(Forbes) Three months ago, in what seems like another age, I wrote about the concept of dynamic materiality. It was developed by Thomas Kuh, Andre Shepley, Greg Bala, and Michael Flowers of Truvalue Labs (TVL), a San Francisco-based technology company (to whom I’m an advisor) which uses AI and big data to develop signals on a variety of intangible risk factors. The basic idea of dynamic materiality is that what investors consider to be the material environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues changes over time. This can happen slowly, as with climate change and gender diversity, or most quickly, as with plastics in the oceans.
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