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    Varma Invests in Japanese Low-Emissions

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    Stockholm (NordSIP) – On 20 April, Finnish pension insurance company Varma announced a €300 million investment in Japanese companies through Nomura Asset Management’s NEXT FUNDS Solactive Japan ESG Core Index exchange-traded fund (ETF). The €467 billion low-emission fund, tailor-made for Varma, was listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange on 8 April 2022 and is the largest-ever responsible investment ETF to be listed in Japan.

    “We wanted to make an ESG investment that takes sustainability aspects into account also in the Japanese market. This is a systematic continuation of our ESG investments tailored to the US, European and emerging markets. The number of exchange-traded ESG funds in Japan is still rather low,” says Timo Sallinen, Varma’s Head of Listed Securities.

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    The fund invests in approximately 100 large and mid-sized Japanese companies selected according to strict sustainability criteria, with the liquidity of the shares also taken into account according to Varma. Among the investees are the pharmaceutical company Takeda, the world’s leading manufacturer of heat pumps, Daikin Industries, the conglomerate Hitachi, the automotive manufacturer Toyota and the video game company Nintendo.

    “The fund does not aim to track the broad Japanese market, as it does not nearly cover all industries or companies in the broad indices. In this sense, the tailored fund provides more of an active risk to us compared to a traditional broad market benchmark ETF.

    “The investees selected for the fund are low-emission industries whose growth prospects we believe in also in the long run. In addition, within each industry, the companies that operate the most responsibly were selected. One example of an industry whose future prospects we believe in is technology,” says Sallinen.

     

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    Filipe Albuquerque
    Filipe Albuquerque
    Filipe is an economist with 8 years of experience in macroeconomic and financial analysis for the Economist Intelligence Unit, the UN World Institute for Development Economic Research, the Stockholm School of Economics and the School of Oriental and African Studies. Filipe holds a MSc in European Political Economy from the LSE and a MSc in Economics from the University of London, where he currently is a PhD candidate.

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