Full Market Disclosure Means that Everyone at the Table Plays their Climate Cards Face Up to Have the Best Read on Climate Risks

“…opaque ESG data and black box ESG calculations have killed the market signal that generates sustainability price discovery.”

Sustainability Arbitrage Strategy

“Full Market Disclosure is a concrete innovation that ensures climate becomes a part of every investment decision as rapidly and openly as possible, creating climate (and ESG) price discovery for the first time.”

“Moreover, markets will quickly improve by iterating in a radically transparent way – as loads of new information is released daily, the innovation will be unrelenting, reducing risk.”

“Standards like the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosure (TCFD), Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), U.N. Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI), etc. would become applications that the Full Market Disclosure environment automatically tests and refines. Full Market Disclosure is a funnel that can efficiently process all of these competing applications. The more, the better!

They won’t be debated or promulgated – they’d be organically ratified by use in real world investing, self-evident over time.

Full Market Disclosure will shine when climate journalism hums loudly, processing all the information that comes out daily, making greenwashing next to impossible, and unlocking a tsunami of effectively invested green finance.”

“Market failures in finance have traditionally been mitigated through transparency. But instead of seeking transparency from just the companies (aka issuers), as is the focus now, let’s seek transparency from all the large players that drive the markets and share it equally so that everyone can use it. 

I call this ‘Full Market Disclosure.’ It turns an “investment edge” into “public goods” for everyone. 

Excerpts from “ESG Data is a Public Good. Let’s Open It Up.” Published in Impact Alpha, November 21, 2021

Susarb invented the Full Market Disclosure sustainability standard in our first comment letter to the SEC.