Hedge funds keen to get a piece of the $40 trillion ESG market are voicing growing frustration over what they say is an absence of clear regulations for one of their most popular investment strategies.

Firms including Man Group Plc and BlueBay Asset Management LLP say disclosure rules for environmental, social and governance investing still don’t explain how hedge funds should account for short selling. As a result, many are now turning to their lawyers to help them avoid the kinds of legal risks that might arise if they misstate their ESG positions.

“It’s becoming really problematic because of the fact that hedge funds don’t have frameworks or regulations to point to on this,” said Jason Mitchell, co-head of responsible investing at Man Group, in an interview. “And by default, the ones that do exist, the regulations are essentially long-only friendly.”

The ESG industry has ballooned to make up roughly a third of total global assets, by some estimates, as financiers everywhere reallocate and rebrand much of what they do. Much of that growth has taken place without many guardrails, and products such as ESG repos and derivatives remain for the most part unregulated.

Last year, the European Union led the way in trying to rein in the ESG boom by enforcing an anti-greenwashing rulebook: the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation. The EU says it covers all corners of the asset management industry, including short selling. SFDR also requires every firm targeting European clients, including those in the U.S. and Asia, to abide by it. But hedge funds and their lawyers say the rules aren’t clear enough to let them operate with legal confidence.

“For long-only investors, SFDR is in some ways quite straightforward, but when it comes to hedge funds and alternative strategies, it’s much more difficult,” Lucian Firth, an attorney at the London-based law offices of Simmons & Simmons LLP, said in an interview. “There are genuinely green strategies that involve shorting,” but “SFDR generally speaking doesn’t take into account short positions,” he said.

The industry is still awaiting clarification from the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) and the European Commission, Firth said. The risk in the meantime is that the lack of clear rules will lead some hedge funds to stray onto the wrong side of the regulations.

“We’ve had some quite interesting conversations with frustrated managers who can’t believe it when we tell them that what they’re doing doesn’t fit in the regulation,” Firth said.

Adam Jacobs-Dean, global head of markets, governance and innovation at the Alternative Investment Management Association in London, says “there’s definitely not been sufficient focus” in SFDR in the role it plays “in terms of how firms do responsible investments.”

A spokesperson for the EU Commission said that whether a hedge fund “intends to go short or long is irrelevant. What is relevant for SFDR is the ESG-sustainability related claims by products.”

First « 1 2 » Next