This fund promotes environmental and social characteristics but does not have sustainable investments as its objective. In promoting environmental and social characteristics, the fund takes into account the environment and climate, as well as human rights, labor rights and equal opportunity. In the promotion of environmental and social characteristics, the fund may also invest in sustainable investments, in accordance with the assessment method applied by the Management Company.
What are the objectives of the sustainable investments that the financial product partially intends to make and how does the sustainable investment contribute to such objectives?
The fund's sustainable investments are made in companies whose economic activities are considered as having a positive impact on the attainment of one or several environmental or social objectives, or alternatively, that the company is involved in activities aligned with the EU Taxonomy. The environmental and social objectives are defined based on the Sustainable Development Goals in Agenda 2030.
Sustainable investments contribute primarily through investments in companies that support the Sustainable Development Goals or activities aligned with the EU Taxonomy by exceeding a minimum level of revenue in the company in line with the Sustainable Development Goals or the EU Taxonomy or a combination thereof. In addition to company revenue, the capital expenditures or operational expenditures (CAPEX/OPEX) can be used to assess a company's contributions to the objectives.
For a company to be defined as a sustainable investment, an investment must not only contribute to the attainment of an environmental or social objective, the investment must also not cause significant harm to any of the environmental or social objectives and the company must follow good governance practices. The fund applies the following principles to ensure adherence to the do no significant harm" principle:
1. Exclusion criteria for companies with activities linked to controversial sectors as well as specific PAI indicators (Principal Adverse Impact, PAI), such as fossil fuels and controversial weapons.
2. Exclusion criteria for companies with verified violations of international norms and conventions, such as OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, International Labor Organization's (ILO) Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, and in the international regulations for human rights.
3. Assessment that the investments are not considered to cause significant adverse impacts on sustainability factors. This is conducted through the Management Company's internal PAI tool.
4. Assessment of what products and services in which the company is otherwise involved in, as well as if these can be considered as significantly obstructing a sustainable development.
In the context of taking into account the PAI indicators, the Management Company conducts engagement work through dialogue and active corporate governance so that the companies manage their sustainable risks and any principal adverse impacts on sustainability factors.
With respect to the Management Company's assessment methodology for sustainable investments, including the assessment of the "do no significant harm" principle, read more in the document "SDFR - Definitions and description of methodology within sustainability", which is published on our website at:
www.handelsbankenfonder.se.