Certainly.
It's not clear that regulation would address the issue.
You're absolutely right; that's what we found as the current status quo. Asset managers are not going to be taking into account issues they don't believe are material.
However, what can lead them to doing this are constraints from their own clients. If there's a fund mandate saying that you have to invest in sector X and you're not allowed to invest in sector Y, that is something that absolutely can move them to investing in a different way, but that will come from the clients of those funds, not necessarily from regulation.
What might be the issue of having regulation do it is it will go back to the previous discussion of taxonomies. It's very difficult to decide what is good or what is not good. Maybe a client can decide for themselves, but I'd be rather nervous about a regulator deciding on behalf of all clients.
That has happened, actually, for my industry of education. A while ago, you had “no child left behind” in the U.S., where they said, “Let's try to have a taxonomy and let's measure which schools are good and which ones are bad and allocate capital to the well-performing schools and keep it away from the poorly performing schools,” just like the idea of allocating capital towards the transition, but this then led to many schools teaching to the test.
When you have such a complex issue and there are so many moving parts, it is quite difficult for regulators to have a taxonomy that takes these all into account. It's incumbent on the clients to express their wishes to fund mandates in order to guide investors on where they should be allocating their capital.