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01 Jun 2022, 14:19
Benjamin Wehrmann

Greenwashing investigation raid shakes up Deutsche Bank investment subsidiary’s management

Clean Energy Wire / ARD

A raid on the offices of Deutsche Bank’s asset management subsidiary DWS over alleged greenwashing activities has shaken the company’s management and led to the resignation of CEO Asoka Wöhrmann. Accusations regarding fraudulent investment practices had become a “burden” for himself and the company, Wöhrmann said. On 31 May, about 50 investigators searched the premises at DWS and parent company Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt am Main focusing on “unspecified” employees of the companies, public broadcaster ARD reports.

Financial supervisory authority BaFin said DWS had been investigated over greenwashing allegations since the beginning of the year to clarify whether the asset management company had tricked customers into buying financial products that were irregularly labelled as sustainable investments. Dubious criteria setting and false reporting on progress in sustainable finance development could have been among business practices carried out by DWS, BaFin said after carrying out initial research on the accusations. “Contrary to what was said in customer information leaflets, only a minority of DWS funds are managed along ESG [environmental, social, governance] criteria,” investigators said. Often, sustainable ESG factors did not play a role at all in investment decisions, they added.

Magdalena Senn of NGO Finanzwende commented the raid and Wöhrmann’s resignation are indicative of a long-standing problem in sustainable finance. “Greenwashing is not a petty crime,” Senn said, stressing that it amounted to severe investment fraud if proven true. She said the incident could become a “signal” to other asset managers. “Providers offering investments labelled as sustainable will now examine more closely whether their own criteria match their promises.”

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