Vision Super has divested from thermal coal, tar sands and tobacco in addition to its existing weapons exclusion.
Chief executive officer, Stephen Rowe, said as a value-based fund, environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors were important when deciding how to invest.
“Our ESG decision-making framework looks first to reduce harm through active ownership of shares, and the Board will only decide to divest if the evidence is clear that the harm of a particular product cannot be reduced,” he said.
Rowe said the fund already had a considerably lower carbon intensity than the index across its portfolio as markets weren’t pricing in carbon risk appropriately, which was a risk for members.
“But thermal coal and tar sands are two of the biggest contributors to climate change, and we don’t believe the risk of continuing to use them can be mitigated,” he said.
Rowe said the fund looked at tobacco through the same lens, and concluded that it wasn’t possible to minimise the harm the product causes.
“So the decision was made to exclude tobacco too.”
The lower outlook for inflation has set the stage for another two rate cuts over the first half of 2026, according to Westpac.
With private asset valuations emerging as a key concern for both regulators and the broader market, Apollo Global Management has called on the corporate regulator to issue clear principles on valuation practices, including guidance on the disclosures it expects from market participants.
Institutional asset owners are largely rethinking their exposure to the US, with private markets increasingly being viewed as a strategic investment allocation, new research has shown.
Australia’s corporate regulator has been told it must quickly modernise its oversight of private markets, after being caught off guard by the complexity, size, and opacity of the asset class now dominating institutional portfolios.