Sustainable funds market to grow 150% by 2025

Sustainable funds market to grow 150% by 2025
The industry is looking at younger clients with a focus on millennials and Gen Xers for ESG growth and future investment.
SEP 09, 2022

Despite the anti-ESG movement and struggling performance for sustainable funds this year, investment management executives have predicted the ESG market will grow by 150% by 2025.

The findings were revealed in a Dow Jones report published on Wednesday, following a survey of 200 senior leaders at U.S. and U.K. investment management firms in April and May. The respondents were all involved in sustainable investing.

Sustainable investments currently represent about 6% of assets in the portfolios of the companies surveyed, with that proportion estimated to hit 15% over the next three years.

Much of that growth would occur amid heightened regulation in the U.S. Public companies will likely have to disclose their greenhouse gas emissions, and new rules for ESG funds and financial advice will take effect.

Just over half of respondents to the survey said they had concerns with ESG data quality, with 45% taking issue with the timeliness of data that is publicly available and the consistency and scope of it (42%), according to the report. However, 60% of investment company executives said they think forthcoming regulations will require their businesses to take ESG more seriously. Another 58% said there will be more transparency around ESG ratings.

Nearly two thirds of investment professions said they think the positive effects of ESG investments are important, although more than half said clients could be more educated about sustainable investing. Further, 50% said that “for sustainable investments to be a success, investment management companies also need demand from retail and institutional investors.”

Increasingly, that demand is likely to come from younger clients, the survey indicated.

In the U.S., more than half of said they are focused on millennials and Gen Xers for ESG growth and future investment, with only 15% focused on Gen Z and 12% on baby boomers, according to the report.

And, despite rapid growth in product development, there appears to be more room for additional ESG-themed funds. Almost half (44%) of those surveyed said the availability and variety of sustainable funds on the market posed a challenge in building portfolios with strong performance.

This story was originally published on ESG Clarity.

'IN the Office' with ESG expert and author Bruce Usher

Latest News

Costly referral programs fuel RIA M&A growth strategies
Costly referral programs fuel RIA M&A growth strategies

With growth topping succession as the leading M&A driver, referral programs are a top of mind consideration for advisory firms making moves as Goldman Sachs, Pershing and Robinhood consider entering the referral market.

Dynasty firm Procyon Partners inks staking deal with Constellation Wealth Capital
Dynasty firm Procyon Partners inks staking deal with Constellation Wealth Capital

The $8 billion RIA is getting more fuel for geographic expansion and recruit top talent through a minority investment partnership.

Dual-share class hopes grow higher with filings from Pimco, T. Rowe Price
Dual-share class hopes grow higher with filings from Pimco, T. Rowe Price

The rush of SEC applications, which also includes JPMorgan and Schwab, reflect growing optimism over the tax-busting fund structure.

Concurrent hails first quarter advisor team growth, adding $2B in AUM
Concurrent hails first quarter advisor team growth, adding $2B in AUM

The half-dozen teams who joined the hybrid RIA in the early innings of 2025 have lifted it past a key asset milestone.

Judge Oks release of $400 million to besieged GPB investors.
Judge Oks release of $400 million to besieged GPB investors.

Meanwhile, GPB senior executives' sentencing for fraud pushed to May.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.