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Namita Nair

Namita Nair

Vice President, MSCI Research

Namita Nair is the lead researcher for the health-care industry, specializing in pharmaceuticals, health-care providers and services. Based in London, she is a regular content contributor, offering insights on key health-care sustainability issues and trends. Previously, Namita worked as a surveillance medical officer in the Indian National Polio Surveillance Project under the World Health Organization. She holds a master’s in health economics, policy and law from Erasmus University Rotterdam and a bachelor’s in medicine and surgery.

Research and Insights

Articles by Namita Nair

    The Sustainability and Climate Trends to Watch for 2025

    Podcast | Dec 13, 2024 | Namita Nair, Jonathan Ponder, Liz Houston

    Join us as we cover the sustainability and climate trends that our team thinks will shape the year head. We talk about energy transition opportunities that are emerging in private markets, rising social risks and big tech, falling data access for AI models and much more. Here’s to a big, intriguing 2025!

    Investing in the Fight Against Superbugs

    Podcast | Aug 30, 2024 | Namita Nair

    Antimicrobial resistance is getting worse. Set to impact healthcare, agriculture and insurance, it’s a phenomenon worth paying attention to. On this episode, we take a look at whether there’s an investment case for fighting back against the superbugs. 

    AI is Diagnosing and Texas is Burning

    Podcast | Apr 19, 2024 | Namita Nair, Mathew Lee

    Everyone is talking about AI, but on today’s episode we focus on the technology’s potential to disrupt health care. Then, we switch things up to look at how wildfires are exacerbating physical, legal and financial risks for electric utilities in the U.S.

    Assessing Corporate SDG Alignment: Identifying Gaps and Opportunities

    Research Report | Dec 6, 2023 | Namita Nair, Jurgita Balaisyte

    In 2015, the UN launched its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to drive large-scale, positive environmental and societal impact. We mapped these SDGs to four broad themes — environment, society, economy and governance — to analyze corporate alignment patterns.

    Diet ESG

    Podcast | Apr 12, 2023 | Namita Nair

    This week we discuss the new anti-obesity drugs that many have claimed could spell an end to the world’s obesity epidemic. But ESG and diseases are not so straight forward. For example, we include diabetes medication but not obesity medication in our access to healthcare key issue. Why is that? We explore the topic in this week’s episode.

    The Conflict Within ESG

    Podcast | Jan 20, 2023 | Rumi Mahmood, Namita Nair, Mathew Lee

    What if there is a water utility that saves a city millions of gallons worth of water a day, but also increases its carbon emissions by a large amount? What if a company makes a product that saves people, but it allegedly uses forced labor to do so? Do you avoid these companies and products? Are you a follower of the Ethics of Ambiguity in that the means of production is the same as the ends? In this episode, we discuss the conflicts that arise for investors, impact investors especially, due to the inherent conflicts that are present in the operations of some companies.

    Baby Formula Crisis and Australia Goes Green

    Podcast | May 27, 2022 | Antonios Panagiotopoulos, Namita Nair, Elchin Mammadov

    Abbott Laboratories is having to answer difficult questions after the F.D.A found its Michigan plant to be “egregiously unsanitary.” The plant closed after four infants became ill and two died after consuming Abbott’s baby formula that was made at the plant leading to a national formula shortage. We discussed what happened and why product quality and safety is such a key issue in ESG analysis. Then, we discussed the Australia election results which were heavily influenced by climate change concerns.

    Abortion Pills and the Climate of Bonds

    Podcast | May 6, 2022 | Namita Nair, Bhaveer Shah

    After a draft opinion was leaked from the U.S. Supreme Court showed the possible reversal of the landmark abortion law called Roe v Wade, a new spotlight has been put on companies that manufacture abortifacients (aka abortion pills). We give you a quick look into what those pills are used for (not just abortions) and the companies that manufacturer them. Then we explore what sovereign bonds can tell us about how climate change is going to affect governments.

    Nord Stream 2 and Vaccines for Everyone

    Podcast | Feb 25, 2022 | Namita Nair, Elchin Mammadov

    As the Russian escalation in Ukraine continues, Germany has decided to suspend certification of the Nord Stream 2 Baltic Sea pipeline that would have doubled Russia’s natural gas export capacity to Germany. We discussed what this move means for the energy mix of Western Europe and what companies are exposed to the pipeline’s construction. Then, we discussed the equitable distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine: which company has distributed the most vaccines to lower income countries and which company has distributed the least, and why it matters.

    We Need Miners and Cheap Drugs

    Podcast | Dec 10, 2021 | Samuel Block, Namita Nair

    Everyone wants to get into mining these days. The extractive industries have seen a flurry of interest as the rush to decarbonize our economies sparks a race to control the metals those low-carbon technologies need to work. We discuss the ESG paradox this creates: on the one hand, mining is a fundamentally challenging sector when it comes to ESG and on the other hand for renewable energy to be a feasible solution to fossil fuels, we need batteries. Then we discuss a sustainability bond issued by Teva Pharmaceuticals with some of its provisions tied to both better access to healthcare and lower greenhouse gas emissions.

    Vaccine Mandates and Walmart’s Insulin

    Podcast | Aug 6, 2021 | Samuel Block, Namita Nair

    Some companies are mandating their employees receive vaccine for COVID-19 if they want to continue working at the company. The idea sort of seems like a mandatory health and safety procedure, albeit one with a bit more controversy surrounding it than others. Still, the companies that have a fully vaccinated workforce may be in a better place come winter than those without. We discuss how vaccine mandates are similar to the proactive health and safety policies implemented at companies in more dangerous industries. Then we ask whether Walmart has become a social impact company with its new relatively low-cost insulin product offered to uninsured Americans.

    MSCI ESG Healthcare Funds and SDG 3

    Research Report | Jun 30, 2021 | Rumi Mahmood, Jurgita Balaisyte, Namita Nair

    We studied all ETFs and mutual funds in our coverage that invest in healthcare and allied industries to assess the degree of fund alignment with the UN’s Sustainable Development Goal 3. Overall, we found relatively little alignment.