.

Although Thornburg intends the information contained in this website to be accurate and reliable, errors sometimes occur. Thornburg does not warrant that the information to be free of errors, that the functions contained in the site will be uninterrupted, that defects will be corrected or that the site and servers are free from viruses or other harmful components. You agree that you are responsible for the means you use to access this website and understand that your hardware, software, the Internet, your Internet service provider, and other third parties involved in connecting you to our website may not perform as intended or desired. We also disclaim responsibility for damages third parties may cause to you through the use of this website, whether intentional or unintentional. For example, you understand that hackers could breach our security procedures, and that we will not be responsible for any related damages.

Thornburg Investment Management, Inc. is regulated by the U.S. Securities and Exchange under U.S. laws which may differ materially from laws in other jurisdictions.

Online Privacy and Cookie Policy

Please review our Online Privacy and Cookie Policy, which is hereby incorporated by reference as part of these terms and conditions.

Third Party Content

Certain website's content has been obtained from sources that Thornburg believes to be reliable as of the date presented but Thornburg cannot guarantee the accuracy, timeliness, completeness, or suitability for use of such content. The content does not take into account individual investor's circumstances, objectives or needs. The content is not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase or sale of any security or other financial instrument or any investment management services, nor does it constitute investment advice and should not be used as the basis for any investment decision.

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No determination has been made regarding the suitability of any securities, financial instruments or strategies for any investor. The website's content is provided on the basis and subject to the explanations, caveats and warnings set out in this notice and elsewhere herein. The website's content does not purport to provide any legal, tax or accounting advice. Any discussion of risk management is intended to describe Thornburg's efforts to monitor and manage risk but does not imply low risk.

Limited License and Restrictions on Use

Except as otherwise stated in these terms of use or as expressly authorized by Thornburg in writing, you may not:

  • Modify, copy, distribute, transmit, post, display, perform, reproduce, publish, broadcast, license, create derivative works from, transfer, sell, or exploit any reports, data, information, content, software, RSS and podcast feeds, products, services, or other materials (collectively, "Materials") on, generated by or obtained from this website, whether through links or otherwise;
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  • Modify, copy, obscure, remove or display the Thornburg name, logo, trademarks, notices or images without Thornburg's express written permission. To obtain such permission, you may e-mail us at info@thornburg.com.

Severability, Governing Law

Failure by Thornburg to enforce any provision(s) of these terms and conditions shall not be construed as a waiver of any provision or right. This website is controlled and operated by Thornburg from its offices in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The laws of the State of New Mexico govern these terms and conditions. If you take legal action relating to these terms and conditions, you agree to file such action only in state or federal court in New Mexico and you consent and submit to the personal jurisdiction of those courts for the purposes of litigating any such action.

Termination

You acknowledge and agree that Thornburg may restrict, suspend or terminate these terms and conditions or your access to, and use, of the all or any part this website, including any links to third-party sites, at any time, with or without cause, including but not limited to any breach of these terms and conditions, in Thornburg's absolute discretion and without prior notice or liability.

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ESG standards, a corn field glows in the late afternoon sunlight
ESG

In Search of an ESG Standard in a Sea of ESG “Standards”

Jake Walko
Director of ESG Investing & Global Investment Stewardship
22 Nov 2021
4 min read

Stakeholders need to understand and evaluate financially material ESG factors in investments because singular “winner” of ESG standards may never come.

International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and US  Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) have given us the tools to compare and evaluate revenue streams from vastly different sectors and industries. For example, we can calculate and contrast a firm that sells agricultural products in Germany vs. a firm that offers cloud computing services in Singapore.

ESG has been subjected to similar expectations even though the definition itself varies considerably from those looking to complement existing financial analysis to those looking to quantify the impact that capital markets have on society. However, the reality is that just as there is art as well as science to creating  financial reports, the same occurs in applying ESG standards.

In fact, the many standards don’t pretend to strive for the same thing.

  • Some, like the EU Taxonomy for Sustainable Activities are a regulatory standard for understanding the ESG of economic activities in that market – but no comparable initiative exists in most markets.
  • Stewardship Codes like those in the UK and Japan articulate important expectations, but don’t show the methods through which those should be met.
  • Standards like the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), the Task Force for Climate-related Financial Disclosure (TCFD), or the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) present frameworks under which companies can provide disclosure around their management of particular stakeholder concerns.
  • Similarly, the recent merger of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) and International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) to form the Value Reporting Foundation comes as investors seek tools to focus on financially material ESG issues.
  • Yet others, such as commercial data providers MSCI and Sustainalytics, offer scoring tools and methodologies to evaluate what is good, or bad, risky, an opportunity and/or impactful in ESG.

Recently MSCI’s Chief Executive Officer told The Financial Times that the whole argument surrounding ESG ratings is misplaced. Indeed, Thornburg Investment Management’s (Thornburg) view is that rather than survey every available standard and framework, companies need to conduct materiality analyses appropriate to their own businesses and stakeholders and disclose accordingly. The investment industry in turn needs to identify standards that focus on alignment with academic and industry ESG research, which continues to evolve.

Figure 1. Academic research largely substantiates a case for managing ESG with more focus, rather than doing everything less well.

Annualized Alpha on Material and Immaterial Sustainability Issues (%)

 

Source: https:lldash.harvard.edulbitstreamlhandle/1114369106/15-073.pdf

However, before we have a final word on the social impact of a  particular investment or its alignment with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, we must make sure our investment decisions are rooted in the kind of substantiated ESG that has improved performance. The oft-quoted Khan, Serafeim, and Yoon “Corporate Sustainability: First Evidence on Materiality”1 paper sought to demonstrate the value of ESG in contributing to risk adjusted returns. The approach was rooted in material factors based on the SASB Standards, not abstract values or hard to-measure social impact. More recently other work2 3 has shown promise, and we should test whether these conclusions hold true throughout economic cycles, across investment vehicles, and even for specific securities.

While it may irritate some purists, the relevance of ESG factors for the improved management of financial risk and return should be an easy place to agree to begin. Figure 2 shows the methodology framework deployed by Thornburg to incorporate ESG analysis on companies that are potential investments. Our process begins with materiality, which depends on reliable data and experienced analysis, and ends with ongoing stewardship.

Figure 2. The Thornburg ESG Analysis Methodology Framework

Step 1: Materiality

  • Identify on the factors that influence return and risk
  • Establish material ESG factors for each proposed investment
  • Analyze company results and prospective strategy

Step 2: Due Diligence & Data

  • Research and perform due diligence the relevant ESG factors in the company’s materials
  • Compare the quality of disclosure to other indicators of management quality and board oversight

Step 3: Assessment

  • Integrate analysis of material ESG factors and third-party ESG ratings within our comprehensive investment research
  • Assess business, financial and ESG sustainability to identify opportunities and manage risks

Step 4: Decision

  • Establish an appropriate compensation for the determined risk
  • Decide to invest or defer, scaling position size and holding period as necessary

Step 5: Stewardship

  • Monitor ESG risks and reporting
  • Vote company proxy with purpose
  • Establish opportunities for company engagement

Summary: It’s a Material World

Asset managers, regulators, NGOs, and other stakeholders should first work to understand, evaluate, and bring to bear financially material ESG factors in making investment decisions. The work certainly can’t end there but if we wait for a singular ‘winner’ of ESG standards that may never come.

As we know, there are still two major global standards for accounting, despite convergence efforts since 2002. The financial services industry, both buy and sell sides, has learnt how to interpret and compare reporting under the two systems. There is no reason that the same cannot happen with ESG standards. What may matter more than third party scores, Bloomberg has argued4, is the investment industry’s need for transparent, high quality ESG corporate data that allows firms such as Thornburg to conduct their own due diligence and assessment.

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