BlackRock Sees 30% Jump in Flows to Suite of Climate ETFs

BlackRock Inc.’s greenest exchanged-traded funds have seen a 30% increase in inflows as investors seek out the most credible ESG products amid a wider cooling toward the industry.

The nine ETFs, which have tracked EU-regulated climate transition benchmarks since October, attracted a net $2.7 billion this year as of mid-June, bringing the total amount held in the funds to $11.6 billion, BlackRock said.

“Regardless of regulatory designation, climate is becoming a prevalent consideration in defining European clients’ sustainable investment goals,” Manuela Sperandeo, head of EMEA sustainable indexing at BlackRock in London, said by email.

The climate ETFs have managed to draw buyers despite growing questions about the investment choices by managers of environmental, social and governance funds. More than half of the institutional investors surveyed by Schroder Investment Management now say the industry’s performance is a main concern, up from roughly 38% a year ago.

In Europe, investors have pulled about $117 billion from so-called light-green products — known as Article 8 — in the past year. In the same period, Bloomberg data show that $6 billion went into dark-green funds such as the BlackRock climate ETFs, which are also known as Article 9 in EU ESG terminology.