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Arnold & Porter Discusses ESG, Disclosure, and Whistleblowing

On August 25, 2021, The Wall Street Journal reported that the SEC and the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York are investigating greenwashing allegations made by the former head of sustainability of Deutsche Bank AG’s asset-management arm, DWS Group (DWS), including allegations that DWS overstated how much it used sustainable investing criteria to manage its assets. DWS disclosed in its 2020 annual report that it invested more than half of its $900 billion in assets using a system called ESG integration, where companies are graded using ESG criteria. According to The Wall Street Journal, however, an internal assessment done a month earlier said that only a fraction of these assets applied the ESG integration process and that there was no quantifiable or verifiable ESG-integration for key DWS asset classes.

These allegations raise key considerations concerning the intersection of two high-priority matters for the SEC: (i) the adequacy and accuracy of ESG-related disclosures and (ii) the strengthening of the SEC’s whistleblower rules to encourage whistleblowers to come forward. In this Advisory, we analyze this intersecting landscape and its implications and practical considerations.

Recent Signs of the SEC’s Aggressive Approach to ESG-Related Misconduct

Since the 2020 presidential election, ESG investing and disclosure standards have repeatedly made financial news headlines, been the subject of many regulatory agency initiatives and newly-formed committees, and frequently served as a centerpiece of senior government officials’ speeches.

Indeed, the SEC has signaled that it will aggressively investigate ESG-related misconduct using whistleblower tips. On March 4, 2021, the Commission announced the creation of the Climate and ESG Task Force in its Division of Enforcement, which is comprised of 22 enforcement attorneys and specialists who will analyze disclosure and compliance issues relating to “investment advisers’ and funds’ ESG strategies.” The task force is charged with evaluating and pursuing whistleblower complaints on ESG-related issues. To highlight the SEC’s interest in receiving these whistleblower complaints, the announcement included a link to the Commission’s online portal which can be used to submit ESG-related tips, referrals, and complaints.

On April 9, 2021, the SEC’s Division of Examinations issued a Risk Alert detailing staff observations from recent examinations of investment advisers, registered investment companies, and private funds engaged in ESG investing. These observations included “some instances of potentially misleading statements regarding ESG investing processes and representations regarding the adherence to global ESG frameworks” as well as “a lack of policies and procedures related to ESG investing; policies and procedures that did not appear to be reasonably designed to prevent violations of law, or that were not implemented; documentation of ESG-related investment decisions that was weak or unclear; and compliance programs that did not appear to be reasonably designed to guard against inaccurate ESG-related disclosures and marketing materials,” despite claims to the contrary.

On September 1, 2021, the Chair of the SEC, Gary Gensler, issued the Commission’s most recent warning about ESG disclosures in prepared remarks made to the European Parliament Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs. Chair Gensler stated that, “ Many funds these days brand themselves as ‘green,’ ‘sustainable,’ ‘low-carbon,’ and so on. I’ve directed staff to review current practices and consider recommendations about whether fund managers should disclose the criteria and underlying data they use to market themselves as such.”

Despite the SEC’s aggressive enforcement posture on ESG disclosures, Gensler’s recent remarks indicate that the SEC is still considering development of specific ESG disclosure requirements for ESG funds or funds that claim to incorporate ESG criteria into their investment strategies. Any enforcement action, therefore, would be based on existing, generally-applicable regulations that lack this specificity. For example, Rule 35d-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, the “Names Rule,” requires a fund to invest at least 80% of its assets in the type of investment, industry, or geographic region suggested by its name. When applied to ESG funds and disclosures, there is significant ambiguity as to what is an ESG fund and what constitutes an ESG investment. As Commissioner Elad Roisman observed last year, “[i]n recent years, asset managers have proliferated in their creation of products labeled as ‘ESG,’ ‘Green,’ or ‘Sustainable,’” but “there is no universal definition for any of these terms, and such products’ investment philosophies and holdings can vary widely.”

The SEC’s Enhanced Use of Its Whistleblower Program as an Enforcement Tool

The SEC’s Office of the Whistleblower (OWB) was formed in 2011, one year after the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank) amended the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 by directing the SEC to pay monetary awards to eligible individuals who voluntarily provide original information leading to successful enforcement actions that result in monetary sanctions over $1 million and successful related actions. 15 U.S.C. § 78u-6. Awards range between 10% and 30% of the money collected. Dodd-Frank and the SEC’s implementing rules include confidentiality protections for whistleblower submissions and prohibit employers from retaliating against whistleblowers for providing information to the SEC. 17 C.F.R. §§ 240.21F-7; 15 U.S.C. § 78u-6(h)(1).

In a prior Advisory, we analyzed how the SEC’s fiscal year 2020 was a record-breaking year for the OWB in terms of whistleblower tips received and awards paid, and how fiscal year 2021 (which ends on September 30, 2021) will set new records. Moreover, on September 15, 2021, the SEC announced that the whistleblower program has now surpassed $1 billion in awards to individuals who provided information under the program since its inception. The number of tips, value of awards paid, and recent statements by Chair Gensler signaling his intent to strengthen the whistleblower rules underscore that the SEC views whistleblower tips as an important tool for the enforcement of the securities laws.

Convergence of the Two Landscapes: Implications and Practical Considerations

In light of these recent, converging ESG and whistleblower developments, there is likely to be an increase in internal and external whistleblower complaints concerning ESG disclosures and related issues. The SEC’s focus on ESG-related funds and disclosures highlights the need for companies to take prompt action once they receive an internal report of potential misconduct regarding climate or other ESG disclosures. As a result, ESG-related funds, publicly traded companies, regulated entities, and other companies would be well-advised to consider the following:

This post comes to us from Arnold & Porter Kaye Scholer LLP. It is based on the firm’s memorandum, “At the Crossroads of ESG Disclosures and Whistleblowing: What Companies Need to Know Now (ESG Advisory Series, Part 5),” dated September 20, 2021, and available here. Veronica Callahan, Ellen Kaye Fleishhacker, David F. Freeman, Jr, Teresa L. Johnson, Michael D. Trager, Andrew Varner, and Andrew Johnson also contributed to the memorandum.

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