Advisers are missing the boat on ESG: Cerulli

Advisers are missing the boat on ESG: Cerulli
Surveys of investors and financial advisers show a disconnect between what investors want with regard to environmental, social and governance strategies, and what most advisers think their clients want.
APR 12, 2021

Contrary to many of the trends unfolding across financial services, advisers are not recognizing strong client demand for investments focused on environmental, social and governance strategies, according to a recent study by Cerulli Associates.

The report cites a 2020 survey of financial advisers that showed 58% of respondents said a lack of investor demand was a significant factor preventing their adoption of ESG strategies, and an additional 14% reported that it was a moderate factor.

According to Cerulli, advisers maintain a widely held belief that demand for ESG strategies among their clients is a non-issue.

The Cerulli report cited numerous conversations with advisers about ESG and responsible investing, where “most advisers reported that only a handful of clients had reached out to them about ESG investing.”

By contrast, Cerulli’s survey of U.S. retail investor households found that 44% of respondents would prefer to invest in an environmental or socially responsible way, “far more than that handful of clients that advisers report proactively reaching out around the topic,” the report states.

“Based on our research, advisers generally underestimate the demand their clients have for ESG and should not interpret lack of proactive questions as a lack of client interest,” said Matt Belnap, Cerulli senior analyst.

If advisers need more proof of the swelling appetite for ESG investing, they might consider the record-setting asset flows into funds categorized by Morningstar as sustainable. In 2020, flows into such funds hit a record $51.1 billion, which more than doubled the 2019 record of $21.4 billion. Those two record years followed six years of flows into sustainable funds hovering at or below $5 billion.

Another common misconception among advisers is that interest in ESG investing is limited to their wealthiest clients. Expectations of asset managers and financial advisers do not necessarily align with the preferences of retail investors, according to Cerulli.

More than half of households with between $100,000 and $250,000 in investable assets agree that they would rather invest in companies that have a positive social or economic impact.

“By viewing ESG investing as merely a HNW solution, asset managers and advisers are discounting the interest from a broad swath of the investing public,” said Belnap. “Both asset and wealth managers should seek to make ESG investing more accessible across wealth tiers.”

Latest News

Women are financial power players. So why don't they feel like it?
Women are financial power players. So why don't they feel like it?

With most of the Great Wealth Transfer set to arrive in their hands, it's time women embraced the generational opportunity to step into their financial independence.

Wealth and asset manager dealmaking climbs in H1 2026, even as mega-deals dry up
Wealth and asset manager dealmaking climbs in H1 2026, even as mega-deals dry up

North American wealth deal count rises 20% but value drops as big-ticket transactions vanish.

Schroders offloads integrated advice arm as Nuveen takeover nears
Schroders offloads integrated advice arm as Nuveen takeover nears

Benchmark sale to Söderberg & Partners tightens wealth focus ahead of $13.5B US deal

Investor accuses Canaras, U.S. Bank of hiding $50 million CLO loss
Investor accuses Canaras, U.S. Bank of hiding $50 million CLO loss

A trustee says it has no record of the investor now suing it for $50 million

New bill would let advisers unlock accredited investor status for clients
New bill would let advisers unlock accredited investor status for clients

Legislation seeks to loosen access to private markets to include professional advice from RIAs and broker-dealers, not just income or net worth.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.