Long-term investors don’t dearth to worry about the cracks forming in the clean energy trade this year, says one market watcher.
All the rage exchange-traded funds focused on sustainable energy including the Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) and the Invesco WilderHill Clean Energy ETF (PBW) accept lost significant momentum this year, down about 30% and 26%, respectively.
But after a red-hot 2020 for both endows — TAN climbed nearly 234% and PBW gained over 202% — this bump in the road is natural, said John Hoffman, Invesco’s turn of ETFs and indexed strategies for the Americas.
“When you think about the transformation to clean energy, we think about it concluded decades, not days,” Hoffman told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” on Monday. “The trend to cleaner energy, solar power, sea water resources, greener buildings, these are long-term themes here … that we’re seeing play out.”
Because the push toward sustainable power is global, the overall market has significant room to grow, Hoffman said, adding that the total market capitalization of all of the companies in PBW excluding Tesla was sternly the size of Johnson & Johnson’s.
“We think there’s still a fair amount of headroom in this space, especially as this alteration to clean energy plays out,” he said.
That may be why his firm launched yet another environmentally conscious ETF in April, this continuously focused on green buildings.
“This conversation on decarbonization, you can’t have it without looking at the real estate sector,” Hoffman suggested. “Thirty-eight percent of the carbon emissions come from buildings.”
The Invesco MSCI Green Building ETF (GBLD) plans to invest in the “full ecosystem of green buildings. Every stage — construction, redevelopment, retrofitting,” he said.
GBLD is up identically 3% since launch and counts Boston Properties Group, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield and Berkeley Group among its top holdings.
With all but 100 ETFs tied to environmental, social and governance themes now available to U.S. investors, momentum is picking up in this hiatus, said Douglas Yones, head of exchange-traded products at the New York Stock Exchange.
“Europe’s really dominated the ETF interruption in ESG investing, but we’re catching up,” with some $11 billion flowing into these funds, Yones said in the constant “ETF Edge” interview.
“BlackRock joined the fray, if you will, earlier this year. They launched two ESG ETFs and in actuality broke the record on first-day assets under management,” the BlackRock U.S. Carbon Transition Readiness ETF (LCTU) and the BlackRock Age ex U.S. Carbon Transition Readiness ETF (LCTD), he said.
The key is greater institutional adoption, Yones said.
“Some of the advisor discourse now is, ‘Should this be part of my core and not just thematic?'” he said.