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Zurich Plans $5 Billion Allocation to Impact Investments

Zurich Plans $5 Billion Allocation to Impact Investments

(Bloomberg) -- Zurich Insurance Group AG plans to more than double its allocation to impact investments, earmarking $5 billion for a broader range of assets after devoting $2 billion to green bonds in recent years.

While it didn’t specify a period, Zurich plans to buy bonds that finance social projects and the sustainable use of resources, as well as investments in private equity geared to these goals, Switzerland’s biggest insurer said in a statement on Thursday. The allocation represents about 2.6 percent of Zurich’s $190 billion portfolio, mainly consisting of debt securities.

Zurich Plans $5 Billion Allocation to Impact Investments

Demand for impact investments is surging, making them one of the fastest-growing asset classes. Variously labeled as sustainable, responsible or ethical investing, the field encompasses 26 percent of assets under management globally, almost $23 trillion, according to a 2016 report by the Global Sustainable Investment Alliance. Europe and Australia lead markets with about half of managed assets considering sustainability criteria, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Earlier this year, Swiss Re announced that it was moving its entire investment portfolio of $130 billion to ethically based benchmark indexes from traditional ones. UBS Group AG recently raised $325 million from clients for The Rise Fund, whose investments include $120 million for EverFi Inc., a provider of digital educational material, and $50 million for Dodla Dairy Ltd., which helps small farmers in southern India.

“Zurich will invest in different types of impact investments in various asset classes and around the globe,” the insurer said in the statement. “In addition, it will establish a measurement framework to track the impact of these investments.”

--With assistance from Daniel Shurey

To contact the reporter on this story: Jan-Henrik Förster in Zurich at jforster20@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dale Crofts at dcrofts@bloomberg.net, Cindy Roberts, Andrew Blackman

©2017 Bloomberg L.P.