Investors have long been familiar with ESG and climate funds, which can encompass a wide variety of sustainability-linked themes and objectives. Following the UN’s COP 15 Biodiversity Conference in December 2022 and the recent advent of the Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD), biodiversity has emerged as an investment theme. The fund management industry has heard the call, and several biodiversity funds have sprung up in the past year.
A grassroots movement, for now
We identified 149 funds globally that were thematically linked to biodiversity based on the fund name and investment strategy. These funds collectively held approximately USD 60 billion, or around 2%, of the estimated USD 3 trillion invested in sustainable funds as of September 2023.[1] Among these, there were 15 pure-play biodiversity-labeled funds with just over USD 1 billion in AUM, the majority of which were mutual funds launched in 2022.[2] The remaining funds were biodiversity-related with a broader environmental or associated thematic mandate, such as strategies focusing on the circular economy that aim to provide exposure to firms that minimize waste, circulate resources, address water scarcity and regenerate nature.[3]
The canopy of biodiversity funds
Beneath the foliage, exposure to industrials and information technology dominated
Zooming in on the 10 largest biodiversity-labeled funds based on AUM as of September 2023, we observed that cyclical sectors were dominant, with industrials on average accounting for the largest sector exposure, followed by information technology and materials, with virtually no exposure to energy.[4]
Cyclical sectors favored in biodiversity-labeled funds
Money doesn’t grow on trees — lower risk-adjusted returns vs. peers
In recent years, biodiversity-labeled funds have, on average, delivered lower risk-adjusted returns versus their peers in the same thematic sphere. This may partly be attributed to the large allocation to cyclical sectors, in particular information technology, which experienced a series of sharp selloffs in 2022. That being said, the lower correlation to other sustainability themes may serve as a diversifying function for investors. Based on our research, however, asset-class diversification may be a challenge at present, with over 90% of funds being equity strategies focused on developed markets.
Asset-weighted average returns of biodiversity-labeled and biodiversity-related funds
The fruits of labor — higher exposure to sustainable-impact solutions vs. peers
Using MSCI Sustainable Impact Metrics, we found that, on average, funds that contained the term “biodiversity” in the name exhibited twice the sustainable-impact-solutions revenue exposure as their biodiversity-related peers. These funds had more exposure to companies that derive revenue from products or services with positive impact on society and the environment, and revenue tied to natural capital and climate change themes.
Exposure of funds to sustainable-impact solutions
Navigating the jungle
Overall, biodiversity remains a nascent investment segment, with only a limited number of funds explicitly adopting biodiversity as the core investment theme. Investors may be confronted with a broad mix of different strategies and investment approaches that can vary significantly in terms of their level of complexity and their clear link to global biodiversity goals. They may range from funds based on exclusion criteria, to ones that apply sophisticated metrics with a clear focus on businesses aligned with global biodiversity goals. Hence, understanding the finer details of biodiversity funds may be key for investors to successfully navigate this space. Nonetheless, nature-related risks and opportunities are becoming more important for investors and regulators, and coupled with the emergence of reporting frameworks such as TNFD, biodiversity funds may soon receive greater attention.