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Efficiency|Gold|Mining|SECURITY|Products|Environmental
Efficiency|Gold|Mining|SECURITY|Products|Environmental
efficiency|gold|mining|security|products|environmental

Despite concerns, investors expect ESG improvement

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MINING ESG ENHANCEMENT There is a disparity between the most responsible miners and the industry as a whole, which increases the pressure on investors to find suitable investments

23rd August 2024

     

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Despite many investors being unconvinced by the environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance of some gold mining firms, new research from European exchange traded fund provider Tabula Investment Management shows investors are, more broadly, expecting improvements in ESG from the gold mining sector.

The study reveals that just one in four institutional investors and wealth managers believe gold miners are “very good” at adhering to industry-wide ESG standards.

The research surveyed 200 gold investors at European pension funds, wealth managers, insurers and family offices responsible for over €800-billion in assets under management.

About 89% expect improvements over the next five years in gold miners’ adherence to industry-wide standards, with 24% expecting dramatic improvements.

Although the gold mining sector has had ESG-focused policies for some time, including the World Gold Council’s (WGC’s) Responsible Gold Mining Principles (RGMPs) which launched in 2019, Tabula’s research finds that two-thirds of investors believe miners are only “quite good” at adhering to the standards.

More than four out of five estimate less than half of the 200 gold mining companies worldwide are members of the WGC – currently just 32 companies.

The research with investors in the UK, Germany, Switzerland, France, Italy and the Nordics shows 63% of respondents rate gold miners as ‘good’ or ‘excellent’ on the quality of diversity across the sector.

“The gold mining industry, through the WGC, has worked hard to produce ESG policies and the sector has the tools in place to be ESG focused,” says Tabula CEO Michael Lytle.

“However, it is very clear that there is a huge disparity between the most responsible miners and the industry as a whole, which increases the pressure on investors to find suitable investments.”

The study for Tabula, which recently announced the launch of an ESG-focused physical gold exchange traded commodity (ETC) – the Single Mine Origin (SMO) Physical Gold ETC – finds that environmental degradation is seen as the biggest risk for investors in the gold supply chain, ahead of financing of conflict and terrorism.

Money laundering and sanctions evasion are rated as the third- and fourth-biggest risks, ahead of human rights abuses.

The SMO Physical Gold ETC is the first exchange-traded physical gold product to offer full traceability of gold bars, from mine to vault.

It holds no gold of Russian origin, does not source gold from controversial mines or miners, and holds no gold that is recycled or of unknown provenance.

Importantly, reports Tabula, no mercury is used in the extraction of the gold held by SMO Physical Gold ETC.

“The risks for investors in the gold mining sector are as much to reputations as they are to the fundamentals of the asset class and the gold ETC market has to recognise that and produce products which minimise risks,” says Tabula CIO Jason Smith.

SMO Physical Gold ETC uses gold from a small number of named mines, has full traceability across the supply chain, and is designed to provide the same level of liquidity, efficiency and security as other physical gold ETCs.

SMO, an independent company set up in 2017, conducts extensive due diligence and ongoing monitoring of the participating mining companies, mines and refiners, and oversees and documents every step of the supply chain. The result is a transparent and trusted standard for responsibly sourced gold.

The SMO Physical Gold ETC has $34-million in assets and is listed on the London Stock Exchange.

It has a total expense ratio of 0.29% and has been launched in partnership with global gold custodian HSBC.

Edited by Donna Slater
Features Deputy Editor and Chief Photographer

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