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Deutsche Bank's DWS replaces CEO after police raid in greenwashing probe

SINGAPORE (BLOOMBERG) - DWS Group replaced its embattled chief executive officer Asoka Woehrmann just hours after a police raid in a probe of alleged greenwashing at the asset management unit of Deutsche Bank.

Law enforcement officials had on Tuesday morning (May 31) entered the twin towers in Frankfurt where Germany's largest lender is headquartered, as well as the nearby premises of DWS.

The police probe of potential greenwashing underscores the growing scrutiny of money managers as global demand for ESG investments soars. Assets tied to environmental, social and governance issues are expected to surge to more than US$50 trillion (S$68.5 trillion) by 2025, according to estimates from Bloomberg Intelligence.

DWS has faced regulatory probes in the US and Germany after its former chief sustainability officer, Desiree Fixler, alleged last year that the company inflated its ESG credentials. As well as adding to the list of regulatory issues for Deutsche Bank, the raid is a high-profile example of lenders facing legal consequences for alleged greenwashing.

Stefan Hoops, the head of the German lender's corporate bank, will assume the top role at DWS from June 10, according to a statement on Wednesday. His previous responsibility for the corporate bank will be assumed by David Lynne, currently head of the corporate bank in Asia-Pacific based in Singapore.

Growing chorus

The ESG industry has recently faced attacks from a growing chorus of detractors, and even insiders are starting to air their doubts around aspects of the booming investing form.

Jim Whittington, head of responsible investment at Dimensional Fund Advisors with about US$660 billion of assets under management, said the industry is struggling both in terms of real-world impact and returns. Any "promise that you can outperform the market by your insight and evaluating ESG risks probably isn't going to stack up," he said in a recent interview.

HSBC Holdings's asset management unit recently suspended its head of responsible investment after he questioned the sense of focusing on climate change. In the US meanwhile, Republicans have identified ESG as a target in their culture wars, while Tesla's Elon Musk has called ESG a "scam."

The US Securities and Exchange Commission floated tighter rules on Wednesday to ensure a product's name is squarely focused on its actual strategy, with most observers fixating on what the restrictions mean for socially responsible investing. The proposals could hit thousands more funds trading everything from value and growth stocks to bonds and emerging markets.

For Mr Woehrmann, the raid was another blow after he faced scrutiny over his use of personal email for business purposes and the role his relationship with a German businessman played in deals.

While Mr Woehrmann has been a trusted lieutenant of Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing, the negative news flow around DWS has annoyed the bank's top brass, Bloomberg reported late last year. Still, Mr Sewing had said earlier this year that Mr Woehrmann has "done an outstanding job," and in Wednesday's statement thanked him for his "impressive work and performance for DWS and Deutsche Bank."

He took over the DWS job in 2018, soon after the asset manager's poorly received initial public offering. Investors had yanked billions of euros from its funds and Sewing asked Woehrmann to turn the asset manager around after he'd impressed him running the bank's German retail operations. He managed to stem the outflows and morale improved.