PwC’s Global Investor Survey 2023

Trust, tech and transformation: Navigating investor priorities

Global investor survey hero
  • Insight
  • 10 minute read
  • 29 Mar 2024

Investors want to better understand how companies are managing crises and staying resilient, while creating and protecting long-term value in today’s fracturing world. They are looking closely at two areas—emerging technology and sustainability—to gauge whether companies can seize opportunities for reinvention and business transformation, or will instead succumb to rivals.

These are among the findings of PwC’s Global Investor Survey 2023. The survey, now in its third consecutive year, queried 345 investors and analysts across geographies, assets classes, and investment approaches for insights into the factors that most affect the companies they invest in and cover. Through the survey, and follow-up interviews with investment professionals, we explored how investors assess threats and opportunities, allocate capital and determine what is important to their decision-making. We also asked about the degree to which they trust—or mistrust—the information they have available to make decisions. (For more, see the Note on methodology at the end of this report.)

In our interviews, we heard repeatedly that investors want clearer, more consistent and more comparable information on the material issues facing companies. They want a better grasp of how companies are approaching the potential trade-offs between short-term crises and long-term business transformation. Addressing this challenge will benefit companies, too, as boards and management teams seek to better engage with their stakeholders and ensure that material risks and opportunities are embedded deeply in governance and strategy, and are transparently reported.

Among the key findings:

Economic worries ease

Investors’ worries about macroeconomic volatility and inflation have declined from last year’s high levels, although these risks remain significant relative to others. ‘A continuation from…last year is inflation,’ said one analyst we spoke to. ‘We’ve had free money for 12 or 13 years; now the cost of capital matters.’ Whilst less significant relative to others, it is also important to note that exposure to climate change and social inequality grew compared to last year—highlighting a shift in focus for investors.

A focus on technology

Artificial intelligence (AI) and emerging technologies are areas of prime investor interest. Sixty-one percent of investors said that accelerated adoption of AI is very important or extremely important, despite concerns about the risks. Investors identified technological change as the most likely factor to influence how companies create value over the next three years; and investors are interested to know how those technologies will be deployed and used in order to support their investment analysis.

Sustainability matters

Three-quarters of respondents said that how companies manage sustainability-related risks and opportunities is an important factor in their investment decision-making. Our data also shows that they want better information, including the cost of meeting sustainability commitments and a clear road map for achieving them, combined with a view of what it means for financial statement assumptions. Beyond that, investors want details on the impact of company actions on the environment, and on society.

A broad trust deficit

Investors depend on information from a range of sources, including companies and third parties, to make investment decisions. But they do so in an environment of diminished trust, our survey finds. When we asked investors about the degree to which they use—and trust—17 sources of information, the greatest variances were in narrative reporting and sustainability disclosures. Investors are triangulating one information source against another, likely because they don’t trust any single source entirely.

Awash in greenwashing

94% of investors believe that corporate reporting on sustainability performance contains at least some unsupported claims, an increase from last year. That may explain the support that investors expressed for new disclosure requirements, such as those from the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB), which could lead to more consistent, comparable reporting on sustainability. In line with our findings last year, the survey also highlighted that third-party assurance would increase confidence in sustainability reporting.

Our survey points to three areas where companies should act to address issues that matter most to investors. First, companies must convince investors that they are keeping up with the pace of accelerating technology. Next, they must find ways to prove to investors that they can continue to create value and meet their sustainability commitments. Finally, to meet investor demands for better information, companies must recommit to building trust in what matters.

1. Prioritising future technologies and business reinvention

Recent developments in AI and other emerging technologies have excited companies with the possibility of everything from improved productivity to new sources of top line growth and new business models. Investors are interested in this, too, ranking technological change (59%) as the factor most likely to influence how companies create and capture value in the coming three years. Further, investors ranked innovation and emerging technologies (including AI, the metaverse and blockchain) among their top five priorities when evaluating companies.

2. Embedding sustainability to drive value

Sustainability is clearly on the minds of investors, and they are pressing to understand how companies incorporate sustainability considerations into strategic decision-making, risk management, and their financial statements. Investors want to know how a company’s sustainability plans square with its business model and, ultimately, its prospects for creating long-term value.

The survey responses reflect these broader concerns. For example, investors largely agree that ESG should be directly embedded into company strategy, and that companies should make expenditures that address ESG issues relevant to their business—even in cases where doing so would reduce short-term profitability. How a company manages its sustainability-related risks and opportunities is vital to investor decision-making. ‘We want to understand what those [sustainability] commitments actually mean for how [a company is] deploying capital or positioning the business,’ said one investor.

3. Addressing the reporting trust deficit

Our survey highlighted a strong undercurrent of doubt among investors as they assess the reliability of the information they use. They are clear about areas where they want more and better reporting across both technology and sustainability. We have also noted that they lack trust in the sources of information they are using.

Against this backdrop, companies will need to think hard about what matters most to their investors and other stakeholders. With better information in hand, companies will be better able to communicate a more complete, interconnected and coherent narrative to investors. Investors still place their greatest trust in financial statements and note disclosures. By contrast, sustainability disclosures were among the least trusted information sources published by companies.

Contact us

Evren Sezer

Evren Sezer

Sustainability Platform Leader, PwC Türkiye

Tel: +90 212 326 6468