Investors have pulled billions from ESG-focused funds in 2026, triggering fund closures and a retreat in proxy voting that asset managers describe as an evolution rather than an abandonment of sustainable investing.
Investors have pulled billions from ESG-focused funds in 2026, triggering fund closures and a retreat in proxy voting that asset managers describe as an evolution rather than an abandonment of sustainable investing.

ESG investing funds have shed billions in assets this year as dozens of products close and shareholder advocacy declines, though asset managers argue the strategy is adapting rather than disappearing, a Wall Street Journal analysis published July 5 shows.
The strategy remains viable even if pursued more quietly, proponents told the Journal, as asset managers continue integrating environmental and social factors into investment decisions without the public branding that defined the boom years.
The outflows mark a sharp reversal from 2020 to 2022, when ESG funds attracted record inflows amid a surge in climate-focused investing. Proxy voting on environmental and social shareholder proposals has also declined, the analysis found, as fund managers reduce public advocacy that had drawn political backlash.
The shift carries implications for the asset management industry. If outflows persist, fund managers may face pressure to consolidate products or rebrand strategies, potentially reducing capital allocated to companies with strong environmental and social profiles. The question for investors is whether the strategy can deliver returns without the tailwind of political and regulatory support.
The pullback reflects a broader reassessment of sustainable investing across the asset management industry. After years of rapid growth, ESG funds became a political flashpoint in the US, with Republican-led states restricting the use of environmental and social criteria in public pension investments. In Europe, where ESG adoption is more advanced, regulators have tightened rules around fund labeling to prevent greenwashing, adding another layer of pressure on asset managers who had marketed ESG products aggressively during the boom.
The decline in proxy voting activity marks one of the clearest indicators of the shift. During the peak ESG era, large asset managers such as BlackRock Inc. and Vanguard Group routinely supported environmental and social shareholder proposals, pushing companies to disclose climate risks and set emissions targets. That engagement has moderated as political pressure mounted and as the investment case for ESG-focused activism came under scrutiny.
A quieter approach takes hold
Some asset managers are responding by dropping the ESG label while maintaining the underlying investment approach. Rather than marketing dedicated ESG funds, firms are integrating sustainability factors into broader investment processes — a shift that preserves the strategy while avoiding the political and reputational risks associated with the ESG brand.
The approach mirrors patterns seen in other areas of asset management where strategies fall out of favor. Fund closures and consolidation are typical during downturns, and the surviving products often emerge with stronger performance records and more focused mandates. For investors, the challenge lies in distinguishing between genuine integration and superficial rebranding — a task made harder by the absence of standardized definitions for what constitutes sustainable investing.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.