However ethical our lifestyle habits are, itâs likely our pensions are still funding fossil fuels, arms manufacture and the tobacco industry. If asked, weâd probably much rather this cash was invested in healthcare and renewable energy. In fact, according to Make My Money Matter, a growing campaign advocating pensions that âbuild a better worldâ, âmaking your pension sustainable can be 27x more powerful at cutting your carbon footprint than giving up flying and becoming a vegan combinedâ.Â
According to Emma Douglas, Head of Defined Contribution at Legal and General Investment Management (LGIM), âIncreasingly a âgood member outcomeâ isnât just about building up as much as possible in the pot during the accumulation period, itâs also about helping members make the right decisions and giving them the right options."Â
LGIM, one of Europeâs largest asset managers, last week announced a partnership with Tumelo â an impact-focused fintech firm working towards greater transparency and a more ethical investment system. LGIM will now be working with Tumelo to ensure the ÂŁ1.2T of pensions it manages are developed with more than just financial return in mind.Â
âOur research has shown that most members donât spend much time thinking about how their pension money is invested but once they have the opportunity to engage, they are interested in the underlying themes such as climate change, human exploitation, and fair payâ, Emma continues.Â
What will this mean for LGIMâs customers? Via Tumelo, hundreds of thousands will now be able to see precisely which companies their pension money is invested in. They will also be able to have their say and vote on ESG issues - from gender equality to climate change - raised by these companiesâ conduct. For example, activewear brand Lululemon has come under fire for its poor animal welfare record and LGIM users would be able to vote against this via Tumeloâs user-friendly software.Â
Georgia Stewart co-founded Tumelo while studying at Cambridge University; it began life as a campaign to challenge the ways in which the university was investing its endowment funds. Now CEO, she says of the LGIM deal, "The largest companies in the world have a profound effect on the way we live our lives, and on what our futures will look like. But they are not untouchable.âÂ
âWhere our money is invested, and how those companies are stewarded, is critically important if our society is to have a better future and if biodiversity is to survive.â