Europe’s ‘Ambitious Plans’ for ESG Disclosure Rules

New requirements for financial sector firms in Europe take effect in March. 


New European rules on sustainability disclosure requirements in the financial services sector take effect in March, affecting institutions such as banks, insurance companies, pension funds, and investment firms. And while details of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) have not been finalized, law firm Akin Gump says the move to increase requirements shows the EU and the UK have “ambitious plans” for improving environmental, social, and governance (ESG) disclosures for financial firms.

In 2018, the European Commission established an action plan on financing sustainable growth. And “Action 7” of the plan, which takes effect March 10, calls for clarifying institutional investors’ and asset managers’ ESG disclosure duties. It sets sustainability disclosure obligations for manufacturers of financial products and financial advisers in relation to the integration of sustainability risks by participants such as asset managers, pension funds, and other institutional investors.

According to Akin Gump, the three main disclosure requirements specified by the European Commission are: 1. Disclosures related to the integration of sustainability risks in the investment decisionmaking process; 2. The pre-contractual disclosure requirements applicable when products are promoted as having an ESG focus or investment objective; and 3. The disclosures related to whether an investment manager or financial product considers the adverse impacts of investment decisions on sustainability.

The UK will also introduce new ESG disclosure requirements for Financial Conduct Authority (FCA)-authorized investment managers based on the recommendations of the Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). The UK’s Joint Government-Regulator TCFD Taskforce has said the UK’s proposed rules will likely include disclosure of strategy, policies, and processes.

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The taskforce also said the proposed UK disclosure requirements will interact with related international initiatives, including the SFDR. While the UK will adopt a similar regime, the rules are unlikely to be identical, said Akin Gump.

“Investment managers will need to assess the direct and indirect application of the SFDR on their operations,” lawyers for Akin Gump wrote on the JD Supra legal information site. “A first step for many investment managers is to consider the ability and willingness of the business to comply with the requirements and the extent to which compliance is possible.”

The firm said investment managers should assess their existing ESG policies and practices against the SFDR requirements to identify any gaps. It added that investment managers will need to keep in mind the potential divergent approaches taken by the EU and the UK in developing their own ESG-disclosure standards.

“The compliance exercise may require the introduction or revision of ESG policies, and extend to other policies and procedures,” said Akin Gump. “This may require the development of additional benchmarks or investment criteria, the introduction of additional data providers, or new technology in order to provide the business with the means required to implement the new policies in practice.”

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3Q Corporate Earnings Look Better and Better, Yardeni Says

S&P 500 profits should be down just 7.1%, a big upgrade from more dire previous calls.


Whew, battered corporate earnings are recovering, and are en route to becoming positive again next year, by the reckoning of Yardeni Research.

The stock market mostly looks to the future, rather than at the past. That’s the big reason for the Dow Jones Industrial Average reaching 30,000 last week. In that spirit, the earnings trend, a vital component of how equities will fare ahead, is encouraging.

Seems like third quarter S&P 500 earnings will drop just 7.1%, versus the year-before period, according to Yardeni. If so, such a result sure beats the mid-year analysts’ consensus for the third quarter, 26.5%. This latest outcome is calculated with all save a handful of companies reporting for the September-ending span. And it comes with 80% of the companies beating analysts’ expectations.

A minus 7.1% showing is a lot better than the previous two quarters this year: negative 15.4% for the first and down 32.3% for the second. For 2020’s final quarter, Yardeni predicts a more serious decline, 17.3%—which means the entire year would suffer a 17.2% slide.

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But, come 2021, things should be looking up, Yardeni forecasts, with earnings per share (EPS) climbing back to almost equal 2019’s number, $163. Should everything go right, then economic expansion will resume: Pantheon Macroeconomics expects the US economy will increase 5% next year, as opposed to this year’s estimated contraction of 3.5%.

The buoyant prognostications stem from what Barclays analysts call “a perfect trifecta of outcomes” for the current stock rally. The virtuous trio are: news of apparently imminent approval and distribution of coronavirus vaccines, a settled US election, and better-than-expected earnings.

Goldman Sachs economists anticipate the first vaccines will be given to at-risk Americans in mid-December, which should bring noticeable health benefits in 2021’s first quarter. Broad availability will commence in April, the firm contended, sparking a lifting of global economic growth in the second quarter.

Small wonder that new investment has started flowing into domestic equity mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), reversing a long spell of outflows. The stock funds received roughly a net $25 billion in the past two weeks, as measured by the Investment Company Institute (ICI). From January through October, the stock fund outflow totaled $532 billion.

In earnings terms, it’s interesting that the bad news from three industriesoil, airlines, and hotelshas dragged the entire S&P 500 down. If they were excluded, the index’s EPS would have risen 4.%. That’s from a study using results ending November 20, more than a week ago, from FactSet’s senior earnings analyst, John Butters. These three have been the hardest hit by the pandemic. Should the virus finally recede, the three pummeled industries’ recoveries should be marked.

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