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43 Nw. J. Int'l L. & Bus. 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/nwjilb43 and id is 1 raw text is: 






Copyright 2023 by Alexander Coley                                        Vol. 43, No. 1
Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business





ESG Ratings: A Blind Spot for U.S.

Securities Regulation





Alexander Coley


      Abstract:

      Providers of Environmental, Social, and Governance   (ESG)  ratings have
      emerged  as prominent informational intermediaries in the sustainable finance
      ecosystem. The key players are familiar names such as Moody's, Morningstar,
      MSCI  and  S&P.  In recent years, investors, financial markets observers and
      academics  have raised serious doubts about the value and integrity of ESG
      ratings, pointing to lack of reliability and comparability and risks of conflicts of
      interest and abuse, including the potential for greenwashing.

      ESG  ratings are now in the crosshairs of financial regulators, particularly, in
      Europe. However,  the regulatory discourse has failed to contend with risks
      arising from the use of ESG  ratings by companies  (issuers) in their public
      disclosure -for example, to advertise their ESG bona fides on earnings calls, in
      road  show  materials for securities offerings, or even committing to  the
      maintenance, or improvement, of ESG ratings in promises to investors. Drawing
      on use cases ofgreen bonds and other sustainable finance instruments, the paper
      argues that although  ESG  ratings have become   deeply intertwined in the
      securities offering process, they are effectively insulated from securities law
      liability.

      To make this argument, the paper highlights a structural similarity to the SEC's
      attempt to regulate the use of credit ratings in the wake of the global financial
      crisis - an effort which has been criticized as toothless. If the treatment of credit
      ratings under US. securities law is any guide, there is little reason to expect that
      ESG  ratings will serve as the basis for liability, no matter how much importance
      investors attach to them.  This conclusion  has broader  ramifications for
      understanding the contours of Section 11 liability for third-party experts. More
      immediately, the paper should inform ongoing efforts by the SEC and  other
      financial regulators to map out and address new sources of risks building in the
      sustainable finance market.






* J.D., University of California, Berkeley; B.A., M.A., Stanford University. The author is a
senior associate at a large New York-based law firm, resident in the Tokyo office. His practice
focuses on securities law and capital markets transactions, as well as financial regulatory
matters.


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