
As of this piece’s publication, it’s been a bad couple weeks for hedge funds in short positions; specifically, it was
a historically terrible rout for some funds who were caught in short positions on brick-and-mortar retail,
cinema, and legacy tech equities with extremely high short interest.[1] But despite monumental
losses in a number of particular funds, hedge funds are going to keep on doing what they were originally invented to
do: produce uncorrelated returns with the flexibility to express long or short investment theses.[2]
Given that, if we are to expect widespread ESG adoption across the hedge fund industry, there needs to be a wider
embrace of shorting from an ESG perspective.
The lion’s share of assets managed worldwide with an ESG focus are driven by investment screens: According to the
Global Sustainable Investment Alliance’s biennial Global Sustainable Investment Review, assets managed through
negative or exclusionary screens accounted for $19.8 trillion of the total $30.7 trillion sustainably managed assets
worldwide in 2018.[3] In other words, a large majority of sustainably or responsibly managed
assets are long-only, with securities that are selected (or rejected) based on how well they score on ESG metrics.
While the 2020 GSIA Global Sustainable Investment Review has yet to be released, we expect a similar breakdown of
assets.
For ESG to truly reach its maturity as a developing strategy, some investors—particularly hedge funds—need to
consider incorporating ESG shorting into their portfolios. Broadly, ESG investors expect that in the long run
securities well-rated by ESG metrics will outperform, while poorly rated ones will underperform. But by restricting
the scope of ESG investing to long positions, we limit the ability of investors to express profitable
bearish attitudes towards stocks with unpriced ESG risks. It also precludes investors from
hedging against downside risk on an ESG basis. Lastly, ESG shorting has the potential to
enact positive transitions through debt and equity markets. As demonstrated by the highly publicized short battle
over Valeant Pharmaceuticals (now Bausch Health), such pressure can prompt meaningful change.[4]
Capturing the Upside and the Downside of ESG
From an absolute return investor’s perspective, ESG shorting is critical because it allows them to
capture both the upside and the downside of their investments while incorporating ESG
factors. For example, many ESG investors point to increasingly stringent global climate
initiatives, arguing that these changes will eventually create headwinds for the oil and gas industry. Should they
not be able to capture positive returns from this thesis? Due to the plummeting cost of renewables alone, it’s easy
to imagine a somewhat near future where some energy producers who rely exclusively on extracting fossil fuels
struggle to compete: In this scenario, some firms will transition to survive, many will consolidate, and some even
go under, drowning in stranded toxic assets such as extraction and refining facilities.<>[5]
According to a study by Financial Times Lex, if governments worldwide implemented stricter climate measures
to limit the rise in temperatures to 1.5° Celsius above pre-industrial levels for the rest of this
century, it would amount to around $900 billion in stranded assets. At the time, this
equaled about a third of the market value of large oil and gas firms.[6] Investors always go
where they can make money, so it’s not hard to imagine that investors may want to take short positions in this
circumstance, whether it’s to make money, do “the right thing,” or a mix of both.
ESG Hedging against Downside Risk
Unlike positive alpha, which is harder to consistently link to an isolated ESG factor, researchers have proven that
worse ESG ratings correlate with increased default risk. According to a working paper published by researchers at
the University of Giessen, “ESG score reduces firm risk, both for U.S. firms and for European firms.”[7] Their analysis of 1-year and 5-year CDS spreads and distance-to-default also found
that “ESG efforts significantly reduce market-based default risks in the U.S. sample.” In the U.S. market
particularly, increased ESG activity (i.e., social responsibility efforts) correlates with reduced default risk.
Hence, going long on higher ESG scorers can lower risk, while going short on poor ESG scorers could
potentially shield against downside risk.
Firms with a track record of ESG issues, especially scandals and governance issues, have been shown to correlate with
negative alpha. Simon Glossner of the University of Virginia constructed a “value-weighted U.S. portfolio of
controversial firms with a known history of ESG incidents,” and found that it had a “a four-factor alpha of negative
3.5% per year,” even after controlling for other risk factors, industries, and firm characteristics.[8]
There are clear risks in ignoring the governance portion of ESG. Scandals, cover-ups, and fines are perhaps the
easiest place to see the financial impact: It took over two full years for Volkswagen’s share price to recover after
its diesel emissions test cheating scandal; Wells Fargo paid billions to settle its fake accounts scandal, but its
reputational damage was the real cost; and Enron’s falsified earnings led a meteoric rise to a $70 billion market
cap and dramatic fall to bankruptcy. Prominent short-seller Jim Chanos made a name for himself by shorting Enron the
whole way down, netting his fund $500 million. Of course, uncovering such scandals is easier said than done, but
paying attention to governance factors—particularly, a lack of transparency and accounting issues—is often the place
to start.
Creating Positive Change by Shorting
Short positions can also be utilized to pressure executive boards to make strategic changes. While short position
holders have no voting authority, management still pays attention to them, even if it is out of ire: “Managers of
firms don’t like people who short sell their stock, especially if the short sellers are accusing the firms of fraud
and even more especially when the fraud accusations are true,” says economist Owen Lamont.[9]
While it’s hardly a surefire strategy for friendly engagements with management, sometimes it works, especially in
cases where the short sellers put reputational pressure the firm by uncovering issues management would rather hide.
Short sellers played a key role in publicizing the nature of Valeant’s drug pricing policy, which lead to Senate
hearings where Valeant stood accused of price gouging sick and vulnerable people, followed by the ousting of CEO
Michael Pearson.
“Socially responsible short selling could even be used to uncover ‘greenwashing’
by supposedly well-rated ESG firms that are misleading investors about their environmental impact.”
Even if these short sellers weren’t necessarily coming from an “ESG perspective,” the results were the same, and it’s
easy to imagine how these tactics could be used to pressure ESG bad actors (e.g., polluters, labor exploiters, etc.)
to correct course. Socially responsible short selling could even be used to uncover “greenwashing” by supposedly
well-rated ESG firms that are misleading investors about their environmental impact.
Conclusion
ESG has long been the domain of long-only investors. In fact, there’s even some disagreement on whether taking a
short position at all is compatible with ESG principles. However, shorting can be a viable strategy for achieving
the goals of ESG investors: lessening carbon footprints, uncovering lapses in proper governance, and raising the
cost of capital for ESG laggards, to name a few. Another goal of ESG investors is to encourage widespread ESG
adoption across all asset classes, including hedge funds—it’s Principle 4 of the UN Principles for Responsible
Investment. It would be a disservice to the wider project of socially responsible and sustainable investing to
exclude the bearish side of the market.
Contact the Author
Andrew Koski, Senior Analyst | andrew.koski@hfr.com
Learn more about HFR Investments at: hfr-investments.com
or reach out toinvestments@hfr.com
A downloadable copy of this article may be found here.
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[2] Other hedgies made
hundreds of millions riding the short squeeze alongside retail investors.
[3] 2018 Global Sustainable Investment Review
[4] Of course, in this
case, the shorts need to produce positive meaningful change (e.g., pressuring a carbon intensive energy
producer to transition towards renewables).
[5]CEOs of the U.S. behemoths
Exxon Mobil and Chevron have reportedly discussed a merger.
[6] Alan Livsey, “Lex
in depth: the $900bn cost of ‘stranded energy assets’,” Financial Times, February 3 2020.
[7] Christina E.
Bannier, Yannik Bofinger, and Björn Rock, “Doing safe by doing good: ESG investing and corporate social
responsibility in the U.S. and Europe,” CFS Working Paper Series, No. 621, Goethe University Frankfurt, Center for
Financial Studies, April 29, 2019.
[8] Simon Glossner,
“The Price of Ignoring ESG Risks,” May 18, 2018.
[9] Owen A. Lamont,
“Short Sale Constraints and Overpricing,” in Short Selling: Strategies, Risks, and Rewards, edited by Frank
J. Fabozzi, 2004, pp. 183-4.