Climate change opportunities are difficult to play
- Climate change is generally viewed as a longer-term phenomenon (decades), but most investing has a shorter time horizon (1-3years).
- Science research shows warming trend and increase in weather variability regardless of the cause. More natural disasters or hazards related to weather will occur.
- Higher volatility makes any investment decision riskier given the uncertainty in shorter-term weather and longer-term climate environment.
- Investments with direct links to weather and climate variability are limited, so any decision to protect or exploit climate change is limited.
Alternatives in the investment space are limited
§Fixed Income
•Catastrophe bonds?
-Put option approach to
climate change – pay-off if nothing bad happens; limited upside and
illiquid
•Exposure
to general interest rate risk
§Equities
•Which
industries?
-Many
“green” industries are supported through subsidies; high risk if change in policies
•Exposure
to general equity market risk
§
Commodities
•Passive,
long-only investing can result in long drawdowns during weather favorable to
high commodity production
•Active
trading can exploit optionality (higher volatility) from climate change
Climate
change investment should be viewed like a real
option
§A
climate change real option provides exposure to investments which will be more
sensitive to climate change effects.
•A
financial 'option' is a right, but not an obligation, to make an investment
decision.
•A
real option is a right, but not an obligation, to undertake some business
decision, typically the option to make a capital investment.
•Real
options capture the value of managerial flexibility to adopt decisions in
response to unexpected market developments.
§A
portfolio invested in asset sectors with more sensitivity to climate change
factors will have an opportunity for potential upside.
§The
commodity sector may have the most sensitivity to climate change given the
direct link between production risks in agriculture and demand uncertainty in
energy markets.
The choice of commodities as a option on climate change
§Many commodity markets
offer direct price link with the weather.
•Generally, higher
volatility means greater price trading ranges
-Higher upside and
downside return potential
•Focus on energy usage
(heating and cooling degree days)
•Focus on agricultural
growth cycle (weather patterns affect supply)
•Less focus on metals
for climate change
§However, given climate
change increases variability, long-only commodity investing is not necessarily
the correct choice.
•Downside risk is still
present
•Optionality through active investing may be more
appropriate
Climate change will have price effects
Climate change and the impact on commodity investing
The number of natural disasters has been trending higher
Weather extremes exist all over the world across all commodities
Weather extremes are more likely
§The Annual Climate Extremes Index (CEI)
shows that U.S. climate has generally been getting more extreme since the early
1970s, but that the 2010 climate was just slightly more extreme than average.
On average since 1910, 21% of the U.S. has seen extreme conditions in a given
year (thick black line), and in 2010 this number was about 24%. Image credit: National
Climatic Data Center.
The
Climate Extremes Index (CEI) is based upon three parameters:
1.Monthly maximum
and minimum temperature
2.Daily precipitation
3.Monthly Palmer
Drought Severity Index (PDSI)
Global temperatures have been increasing
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