The ESG Crackdown is Coming for Goldman Sachs

(Quartz) - Regulators in the US and Europe are cracking down on greenwashing by financial firms, and on June 10 targeted their biggest potential perpetrator to date: Goldman Sachs.

In response to investor interest in climate-friendly products, banks and asset managers have been racing to slap “ESG” labels on their offerings, which ostensibly indicate an investment fund is composed of shares in companies with strong environmental, social, and governance credentials. But the absence of regulations around these labels means that firms like S&P and MSCI established their own ratings, using murky and sometimes dubious methodologies. As a result, many “ESG” funds still hold major emitters like ExxonMobil, and are only marginally less carbon-intensive than the market average.

The SEC is going after greenwashing by banks

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said in May that it is developing stricter ESG standards. In the meantime, the agency is going after firms it believes are sharing misleading statements with investors about the “green-ness” of their products. The SEC launched an investigation of Deutsche Bank last year, which was followed by a separate investigation by German authorities that led to a police raid on the bank’s Frankfurt headquarters in May. That same month, the SEC fined BNY Mellon $1.5 million for “misstatements and omissions about ESG considerations.”

The Goldman investigation is focused on mutual funds. Because there is no legal standard for ESG definitions, the SEC will determine whether the bank’s actual methods for managing ESG funds differ from what it has disclosed to investors, not whether the funds are really green or not. But as more money pours into ESG funds—up to $41 trillion globally this year—and more formal rules take effect, the crackdown and resulting penalties are likely to escalate.

The climate economy

Every industry can be part of the solution — or part of the ongoing problem.

THE MOST PRESSING QUESTION

How do we get to net zero emissions?

The question will define the global economy for the next century. The IPCC estimates (pdf) we need to invest at least $1.6 trillion per year through 2050 to put the planet on a safe climate trajectory. We’re spending about 20% of that figure today. And that’s just for the energy sector.  The climate economy means almost every aspect of our global system—agriculture, transportation, energy, construction—will need to be rethought and redesigned to reduce and then remove greenhouse gases from the equation. It’s the greatest challenge, and opportunity, of our time. 

By Tim McDonnell

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