What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (2024)

*On the 4th of December, the European Supervisor Authorities published a report containing proposed amendments to SFDR’s regulatory technical standards.

The proposals are:

  • Additional disclosures for sustainable investments
  • Introducing new, and specifying existing, PAIs
  • New disclosures on decarbonisation targets
  • Revisions to disclosure templates

The European Commission will now take until March 2024 to decide on the proposals. To find out more, read the report or contact a member of our team. The information in this article is up to date as of December 2023.

SFDR Blog Series: Article 8 vs Article 9 Classification

The primary aim of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) is to tackle greenwashing in the financial sector. As part of this mandate, the regulation requires fund managers to classify their funds based on their sustainability performance. The three classifications are Article 6, 8, and 9 funds. We outline the differences between these fund types in the first article of our SFDR blog series. Today’s article explores these differences with a focus on Article 8 and Article 9, in light of recent legislative clarification.

SFDR Level 1, implemented in March 2021, required fund managers to classify their existing funds according to Articles 6, 8, or 9.

Level 2 of this regulation is due to be enforced from January 1st 2023. It requires managers to disclose detailed information to reinforce these initial classifications. The first draft of the Level 2 requirements, known as the Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS), was originally published in early 2021. Since this initial publication, there have been a number of redrafts. Q&As have also been published by the European Commission (EC), clarifying technical details with regard to the implementation of Level 2 regulations. Part of the supplementary information provided pertains to the requirements for Article 8 and 9 fund classification. These requirements, until recently, have been unclear.

In this blog, we outline the key takeaways from these recent publications. We provide fund managers with a clear understanding of the requirements for Article 8 and 9 classifications. We also introduce the concept of Article 8+ funds.

Before we dive into these requirements, there are two elements of SFDR that are worth emphasising.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (1)

The two crucial elements of SFDR

Firstly, whilst this blog focuses on fund-level disclosures and the associated asset-level disclosures, there are other firmwide disclosures required for SFDR compliance. Please refer to this earlier blog in our series for further detail.

Secondly, it is important to note that there are still minimum disclosure requirements associated with being classified as an Article 6 fund. This blog, however, focuses on the additional disclosures required for Article 8 and Article 9 classification. Funds are automatically classified under Article 6, unless proven otherwise by the fund manager.

The remainder of the blog is structured as follows: firstly, disclosures specific to Article 8, 8+, and 9 funds are outlined. Secondly, disclosures common to all of these funds are then summarised. This should not be treated as a comprehensive list for compliance purposes. It aims to cover the key disclosure areas for fund managers in a succinct manner.

Fund-specific disclosures

Article 8 funds: The promotion of environmental and/or social characteristics

As suggested by its definition, disclosures for Article 8 classification centre around the environmental/social characteristics promoted by the fund. These details must be provided in pre-contractual and periodic documentation.

Characteristics can be expressed in the form of investment policies, goals, or targets. The fund manager must select the particular fund characteristics and provide detail on how these are attained. Sustainability indicators must therefore be defined, in order to measure these characteristics. The EC recommends the use of relevant principal adverse impact indicators (PAIs) to act as sustainability indicators. For more information on the PAIs, head to our previous blog on 'Introducing the Principal Adverse Impacts (PAIs)' and download the Full List of PAIs we have put together. PAIs provide objective, comparable measures that can be tracked over the lifetime of the portfolio. These protocols are also easy to implement, as they are already required for other SFDR disclosures.

When defining an Article 8 fund, the use of the term “promotion” can be widely interpreted. In 2021, the EC clarified that promotion can encompass claims, information, reports, disclosures, or even impressions that portfolio assets consider the prescribed environmental/social characteristics.

The Commission goes on to list a wide range of document types in which these “impressions” could be stated. (Click here for the full list). The range of possible disclosures has become a cause for confusion for fund managers. For example, one suggested format for promoting environmental/social characteristics is an exclusion policy relevant to these characteristics. This could involve the exclusion of coal-generated power, for instance. However, it is unclear how the PAIs can track progress towards this “characteristic”.

Article 8+ funds: The promotion of environmental and/or social characteristics with a minimum commitment to making sustainable investments

There has been a general market consensus that Article 8 classification requirements in their current form are not sufficiently stringent. This has led to a wide range of financial products, all self-classified under Article 8.

These range from funds with minimal exclusion policies to funds defining their investment strategy according to environmental or social concerns. In response to this, the concept of Article 8+ funds was developed by the financial sector, rather than the regulators. Article 8+ funds (or mid-green funds) differ from Article 8 funds (or light-green funds) in that a proportion of the portfolio must be classified under “sustainable investments”, as defined by the SFDR.

There are the three key requirements for this type of investment:

  • Contribution to an environmental or social objective.
  • Compliance with the “do no significant harm” principle (for which disclosure of the PAI indicators is required).
  • Adherence to “good governance” (discussed later).

For Article 8+ funds, a classification process must be embedded into pre-contractual and periodic disclosures to determine whether or not portfolio assets classify as sustainable investments under SFDR regulation. Fortunately, there is significant overlap between sustainable investment classification and alignment with the EU Taxonomy. Given the detailed technical screening criteria available to assess Taxonomy alignment (discussed in a previous blog in the SFDR series), the process of classifying an investment as sustainable is made easier if the activity falls within the Taxonomy.

Article 9 funds: The objective of the fund is sustainable investment

Now that the distinctions between Article 8 and 8+ funds have been outlined, it is relatively easy to establish the requirements for Article 9 fund classification. As discussed, Article 8+ funds differentiate themselves from Article 8 funds by containing a proportion of “sustainable investments” in their portfolio.

Article 9 funds take this one step further by requiring that all assets be sustainable investments (with certain exceptions related to hedging or liquidity). As such, additional disclosures that are required for Article 9 classification take a similar form to Article 8+ disclosures, with the additional requirement that investments are exclusively classified as sustainable.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (2)

Disclosures required for all Article 8, Article 8+, and Article 9 classifications

Website disclosures

Though there will be some variation between Articles 8 and 9, the information that must be published on the fund manager’s website is similar for both fund types. Both in terms of content and format. Website disclosures overlap with the pre-contractual disclosures described above, as well as further detail regarding data management and due diligence processes.

Consideration of the PAIs

All funds regulated under SFDR must detail, in both periodic and pre-contractual documentation, how the principal adverse impacts on sustainability factors are considered. Beyond an explanatory disclosure, fund managers are encouraged to use quantifications in the form of the PAI indicators.

Technically, consideration of the PAIs is a firm-wide disclosure. However, in May 2022, the EC clarified that the PAI indicators could be applied to individual financial products, without the requirement for firm-wide compliance.

Fund alignment

Both Article 8 and 9 funds require disclosures detailing fund composition, presented in the form of investment proportions. This is intended to provide investors with a clear understanding of the fund’s profile.

Article 8 classification requires the disclosure of the proportion of investments aligned with its promoted characteristics, and both Article 8+ and Article 9 classifications require the disclosure of the proportion of investments aligned with environmental/social objectives, as well as Taxonomy alignment.

Good governance practices

A final requirement for both Article 8 and 9 classification is the implementation of a screening policy to ensure that all portfolio companies practice good governance. It is worth emphasising that this does not apply to other asset classes, such as real estate assets.

The RTS states that this policy should broadly cover sound management structures, employee relations, remuneration, and tax, but this is not further defined. Once again, this leaves this requirement largely open to the interpretation of fund managers. We recommend that policies are drafted with the portfolio companies in mind to ensure relevancy. Possible starting points for drafting this policy can be found in the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.

Fund labelling

It is worth noting that only Article 8+ and 9 funds can use the term “sustainable” in the fund name. Similarly, the terms “impact” and “impact investing” should only be used by funds that intend to generate measurable and positive social/environmental impact.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (3)

To conclude

As further SFDR clarification is provided, and as ESG measurement regulations continue to evolve, every asset manager must take action to adapt to these changes. Managers and investment decision makers that fail to integrate these new rules in their business plan risk failing to meet European - or even global - standards.

ESG management is an emerging topic, and governing bodies are responding to calls for further clarification. We review and report on every new update in the field to help market participants better understand sustainable finance. Follow our SFDR blog series to find out more.

Contact us for more information on how our intuitive software can further streamline regulatory adherence.

The SFDR Blog Series continues...

  • Our top FAQs for all things SFDR

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (4)

Navigation

Navigation

Section

*On the 4th of December, the European Supervisor Authorities published a report containing proposed amendments to SFDR’s regulatory technical standards.

The proposals are:

  • Additional disclosures for sustainable investments
  • Introducing new, and specifying existing, PAIs
  • New disclosures on decarbonisation targets
  • Revisions to disclosure templates

The European Commission will now take until March 2024 to decide on the proposals. To find out more, read the report or contact a member of our team. The information in this article is up to date as of December 2023.

SFDR Blog Series: Article 8 vs Article 9 Classification

The primary aim of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) is to tackle greenwashing in the financial sector. As part of this mandate, the regulation requires fund managers to classify their funds based on their sustainability performance. The three classifications are Article 6, 8, and 9 funds. We outline the differences between these fund types in the first article of our SFDR blog series. Today’s article explores these differences with a focus on Article 8 and Article 9, in light of recent legislative clarification.

SFDR Level 1, implemented in March 2021, required fund managers to classify their existing funds according to Articles 6, 8, or 9.

Level 2 of this regulation is due to be enforced from January 1st 2023. It requires managers to disclose detailed information to reinforce these initial classifications. The first draft of the Level 2 requirements, known as the Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS), was originally published in early 2021. Since this initial publication, there have been a number of redrafts. Q&As have also been published by the European Commission (EC), clarifying technical details with regard to the implementation of Level 2 regulations. Part of the supplementary information provided pertains to the requirements for Article 8 and 9 fund classification. These requirements, until recently, have been unclear.

In this blog, we outline the key takeaways from these recent publications. We provide fund managers with a clear understanding of the requirements for Article 8 and 9 classifications. We also introduce the concept of Article 8+ funds.

Before we dive into these requirements, there are two elements of SFDR that are worth emphasising.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (5)

The two crucial elements of SFDR

Firstly, whilst this blog focuses on fund-level disclosures and the associated asset-level disclosures, there are other firmwide disclosures required for SFDR compliance. Please refer to this earlier blog in our series for further detail.

Secondly, it is important to note that there are still minimum disclosure requirements associated with being classified as an Article 6 fund. This blog, however, focuses on the additional disclosures required for Article 8 and Article 9 classification. Funds are automatically classified under Article 6, unless proven otherwise by the fund manager.

The remainder of the blog is structured as follows: firstly, disclosures specific to Article 8, 8+, and 9 funds are outlined. Secondly, disclosures common to all of these funds are then summarised. This should not be treated as a comprehensive list for compliance purposes. It aims to cover the key disclosure areas for fund managers in a succinct manner.

Fund-specific disclosures

Article 8 funds: The promotion of environmental and/or social characteristics

As suggested by its definition, disclosures for Article 8 classification centre around the environmental/social characteristics promoted by the fund. These details must be provided in pre-contractual and periodic documentation.

Characteristics can be expressed in the form of investment policies, goals, or targets. The fund manager must select the particular fund characteristics and provide detail on how these are attained. Sustainability indicators must therefore be defined, in order to measure these characteristics. The EC recommends the use of relevant principal adverse impact indicators (PAIs) to act as sustainability indicators. For more information on the PAIs, head to our previous blog on 'Introducing the Principal Adverse Impacts (PAIs)' and download the Full List of PAIs we have put together. PAIs provide objective, comparable measures that can be tracked over the lifetime of the portfolio. These protocols are also easy to implement, as they are already required for other SFDR disclosures.

When defining an Article 8 fund, the use of the term “promotion” can be widely interpreted. In 2021, the EC clarified that promotion can encompass claims, information, reports, disclosures, or even impressions that portfolio assets consider the prescribed environmental/social characteristics.

The Commission goes on to list a wide range of document types in which these “impressions” could be stated. (Click here for the full list). The range of possible disclosures has become a cause for confusion for fund managers. For example, one suggested format for promoting environmental/social characteristics is an exclusion policy relevant to these characteristics. This could involve the exclusion of coal-generated power, for instance. However, it is unclear how the PAIs can track progress towards this “characteristic”.

Article 8+ funds: The promotion of environmental and/or social characteristics with a minimum commitment to making sustainable investments

There has been a general market consensus that Article 8 classification requirements in their current form are not sufficiently stringent. This has led to a wide range of financial products, all self-classified under Article 8.

These range from funds with minimal exclusion policies to funds defining their investment strategy according to environmental or social concerns. In response to this, the concept of Article 8+ funds was developed by the financial sector, rather than the regulators. Article 8+ funds (or mid-green funds) differ from Article 8 funds (or light-green funds) in that a proportion of the portfolio must be classified under “sustainable investments”, as defined by the SFDR.

There are the three key requirements for this type of investment:

  • Contribution to an environmental or social objective.
  • Compliance with the “do no significant harm” principle (for which disclosure of the PAI indicators is required).
  • Adherence to “good governance” (discussed later).

For Article 8+ funds, a classification process must be embedded into pre-contractual and periodic disclosures to determine whether or not portfolio assets classify as sustainable investments under SFDR regulation. Fortunately, there is significant overlap between sustainable investment classification and alignment with the EU Taxonomy. Given the detailed technical screening criteria available to assess Taxonomy alignment (discussed in a previous blog in the SFDR series), the process of classifying an investment as sustainable is made easier if the activity falls within the Taxonomy.

Article 9 funds: The objective of the fund is sustainable investment

Now that the distinctions between Article 8 and 8+ funds have been outlined, it is relatively easy to establish the requirements for Article 9 fund classification. As discussed, Article 8+ funds differentiate themselves from Article 8 funds by containing a proportion of “sustainable investments” in their portfolio.

Article 9 funds take this one step further by requiring that all assets be sustainable investments (with certain exceptions related to hedging or liquidity). As such, additional disclosures that are required for Article 9 classification take a similar form to Article 8+ disclosures, with the additional requirement that investments are exclusively classified as sustainable.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (6)

Disclosures required for all Article 8, Article 8+, and Article 9 classifications

Website disclosures

Though there will be some variation between Articles 8 and 9, the information that must be published on the fund manager’s website is similar for both fund types. Both in terms of content and format. Website disclosures overlap with the pre-contractual disclosures described above, as well as further detail regarding data management and due diligence processes.

Consideration of the PAIs

All funds regulated under SFDR must detail, in both periodic and pre-contractual documentation, how the principal adverse impacts on sustainability factors are considered. Beyond an explanatory disclosure, fund managers are encouraged to use quantifications in the form of the PAI indicators.

Technically, consideration of the PAIs is a firm-wide disclosure. However, in May 2022, the EC clarified that the PAI indicators could be applied to individual financial products, without the requirement for firm-wide compliance.

Fund alignment

Both Article 8 and 9 funds require disclosures detailing fund composition, presented in the form of investment proportions. This is intended to provide investors with a clear understanding of the fund’s profile.

Article 8 classification requires the disclosure of the proportion of investments aligned with its promoted characteristics, and both Article 8+ and Article 9 classifications require the disclosure of the proportion of investments aligned with environmental/social objectives, as well as Taxonomy alignment.

Good governance practices

A final requirement for both Article 8 and 9 classification is the implementation of a screening policy to ensure that all portfolio companies practice good governance. It is worth emphasising that this does not apply to other asset classes, such as real estate assets.

The RTS states that this policy should broadly cover sound management structures, employee relations, remuneration, and tax, but this is not further defined. Once again, this leaves this requirement largely open to the interpretation of fund managers. We recommend that policies are drafted with the portfolio companies in mind to ensure relevancy. Possible starting points for drafting this policy can be found in the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.

Fund labelling

It is worth noting that only Article 8+ and 9 funds can use the term “sustainable” in the fund name. Similarly, the terms “impact” and “impact investing” should only be used by funds that intend to generate measurable and positive social/environmental impact.

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (7)

To conclude

As further SFDR clarification is provided, and as ESG measurement regulations continue to evolve, every asset manager must take action to adapt to these changes. Managers and investment decision makers that fail to integrate these new rules in their business plan risk failing to meet European - or even global - standards.

ESG management is an emerging topic, and governing bodies are responding to calls for further clarification. We review and report on every new update in the field to help market participants better understand sustainable finance. Follow our SFDR blog series to find out more.

Contact us for more information on how our intuitive software can further streamline regulatory adherence.

The SFDR Blog Series continues...

  • Our top FAQs for all things SFDR

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (8)

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? (2024)

FAQs

What are the requirements for SFDR article 8 and 9? ›

All Article 8 and Article 9 products are required to disclose if they consider Principal Adverse Impact indicators. These capture the potential negative impacts that a financial product may have on sustainability factors relating to: Environmental, social, and employee matters. Respect for human rights.

What are the requirements for Article 8 of the SFDR? ›

Under Article 8, companies are required to demonstrate that their investment products favour environmental and/or social characteristics. Article 8 funds promote sustainable characteristics by taking ESG criteria into account as part of the investment process, but without pursuing a sustainable investment objective.

What are the Article 9 requirements for Sfdr? ›

Article 9 requirements:

The primary investment objective is sustainability. There is no significant harm done to other environmental- or social objectives. Information about sustainability characteristics and their impact is transparently disclosed.

What are the SFDR requirements? ›

The SFDR has 2 levels of disclosure:

Entity-Level 1 Disclosure Requirements: obligations for the entities themselves concerning their policies on decision-making on sustainability risks. Product-level 2 Disclosure Requirements: obligations concerning the financial products and their sustainability risks.

What is Article 8 of the SFDR periodic reporting? ›

Funds classified as Article 8 or 9 under SFDR must provide periodic reports on the attainment of the environmental/social characteristics (Article 8) or the sustainable investment objective (Article 9) and other associated metrics and information.

What are the requirements of Article 8? ›

Article 8 funds must disclose their asset allocation, in terms of the minimum proportion of investments promoting sustainable characteristics and optionally the proportion of sustainable investments. Typically, Article 8 funds allocate over 80% of their investments towards the promotion of sustainable characteristics.

What is the mandatory reporting for SFDR? ›

SFDR disclosure requirements can be divided into organization-level reporting and fund/product-level reporting. At the organization level, firms must at least disclose: the potentially negative impacts an investment decision may have on ESG factors, such as water usage, energy consumption, biodiversity or human rights.

Do article 9 funds have to be taxonomy aligned? ›

For Article 9 funds, if the fund has an environmental objective and intends to make taxonomy-aligned investments, they should specify a minimum proportion of intended taxonomy-aligned investments in their pre-contractual reports. If they do not intend to make taxonomy-aligned investments, they should indicate 0.

Who is exempt from SFDR? ›

Simply put, SFDR reporting applies to financial market participants (FMPs) and financial advisors operating within the EU, with more than 500 employees. Financial market participants with fewer than 500 employees are exempt from producing a principal adverse impact statement.

Does SFDR apply to all funds? ›

The SFDR requires asset managers such as AIFMs and UCITS managers to provide prescript and standardised disclosures on how ESG factors are integrated at both an entity and product level. A significant portion of the SFDR applies to all asset managers, whether or not they have an express ESG or sustainability focus.

What is the new regulation for SFDR? ›

On 20 February 2023, further amendments to SFDR Level II came into force, with Commission Delegated Regulation 2023/3633. These amendments enable financial entities to disclose, and investors to identify, any environmentally sustainable fossil gas and nuclear related activities that their financial products invest in.

What is the SFDR regulation in a nutshell? ›

The Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) imposes sustainability disclosure requirements on financial actors in the EU covering a broad range of environmental, social and governance (ESG) metrics at both entity- and product-level.

What is the threshold for SFDR reporting? ›

Financial market participants that employ more than 500 employees in a calendar year are required to disclose entity and product level sustainability practices. Organizations with fewer than 500 employees may still be required to report product level ESG practices according to SFDR legislation.

What is Article 8 and 9 of the SFDR regulation? ›

Compared to article 8 funds, which should promote environmental or social characteristics and have good governance practices, article 9 funds should make a positive impact on society or the environment through sustainable investment and have a non-financial objective at the core of their offering.

What is the Article 8 disclosure obligation? ›

The Article 8 disclosure obligation requires In-scope Entities to include information on how and to what extent their activities are associated with taxonomy-aligned economic activities in their non-financial statements or consolidated non-financial statements.

Who needs to follow SFDR? ›

The SFDR applies to financial advisers and market participants within the EU, particularly those managing assets and providing investment advice. While it primarily targets larger firms with over 500 employees, smaller firms are also encouraged to comply with certain aspects of the regulation.

What are the obligations of SFDR reporting? ›

Under the SFDR, applicable market participants within the EU are compelled to divulge information regarding: Their sustainability practices (firm-level) Their financial products (product-level) A Principle Adverse Impacts (PAI) statement covering both the firm and product levels.

What is SFDR Article 7 requirements? ›

SFDR article 7

According to Deloitte article 7 adheres to, “Disclosure on a product-level (article 7 SFDR), by publishing PAI information in pre-contractual financial product documentation, such as fund information memoranda or prospectuses, this requirement applies to financial market participants only.”

Top Articles
What is a Brokerage Account & How to Open One
What Will Humans Be Doing in Logistics in 2040?
English Bulldog Puppies For Sale Under 1000 In Florida
Katie Pavlich Bikini Photos
Gamevault Agent
Pieology Nutrition Calculator Mobile
Hocus Pocus Showtimes Near Harkins Theatres Yuma Palms 14
Hendersonville (Tennessee) – Travel guide at Wikivoyage
Compare the Samsung Galaxy S24 - 256GB - Cobalt Violet vs Apple iPhone 16 Pro - 128GB - Desert Titanium | AT&T
Vardis Olive Garden (Georgioupolis, Kreta) ✈️ inkl. Flug buchen
Craigslist Dog Kennels For Sale
Things To Do In Atlanta Tomorrow Night
Non Sequitur
Crossword Nexus Solver
How To Cut Eelgrass Grounded
Pac Man Deviantart
Alexander Funeral Home Gallatin Obituaries
Energy Healing Conference Utah
Geometry Review Quiz 5 Answer Key
Hobby Stores Near Me Now
Icivics The Electoral Process Answer Key
Allybearloves
Bible Gateway passage: Revelation 3 - New Living Translation
Yisd Home Access Center
Pearson Correlation Coefficient
Home
Shadbase Get Out Of Jail
Gina Wilson Angle Addition Postulate
Celina Powell Lil Meech Video: A Controversial Encounter Shakes Social Media - Video Reddit Trend
Walmart Pharmacy Near Me Open
Marquette Gas Prices
A Christmas Horse - Alison Senxation
Ou Football Brainiacs
Access a Shared Resource | Computing for Arts + Sciences
Vera Bradley Factory Outlet Sunbury Products
Pixel Combat Unblocked
Movies - EPIC Theatres
Cvs Sport Physicals
Mercedes W204 Belt Diagram
Mia Malkova Bio, Net Worth, Age & More - Magzica
'Conan Exiles' 3.0 Guide: How To Unlock Spells And Sorcery
Teenbeautyfitness
Where Can I Cash A Huntington National Bank Check
Topos De Bolos Engraçados
Sand Castle Parents Guide
Gregory (Five Nights at Freddy's)
Grand Valley State University Library Hours
Hello – Cornerstone Chapel
Stoughton Commuter Rail Schedule
Nfsd Web Portal
Selly Medaline
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Kieth Sipes

Last Updated:

Views: 5669

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (47 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Kieth Sipes

Birthday: 2001-04-14

Address: Suite 492 62479 Champlin Loop, South Catrice, MS 57271

Phone: +9663362133320

Job: District Sales Analyst

Hobby: Digital arts, Dance, Ghost hunting, Worldbuilding, Kayaking, Table tennis, 3D printing

Introduction: My name is Kieth Sipes, I am a zany, rich, courageous, powerful, faithful, jolly, excited person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.