Premium fees and so-so returns on some ‘ESG’ funds

Premium fees and so-so returns on some ‘ESG’ funds
Products that have high sustainability scores but aren't necessarily labeled as ESG are cheaper, according to a YCharts report.
OCT 26, 2022

Funds that include “ESG” in their names often charge steeper fees than peers — but that does not necessarily translate to bigger returns, better ESG scores or higher sales, according to research.

The average asset-weighted expense ratio for U.S. equity funds that are marketed as ESG funds was 34 basis points as of the end of August, according to a report last week from YCharts.

Meanwhile, funds in that asset class with higher-than-average ESG ratings, regardless of their names, charged an average of 25 bps. By comparison, the asset-weighted average for all U.S. equity funds was 12 bps, according to YCharts, which analyzed MSCI data for nearly 4,900 mutual funds and ETFs.

The differences in cost were even more significant across fixed income and asset-allocation funds, with high-ESG-scoring funds being less than half the price of products that are marketed as ESG, the report found.

Part of the reason for the apparent premium on ESG-labeled funds is that they are more likely to be actively managed than non-ESG products, which include many large index funds, the YCharts report noted.

The U.S. market for sustainable funds is also relatively young, with a deluge of mutual funds and ETFs continuing to be launched. In Europe, sustainable funds are on average less costly than non-ESG products and have also seen stronger returns through the third quarter of 2021, according to data provided last year by Refinitiv Lipper.

PERFORMANCE

In an environment this year in which energy holdings have been one of the few drivers of positive returns, sustainable funds — especially those that exclude oil and gas — have lagged peers. Even so, ESG considerations have benefited portfolios, YCharts found.

In sample portfolios of 80% equity funds and 20% fixed income funds, swapping all non-ESG products for the highest ESG-rated ones resulted in 3.8 percentage points of higher returns over 12 months ending in August. However, annualized returns over three years and five years were lower in that scenario, at -1.9% and -0.4%, respectively.

Tweaking the situation to substitute all of the sample portfolio’s holdings for the biggest ESG-labeled products on the market, returns over a year were lower than the base case by 0.8 percentage points but equal over three years and 0.3 percentage points higher over five years, YCharts found.

Among the 25 biggest U.S. funds that are marketed as ESG, just three had seen net positive returns in 2022, through August: the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (5.5%), Invesco Solar ETF (9.6%) and Fidelity Advisor Energy (49.9%), according to the report.

That was an even smaller figure among the 25 U.S. funds with the highest ESG scores from MSCI, with only the Hennessy Gas Utility Fund having a positive return, at 11.9%.

During the first eight months of the year, the S&P 500 was down by 16.1%. In that time, the average returns for the biggest 25 ESG-marketed funds were -13.1%, and it was -17.7% among the 25 funds with the highest ESG ratings, according to Y charts.

This story was originally published on ESG Clarity.

The high stakes of the midterm election

Latest News

RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence
RIA moves: True North adds $353M California RIA as SageView grows North Carolina presence

Plus, a $400 million Commonwealth team departs to launch an independent family-run RIA in the East Bay area.

Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans
Blue Owl Capital, Voya strike private market partnership for retirement plans

The collaboration will focus initially on strategies within collective investment trusts in DC plans, with plans to expand to other retirement-focused private investment solutions.

Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!
Top Commonwealth advisor to recruiters: Stop with the cold calls already!

“I respectfully request that all recruiters for other BDs discontinue their efforts to contact me," writes Thomas Bartholomew.

Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings
Why AI notetakers alone can't fix 'broken' advisor meetings

Wealth tech veteran Aaron Klein speaks out against the "misery" of client meetings, why advisors' communication skills don't always help, and AI's potential to make bad meetings "100 times better."

Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit
Morgan Stanley, Goldman, Wells Fargo to settle Archegos trades lawsuit

The proposed $120 million settlement would close the book on a legal challenge alleging the Wall Street banks failed to disclose crucial conflicts of interest to investors.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.