ESG is going mainstream, and alternative investment managers are having to get serious with their efforts to incorporate environmental, social and governance factors, or get left behind.
In an October report, Preqin estimated that $3.1 trillion in private markets assets under management were run by firms committed to ESG factors, representing about 36% of the total $8.52 trillion in private capital AUM globally.
Private credit had the highest rate with 49% of assets committed to ESG, while infrastructure managers had the lowest rate at 31% of assets, the report said.
Alternative investment firms have traditionally occupied a smaller corner of the ESG universe, but that is about to change with private markets managers starting to up their game, industry insiders say.
"We have seen a transformation," said Thomas Durkin, senior vice president in the Boston office of placement agent Monument Group Inc. In the past, ESG was adopted "more on a surface level, more as a public relations tool," Mr. Durkin said.
Now, more alternative investment managers see ESG as a "value creation lever," he said. "They've moved away from ESG as a check-the-box item."
While ESG is an overlay in investors' due diligence process that can boost a fund's desirability, alternative investment fund strategies can't rely solely on their ESG credentials. The fund has to perform as well as other funds in its asset class, Mr. Durkin said.
A majority (86%) of private equity investors reported that their impact investments performed in line with or exceeded their expectations, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers' 2021 Private Equity Responsible Investment Survey.
Among the ESG-related funds that are in the market are DIF Capital Partners' latest fund, DIF Core-Plus Infrastructure Fund III, a real assets fund focusing on digital, energy transition, transportation and social infrastructure investments in Europe and North America; Stonepeak Asia Infrastructure Fund, a fund managed by Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners that would invest in the energy transition as well as communications, transport and logistics; and Polestar Capital's Polestar Capital Circular Debt Fund, a venture debt vehicle that would lend to Dutch circular economy projects with sustainability goals.