Deutsche Bank’s investment unit needs to sell more than 5% of its investments in certain ESG funds as a result of new regulations from the European Union.
These rules will be enforced soon by the European Securities and Markets Authority, and it will focus on funds that use terms like ESG, sustainability, transition, and impact in their names.
The goal is to make sure these terms accurately describe what the funds actually invest in. Even though the regulations aren’t final yet, asset managers are already checking their portfolios and making changes as needed.
Dennis Haensel, head of ESG advisory at DWS Group, said in an interview with Bloomberg, “The biggest impact that we currently observe for an existing strategy through the new binding elements in ESG-labeled funds is more than 5% of the investment universe.”
“It’s a big impact because it mainly relates to a few sectors,” Haensel said. “This is definitely a situation” in which portfolio managers will sit down “with all the involved stakeholders, also with sales and distribution partners” to figure out how to proceed, he said.
On Monday, the biggest groups representing banks, insurers, and asset managers in the EU released a statement. They said that the many new rules being made are causing legal problems and confusing investors.