Elon Musk’s view of this investing strategy: ‘ESG is the devil’
Elon Musk evidently has a diabolical view of environmental, social and corporate governance – more commonly referred to as “ESG.”
His comments came in response to a Sunday Twitter post from small business expert and advisor Carol Roth.
“Remember when @ElonMusk wanted to bring free speech to Twitter and then S&P removed Tesla from their ESG 500 index, but kept in Exxon?” Roth wrote. “ESG is business social credit. It’s a means to control capital, keep business people in line with the narrative, and, ultimately, control you.”
In characteristically brief fashion, Musk responded: “ESG is the devil.”
ESG refers to non-financial standards used by asset managers and investors in financial decision-making. ESG investing is sometimes referred to as sustainable investing or impact investing, and investors can use ESG standards and criteria to screen potential investments and monitor non-financial risks.
Earlier this year, Tesla was removed from the S&P 500’s ESG index. S&P Dow Jones Indices’ senior director and head of ESG indices Margaret Dorn said in a May blog post that Tesla was no longer eligible for inclusion in the index because its S&P DPJ ESG score had fallen into the bottom 25% of its global industry group peers despite remaining “fairly stable” year over year.
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Factors that contributed to Tesla’s lower score include its lack of “low carbon energy and codes of business conduct.”
“While Tesla may be playing its part in taking fuel-powered cars off the road, it has fallen behind its peers when examined through a wider ESG lens,” Dorn said.
FOX Business Kelsey Koberg contributed to this report.