Vanguard's shift away from ESG fits with its focus on low fees - Reason Foundation (2024)

In a candid February interview with the Financial Times, The Vanguard Group Chief Executive Officer Tim Buckley caused a stir by plainly explaining the company’s restraint on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing.

“We cannot state that ESG investing is better performance-wise than broad index-based investing,” Buckley said. “Our research indicates that ESG investing does not have any advantage over broad-based investing.”

Buckley’s statements followed Vanguard’s withdrawal from the Net Zero Asset Managers (NZAM) initiative—a group of 301 asset managers that says it is “committed to supporting the goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 or sooner, focused on lowering carbon emissions in their portfolios.”

Previously, Vanguard had thrown its support and market influence—managing over $8 trillion in assets—behind the initiative. Now the company appears to be adopting a more neutral approach that still allows inclined investors to pursue ESG strategies if they choose.In December, Reuters reported:

“We have decided to withdraw from NZAM so that we can provide the clarity our investors desire about the role of index funds and about how we think about material risks, including climate-related risks—and to make clear that Vanguard speaks independently on matters of importance to our investors,” Vanguardsaidin the statement.

In his interview with the Financial Times, Buckley stated, “Politicians and regulators have a central role to play in setting the ground rules to achieve a just transition to a lower carbon economy,” but Vanguard is “not in the game of politics.”

The shifts and statements come at a time when government funds and institutional investors find themselves in the middle of a political tug-of-war, with many parties seeking to influence the investment decisions of public pension systems and others by injecting objectives that extend beyond the standard considerations of returns and risk. Of the so-called “Big Three” asset managers—Vanguard, BlackRock, and State Street—Vanguard has been the least enthusiastic in its embrace of ESG.

Vanguard operates 28 sustainable funds, compared to BlackRock’s 282. An analysis of 2021 proxy voting from Morningstar found that Vanguard’s average percentage of votes in favor of key ESG shareholder resolutions was 51%, considerably lower than BlackRock’s 74% and State Street’s 66%.

Vanguard's shift away from ESG fits with its focus on low fees - Reason Foundation (1)

Buckley clarified the reasoning behind Vanguard’s relatively lower support for ESG shareholder resolutions in the interview. “It would be hubris to presume that we know the right strategy for the thousands of companies that Vanguard invests with,” Buckley said. “We just want to make sure that risks are being appropriately disclosed and that every company is playing by the rules.”

Vanguard’s measured approach to ESG is consistent with the company’s history of focusing on offering low-cost, passive investments to the public. The company further innovated the investment landscape by offering low-cost, passive index investments, giving small individual investors access to parts of the market usually exclusive to institutional investors, all without high fees or massive commitments of assets. The competitive effects of Vanguard’s products are likely an important driver behind expense ratios, the percentage of a fund’s assets used to cover costs of operating and maintaining the fund, coming down across the market.According to a recent report by Morningstar, asset-weighted passive funds have experienced a 66% decrease in fees since 1990. This trend is a boon for investors seeking to minimize expenses, but it has put serious pressure on asset managers to cut costs.

For many asset managers, including some working with public pension systems, ESG funds are a hack to help relieve them from these competitive pressures. In 2019, Michal Barzuza, Quinn Curtis, and David Webber wrote a Southern California Law Review paper arguing that appealing to the social values of millennial investors (i.e., ESG) gives these potential clients a reason to choose them despite their disadvantage in higher fees. “With fee competition exhausted and returns irrelevant for index investors, signaling a commitment to social issues is one of the few dimensions on which index funds can differentiate themselves and avoid commoditization,” they wrote.

ESG investment vehicles have higher expense ratios than their non-ESG alternatives. Morningstar’s research found in 2021 a considerable “greenium” upcharge for ESG funds. Although fees reached an all-time low in 2020, the average expense ratio for sustainable funds was 0.55% on an asset-weighted basis, notably higher than the 0.39% ratio for conventional funds.

In part, this might be attributable to the generally smaller size of these funds or just the back-end work involved in constructing and maintaining these indices. Still, higher expense ratios necessitate higher returns to maintain parity. In prior years this worked out well for ESG indices because they tended to be weighted heavier in tech, which performed well. As interest rates began to rise in 2022 and energy prices rose, the relative performance of ESG indices has waned.

The chart below shows the percentage change in the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund ETF (VTI) and the Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF (ESGV). The standard index VTI has an expense ratio of 0.03%, and ESGV has an expense ratio of 0.09%.

Vanguard's shift away from ESG fits with its focus on low fees - Reason Foundation (2)

While some asset managers may view ESG funds as an opportunity to differentiate themselves from competitors and help alleviate cost pressures—and are free to do so in the market‚ for many individual investors and public pension systems, it is likely worth noting that Vanguard’s position appears to be one that does not put ESG interests above other priorities.

Editor’s Note: Vanguard Charitable is a contributor to Reason Foundation.

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Vanguard's shift away from ESG fits with its focus on low fees - Reason Foundation (2024)

FAQs

Does Vanguard focus on ESG investing? ›

Our approach to ESG

It's how our mission is aligned with yours. With these guiding principles, we offer environmental, social, and governance (ESG) products that can help your clients reach their investing goals while giving them the access and choice to invest according to their preferences.

Why are Vanguard fees so low? ›

Vanguard funds offer an enviable cost advantage

You don't get a bill explaining how much of your savings went toward paying fund expenses, because those costs are paid directly out of each fund's returns. Vanguard was built differently to make sure we stay focused on keeping your costs low.

What is the controversy with the Vanguard Group? ›

Vanguard Group faces backlash for 'taking orders' from climate skeptics and spurning ESG activists, who are calling firm to account with PR campaign. Sunrise Project is targeting Vanguard, its staff and investors with a localized advertising blitz over NZAM withdrawal last year.

What is wrong with ESG funds? ›

Critics see that as a sign that ESG is primarily a marketing resource for companies, rather than a concrete indicator of a company's sustainability. ESG funds are often more expensive than conventional products.

Why did Vanguard pull out of ESG? ›

Kirsten Spalding, vice president at sustainability nonprofit Ceres, a founding partner of NZAM, said she believed that Vanguard's move was mainly in response to a backlash against ESG from Republican politicians. Vanguard's NZAM withdrawal spared it from appearing at a Dec.

Did Vanguard pull out of ESG funds? ›

We have decided to withdraw from NZAM so that we can provide the clarity our investors desire about the role of index funds and about how we think about material risks, including climate-related risks—and to make clear that Vanguard speaks independently on matters of importance to our investors,” Vanguard said in the ...

Why are investors pulling money from Vanguard? ›

When the market cratered, investors withdrew $16.4 billion from Vanguard's index mutual funds. What accounts for remaining index mutual fund outflows? Johnson says it could be clients pulling out money because they're retiring, or because they're negatively affected by the pandemic.

Does Vanguard still have the lowest fees? ›

If you look at individual options, you might beat Vanguard. But across the board, Vanguard is, I think, still the low-cost provider. Its U.S. average fund-weighted expense ratio is 8 basis points. By contrast, the industry average is 47 basis points.

What are the cons of Vanguard? ›

Cons
  • Relatively high minimum investment requirements for many fund options.
  • Higher-than-average per-contract options fee.
  • Slow process to open an account.
  • No trading platform for active traders.
  • No fractional shares of stocks or ETFs.
Mar 22, 2024

Is Vanguard moving away from ESG? ›

Finance giants BlackRock and Vanguard seem to be changing their approach to Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) investment strategies, increasingly rejecting shareholder proposals that focus on environmental and social issues.

Why are people protesting Vanguard? ›

According to Vanguard SOS, the asset management giant allegedly invested US$268 billion in fossil fuels in 2023 and US$93 billion in coal alone. In addition, the campaigners claim that Vanguard remains “out of step” with the general public's sentiment towards sustainability.

What happens if Vanguard goes bust? ›

The securities that underlie the funds are held by a custodian, not by Vanguard. Vanguard is paid by the funds to provide administration and other services. If Vanguard ever did go bankrupt, the funds would not be affected and would simply hire another firm to provide these services.

Why are people against ESG? ›

“They may also argue that considering ESG factors could conflict with a fiduciary's duty to act in the best financial interests of plan participants. Some opponents also believe that ESG investing is politically motivated and could lead to biased investment decisions.”

What is the biggest ESG scandal? ›

In December 2022, Florida announced that it was taking $2 billion out of the management of BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager (and biggest lightning rod for ESG criticism). This was the largest such divestment thus far. These attacks have been coordinated.

Why not to invest in ESG funds? ›

The very popularity of ESG makes it unlikely that the market is underappreciating the risks. The rush of money into firms like Vestas, whose stock hit a price-to-earnings ratio of 534 in 2022, illustrates the risk that shares with high sustainability scores can get too expensive, leading to lower returns.

Which Vanguard ESG is best? ›

Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF (ESGV)

If you had to pick just one ESG exchange-traded fund, the Vanguard ESG U.S. Stock ETF would probably be it. With nearly 1,500 holdings, almost all from the U.S., this ETF hods an extremely well diversified portfolio that meet its environmental, social and governance principles.

Is Vanguard an ethical investment? ›

Vanguard is one of the biggest companies on the planet, as well as one of the biggest investing brokerages. That means that Vanguard ethical funds (Vanguard ESG funds) are hugely important to sustainable investing- they have the client base to make a difference in how companies operate sustainably or not.

What is ESG fund Vanguard? ›

ESG stands for environmental, social and governance. They're the criteria that can play a role in deciding what an ESG fund invests in. ESG issues can impact a company's financial performance. So funds that consider ESG issues could fit your investment goals. They could also suit your personal values.

Is Vanguard more ethical than BlackRock? ›

Vanguard's ESG Support Half That of BlackRock, State Street

So, investors who prefer to invest with a manager that supports a majority of key ESG resolutions would be more comfortable with BlackRock's and State Street's voting decisions than Vanguard's.

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