UBS Group AG recently organized its first-ever conference centred on the ESG aspect of biodiversity, indicating its aspirations to expand into a business sector previously targeted for growth by Credit Suisse before its downfall.
Judson Berkey, UBS’s group head of engagement and regulatory strategy, expressed the aim of finding ways to facilitate financing for initiatives to conserve natural resources.
According to Berkey, the focus extends beyond risk mitigation to identifying investment opportunities that can yield returns for investors.
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UBS reported that 250 institutional investors, corporate clients, family offices, and professionals participated in the private event on Tuesday.
Credit Suisse previously hosted this event in New York before UBS acquired the bank last year.
Berkey mentioned that UBS had to reject some clients due to overwhelming demand exceeding the bank’s capacity. He added that UBS is contemplating broadening the focus of upcoming conferences in response to this high demand.
“The transition journey has gotten very, very real, and it’s showing up with some real challenges and trade-offs,” said Lucy Thomas, head of sustainable investing at UBS Asset Management.
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Now is “the time to face into those and to get smarter on what the solutions could be to manage some of those complexities.”
Private investment in nature has surged significantly, increasing eleven-fold to reach $102 billion over the past four years, as revealed by the latest data from the United Nations Environment Programme’s Finance Initiative (UNEP FI).
This growth has been primarily propelled by alternative investments, traded debt, and private equity, along with advancements in financial tools like debt-for-nature swaps, emerging “nature-supportive” exchange-traded funds, and biodiversity credits, according to UNEP FI.