據美國彭博新聞社2022年5月11日報道,由克里夫·阿斯尼斯共同創辦的全球第二大對沖基金美國AQR資本管理公司日前提出了一種測量供應鏈氣候風險的新方法。
今天,大多數投資者關注的是范圍3的排放——企業供應鏈或客戶使用其產品時產生的排放。 AQR資本管理公司表示,范圍3的可用數據因公司而異,通常不準確。
AQR資本管理公司表示,更好、更準確的測量標準是關注公司客戶和供應商的整體氣候敞口。 換句話說,AQR資本管理公司測量的是一家公司與可能因氣候相關風險而遭受損失甚至倒閉的合作伙伴開展業務的程度。
舉個例子,AQR資本管理公司調查一家美國支付服務公司,這家支付服務公司表面上看起來和其他公司一樣環保。AQR資本管理公司的初步調查發現,其范圍1、范圍2和范圍3的排放量低于行業競爭對手。但根據AQR資本管理公司的數據,監管文件顯示這家支付服務公司的客戶包括3家在2011年總收入中約占21%的大型石油公司。
AQR資本管理公司的研究主管盧卡斯·波莫爾斯基說,這個例子——雖然是過時例子——突出了AQR資本管理公司的方法和范圍3排放量的簡單讀數之間的關鍵區別。范圍3將特定公司產品的排放與供應商和客戶隔離開來——即使他們的總體排放量已知,這也是一個令人生畏的挑戰。
相比之下,AQR資本管理公司的方法是專注于“經濟聯系”。這意味著要評估一家公司有多少間接氣候風險,方法是確定其收入中有多少來自自身氣候風險較大的客戶,以及它在氣候風險公司的供應上花了多少錢。波莫爾斯基說,這與這些暴露的原因是客戶還是生產商的產品無關。它衡量的是一個被低估的風險,因為一個非常環保的公司可能在其供應鏈和客戶鏈上間接暴露于氣候風險。
波莫爾斯基說:“范圍3確實很重要,也很有價值,但關于范圍3的數據充其量是值得懷疑的。”
AQR資本管理公司管理著大約1100億美元的資金,該公司表示,他們利用供應鏈數據進行交易是因為這些數據是可驗證的,而且氣候相關的風險在全球范圍內只會不斷增加。AQR資本管理公司表示,一些該公司客戶也對使用其指標和策略表現出興趣。
波莫爾斯基表示,從投資者的角度來看,關鍵問題是他們的投資組合在整個供應鏈中面臨的環境相關風險有多大。在極端情況下,如果一家公司的客戶因氣候相關原因破產,該公司面臨的風險有多大? 公司會因為客戶的破產而損失有意義的收入嗎?
AQR資本管理公司的研究超出了上述氣候風險的應用范圍。波莫爾斯基說:“我們的措施還可以捕捉到潛在的離岸排放,即當一家公司從自己生產碳排放最密集的部件轉向從供應商那里購買它們時。”
當投資者向企業施壓要求它們變得更環保時,企業高管們可能會關閉它們碳排放最密集的資產,轉而從第三方供應商那里購買相同的原料。這只是將碳轉移到整個供應鏈,對全球排放沒有凈影響。 AQR資本管理公司的指標可以幫助投資者監控這種行為,而范圍3的數據仍然很少。
最后,AQR資本管理公司的研究為投資者提供了一種分析通過客戶和供應商嚴重暴露于氣候變化影響下的公司的方法。例如,如果一家公司的客戶排放了大量的二氧化碳或擁有大量的化石燃料儲備,那么這家公司就間接地繼承了這種暴露,即使它本身可能看起來是“綠色的”。
波莫爾斯基說:“雖然我們的測量方法與范圍3的排放有相似之處,但我們的測量方法捕捉到的信息有些不同,而且利用許多投資者已經獲得的數據,更容易評估,這是一個重要的優勢。”
李峻 編譯自 美國彭博新聞社
原文如下:
Investment Firm Discovers New Way to Measure Supply-Chain Climate Risks
AQR Capital Management, the investment firm co-founded by Cliff Asness, has come up with a new way to measure supply-chain climate risks.
Today, most investors focus on Scope 3 emissions—the emissions generated as a function of a company’s supply chain or through the use of its products by customers. AQR says the data available on Scope 3 vary from company to company and is often imprecise.
AQR says the better and more accurate metric is focusing on the overall climate exposure of a company’s customers and suppliers. In other words, AQR measures the extent to which a company does business with partner firms that may suffer, or even go out of business, because of climate-related risks.
As an example, AQR examined a U.S. payments services company that seems on its face as green as any business around. An initial AQR review found its Scope 1, Scope 2 and Scope 3 emissions were lower than industry competitors. But regulatory filings showed that the company’s customers included three large oil companies, which accounted for about 21% of its consolidated revenue as recently as 2011, according to AQR.
This example—while dated—highlights the key difference between AQR's methodology and a simple reading of Scope 3 emissions, said Lukasz Pomorski, AQR’s head of research. Scope 3 isolates the emissions from suppliers and customers that are attributable to a given company’s products—a daunting challenge even when their overall emissions are known.
By contrast, AQR’s approach is to focus on “economic linkages.” This means assessing how much indirect climate-risk exposure a company has by identifying what portion of its revenue comes from customers with large climate exposures themselves, and how much it spends on supplies from climate-risky firms. This is regardless of whether such exposures are attributable to the client or producer’s product, Pomorski said. It measures an underappreciated risk, because a very green firm may be indirectly exposed to climate risks across its supply and customer chains.
“It’s true that Scope 3 is important and relevant, but the data around Scope 3 are questionable at best,” he said.
AQR, which oversees about $110 billion, says it trades on this supply-chain data because it’s verifiable and climate-related risks are only increasing globally. Some AQR clients also have shown interest in the metric and strategies that use it, the firm said.
From an investors’ perspective, the essential question is how exposed are their portfolios to environmental-related risks across the supply chain, Pomorski said. At the extreme, how at risk is a company if one of its customers goes bankrupt for climate-related reasons? Will the company lose meaningful revenue because of client’s bankruptcy?
AQR’s research goes beyond the climate-risk application outlined above.
“Our measure can also capture potential emissions offshoring, which occurs when a company switches from making the most carbon-intensive components in-house to buying them from suppliers,” Pomorski said.
As investors pressure companies to become greener, corporate executives may respond by shutting down their most carbon-intense assets and instead buying the same ingredients from third-party suppliers. This just shifts carbon across the supply chain, with no net effect for global emissions. AQR’s metric could help investors monitor such behavior while Scope 3 data remains sparse.
In the end, AQR's research provides a way for investors to analyze companies that are heavily exposed to climate change via their customers and suppliers. For example, if a company’s customer emits a lot of CO2 or has lots of fossil-fuel reserves, then that company indirectly inherits that exposure even if by itself it may seem “green.”
“While there are similarities between our measure and Scope 3 emissions, our metric captures somewhat different information and has a meaningful advantage of being much easier to assess, using data many investors already have access to,” Pomorski said.
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