SASB FSA Level 1

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IASB 2017 guidance

"matters that could affect an entity's long-term prospects; the entity's intangible resources and relationships; and ESG matters"

IFRS Management Commentary

-Provide management's view of the entity's performance, position, and progress -supplement and complement information presented in financial statements

examples of sources of evidence

-company source material -investor insights -third-party research -government and legal documents

US SEC on Management Disclosure and Analysis (MD&A)

-focus on material information -include key performance indicators (including non-financial and metrics to improve comparability to companies in other industries) -disclose known trends and uncertainties that are reasonably likely -analyze the information that is disclosed

materiality

-historically has described information likely to affect a company's operating condition and financial performance -now recognizes non-financial and sustainability information -refers to omissions, misstatements, and obscurement -obligation to ongoing disclosure as new facts emerge or events take place

components of sustainability disclosure value chain

-reporters -disclosure platforms and software providers -auditors -frameworks and standards -data providers -analytics platforms -end users -regulators

SASB governance

-standards are developed and maintained by the SASB Standards Board, and independent board with members appointed by the SASB foundation Board of Directors -Board of Directors maintains Standards Oversight Committee, which safeguards the independence and integrity of the standard-setting process -SASB technical staff (research team) monitors current/emerging sustainability trends, proposes research and standard-setting projects to the board for approval, and engages with stakeholders across capital markets and broader society

3 pillars of reliable information

1. appropriate board oversight 2. established internal controls 3. data assurance

SASB 5 sustainability dimensions

1. environment 2. leadership and governance 3. business model and innovation 4. human capital 5. social capital

examples of disclosure scope

1. environmental (natural resources, climate info, emissions) 2. social information (social and human capital issues, like workforce safety and access/affordability) 3. operational governance (how a business is run - corruption, bribery, etc) 4. economic information (financial inputs, economic impacts of the company related to ESG-based practices) 5. physical assets (physical goods and infrastructure owned, leased, and controlled by an organization) 6. intellectual assets (intangible assets that lend insight into a company's future earning potential and competitive advantage)

SASB 4 Fundamental Tenets

1. evidence-based 2. market-informed 3. industry-specific 4. transparent

SASB criteria for disclosure topics

1. financially impactful 2. of interest to users 3. prevalent 4. actionable

three core components of SASB disclosure guidance

1. financially material 2. decision-useful 3. cost-effective

SASB Conceptual Framework

1. guides board members and staff who oversee and implement standard-setting activities 2. helps stakeholders better understand SASB's approach to standard setting 3. helps to improve board member and staff engagement and consultation with stakeholders by providing a common language for communication -also reduces influence of personal bias in standard-setting

SASB characteristics of metrics

1. representationally faithful 2. complete 3. comparable 4. neutral 5. verifiable 6. Aligned 7. understandable

Characteristics of framework and guidance

1. scope of information 2. type of guidance 3. primary audience 4. scope of materiality 5. industry agnostic or industry specific 6. time horizon 7. governance model

Number of sectors and industries in SASB guidance

11 sectors, 77 industries

A statement of basic accounting theory

1960s report that shifted focus of financial reporting from strict historical asset valuation and toward decision usefulness of reported information to the users of the disclosed information -"provide information which will be of assistance in making economic decisions"

Canada sustainability reporting requirements

2010: CSA (Canadian Securities Administration) Staff Notice delineated a number of disclosure requirements related to ESG 2019: expansion on 2010 report to identify and disclose material climate change risks to investors

GRI definition of materiality

2011 "sustainability reporting guidelines": topics that: a) reflect organization's significant economic, environmental, and social impacts b) would substantively affect assessments and decisions of stakeholders

EU sustainability reporting requirements

2014: Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) compels public-interest companies to report sustainability information -principles-based (material; fair/balanced/understandable; comprehensive but concise; strategic and forward-looking; stakeholder-oriented; consistent and coherent) 2015: France Law on Energy Transition for Green Growth requires publicly listed companies to implement low-carbon strategies in every component of their activities EU Taxonomy: extremely specific criteria for evaluating economic activities, including through social lens EU Taxonomy, Jan 2022: companies expected to disclose turnover derived from activities that are environmentally sustainable and, when applicable, capital expenditures and operating expenditures associated with qualifying activities

Statement of Intent to Work Together Towards Comprehensive Corporate Reporting

2020: CDP, CDSB, GRI, IIRC, and SASB joint statement

European Commission's Action Plan for Financial Sustainable Growth

3 core strategies: -reorienting capital flows towards a more sustainable economy -mainstreaming sustainability into risk management -fostering transparency and long-termism

80/20 rule

80% of emissions come from 20% of sources

comply or explain

A set of guidelines that require companies to abide by a set of operating standards or explain why they choose not to. -promote transparency from companies who are not developed enough or unable to comply with existing regulations

CDSB

Carbon Disclosure Standards Board: -offers companies a framework to disclose environmental information with the same rigor used to report financial information -encourages standardization of environmental reporting -helps investors, analysts, companies, regulators, stock exchanges, and accounting firms consider the impacts of natural capital -series of *principles* to abide by in reporting

EBITDA

Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization

FASB (Financial Accounting Standards Board)

Founded to replace APB; identified goal of disclosure and accounting; affirmed decision-usefulness and emphasis on discounted future cash flows as way of valuing assets (as opposed to historical cost accounting) -also stated that economic and social goals of a business are equally important

financed emissions

GHGs emitted by entities that receive financial services, loans or investments from a bank/investor (important to disclose and risky investments)

GAAP

Generally Accepted Accounting Principles

IIRC

International Integrated Reporting Council -<IR> Framework - helps companies connect sustainability disclosure to reporting on financial and other capitals: 1. financial 2. manufactured 3. intellectual 4. human 5. social and relationship 6. natural

KPI

Key Performance Indicator

US SEC/Securities and Exchange Commission

Protects investors, maintains fair, orderly, and efficient markets, and facilitates capital formation

Brundtland Report

Published in 1987 in the influential report "Our Common Future" and created by World Commision on Environment and Development of the UN. Discusses sustainable development and the triple bottom line for the first time.

SASB

Sustainability Accounting Standards Board -covers environmental, social, and governance topics most likely to be material financially to companies in a given industry

TCFD

Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures: -Principles-based framework for climate-related financial disclosure -provide information to investors, lenders, insurers, and other stakeholders -strong focus on risks and opportunities associated with transition to low-carbon economy

United States sustainability reporting requirements

US SEC, 2010: guidance explaining how companies should apply existing disclosure requirements to climate change information that might be appropriate to disclose

assurance readiness

a measure of internal confidence in the quality of a company's processes and information used for internal decision-making

assurance

a review by an external, independent professional on the credibility of data

internal controls

activities that help companies achieve their objectives by mitigating risks of incorrect data and disclosures

50%

approximate market share of passive funds in US equities

reasonable assurance

assurance with level of rigor comparable to an audit. Examines reported information, source data, and an organization's internal controls for protecting the integrity of source data.

examinations

audit-level engagements designed to provide a high level of assurance on information other than historical financial statements

stewardship codes

based on logic of fiduciary duty, they offer a framework of principles that investors can apply to their corporate stewardship activities

CDP

carbon disclosure project: -supports companies, cities, states, and regions -measure and manage environmental risks and opportunities -compiles and scores companies: A: environmental leadership D: low environmental awareness F: failure to report sufficient information

software providers and disclosure platforms

collect and report information

SASB Rules of Procedure

complements the Conceptual Framework by providing more detail about mechanics of standard setting -Conceptual Framework is more of a general outline for how decisions are made

actual impacts

could materialize in the form of existing regulation and known changes in consumer demand

rules-based approach

details specific reporting format and standards with a relatively high degree of detail

impairment calculations

difference between book value and fair market value, reported as an impairment loss

decision-useful

disclosures that consider the needs of primary users of info and yield qualitative and quantitative data that helps users assess a business' operating performance and financial condition

securities exchanges

encourage listed companies to report non-financial and sustainability information -often publicly listed companies themselves that set terms companies must adhere to to maintain listed status

ECA

environmental cost accounting - aims to analyze cause-and-effect relationships to identify the source of and measure environmental impacts

EP&L

environmental profit and loss statements - seeks to assign a monetary value to the environmental costs associated with certain business activities

acute impacts

events that may be rare or unlikely but can have significant impacts

quantitative metrics

extremely useful for fundamental and comparative analysis, as well as a contextual understanding of a firm's operations or strategic initiatives

boilerplate

first sustainability disclosure type: broad, nonspecific wording that does not describe the realities of the registrant's particular operating context

audit committee

front line in determining if and how sustainability information will be assured

GRI

global reporting initiative: -independent standard-setting organization -helps companies/organizations report significant impacts on economy, environment, and surrounding society

technical protocol

guidance accompanying each accounting metric that advises on definitions, scope, implementation, compilation, and presentation to help ensure that disclosures from companies in the same industry are as comparable as possible

Stock Market Crash of 1929

historical example about how a lack of transparency and public reporting can have disastrous consequences

83%

how much tangible assets composed of market value of S&P 500 in 1975

10%

how much tangible assets composed of market value of S&P 500 in 2020

need for standards

improve market efficiency and price discovery, reduce information asymmetry, and promote trade across markets

disclosure topics

industry-specific impacts of general sustainability issue categories

SASB definition of materiality

information is financially material is omitting, misstating, or obscuring it could be reasonably expected to influence investment decisions by users based on expected financial performance and enterprise value

materiality (as defined by the US Supreme Court)

information is material if its exclusion would have altered the "total mix" of information considered by a reasonable investor

dynamic materiality

information that is material today may not be material tomorrow

structured data

largely quantitative and can be organized in a relational database -this type of data is often reported once a year

potential impacts

latent impacts, such as results of pending regulation or sustainability issues, threats of competition from products or services, or increased interest in sustainability performance

progressive impacts

less-extreme effects in a given year, but are enduring and can erode a company's value over time

principles-based guidance

list of tenets that companies use to guide their reporting process (such as that offered by MD&A)

customer welfare

management of public health risks and social externalities experiences as a byproduct of a core product or service

cost-effective

mandatory disclosures and reporting requirements can place a significant financial and resource burden on companies; helps ensure that investor needs are not overly prioritized -> thus, SASB aligns to the extent possible with metrics contained in other reporting standards or those already used in the industry

historical cost accounting

measured the value of an asset as the actual cost paid at the time of purchase -original nominal value of asset reported on balance sheet, even if the asset's value has changed over time

suitable criteria

metrics and underlying protocols suitable for a company's disclosure context and needs

activity metrics

metrics that quantify the scale of a company's business and are intended for use in conjunction with accounting metrics to normalize data and facilitate comparison e.g. operational data, such as number or employees or quantity of product produced **strictly quantitative

limited assurance (review)

more limited in scope than reasonable assurance examination

withdrawal rates

number of withdrawals of resolutions (by investors or stakeholders) because of a negotiated dialogue -have reached record levels, suggesting increased collaboration between companies and investors

SEC 2010 guidance:

obligation to disclose how climate change affects the following: -legislative and regulatory impacts -international accords -indirect consequences of regulation or business trends -physical impacts of climate change

Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO)

private organization to provide frameworks and guidance on enterprise risk management, internal control, and fraud deterrence

gap analysis

process for determining what data is already reported externally, what data is being collected but not reported externally, and what information needs to be collected

MD&A (management discussion and analysis)

provides a narrative from management's perspective that identifies and discusses key performance indicators that management uses to manage the business and would be material to investors

XBRL (eXtensible Business Reporting Language)

provides a standardized system to improve the way data is communicated in the capital markets - to reduce the burden on reporting companies, regulators will most likely include ESG reporting as part of the existing taxonomy

types of accounting metrics

quantitative and discussion and analysis (MD&A)

securities commissions

regulators with the authority to legally mandate sustainability disclosure

Accounting Principles Board (APB)

replaced CAP to resolve tensions, reduce variation in accounting practices, and establish one standardized practice

3 primary financial drivers

revenue and cost; assets and liabilities; cost of capital

Company-tailored narrative

second sustainability disclosure type: Specific language in a disclosure that can be understood only in the context of the reporting company

governance documents

set forth the formal, systemized procedures and principles applied to the development of sustainability guidance -for SASB, they are the Conceptual Framework and Formal Rules of Procedure -developed using robust input from wide range of market participants and public meetings to foster transparency in decision-making process for framework or standards

accounting metrics

set of quantitative and/or MD&A metrics intended to measure performance on a sustainability topic

SRI

socially responsible investing

Standards' Advisory Group (SAG)

standing committee of volunteer industry experts from corporations, financial institutions, and third parties -comprised of about 174 members -advisory groups of industry professionals, investors, financial analysts, and other subject matter experts

unstructured data

text-heavy; text files, news articles, call transcripts, and reports -historically, most sustainability data has been of this type -this type of data can change daily

performance metrics

third sustainability disclosure type: standardized metrics to allow comparability with company peers

problem with short-termism

though increases market liquidity, persistent short-termism may undermine the efficiency of capital markets and result in diminished public confidence and depressed returns

"reasonable"

used by CDSB, SASB, and TCFD, opening information yielded through these frameworks to be subject to the rule of law (not used by GRI and IIRC)

Sustainable Industry Classification System (SICS)

used to prevent the granular industry classification system that creates overlap/repetition between industry sustainability accounting standards (as with Global Industry Classification Standards (GICS), Bloomberg Industry Classification System (BICS), and Industry Classification Benchmark (ICB) -focused on impacts from risks and opportunities to differentiate industries, as opposed to a supply- or demand-side oriented approach

double materiality

useful for enterprise value creation and in the context of significant impacts on economy, environment, and people

sell side analysts

work for investment brokerage firms, analyze companies, or make buy/sell/hold recommendations on stocks and securities


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