EBSA Secretary Defends ESG Rule as Legislative, Litigation Battles Continue

The issue of considering ESG in retirement plans is becoming increasingly polarized.



The Department of Labor’s assistant secretary of labor for employee benefits security, Lisa Gomez, defended the DOL’s final rule allowing the consideration of ESG factors in retirement plan investments at a webinar hosted Monday by Ceres, a sustainability advocate.

The rule, which took effect on January 30, permits, but does not require, the use of ESG considerations in investment selection by retirement plan fiduciaries. There is a pending lawsuit in Texas challenging the legality of the rule.

Gomez explained that this rule is “not a per se requirement” to use ESG and clarifies that ESG factors may be considered as part of a fiduciary’s ordinary risk-return analysis. She also explained that this new rule does not allow fiduciaries to sacrifice the financial health of a plan to pursue other goals: A fiduciary may consider the risks and opportunities of climate change and other ESG factors.

Gomez dubbed the rule “a return to neutrality.”

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According to Gomez, the previous rule, passed during the administration of President Donald Trump, which required only “pecuniary factors” to be used in investment selection, had a “chilling effect” on the consideration of ESG factors. Gomez said the word “pecuniary” neither appears in the text of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, the governing statute for both rules, nor does it occupy a “long-standing place in employee benefits law.”

Gomez briefly discussed one of the more nebulous provisions of the new rule when she said participant preferences for investments can be considered in menu selection on the grounds that it can increase plan participation and deferral rates, thereby increasing retirement security. She did not comment on how fiduciaries should determine adequate participant interest or how much economic gain could be compromised in exchange for increased participation, if any.

Eric Pitt, a climate finance consultant at Ceres who moderated the webinar, asked Gomez how a fiduciary should consider a hypothetical ESG large-cap stock fund for a plan menu: Should the fiduciary compare it to other similar ESG funds or the entire universe of large-cap funds? Gomez answered that there is no special treatment for ESG funds, and a fiduciary should look generally at the risk and return for any and all large-cap equity funds available, whether they use ESG considerations or not.

Despite the branding of the rule as neutral, Republicans in Congress have increased their organized opposition to the use of ESG considerations in retirement-plan investing.

Representative Patrick McHenry, R-North Carolina, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, announced the creation of a “Republican ESG working group” on Friday. The purpose of the working group is to “combat the threat to our capital markets posed by those on the far-left pushing environmental, social, and governance (ESG) proposals.”

The working group will be chaired by Representative Bill Huizenga, R-Michigan, and is staffed entirely by Republicans.

Last month, Representative Juan Vargas, D-California, and Representative Sean Casten, D-Illinois, started the Sustainable Investment Caucus.

Casten said in a statement that, “Given the significant growth of assets under management in funds that prioritize ESG factors, Congress has a duty to craft policies that provide investor protections and transparency of information to market participants.”

Members of the Sustainable Investment Caucus are all from the Democratic Party.

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Former Goldman Sachs President Schwartz Selected as New Carlyle CEO

Harvey Schwartz takes over at private equity behemoth Carlyle Group on February 15.

 

Effective February 15, Harvey Schwartz will take over as CEO of global investment firm The Carlyle Group, after the Board of Directors unanimously appointed him, the firm announced Monday.

Schwartz will step into the role previously held by Glenn Youngkin, who departed in 2020 to pursue the GOP nomination for governor of Virginia, and Kewsong Lee, who departed in August 2022 after a contract dispute.

Co-Founder Bill Conway will step down as interim CEO, while maintaining his role as co-chairman of the board, when Schwartz joins.

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“Harvey is a widely respected business builder with significant leadership experience in a high-performing, highly competitive global financial institution,” said Conway and Co-Chairman David Rubenstein in a joint statement. “Given his experience, track record, and skillset, the board was unanimous in its determination that he is the right leader to drive Carlyle forward, building upon the firm’s strong operational foundation, world-class brand, and collaborative, performance-oriented culture.”

Prior to assuming the role of CEO at Carlyle, Schwartz formerly was the president and co-COO of Goldman Sachs. Prior to that, he served as Goldman’s CFO.

At Carlyle, Schwartz will be responsible for setting and executing a strategy that advances and accelerates the diversification plan the firm has pursued, as well as identifying new investment opportunities to further grow and scale the firm, drive sustained performance for fund investors and create significant shareholder value.

“I am thrilled to be joining Carlyle, a premier investment firm with a world-class brand and differentiated global platform supported by one of the most talented teams in the industry,” said Schwartz in the press release. “I believe there is tremendous opportunity ahead to continue to transform and grow the firm and enhance its ability to deliver on its mission of driving long-term value for its investors, shareholders and all stakeholders. I’m excited to get started and look forward to working closely with the firm’s senior leaders, along with the entire global team, as we build on Carlyle’s strong foundation to navigate and capture the opportunities in the current market environment and in the future.”

Schwartz serves on the boards of SoFi Technologies Inc. and One Mind, a nonprofit that accelerates collaborative research and advocacy to enable all individuals facing brain health challenges. He is also the group chairperson and non-executive director of the Bank of London, a clearing and payments bank with operations in London and New York City.

Schwartz earned a B.A. from Rutgers University, where he is a member of the university’s Board of Governors and its Hall of Distinguished Alumni and holds an MBA from Columbia University.


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