Corona Capital: Movie releases, Ads, Running 4 Dec 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: HBO Max uses its muscle on movie releases; advertising wins some and loses some; Brooks’ beast year.
Hershey cocoa spat tests limits of investor ethics 4 Dec 2020 Ghana and Ivory Coast may stop selling sustainable beans to the Reese’s maker, accusing it of dodging payments for impoverished farmers. That could make it harder for the $31 bln group to flaunt its sustainability kudos. The snag is that so far shareholders don’t seem to care.
Corona Capital: Cyber Friday and Monday 30 Nov 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: Online holiday shopping hits new records.
Corona Capital: Brexit curveball, Sonos 19 Nov 2020 Concise views on the pandemic’s corporate and financial fallout: a Covid-19 scare for European Brexit negotiators puts an already-optimistic deadline to the test; and wireless-speaker maker Sonos joins the list of companies profiting from consumers being stuck indoors.
Deutsche Boerse jumps on ESG train with ISS deal 18 Nov 2020 CEO Theodor Weimer is spending $1.8 bln on 80% of the U.S. proxy adviser after missing out on Italy’s bourse and an FX trading platform. Accurately scoring companies’ environmental, social and governance credentials is a growth business. But it’s also a crowded field.
Renewable energy gets its very own Masayoshi Son 13 Nov 2020 Aussie mining mogul Andrew Forrest unveiled plans for his Fortescue to go big in green projects. Targets include competing with global oil giants in production capacity. The bold strategy will spark a frenzy – both helpful and harmful – just as the SoftBank boss did in tech.
Fed is only half way to climate-change conversion 10 Nov 2020 The U.S. central bank finally acknowledged that a warming planet poses real risks to the financial system. The Damascene moment is late but sets the scene for more concrete action now that the politics looks more favorable. And at least the Fed will have a late-mover advantage.
Stored carbon could morph into investment gold 20 Oct 2020 Capturing and storing CO2 is expensive, judging by a new project in Norway. But the need to curb emissions is persuading states to take the plunge. The rising cost of emitting carbon dioxide means the technology may soon give investors a new regulated asset to embrace.
P&G learns climate rebuke is no longer glacial 14 Oct 2020 BlackRock joined other shareholders to reject the $359 bln firm’s claim that it does plenty to protect forests. Reporting on efforts to save trees is an easy ask that companies, like Exxon, have worked around. Still, it gives investors a launching pad to push for more.
Banks only partly to blame for weak green targets 13 Oct 2020 HSBC and JPMorgan are among lenders pledging to align their financing with the Paris accord to cut carbon emissions. A general absence of detail might just be because they have big fossil fuel loan books. But it also reflects the problem with measuring financed emissions.
Guest view: Five ways to hit Europe’s green goals 9 Oct 2020 The EU’s aim to cut 2030 carbon emissions by 55% is ambitious. It means more renewables, less coal, and new thinking on energy demand and efficiency. Meanwhile, notes Energy Commissioner Kadri Simson, the extra 350 bln euros it will cost annually will require private sector help.
Singapore’s bid for insolvency tourism is at risk 8 Oct 2020 The city-state picked elements of both U.S. and UK bankruptcy law to boost its attractiveness for hosting corporate workouts. But the glacial resolution of water treatment giant Hyflux could discourage the creditors the city needs to support its campaign to become a genuine hub.
Xi puts clean energy to good use beyond climate 23 Sep 2020 China’s president says his country will be carbon-neutral by 2060. The pledge is credible because it’s in Beijing’s interests; Xi may also be trying to warm frigid European negotiators, and defang sceptics. It’s also plausible because China is exporting pollution to poor countries.
Green bonds could slide into irrelevance 17 Sep 2020 Securities used to finance environmentally friendly investments are thriving, with everyone from JPMorgan to Germany charging in. Yet the $800 bln market does not necessarily mean greener issuers. As investors get better at differentiating, green bonds could become redundant.
UBS reframing of ESG investing changes the game 11 Sep 2020 Portfolios factoring in social and climate issues are now the “preferred” option for its $2.6 trln of private-client assets. Making them the default, with no caveats about performance, is a big deal. It’s necessary, if not sufficient, to drive substantive real-world change.
Rio Tinto board can choose CEO – at expense of ESG 10 Sep 2020 Many shareholders want harsher punishments for the mining giant’s destruction of Aboriginal heritage sites. Robust returns are one reason to stop short of axing boss Jean-Sebastien Jacques. If he stays, though, Rio’s responsible investing credentials will be deeply discounted.
Big Oil’s green turn is justified by the numbers 7 Sep 2020 BP’s call to hike spending on renewables risks a repeat of past goofs. But hard data implies oil majors have been the ones eroding shareholder value in recent years. By comparison, the falling expense of wind and solar power and their lower cost of capital make them a safer bet.
Fashion can bear the costs of virtue cotton 25 Aug 2020 Most of China’s crop comes from the persecuted Uighurs’ home region. Forced labour may taint some of that, but clothes makers do not yet trace their complex supply chains back to the farms. Scrutiny from politicians and investors means careful sourcing makes financial sense.
Trump’s ESG animus creates ultimate systemic risk 18 Aug 2020 The U.S. president and his team are loosening methane rules and even pushing a daft showers rule. The administration also wants to hobble investors’ ability to weigh environmental, social and governance concerns. Combined, they put the climate and the financial system in peril.
Guest view: Let’s gauge firms’ real CO2 footprints 14 Aug 2020 Corporate reports often cite carbon emissions created by companies’ production and customers. But, as Extinction Rebellion spokespeople Roc Sandford and Rupert Read argue, these ignore the global warming tacitly supported through lobbying and advertising. That needs fixing.