Capital Calls: U.S. malls are a tale of two REITs 14 Jun 2021 Concise views on global finance: Shopping center operator Washington Prime filed for bankruptcy protection, but the outlook is a bit rosier for premium mall owners.
Fashion moves to the centre of activist crosshairs 14 Jun 2021 Covid-19 has exacerbated the $2.5 trln industry’s ESG-unfriendly flogging of cheap clothes. Recycling is no more than a partial fix for the problem. Inditex and H&M are insulated by their big family holdings, but Boohoo, Adidas and ASOS look vulnerable to investor attacks.
Shell’s U.S. rethink betrays lack of wiggle room 14 Jun 2021 The Anglo-Dutch driller may sell assets worth $10 bln in Texas. Not so long ago the U.S. Permian Basin was a key oil major growth area, but now Shell is under pressure to cut emissions. Restricting carbon while earning a financial return is increasingly determining strategy.
Bank climate stress tests scarier than they look 11 Jun 2021 UK and European lenders that flunk green exercises will not face higher capital charges. But past evidence suggests investors will use the new disclosure to penalise funders of pollution. That will either throttle carbon financing – or shift it to the non-bank sector.
Danish hydrogen adds hygge to market green malaise 7 Jun 2021 Green Hydrogen Systems is planning a Copenhagen float that will value the electrolyser maker at $500 mln. Of late, pulled IPOs reflect investor scepticism about so-so renewable energy listings. The green gas’s key role in cutting EU carbon emissions may make this a comfier fit.
Anglo spinoff points to darker future for coal 7 Jun 2021 The mining giant’s thermal coal unit, Thungela, was valued at just $250 mln on its market debut. That’s a third of the EBITDA its South African mines may earn this year. It’s a stark reminder of the black stuff’s rapidly declining worth, and of public investors’ aversion to it.
Jay Powell’s oil price bet counts on green inertia 3 Jun 2021 The Fed boss and his peers expect rebounding energy costs will only temporarily lift inflation. But if Western oil majors cut capex to please investors, crude could grow more expensive in coming years. Rate-setters are implicitly banking on a more gradual eco-friendly shift.
BlackRock’s green activism fires on some cylinders 2 Jun 2021 The $9 trln asset manager voted with a hedge fund against Exxon Mobil and for tougher emissions targets at Chevron. That’s progress. Still, its voting record with other oil majors like Royal Dutch Shell suggests it sometimes gives polluters a pat rather than the required shove.
The Exchange: Steering Europe’s green transition 1 Jun 2021 Frans Timmermans has a key leadership role in the European Union’s quest to reduce its 2030 emissions by 55% compared to 1990 levels. Ahead of a major set of green policy updates next month, he talks to George Hay about both these and November’s COP26 conference.
Capital Calls: Greensill/Bluestone 1 Jun 2021 Concise views on global finance: The collapse of the supply-chain finance group may have left the governor of West Virginia personally on the hook for $700 million.
Review: A theory of everything green 28 May 2021 Carbon taxes, ESG investing, colonizing Mars – they’re all pieces of the puzzle. In “The Spirit of Green,” Nobel laureate William Nordhaus gives a sweeping account of how they fit together, and what economists can offer to counter climate change, if only humans would listen.
Oil giants’ setbacks turn BP from tortoise to hare 27 May 2021 Investors were initially sceptical about the UK major cutting fossil fuels, preferring the fuzzier plans of its U.S. and European rivals. Shell’s legal defeat and an investor revolt at Exxon Mobil change the game. Clarity on cutting emissions will increasingly support valuations.
Dutch court hands Shell chairman shakeup stick 26 May 2021 A Hague judge has told the oil giant to toughen up its targets for cutting carbon emissions. Besides appealing, Shell could try to dodge the ruling by moving its headquarters. Alternatively, new chair Andrew Mackenzie could shunt the group in the direction of rivals BP and Total.
The Exchange: South Africa’s prospects 25 May 2021 Johannesburg Stock Exchange CEO Leila Fourie tells Swaha Pattanaik how South Africa’s economy has coped with Covid-19. In an interview recorded for the International Economic Forum of the Americas, she also flags sectors that will rebound fastest and discusses ESG investing.
Rusal’s upside from clean break only goes so far 19 May 2021 The $6 bln aluminium maker’s plan to demerge carbon-heavy assets could unlock value if ESG-focused investors value the other parts more highly. But the greener entity will still have 28% of polluter Norilsk Nickel and the risk of U.S. sanctions snapback. That might cap any gains.
Oil majors get unsettling glimpse of Kodak moment 18 May 2021 The photo group hit the skids after failing to embrace change. In sketching a future with way less oil, a landmark report by the International Energy Agency points to a similar outcome for polluters like Royal Dutch Shell. Investors now have a stronger hand to push for change.
The Exchange: Finance far away from Wall Street 11 May 2021 It’s not often we hear from the boss of a finance business based in Milwaukee. Even more unusual is to find one that is owned by its customers. Rob Cox chats with Northwestern Mutual CEO John Schlifske about investing, interest rates, ESG and the benefits of mutual ownership.
Breakdown: Net zero goals demand zero tolerance 10 May 2021 Only a fifth of the world’s top public companies have promised to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. Among those that have, promises are tricky to compare and rely on ambitious offset schemes. Breakingviews helps investors find the substance behind the hot air.
Review: A better way of valuing the world 6 May 2021 The pandemic is one of three crises that Mark Carney dissects to show how market prices can fail, to society’s detriment. He suggests solutions in “Value(s)”. Better still, the former central banker is trying to practice what he preaches with his work on climate change.
Green shoots’ salad days have come and gone 6 May 2021 Toppy valuations for wind and solar sparked Italy’s Eni, Spain’s Acciona and others to hire investment bankers for spinoffs and IPOs of renewables assets. Rising oil prices and fears of a green bubble mean firms now need size and a track record to play. That’s a good thing.