Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) has today bolstered its Fixed Income Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) range with the launch of a new L&G ESG Green Bond UCITS ETF, now offering investors in the UK and Europe eight different fixed income ‘building block' ETFs for investors' portfolios.

This adds to the L&G ESG USD Corporate Bond UCITS ETF and L&G ESG Emerging Markets Corporate Bond UCITS ETF, which were both listed in January 2021.

The L&G ESG Green Bond UCITS ETF tracks the J.P. Morgan ESG Green Bond Focus Index, which aims to provide exposure to green bonds issued across hard currency (i.e. USD, EUR and GBP denominated) credit and local currency government bonds.  The fund incorporates a focus on green bonds that have been reviewed independently by the Climate Bonds Initiative to prioritise bond issues that meet their standards and certification scheme. The portfolio of global constituents has an average credit rating of A+.

Within the actively designed index, this fund incorporates an ESG scoring and screening methodology, and allocates more money towards issuers ranked higher on ESG criteria and ‘Certified Climate Bond' issues and invests less money in green bond issues that have not been reviewed independently. The range also excludes the lowest scoring bond issuers and certain industries such as controversial weapons manufacturers, thermal coal miners, tobacco companies, oil sands (from March 2021) and violators of the UN Global Compact.

This launch has been driven by wider sector and investor demand for sustainable credit, as previous J.P Morgan research has shown that the number of corporate green bond issuers has grown fourfold since early 2017, with the green bond index family having 170 corporate issuers today vs. only 40 at the beginning of 2017.

According to the Climate Bonds Initiative, there were $258bn worth of green bonds issued in 2019 vs. $171bn in 2018, with most of those bonds issued by European companies, i.e. 45.3% of total issuance for 2019. With the green bond market expected to continue its growth, incorporating a methodology that prioritises bonds certified in accordance to independent standards helps investors to navigate the future issues of green bonds.

The other additions to the fund range, which were listed in January this year, include the L&G ESG Emerging Markets Corporate Bond (USD) UCITS ETF which aims to provide exposure to liquid, US Dollar denominated emerging market fixed and floating-rate debt instruments issued by corporates.

The L&G ESG USD Corporate Bond UCITS ETF aims to provide exposure to US dollar-denominated investment grade corporate bonds issued by developed market issuers. The indices behind both of these funds have been designed to incorporate an ESG scoring and screening methodology that allocates more towards issuers ranked higher on ESG criteria.

Commenting on the new launches, Howie Li, head of ETFs at LGIM, said: "As with the rest of the range, we have designed these new ETFs to be portfolio building blocks that answer to investors' increasing call for ESG integration and liquidity considerations."

"These funds incorporate ESG as standard and employ a liquidity-aware approach, including increased minimum issuance thresholds relative to traditional benchmarks to improve the overall liquidity profile. Through the active design of these indices, the expansion of this range continues to draw on LGIM's deep experience in bond management and responsible investing," Li added.

"As questions mount on how "green" some bond issues in the market may be, the incorporation of the Climate Bonds Initiatives certification process into the design means that we can direct more of an investor's money towards green projects that have been independently verified."

James Crossley, head of UK Retail Sales at LGIM, added: "We are excited to build out our ETF suite, which encompasses a diverse range of nearly 40 core and thematic products for retail and wholesale investors in the UK.  It was important that we could incorporate some of our pragmatic portfolio management techniques into the index design itself, allocating to green bonds and issuers with the highest ESG scores while retaining a similar risk/return profile to traditional indices."