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Rapport de l’ESMA : les fonds ESG performent mieux !

L’Autorité européenne des marchés financiers (AEMF ou ESMA) viennent de publier un rapport soulignant la meilleure performance des fonds ESG.

Extrait

The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU securities regulator, today publishes its fourth annual statistical report on the cost and performance of European Union (EU) retail investment products.  A new finding this year is that UCITS with an environmental, social and governance (ESG) strategy (including equity, bond and mixed funds) outperformed their non-ESG peers, and were also overall cheaper.

  • Gross performance: Gross performance in 2020 was low or negative and highly volatile due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Investing long-term significantly reduces the risks related to sudden and large changes in the valuation of financial products;
  • Costs: Costs remained a critical component when evaluating the ultimate benefits of an investment, they reduced only marginally over time. Total costs were higher for retail investors than for institutional investors, on average. Costs for cross-border funds were higher than those for domestic funds;
  • ESG UCITS: ESG equity, bond and mixed funds were overall cheaper than non-ESG peers, while their performance reflected the strong performance of specific sectors since the COVID-19 crisis. Within the ESG fund category, impact funds performed better than other ESG strategies and funds with sustainable investment as objective performed better in net terms, after having included costs, than those promoting environmental or social characteristics despite slightly higher costs;
  • Structural market features: 15% of the managers of UCITS in our sample managed 90% of assets. Cross-border funds were, on average, larger than funds sold only in their home market and on average 60% of funds included in the sample were effectively sold cross-border. Heterogeneity across Member States persists;
  • Performance and costs by management type: Costs were significantly higher for active UCITS than for passive funds and ETFs. ETF UCITS performance was in line with that of other passive UCITS investing in similar assets;
  • Retail AIFs: In 2020, retail investors accounted for only 13% of the total Net Asset Value (NAV) in the EU AIF market. As for UCITS, the annualised monthly gross and net performance across the main retail AIFs fund types, significantly decreased compared with 2019. A full costs analysis could not be carried out due to the unavailability of data on cost composition; and
  • Structured Retail Products: Total costs were largely attributable to entry costs and varied substantially by country and by pay-off type, but they did not depend on issuance size or underlying type.

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