Fund centre | Capital Group

Capital Group Global High Income Opportunities (LUX)

Une source fiable de revenus élevés et réguliers

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        Vue d’ensemble

        Résultats

        The information in relation to the index is provided for context and illustration only. The fund is an actively managed UCITS. It is not managed in reference to a benchmark.

        Past results are not a guarantee of future results.

        Cours et dividendes

        Portefeuille

        cgghiolu

        Risques

        Avant d’investir, il convient de tenir compte des facteurs de risque suivants :

        • Le présent document n’a pas vocation à fournir un conseil d’investissement, ni à être considéré comme une recommandation personnalisée.
        • La valeur des investissements et le revenu qu’ils génèrent ne sont pas constants dans le temps, et les investisseurs ne sont pas assurés de récupérer l’intégralité de leur mise initiale.
        • Si la devise dans laquelle vous investissez s’apprécie face à celle dans laquelle les investissements sous-jacents du fonds sont réalisés, alors la valeur de votre placement baissera. La couverture du risque de change vise à limiter ce phénomène, rien ne permet de garantir qu’elle sera totalement efficace.
        • Certains portefeuilles peuvent investir dans des instruments dérivés à des fins de placement, de couverture et/ou de gestion efficace du portefeuille.
        • Des risques supplémentaires (Bond Connect, obligations, CIBM, contrepartie, produits dérivés, marchés émergents, obligations high yield, liquidité, opérationnel et durabilité) sont associés à ce fond.

         

        Risques liés aux fonds

        Risque lié à Bond Connect : les investissements réalisés dans des obligations onshore chinoises négociées sur le marché interbancaire direct (China Interbank Bond Market – CIBM) via Bond Connect sont assortis de divers risques (compensation et règlement, liquidité, réglementaire, contrepartie).

        Risque obligataire : la valeur des obligations peut évoluer en fonction du niveau des taux d’intérêt (en général, quand les taux d’intérêt montent, le cours des obligations baisse). Les fonds investis en obligations sont exposés au risque de crédit. La valeur d’une obligation peut reculer, voire devenir nulle en cas de dégradation de la situation financière de son émetteur.

        Risque CIBM : le fonds peut investir sur le marché interbancaire direct chinois (China Interbank Bond Market – CIBM), qui peut être volatil et soumis à des contraintes de liquidité en raison de volumes de transaction limités, ce qui peut se traduire par de fortes fluctuations du cours des instruments de dette négociés sur ce marché, des spreads importants et des coûts de transaction élevés.

        Risque de contrepartie : d’autres établissements financiers fournissent des services au fonds, tels que la conservation des actifs, ou peuvent servir de contrepartie à des contrats financiers tels que des produits dérivés. Il existe un risque que la contrepartie n’honore pas ses obligations.

        Risque lié aux produits dérivés : un produit dérivé est un instrument financier dont la valeur découle d’un actif sous-jacent, et qui peut être utilisé pour couvrir des expositions existantes ou pour acquérir une exposition. Un produit dérivé peut ne pas produire les résultats attendus, subir des pertes supérieures à son coût et ainsi engendrer des pertes pour le fonds.

        Risque lié aux marchés émergents : les investissements sur les marchés émergents sont généralement plus sensibles à des événements comme l’évolution du contexte économique, politique, budgétaire et juridique des marchés concernés.

        Risque lié aux obligations high yield : les titres de créance moins bien notés ou non notés, parmi lesquels figurent les obligations high yield, peuvent pâtir d’un risque de liquidité, de volatilité, de défaut et/ou de contrepartie.

        Risque de liquidité : dans un environnement de marché tendu, certains titres détenus au sein du fonds peuvent être revendus à une valeur inférieure à leur valeur réelle, voire ne pas trouver de repreneur. L’équipe de gestion peut en conséquence décider de reporter ou de suspendre les rachats de parts du fonds, privant ainsi les investisseurs d’un accès immédiat à leur capital.

        Risque opérationnel : risque de perte découlant de défaillances internes (processus, personnel, systèmes) ou d’événements externes.

        Risque de durabilité : événement ou contexte environnemental, social et de gouvernance pouvant avoir un impact négatif significatif sur la valeur d’un investissement dans le fonds.

        Documentation

        Fund centre | Capital Group

        Données de durabilité

        Synthèse

        Sans objectif d’investissement durable

        Ce Fonds promeut des caractéristiques environnementales ou sociales, mais n’a pas pour objectif l’investissement durable.

        Caractéristiques environnementales ou sociales des produits financiers

        Le Fonds promeut les caractéristiques environnementales et sociales en investissant dans des sociétés dont l’intensité carbone moyenne pondérée (WACI) est inférieure à 50 % par rapport à l’indice Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, à 20 % par rapport à l’indice JPM EMBI Global Total Return, à 20 % par rapport à l’indice JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return et à 10 % par rapport à l’indice JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return, et en excluant de ses investissements des émetteurs sur la base de critères ESG et normatifs.

        Stratégie d’investissement

        Pour ses investissements dans des émetteurs privés, le Fonds vise à conserver une intensité carbone moyenne pondérée (WACI) inférieure à 50 % par rapport à l’indice Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, à 20 % par rapport à l’indice JPM EMBI Global Total Return, à 20 % par rapport à l’indice JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return et à 10 % par rapport à l’indice JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return. Cette stratégie ne s’appliquera pas aux émetteurs souverains. Bien que ce Fonds soit sous gestion active et ne renvoie pas ou ne se limite pas à un indice de référence, il utilise ces indices pour contrôler l’émission de carbone de ses investissements. Le Conseiller en investissement s’appuie sur les données d’empreinte carbone d’un fournisseur tiers pour réaliser un suivi continu de l’intensité carbone moyenne pondérée (WACI) au niveau du fonds. Par ailleurs, il est susceptible de réduire ou d’éliminer les expositions à certaines sociétés, le cas échéant.

        CRMC (Le « Conseiller en investissement ») évalue et applique des filtres ESG et normatifs pour mettre en œuvre des exclusions sur les émetteurs privés et souverains à l’égard de certains secteurs tels que les combustibles fossiles et les armes (la « Politique de filtrage négatif »).

        Le Fonds promeut, entre autres caractéristiques, des caractéristiques environnementales et sociales, à condition que les entreprises dans lesquelles les investissements sont réalisés suivent de bonnes pratiques de gouvernance. Les pratiques de bonne gouvernance sont évaluées dans le cadre du processus d’éligibilité du Conseiller en investissement. Dans le cadre de l’évaluation des pratiques de bonne gouvernance, le Conseiller en investissement tient compte au minimum des éléments qu’il estime pertinents pour les quatre piliers prescrits de la bonne gouvernance (à savoir les structures de gestion, les relations avec les employés, la rémunération du personnel et la conformité fiscale). Ces pratiques sont évaluées dans le cadre d’un processus de suivi. Le cas échéant, une analyse fondamentale d’une série d’indicateurs qui abordent les pratiques d’audit, la composition du conseil d’administration et la rémunération des dirigeants, entre autres, est également réalisée.

        La restriction des émissions de carbone du Fonds ne s’applique pas à l’ensemble du portefeuille, mais uniquement aux émetteurs privés pour lesquels des données sur les émissions de carbone sont disponibles (déclarées ou estimées). La Politique de filtrage négatif de Capital Group s’appliquera à l’ensemble du portefeuille, à l’exception des liquidités détenues et des produits dérivés.

        Proportion d’investissements

        L’allocation d’actifs prévue fait l’objet d’un suivi continu et d’une évaluation annuelle. Au moins 80 % des investissements du Fonds sont alignés sur les caractéristiques E/S. Au maximum 20 % des investissements du Fonds, qui incluent les investissements non alignés sur les caractéristiques E/S et/ou les produits dérivés, se trouvent dans la catégorie « #2 Autres ». Le Fonds ne s’engage pas à réaliser des investissements durables.

        Contrôle des caractéristiques environnementales ou sociales

        Les indicateurs de durabilité utilisés par ce Fonds pour mesurer la réalisation de chacune des caractéristiques environnementales ou sociales sont les suivants :

        La WACI est l’indicateur utilisé pour rendre compte des émissions de carbone du Fonds. Basé sur les émissions de niveau 1 et de niveau 2, il permet de mettre en évidence l’empreinte carbone du portefeuille par rapport à l’indice :

        • Niveau 1 : les émissions directes des installations de la société en portefeuille ;
        • Niveau 2 : les émissions indirectes liées à la consommation énergétique de la société en portefeuille.

        Le Conseiller en investissement applique des exclusions ESG et normatives afin d’assurer la mise en œuvre d’une Politique de filtrage négatif aux investissements du Fonds. Le Fonds contrôlera :

        • si les émetteurs privés respectent les critères stipulés dans la Politique de filtrage négatif ; et
        • le pourcentage d’émetteurs souverains ne relevant pas du processus d’évaluation des souverains du Conseiller en investissement.

        Méthodes

        Le Fonds met en œuvre deux critères ESG contraignants : des filtres sectoriels et normatifs qui se traduisent par des exclusions et un objectif d’empreinte carbone.

        Sources et traitement des données

        Les exclusions sont principalement définies suite aux recherches de filtrage de l’implication ESG des entreprises de MSCI (« ESG de MSCI ») d’un fournisseur tiers. D’autres données intègrent le Pacte mondial des Nations unies (MSCI) et les indicateurs MSCI de l’empreinte carbone.

        Limites aux méthodes et aux données

        La méthodologie et les sources relatives aux exclusions et à l’approche de l’intégration ESG dans leur ensemble présentent certaines limites. L’évaluation des caractéristiques ESG des titres et la sélection de ces titres sont susceptibles de faire appel à un jugement subjectif dans le cadre du processus d’investissement. L’empreinte carbone est mesurée par la WACI par rapport à l’indice concerné. Si les données sur les émissions de carbone ne sont pas disponibles pour un émetteur donné, le fournisseur tiers peut fournir des estimations en utilisant ses propres méthodes. Les émetteurs qui ne disposent pas de données sur les émissions de carbone (déclarées ou estimées) sont exclus du calcul de la WACI. Sont exclus du calcul du WACI : les liquidités détenues, les produits dérivés, les titres souverains et les produits titrisés.

        Diligence raisonnable

        Les membres des services de conformité réglementaire, de gestion du risque et d’audit interne de Capital Group réalisent des évaluations périodiques de la conception et de l’efficacité opérationnelle des activités ESG et des principaux contrôles de l’entreprise.

        Politiques d’engagement

        La mise en place d’un dialogue avec les sociétés fait partie intégrante du service de gestion des investissements que le Conseiller en investissement assure pour ses clients. Cela permet à Capital Group de mener un dialogue collaboratif sur toute question susceptible d’affecter les perspectives à long terme de l’entreprise en portefeuille, y compris ses expositions aux thématiques de durabilité.

        Indice de référence désigné

        Le Fonds n’a désigné aucun indice de référence en vue d’atteindre les caractéristiques environnementales et/ou sociales qu’il promeut.

        The sustainability-related disclosures are meant to be revised as necessary from time to time to capture any changes or reviews. The capitalized terms are used in accordance with the definitions and references outlined in Prospectus.

        Capital Group Global High Income Opportunities Fund (LUX) (the “Fund”)

        LEI: 5493003T9JGEHH5RHV09

        The below section “Summary” was prepared in English and is being translated to other official languages of the European Economic Area. In case of any inconsistency(ies) or conflict(s) between the different versions of this section “Summary”, the English language version shall prevail.

        Summary

        No sustainable investment objective

        This Fund promotes environmental or social characteristics, but does not have as its objective sustainable investment.

        Environmental or social characteristics of the financial products

        The Fund promotes the environmental and social characteristics of investing in companies with a Weighted Average Carbon Intensity (WACI) lower than 50% Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, 20% JPM EMBI Global Total Return, 20% JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return, 10% JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return indexes, and of excluding investments in issuers based on ESG and norms-based criteria.

        Investment strategy

        The Fund aims to maintain a Weighted Average Carbon Intensity (WACI) for its investments in corporate issuers that is lower than 50% Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, 20% JPM EMBI Global Total Return, 20% JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return, 10% JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return indexes. This will not apply to sovereign issuers. While this Fund is actively managed and without any reference or constraints to a reference index, the Fund is using these indexes to monitor the investment’s carbon emission. The Investment Adviser relies on carbon footprint data from a third-party provider to carry ongoing monitoring of weighted average carbon intensity (WACI) at the fund level, and may reduce or eliminate exposures to certain companies as necessary.

        CRMC (the “Investment Adviser”) evaluates and applies ESG and norms-based screening to implement exclusions on corporate and sovereign issuers, with respect to certain sectors such as fossil fuel and weapons (the “Negative Screening Policy”).

        The Fund promotes, among other characteristics, environmental and social characteristics, provided that the companies in which investments are made follow good governance practices. Good governance practices are evaluated as part of the Investment Adviser’s eligibility process. When assessing good governance practices, the Investment Adviser will, as a minimum, have regard to matters it sees relevant to the four prescribed pillars of good governance (i.e., sound management structures, employee relations, remuneration of staff and tax compliance). Such practices are assessed through a monitoring process. Where relevant, fundamental analysis of a range of metrics that cover auditing practices, board composition, and executive compensation, among others, is also conducted.

        The Fund’s carbon constraint does not apply to the entire portfolio, and will apply only to corporate issuers that have carbon emissions data available (reported or estimated). The Capital Group's Negative Screening Policy will apply to the entire portfolio, with the exception of cash holdings and derivatives.

        Proportion of investments

        The planned asset allocation is monitored continuously and evaluated on a yearly basis. At least 80% of the Fund's investments are aligned with E/S characteristics. A maximum of 20% of the Fund’s investments including investments non-aligned with the E/S characteristics promoted and/or derivatives are in category “#2 Other”. The Fund does not commit to make any sustainable investments.

        Monitoring of environmental or social characteristics

        The sustainability indicators used by this Fund to measure the attainment of each of the environmental or social characteristics it promotes are the following:

        The WACI is the metric used to report the Fund’s carbon emissions. It helps show the carbon footprint of the portfolio compared to the index, and is based on Scope 1 and 2 emissions:

        • Scope 1: direct emissions from the investee company’s facilities;

        • Scope 2: indirect emissions linked to the investee company’s energy consumption

        The Investment Adviser applies ESG and norms-based exclusions to implement a Negative Screening Policy to the Fund’s investments. The Fund will monitor:

        • adherence of corporate issuers to the criteria set forth in the Negative Screening Policy; and

        • percentage of sovereign issuers failing the Investment Adviser’s process for assessing sovereigns.

        Methodologies

        The Fund implements two binding ESG-related criteria: sector- and norms-based screens in the form of exclusions and a carbon footprint target.

        Data sources and processing

        Exclusions are primarily identified through a third-party provider, MSCI ESG Business Involvement Screening Research (“MSCI ESG”). Other data points include the MSCI United Nations Global Compact and MSCI Carbon Footprint Metrics.

        Limitations to methodologies and data

        The methodology and sources relating to the exclusions and the ESG integration approach as a whole have certain limitations. When assessing the ESG characteristics of securities and the selection of such securities, subjective judgement within the investment process might be involved. The carbon footprint is measured by the WACI relative to the relevant index. In the event that reported carbon emissions data is not available for a particular issuer, the third-party provider may provide estimates using their own methodologies. Issuers that do not have any carbon emissions data available (reported or estimated) are excluded from the WACI calculation. Excluded from the WACI determination are cash holdings, derivatives, sovereigns, and securitised products.

        Due diligence

        Members of Capital Group's compliance, risk management and internal audit staff conduct periodic assessments on the design and operating effectiveness of the firm’s ESG activities and key controls.

        Engagement policies

        Establishing dialogue with companies is an integral part of the Investment Adviser’s investment management service to clients. This enables Capital Group to engage and generate dialogue on any issues that could affect the investee company’s long-term prospects, including exposures to sustainability issues.

        Designated reference benchmark

        The Fund has not designated a reference benchmark to meet the environmental and/or social characteristics it promotes.

        No sustainable investment objective

        This Fund promotes environmental or social characteristics, but does not have as its objective sustainable investment.

        Environmental or social characteristics of the financial product

        The Fund promotes environmental and social characteristics, provided that the companies in which investments are made follow good governance practices.

        Carbon constraint: The Fund aims to maintain a Weighted Average Carbon Intensity (WACI) for its investments in corporate issuers that is lower than 50% Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, 20% JPM EMBI Global Total Return, 20% JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return, 10% JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return indexes. The WACI is based on GHG emissions (Scope 1 and 2) divided by the revenue of the investee companies. Should the WACI of the Fund not be lower than the aforementioned indexes, the Investment Adviser will consider what action is in the best interest of the Fund, its Shareholders and in line with the relevant Fund investment objective to bring the Fund back above the threshold in a reasonable period of time.
        Negative screening policy: In addition, the Investment Adviser evaluates and applies ESG and norms-based exclusions to implement a Negative Screening Policy to the Fund’s investments at the time of purchase. The methodology applied in support of this screening is described in detail under the section “Investment Strategy” of this document.

        The Investment Adviser selects investments to the extent they do not trigger a breach of the carbon target and are in line with the Negative Screening Policy.

        Investment strategy

        The Investment Adviser applies the following investment strategy to attain the environmental and/or social characteristics promoted:

        Carbon constraint. The Investment Adviser aims to manage a carbon footprint lower than the Fund’s selected index level. Therefore, it will aim to manage a carbon footprint (WACI) for its investments in corporate issuers that is lower than the Fund’s selected indexes level (50% Bloomberg US Corp HY 2% Issuer Capped Total Return, 20% JPM EMBI Global Total Return, 20% JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Total Return, 10% JPM CEMBI Broad Diversified Total Return). Should the WACI of the Fund not be lower than the level of the aforementioned indexes, the Investment Adviser will consider what action is in the best interest of the Fund, its Shareholders and in line with the relevant Fund investment objective to bring the Fund back above the threshold in a reasonable period of time. The Investment Adviser carries out ongoing monitoring of WACI at the Fund level, and may reduce or eliminate exposures to certain companies as necessary.
        The selected index is representative of the investment universe of the Fund. The Investment Adviser assess the portfolio WACI data on an ongoing basis to help the Fund remain within the target level. This allows the Investment Adviser to measure the carbon footprint and carbon intensity of the portfolio compared to the selected index, and to understand the attribution of the emission results. From an investment perspective, carbon footprint analysis can serve as a tool to engage with the investee company and better understand the investee company’s business. In the event that reported carbon emissions data is not available for a particular issuer, the third-party provider may provide estimates using their own methodologies. Issuers that do not have any carbon emissions data available (reported or estimated) are excluded from the WACI calculation. This will not apply to sovereign issuers. It is not the intention of the Investment Adviser to automatically exclude higher carbon emitters on an individual basis as the carbon intensity is monitored at the total portfolio level rather than at the individual holding level.

        Negative screening policy. The Investment Adviser also evaluates and applies ESG and norms-based screening to implement a Negative Screening Policy to the Fund’s investments at the time of purchase.

        To support this screening on corporate issuers, the Investment Adviser relies on third party provider(s) who identify an issuer’s participation in or the revenue which they derive from activities that are inconsistent with the ESG and norms-based screens. In this way, third party provider data is used to support the application of ESG and norms-based screening by the Investment Adviser. In the event that exclusions cannot be verified through third-party providers or if the Investment Adviser believes that data and/or assessment is incomplete or inaccurate, the Investment Adviser reserves the right to identify business involvement activities through its own assessment (including by using other third-party data sources). If an eligible corporate issuer held in a Fund subsequently fails a screen, the issuer will not contribute towards the environmental and/or social characteristics of the Fund and will generally be sold within six months from the date of such determination, subject to the best interests of investors in the Fund.

        For sovereign issuers, the Investment Adviser conducts an eligibility assessment leveraging its proprietary sovereign ESG framework, which covers a range of ESG indicators to evaluate how well a country manages its ESG risk. To be eligible for investment, sovereigns must score above pre-determined thresholds for their proprietary ESG score on both an absolute and GNI-adjusted basis. The Investment Adviser leverages data from third-party institutions such as the United Nations and the World Bank to calculate ESG scores across the sovereign universe. Sovereign issuers are evaluated on: (1) a gross national income-adjusted basis to better understand how well a country manages ESG risk relative to its wealth and available resources, as well as (2) on an absolute basis. Sovereign issuers that score below pre-defined thresholds in either category are generally not eligible for purchase by the Funds. If the Investment Adviser believes that the third-party data and/or assessment is incomplete or inaccurate, the Investment Adviser reserves the right to identify exclusions for sovereign issuers through its own assessment. The Investment Adviser also periodically reviews sovereign issuers and if a previously eligible sovereign issuer held in the Fund becomes ineligible, the sovereign issuer will not contribute towards the environmental and/or social characteristics of the Fund and the sovereign issuer will generally be sold within six months from the date of such determination, subject to the best interests of investors in the Fund (save that if the Investment Adviser believes that a score is below a pre-defined threshold for a temporary or a transitory reason, the Investment Adviser may, from time to time, exercise its discretion to keep holding or purchase securities issued by the sovereign issuer).

        What is the policy to assess good governance practices of the investee companies?

        When assessing good governance practices, the Investment Adviser will, as a minimum, have regard to matters it sees relevant to the four prescribed pillars of good governance (i.e., sound management structures, employee relations, remuneration of staff and tax compliance). 

        As described above, the Investment Adviser applies a Negative Screening Policy to the Fund. As part of this, the Investment Adviser excludes companies that, based on available third-party data, are viewed to be in violation of the principles of the UNGC, which include Principle 10 (anti-corruption) and Principle 3 (employee relations).

        In addition, good governance practices are evaluated as part of the Investment Adviser’s ESG integration process. Such practices are assessed through a monitoring process based on available third-party indicators relating to corporate governance and corporate behavior. Third-party data may be inaccurate, incomplete or outdated. Where the corporate governance and corporate behavior indicators cannot be verified through the third-party provider, the Investment Adviser will aim to make such determination through its own assessment based on information that is reasonably available. Where relevant, fundamental analysis of a range of metrics that cover auditing practices, board composition, and executive compensation, among others, is also conducted. The Investment Adviser also engages in regular dialogue with companies on corporate governance issues and exercises its proxy voting rights for the entities in which the Fund invests.

        If a previously eligible company held in a Fund subsequently fails the Investment Adviser’s assessment of good governance practices, the company will generally be sold within six months from the date of such determination, subject to the best interests of investors in the Fund.
        Capital Group's ESG Policy Statement provides additional detail on Capital Group’s ESG philosophy, integration, governance, support and processes, including proxy voting procedures and principles, as well as views on specific ESG issues, including ethical conduct, disclosures and corporate governance. Information on Capital Group’s corporate governance principles can be found in its Proxy Voting Procedures and Principles as well as in the ESG Policy Statement.

        Information on Capital Group’s corporate governance principles can be also found in its Proxy Voting Procedures and Principles, available on:
        https://www.capitalgroup.com/content/dam/cgc/tenants/europe/documents/responsible-investing/global_proxy_voting_guidelines(en).pdf.
        The ESG Policy Statement provides additional detail on Capital Group’s views on specific ESG issues, including ethical conduct, disclosures and corporate governance, available on:
        http://www.capitalgroup.com/content/dam/cgc/tenants/eacg/esg/files/esg-policy-statement(en).pdf

        Proportion of investments

        At least 80% of the Fund's investments are in category “#1 Aligned with E/S characteristics” and so are used to attain the environmental or social characteristics promoted by the Fund (being subject to the Investment Adviser’s binding Negative Screening Policy and carbon constraint). A maximum of 20% of the Fund’s investments including investments non-aligned with the E/S characteristics promoted, securitised debt and/or derivatives are in category “#2 Other”. The Fund does not commit to make any sustainable investments. Cash and/or cash equivalents are excluded from the asset allocation above.
        Cash and cash-equivalents may be held for liquidity purposes to support the Fund’s overall investment objective.

        Monitoring of environmental or social characteristics

        The sustainability indicators used by this Fund to measure the attainment of each of the environmental or social characteristics it promotes are the following:
        The WACI is the metric used to report the Fund’s carbon emissions. It helps show the carbon footprint of the portfolio compared to the index, and is based on Scope 1 and 2 emissions:

        • Scope 1: direct emissions from the investee company’s facilities;

        • Scope 2: indirect emissions linked to the investee company’s energy consumption.

        The Investment Adviser applies ESG and norms-based exclusions to implement a Negative Screening Policy to the Fund’s investments. The Fund will monitor:

        • percentage of corporate issuers failing a screen under the Negative Screening Policy; and
        • percentage of sovereign issuers failing the Investment Adviser’s process for assessing sovereigns.

        The Fund applies investment restrictions rules on a pre-trade basis in portfolio management systems to prohibit investment in companies or issuers based on the exclusion criteria. The portfolio also undergoes regular/systematic post-trade compliance checks. The methodology applied in support of this screening is described in detail under the section “Investment Strategy” of this document.

        In the event that exclusions cannot be verified through the third-party provider(s), the Investment Adviser will aim to identify business involvement activities through its own assessment.

        The Investment Adviser can select investments to the extent they do not trigger a breach of the carbon target and are in line with the Negative Screening Policy.
        Please refer to Capital Group's ESG Negative Screening Policy for further details.

        An additional objective of the Fund is to ensure that the carbon footprint is lower than the securities included in the respective indices. This will not apply to sovereign issuers. The selected indexes are representative of the investment universe of the Fund. The Investment Adviser uses WACI as a metric to measure the Fund’s carbon footprint. In calculating the Fund’s WACI, the Investment Adviser relies on a third-party data provider. In the event that reported carbon emissions data is not available for a particular issuer, the third-party provider may provide estimates using their own methodologies. Issuers that do not have any carbon emissions data available (reported or estimated) are excluded from the WACI calculation. The Investment Adviser assesses the portfolio WACI on an ongoing basis to help the Fund remain within the target level. It is not the intention of the Investment Adviser to automatically exclude higher carbon emitters on an individual basis.

        If the portfolio was in danger of breaching the target, holdings would be adjusted to increase the margin between the portfolio carbon footprint and target level; exposure to selected higher emitters would be reduced with increased exposure to lower emitters, while ensuring the Fund’s investment objective is maintained. It is not the intention of the Investment Adviser to automatically exclude higher carbon emitters on an individual basis. Compliance checks are in place to facilitate this and mitigate the risk of any breach, for example as the result of market movement. Carbon footprint reports use MSCI Carbon Footprint Metrics data.

        Methodologies

        The Fund implements two binding ESG-related criteria: sector- and norms-based screens in the form of exclusions and a weighted carbon footprint target.
        The SFDR classification is related to the European Union’s regulation and is not equivalent to approval or recognition as an ESG Fund by regulators in Asia Pacific.

        The exclusionary screens are implemented pre-trade and the carbon target is managed and monitored at the aggregate portfolio level. The methodology applied in support of this screening is described in detail under the section “Investment Strategy” of this document.

        Data sources and processing

        Data sources

        The Investment Adviser uses a combination of internal research and third-party data providers to gather ESG-related data.
        Third-party providers are used to calculate the carbon footprint of the Fund and for identifying corporate issuers' involvement in activities inconsistent with ESG and norms-based screens. In the event that exclusions cannot be verified through third-party data or if the Investment Adviser believes that third-party data and/or assessment is incomplete or inaccurate, the Investment Adviser reserves the right to identify business involvement activities through its own assessment (including by using other third-party data sources).

        Exclusions for sovereign issuers are identified through the Investment Adviser’s proprietary research. The Investment Adviser leverages data from third-party institutions such as the United Nations and the World Bank to calculate ESG scores across the sovereign universe. Sovereign issuers are evaluated on: (1) a gross national income-adjusted basis to better understand how well a country manages ESG risk relative to its wealth and available resources, as well as (2) on an absolute basis. If the Investment Advisor believes that the third-party data and/or assessment is incomplete or inaccurate, the Investment Adviser reserves the right to identify exclusions for sovereign issuers through its own assessment.

        Data quality and processing

        Capital Group periodically reviews the performance quality of provider organizations and conducts ongoing monitoring and due diligence activities commensurate with the significance of the services provided.

        Data are regularly updated in Capital Group’s internal platforms and made available to relevant teams. When issues are identified in third-party data, they are reported back to the provider(s). The Investment Adviser also applies systematic data quality checks to catch discrepancies and validate with the provider when issues arise.

        Proportion of data that is estimated

        Limitations to methodologies and data

        The methodology and sources relating to the exclusions and the ESG integration approach as a whole have certain limitations. The Fund applies investment restrictions rules on a pre-trade basis in portfolio management systems to prohibit investment in companies or issuers based on the exclusion criteria. The portfolio also undergoes regular/systematic post-trade compliance checks. In the event that exclusions cannot be verified through the third-party provider(s), the Investment Adviser will aim to identify business involvement activities through its own assessment.
        When assessing the ESG characteristics of securities and the selection of such securities, subjective judgement within the investment process might be involved.

        The carbon footprint is measured by the WACI score relative to the relevant index. The WACI is calculated based on securities for which data is reported or estimated. Excluded from the WACI determination are cash holdings, derivatives, sovereigns and securitised products.

        Due diligence

        Members of Capital Group's compliance, risk management and internal audit staff conduct periodic assessments on the design and operating effectiveness of the firm’s ESG activities and key controls. This includes compliance with internal processes and procedures as well as with the regulatory landscape in the jurisdictions in which the company operates. Capital Group meets regularly with the third-party data providers to review the quality of the services provided.

        Pre-trade and post-trade checks are also in place as further explained in section “Monitoring of environmental or social characteristics” above.

        Engagement policies

        Establishing dialogue with companies is an integral part of the Investment Adviser’s investment management service to clients. Capital Group’s investment teams meet on a regular basis with company management, including executive and non-executive directors, chairs and finance directors. This enables the company to engage and generate dialogue on any issues that could affect the company’s long-term prospects, including exposures to sustainability issues.

        Where Capital Group's investment teams identify an issue material to the long-term value of a company or they are concerned about relative ESG performance, Capital Group's investment professionals and governance teams will engage with management. The understanding of these issues, as well as management’s response and the steps they take to minimise any associated risks, forms an important part of Capital Group's assessment of management quality, which itself is a key factor in the stock selection decisions.

        Designated reference benchmark

        The Fund has not designated a reference benchmark to meet the environmental and/or social characteristics it promotes.

        Where can more product-specific information be found?

        More product-specific information can be found in the pre-contractual template:
        https://docs.publifund.com/1_PROSP/LU1577354035/en_LU
        More product-specific information can be found in the periodic reports:
        https://docs.publifund.com/4_AR/LU1577354035/en_LU