FCA consults on new climate related financial disclosures for the asset management sector

24 minute read
23 June 2021

Author(s):

In November 2020, the Government published its Roadmap towards mandatory climate-related financial disclosures across the UK economy by 2025[1] ("the Roadmap"), aligned with the recommendations of the Financial Stability Board's Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures ("TCFD").

In support of the Roadmap, on 22 June 2021, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published proposals[2] for enhanced climate related financial disclosures by standard listed companies and the asset management sector. In this Insight, Sushil Kuner from our Financial Services Regulatory team, focuses on proposals for the asset management sector contained within the FCA's Consultation Paper 21/17 ("the CP") and summarises who the proposals apply to, the key rules being introduced and the next steps for firms.



Who will the proposed rules apply to?

Firms in scope

The FCA's proposed climate-related financial disclosure rules will apply to FCA regulated firms in the asset management sector with respect to their assets managed or administered from the UK, notwithstanding where the client, product or portfolio is based. In particular, it is intended that the following firms will be in scope ("In-Scope Firms"):

  1. Asset managers including:
    • investment portfolio managers;
    • UK Undertakings for Collective Investment in Transferable Securities ("UCITS") management companies;
    • full-scope UK Alternative Investment Fund Managers ("AIFMs"); and
    • small authorised UK AIFMs.
       
  2. Life insurers and FCA regulated pension providers (to which the FCA refer collectively as 'asset owners'), including:
    • life insurers (including pure reinsurers) in relation to insurance-based investment products and defined contribution ("DC") pension products; and
    • non-insurer FCA-regulated pension providers, including platform firms and Self-invested Personal Pension ("SIPP") operators, to the extent that SIPP operators provide a ready-made selection of investments.

The FCA has proposed an exemption for asset managers and asset owners that have less than £5 billion in assets under management ("AuM") or administration on a three year rolling average, to be assessed annually, with respect to their business activities relating to the products and portfolios subject to the proposed rules. The FCA has suggested that this threshold would capture 98% of both the UK asset management market and held by UK asset owners (covering £10.4 trillion and £1.7 trillion in assets, respectively).

The FCA's proposals relate either to the assets a firm manages or administers overall, at an entity level, or to the assets relating to particular financial products or services. The intended target audience for the disclosures are investors, including institutional clients (e.g. pension scheme trustees, employers, corporate investors) and end-user consumers (e.g. pension scheme members, retail investors). Throughout the CP, the FCA refers to these two types of investor as 'clients' and 'consumers', respectively.

Products and portfolios in scope

The FCA's proposed rules and guidance would apply to the firm, which would be responsible for relevant disclosures at product or portfolio level.

  1. Asset managers – the products and portfolios directly within scope of the FCA's proposed rules for asset managers include:
    • authorised funds, excluding feeder funds and sub-funds in the process of winding up or termination;
    • unauthorised Alternative Investment Funds ("AIFs"); and
    • portfolio management services.
       
  2. Asset owners – the scope of the activities to which the proposals would apply relate to the firm's role as a manager or administrator of the underlying assets for clients and consumers. The products in scope include:
    • insurance-based DC pension schemes (e.g. personal pension and stakeholder pensions, including both workplace and non-workplace pensions);
    • non-insurance DC pension schemes (e.g. funds-based, offered by platform firms or similar); and
    • SIPPs, either insurance or non-insurance based, where the SIPP operator offers investments to be held within its SIPP wrapper.

Key Disclosure Requirements

The FCA has published proposed rules and guidance through a new 'Environmental, Social and Governance' ("ESG") Sourcebook which will be applicable to all In-Scope Firms. The proposals in the CP relate solely to climate-related disclosures, but the FCA anticipates that the ESG Sourcebook will expand over time to include new rules and guidance on other climate-related and wider ESG topics. The ESG Sourcebook will require firms to make climate-related financial disclosures at both an entity level and product or portfolio level.

Entity level disclosure requirements

  1. TCFD Entity Report - the proposed new rules require each In-Scope Firm to publish a TCFD Entity Report, consistent with the TCFD's recommendations and recommended disclosures, on an annual basis by 30 June each calendar year. The report must be published in a prominent place on the main website for the business of the firm. However, the FCA is adopting a flexible approach to the TCFD Entity Report which allows firms, in certain circumstances, to cross-refer to disclosures made in other reports where those cover the relevant content (e.g. allowing entity-level disclosures to be made in a group level report). The TCFD Entity Report may therefore be relatively short for some firms, provided that firms set out the rationale for cross-referring to disclosures in another report, within the TCFD Entity Report.
     
  2. Compliance Statement – under the proposals, the TCFD Entity Report will need to include a statement, signed by a member of senior management, confirming that the disclosures comply with the requirements set out in the relevant chapter of the FCA's Handbook. In determining whether the disclosures are consistent with the TCFD's recommendations, firms will be expected to take reasonable steps to ensure their disclosures reflect the TCFD's all sector- guidance and supplemental guidance for asset managers and asset owners, as appropriate.[3] Firms should consider allocating responsibility to a Senior Manager under the FCA's Senior Managers and Certification Regime.
     
  3. Contents of the TCFD Entity Report - the disclosures must be consistent with the TCFD's recommendations, covering:
    1. governance, strategy and risk management – the FCA recognises that the disclosures under these pillars may either be broad, covering a wide range of investment strategies, asset classes or products, or may need to be more tailored. As such, it is proposing that firms must explain any material differences in their approach to governance, strategy or risk management for specific investment strategies, asset classes or products, where relevant. Depending on the number and nature of its different investment strategies, asset classes or products, a firm may make more tailored disclosures or highlight material differences within its product or portfolio-level disclosures. Where this is the case, the firm must cross-reference to these disclosures within the TCFD Entity Report;
       
    2. scenario analysis – scenario analysis involves the consideration of various plausible future scenarios under a set of assumptions and constraints, to arrive at a range of hypothetical outcomes. With respect to climate change, the FCA makes clear that the purpose is to explore and better understand the potential impact of climate-related risks and opportunities over time. The FCA recognises that scenario analysis tools and capabilities are still evolving and so has proposed that firms disclose:
      1. their approach to climate related scenario analysis;
      2. how they apply climate-related scenario analysis in their investment and risk decision-making process; and
      3. quantitative examples to demonstrate their approach to climate-related scenario analysis, where reasonably practicable; and
         
    3. metrics and targets – given the government's legislative commitment to achieving net-zero emissions by 2050, the new rules will require firms not yet setting climate-related targets to explain why not. Where firms have set a climate-related target, they must describe the target, including the key performance indicators ("KPIs) used to measure progress, within the TCFD Entity Report. The rules will require disclosure of carbon emissions on an aggregate AuM basis at entity level with more targeted information, such as information relating to a specific asset class, investment strategy or product.

The FCA has made clear that it favours retaining the largely principles-based approach in the TCFD's recommendations as the basis for its proposed entity-level disclosure rules as it views a prescriptive approach could risk stifling innovation and/or deviating from a globally-accepted disclosure framework.

Notably, where an In-Scope authorised fund manager ("AFM") delegates investment management to a third party portfolio manager which is not in the same group, the AFM will remain responsible for producing the TCFD Entity Report that sets out its approach to the TCFD's recommendations, including a signed compliance statement. The AFM must also briefly explain the reasons for selecting the delegate, where relevant to the TCFD's recommendations. This must include how climate-related matters have been taken into account in selecting delegates and relying on their products and services. While AFMs can cross-refer to relevant climate-related financial disclosures made by delegated managers within their TCFD Entity Reports, any material deviations from the firm's own approach must be clearly identified and explained.

For asset owners, the FCA is proposing that they must produce a TCFD Entity Report that sets out their approach to managing climate-related risks and opportunities for the part of their business offering products where the performance of the underlying investments impacts the benefits accruing to consumers, i.e. where a life insurer or pension provider acts as a manager or administrator of underlying assets for consumers. However, the level of detail required in the report would depend on the extent to which the asset owner takes an active role in investment decisions and product design.

The FCA has made clear that through these requirements, its intention is that clients and consumers are provided with information to help them understand the firm's approach to climate-related risks and opportunities, thereby enabling them to make informed decisions about their investments and hold their providers to account.

Product or portfolio level disclosure requirements

The proposals include a minimum baseline set of consistent, comparable product or portfolio level disclosures, included a core set of metrics. The aim would be to meet the needs of clients and consumers to have reliable and comparable information about the assets to which they have economic exposure. It also aims to support consistent onward disclosure to clients that may be subject to their own disclosure obligations.

  1. Public TCFD Product Reports – the FCA proposes that for many firms, product or portfolio level disclosures would be made annually in a prominent place on the firm's main website, using the most up-to-date data at the time of reporting. These firms would also be expected to include their product or portfolio-level disclosures in the appropriate form of client communication which follows most closely after the annual reporting deadline of 30 June. This could be:
    • the annual long report or half-annual report of an authorised fund, provided that the disclosures are always included in the annual report;
    • a periodic client report;
    • an annual report to with-profits policyholders; or
    • an annual pension benefit statement or pension drawdown statement.
       
    Firms that manage a listed unauthorised AIF will need to include their product or portfolio level disclosures in the TCFD Entity Report. To avoid unnecessary burden on firms, the FCA would permit firms to cross-refer relevant product or portfolio level disclosures made on websites, within client communications. Again, where a firm delegates the management of assets to a third party portfolio manager, it may choose to cross-refer to disclosures made by the delegate, provided it sets out the rationale, outlines any material deviations and cross-refers appropriately.
     
  2. On-demand TCFD Product Reports – the FCA recognises that in some client relationships (e.g. discretionary portfolio management services to individuals and full-scope UK AIFMs or small authorised UK AIFMs in respect of non-listed unauthorised AIFs), public disclosure may not be appropriate. In such circumstances, the FCA is proposing that disclosures should be made to the client once a year, on request.
     
  3. Provision of data – all In-Scope Firms would be required to provide data on the underlying holdings of their products to clients that request it to satisfy their own climate-related financial reporting requirements. Firms would be required to respond to a single request within the annual reporting period.
     
  4. Core metrics – in an attempt to promote consistency and comparability and to support the flow of information along the investment chain, the FCA is proposing a baseline set of core, mandatory, carbon emissions and carbon intensity metrics that In-Scope Firms would be required to disclose. The proposed metrics are a subset of the metrics listed in the TCFD's recommendations and are set out as follows:
    Metric Proposal

    Scope 1 and 2 Greenhouse Gas (GHG emissions)

    These metrics are widely used in the markets – the FCA proposes to mandate this metric from when the proposed rules come into force

    Scope 3 GHG emissions

    Although widely used, the FCA acknowledges that methodologies may differ and there may be significant data gaps among investee companies. The FCA is therefore proposing that firms should disclose scope 3 emissions from no later than 30 June 2024, one year later than the deadline for the first disclosures in accordance with the remainder of the proposals

    *Total carbon emissions

    As total carbon emissions are the sum of the GHG emissions above, the FCA proposes to mandate disclosure of this metric from 30 June 2024.

    *Carbon footprint

    As this is a widely used metric in the market, the FCA proposes this be disclosed on a mandatory basis from when the proposed rules come into force.

    *Weighted average carbon intensity (WACI)

    Given limitations with this form of carbon footprinting due to data availability, the FCA has referred to the TCFD's recommendations that asset managers and owners disclose a financed-emissions metric based on WACI and the Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials ("PCAF") methodology, if relevant or a comparable methodology. The PCAF provides methodologies for asset managers, asset owners and banks to measure or estimate financed emissions for different asset classes. It also provides for alternatives solutions when data is not available.

    The FCA recognises that there are some common elements in the TCFD's recommendations and the EU's Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ("SFDR"), including certain metrics. It also recognises that there are key differences in the calculation methodologies which are marked with an asterisk above. When prescribed calculation methodologies differ between the TCFD's recommendations and the final report on draft Regulatory Technical Standards for the SFDR, the FCA is proposing that they be reported according to the formulae under both regimes as this would promote consistency and comparability with both EU and international firms and reflect the global reach of many In-Scope Firms' AuM.

    All metrics will need to be supported by contextual information to explain how they should be interpreted and any limitations and assumptions, so that disclosures are fair, clear and not misleading. The FCA is also proposing that metrics be accompanied by a historical time series for comparison, after the first year that product or portfolio-level climate disclosures are reported in accordance with FCA rules.

  5. Targets – where a firm makes a claim regards plans to achieve certain climate-related targets at product-level, it will need to determine and communicate the key performance indicators it uses to measure progress against those targets, in accordance with the TCFD's recommendations.

Timings and next steps

The FCA is proposing a phased implementation beginning with the largest, most interconnected firms, having two phases of implementation as follows:

  • First phase – effective from 1 January 2022 - rules would come into force for the following firms:
    • Asset Managers with AuM of more than £50 billion, capturing 34 firms with £8 trillion in AuM
    • Asset owners with £25 billion or more in AuM or administration in relation to In-Scope business, capturing 12 firms with £1.2 trillion in AuM
       
    Under Phase one, the first disclosures would need to be made by 30 June 2023. Subsequent disclosures would be made by 30 June in each calendar year.
     
  • Second phase - effective from 1 January 2023 – rules would take effect for the remaining firms above the proposed £5 billion threshold for both asset managers and asset owners. This would capture 106 asset managers with £2.4 trillion in AuM and 22 asset owners with £0.5 trillion in AuM.

    Under phase two, first disclosures would need to be made by 30 June 2024. Subsequent disclosures would be made by 30 June each calendar year thereafter.

The CP is open for consultation until 10 September 2021. Responses to the CP can be submitted via the FCA's online response form on its website[4] or by emailing the FCA at cp21-17@fca.org.uk

If you have any questions as to how the proposals may impact your business, feel free to get in touch.

We regularly provide updates and commentary relevant to the financial services sector, subscribe to receive our future insights.

Footnotes

[1] Roadmap towards mandatory climate-related disclosures
[2] CP21/17: Enhancing climate-related disclosures by asset managers, life insurers and FCA-regulated pension providers and CP21/18 Enhancing climate-related disclosures by standard listed companies
[3] https://www.fsb-tcfd.org/publications/implementing-tcfd-recommendations/
[4] https://www.fca.org.uk/cp21-17-response-form


NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Information made available on this website in any form is for information purposes only. It is not, and should not be taken as, legal advice. You should not rely on, or take or fail to take any action based upon this information. Never disregard professional legal advice or delay in seeking legal advice because of something you have read on this website. Gowling WLG professionals will be pleased to discuss resolutions to specific legal concerns you may have.

Author(s)