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Targeting the full spectrum: sustainable multi-asset investing

Supriya Menon, Head of Multi-Asset Strategy – EMEA
Oyin Oduya, CFA, Impact Measurement & Management Practice Leader
15 min read
2026-11-30
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Archived pieces remain available on the site. Please consider the publish date while reading these older pieces.
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The views expressed are those of the authors at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional, or accredited investors only.

Over the last decade, many investors have made significant strides in their aim of putting their portfolios on a more sustainable footing. In many cases, this process has involved consecutive portfolio decisions that may be challenging to dovetail. We believe that one way of addressing this challenge is to adopt a multi-asset approach that combines a focus on achieving competitive returns with sustainability goals. Here, we explore how this more holistic approach can work in practice.

Key points

  • Adopting a multi-asset approach to sustainability enables investors to take a holistic view spanning the entire sustainable investment spectrum and bridge the gap between public and private markets.
  • A best-practice framework should be flexible to enable the portfolio to evolve with the changing opportunity set; be diversified from both a strategy and factor perspective; and be underpinned by a strategic asset allocation that explicitly incorporates sustainability goals.
  • Consistent measurement and engagement with companies and issuers held in the portfolio are key in helping to meet the potential for enhanced outcomes from both a financial return and sustainability perspective.

The value of a multi-asset approach

We believe that the primary purpose of sustainable investing is to generate, alongside competitive financial returns, a tangible, positive impact in the real world.

Investors can follow different avenues in pursuit of that dual goal (Figure 1):

  • One way is to target companies that can make a difference by offering products and services that contribute to societal well-being, such as those in the health care or education sectors.
  • Another approach is to focus on a company’s operational improvements, such as increasing the use of renewable energy or decreasing water usage in its operations.

In our view, each type of outcome is valid but distinct and can be achieved through different investment approaches, ranging from ESG integration to dedicated impact investing. Within each approach, engagement offers an additional dimension to drive further financial value and measurable, sustainable progress by encouraging companies to be good stewards that are exemplary in the way they balance the needs of people, planet and profit.

Figure 1
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig1

In our opinion, a multi-asset investment approach can enable investors to capture the full spectrum of these opportunities while improving diversification through different market phases. A holistic approach to sustainable investing across public and private markets also limits the risk of investment allocation decisions taking place in silos, which could result in suboptimal outcomes. Figure 2 illustrates this in the context of the energy transition. Investors can target companies offering climate solutions throughout their life cycle across public and private markets but complement that with exposures to established leaders that actively seek to reduce their operational Scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions, thus amplifying the potential for real-world impact.

Figure 2
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig2

Key features of a best-practice solution

We believe a best-practice multi-asset framework should have the
following features:

  • An enhanced risk/return trade-off and sustainability potential relative to what can be achieved through single strategies.
  • Inherent flexibility in order to accommodate different priorities and evolve over time. At Wellington, for instance, we have a toolkit of sustainable funds spanning impact and stewardship investments that we actively put to work within a multi-asset framework based on our view of both near- and long-term opportunities.
  • Strategic asset allocation (SAA) that explicitly incorporates climate and, where appropriate, other sustainability considerations. We view SAA as the long-term, baseline allocation of a portfolio, based on long-term expectations of return, risk and correlation across asset classes, with climate change as an essential input. By way of example, in our sustainable investing multi-asset portfolios, we look to integrate climate considerations through proprietary models and research collaborations that seek to assess the physical and transition risks of climate change and their implications for different regions and asset classes. The long-term expectations resulting from this research process serve as an anchor for our asset allocation process.
  • Diversification across a variety of dimensions in the sustainability space. We think it is possible to segment exposure based on the role played by these investments. Taking climate change as an example again, some investment approaches seek to decarbonise assets, while others may focus on mitigation solutions or, alternatively, target the growing climate resilience segment.

Moreover, while the bulk of the climate investing universe has historically centred on public markets, private asset approaches have grown meaningfully in size and maturity. We think private equity can be an effective way to tap into innovation, whether at an early stage to gain exposure to new science-based solutions that have yet to scale — for instance, direct air carbon capture — or, at a later stage, with more proven technologies such as greener transport and technology-enabled agricultural solutions. It can also provide an opportunity to invest throughout the life cycle of impact-focused companies, from private markets through to IPO.

Finally, asset owners can also consider the factor footprint of their climate exposure and opportunities to balance it directly, through portfolio construction, or indirectly, through allocations across the climate opportunity set. Figure 3 shows how diversification can help to mitigate the inherent growth bias of many climate strategies, especially those that are passively managed. We illustrate this using the Barra Factor Exposure Analysis Model, which compares a hypothetical diversified, active portfolio with passive exposure to relevant Paris-aligned benchmarks. Benchmark with respect to key fundamental stock characteristics. Here, we look at value (specifically, looking at companies’ relative earnings yields) and growth (companies’ sales or earnings growth prospects). The exposures (“values”) are standardised using z-scores so that the numbers can be compared across different managers/strategies, predominant sector/region tilts and market-cap profiles.

Figure 3
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig3

The importance of measurement

When it comes to sustainability, the quality of measurement is crucial. Although strategies may target different opportunity sets, there should be a unified approach to measuring real-world impact, grounded in the following principles:

  • Intentionality — In our opinion, strategies should explicitly set out the positive social and/or environmental outcomes they are seeking to achieve alongside market-competitive financial returns. These goals can combine quantitative and qualitative elements, but, where feasible, they should be crystallised into key performance indicators that can be measured over time.
  • Holistic approach — We also think it is critical to assess the holistic impact of a company or issuer, including any risks, to help ensure that investment decisions are made in ways that seek to mitigate negative externalities and maximise positive return and sustainability effects.
  • A focus on contribution rather than attribution — Because social and environmental impacts are typically the result of complex factors, we find that directly attributing these impacts to investment decisions with a high degree of certainty is often impossible. We believe a more realistic assessment of impact focuses on the real-world contribution a given strategy can make.

Importance of engagement

We consider engagement — discussions between investors and companies on sustainability issues — to be an essential tool for driving positive real-world outcomes across the entire sustainability spectrum, and, in doing so, enhancing long-term return potential. For example, we partner and engage with the companies and issuers in which we invest in our multi-asset impact portfolios. We believe this engagement can help create lasting value for our clients while enhancing the positive impact of our investments. In our opinion, engagement is also a tool for investors to deepen the fundamental analysis of potential investments and assess the viability of their sustainability theses.

In our view, a multi-asset approach offers scope for enhancing the depth of engagement. For instance, conversations can encompass both an equity and fixed income perspective and leverage insights gained in other areas of the portfolio, notably across both public and private impact investing.

Putting it into practice: a hypothetical case study

For our case study, we show the results of a hypothetical multi-asset solution based on six strategies managed by different Wellington investment teams, which we believe are representative of the wider universe with climate-change mitigation and adaptation as a common theme (Figure 4). The solution encompasses broader sustainable and impact strategies and is complemented by a 10% allocation to private markets.1

Figure 4
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig4

While evidently our portfolio is not indicative of future results, we believe the below potential features stand out:

  • Appealing risk/return outcome — As outlined in Figure 5, our hypothetical portfolio delivers better performance with lower risk compared to its benchmark.
Figure 5
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig5
  • Improved ESG scores — Another conclusion we can draw is that the hypothetical portfolio can deliver attractive ESG scores even with a portion (25%) of assets held being non-rated. The scores are based on Wellington’s proprietary, bottom-up ESG scoring system. Calculated by a team of dedicated ESG research analysts, they evaluate how effectively a company addresses financially material environmental, social and governance risks and opportunities, with the company given a score between one and five (a score of one being the highest). A favourable distribution of scores, with 98% of rated companies scoring between one and three in their ESG scores for the multi-asset sustainable solution signifies that the companies are performing well in these areas.
  • Significantly lower carbon intensity — Finally, focusing on the measurable impact of our hypothetical multi-asset solution, we find that it yields a significantly better outcome in relation to climate-change mitigation. Specifically, as of 31 December 2023, we estimate that the weighted average carbon intensity (WACI) of our hypothetical multi-asset sustainable solution is significantly below that of its benchmark (Figure 6).
Figure 6
targeting-the-full-spectrum-fig6

1This allocation is managed separately. Risk and return characteristics are modelled using a liquid ETF proxy.

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES

The proposed custom portfolio presented is for due diligence purposes and is not for redistribution without the express written consent of Wellington Management. The proposed portfolio’s hypothetical performance statistics are based on the actual performance of the underlying funds. The hypothetical portfolio is weighted based on the proposed allocations of 30% Wellington Global Stewards Fund, 5% Wellington Global Impact Fund, 30% Wellington Global Impact Bond Fund, 20% Wellington Climate Strategy Fund, 5% Wellington Climate Resilience Fund and 10% Wellington Climate Innovation Fund proxied by NZAC US Equity. This SPDR MSCI ACWI Climate Paris Aligned ETF is an exchange-traded fund incorporated in the USA. The Fund seeks to provide investment results that correspond generally to the price and yield performance of the MSCI ACWI Climate Paris Aligned Index. The allocation percentages of the portfolio were rebalanced monthly to maintain the original allocation percentages. This rebalancing does not consider the liquidity provisions of the underlying funds, which may not allow for such frequent redemptions. The proposed allocations are subject to change and may differ from the live portfolio.

The inception date of 2 January 2021 is used as the start date because it is the longest available time period that includes all of the proposed underlying strategies.

The proposed portfolios and the resulting performance history are hypothetical and no such portfolio currently exists. Hypothetical results have inherent limitations, including the benefit of hindsight (i.e., the performance of the proposed allocations is already known and hypothetical results invariably show positive rates of return). No representation is being made that the proposed portfolio will, or is likely to, achieve results similar to those shown. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results and there can be no assurance the proposed portfolio will achieve its objectives or avoid significant losses.

The hypothetical performance record does not include the potential effects of active asset allocation because the allocation of underlying funds may change from time to time and these adjustments are not reflected in the hypothetical results. Additionally, this does not reflect allocation decisions made under actual market conditions and therefore cannot completely account for the impact of risk in actual trading. As such, none of the hypothetical performance should be considered to be an indication of the future performance of the proposed portfolio. There are often differences between the hypothetical performance results and actual results of a live portfolio. In addition, no hypothetical record can completely account for the impact of financial risk in actual trading. For example, the ability to withstand losses or adhere to a particular trading programme in spite of trading losses are material points which can also adversely affect actual trading results. There are numerous other factors related to the markets in general or to the implementation of any specific strategy which cannot be fully accounted for in the preparation of hypothetical performance results and all of which can adversely affect actual results. Investment guidelines or restrictions that may be imposed by a client may impact the performance of the investment approach. The impact of such investment guidelines and restrictions is not reflected. A GIPS composite report is not available since the firm does not currently manage the specific blended strategy. All performance data is shown net of returns for the underlying funds or their proxies.

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