Fund research

Legal & General Future World ESG Tilted & Optimised Developed Index: March 2026 fund update

In this update, Passive Investment Analyst Danielle Farley shares our analysis on the manager, process, culture, ESG integration, cost and performance of the Legal & General Future World ESG Tilted & Optimised Developed Index fund.
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Important information - This article isn’t personal advice. If you’re not sure whether an investment is right for you please seek advice. If you choose to invest the value of your investment will rise and fall, so you could get back less than you put in.

  • Legal & General is one of the UK’s leading providers of responsible passive funds

  • We think this fund offers an attractive blend of responsible and passive investing across global markets

  • It could be a good addition to a broader responsible investment portfolio

  • This fund currently features on our Wealth Shortlist of funds chosen by our analysts for their long-term performance potential

How it fits in a portfolio

The Legal & General Future World ESG Tilted & Optimised Developed Index fund provides broad exposure to developed stock markets all over the world, while being mindful of environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues.

An index tracker fund is one of the simplest ways to invest, and we think this fund could be a great low-cost starting point for an investment portfolio aiming to deliver long-term growth in a responsible way. Given the fund’s bias towards the US, it could help diversify a portfolio that is focused on other regions, like Asia and Europe, and add a responsible tilt. It could also be a good addition to a portfolio of other tracker funds.

Manager

Legal & General is one of the largest providers of index tracker funds in the UK and has offered index funds to investors for over 30 years. That means it’s got the resources and expertise to track indices as closely as possible, and the scale to keep charges to a minimum.

Each equity index fund at Legal & General has a primary and secondary manager, although in practice it’s a team-based approach. The primary manager for this fund is Christian Renz who is responsible for managing several international equity index funds. Renz previously worked as a Portfolio Manager at State Street and joined Legal & General in 2023.

The secondary manager for this fund is Tunde Oladimeji. Prior to joining Legal & General in 2018, he worked at Vanguard where he spent six years as a Portfolio Manager & Trader on the Equity Index Team.

Process

This fund aims to track the performance of the Solactive L&G Enhanced ESG Developed Markets Index. The team would preferably invest in every company in the index and in the same proportion. However, this isn’t always possible because it's difficult to buy and sell the smallest companies quickly or at low cost, which could ultimately impact performance. This is known as partial replication and helps the fund closely match the performance of the index.

The fund is currently made up of 1,271 companies with 69% invested in the US and the rest in other developed markets such as Japan, the UK, Canada and Switzerland. While the fund is diversified across many sectors, 42% is invested in communications and technology companies. It predominantly invests in larger companies but also invests in some smaller ones, in line with the benchmark. These companies can be subject to more extreme share price movements, which can increase risk.

The fund won't invest in persistent violators of the UN Global Compact Principles (a UN pact on human rights, labour, the environment and anti-corruption) and companies that are involved in controversial weapons. It also excludes companies that earn a significant proportion of their revenues from tobacco, adult entertainment, gambling, civilian firearms, military weapon system manufacture, thermal coal and oil sands.

The index increases investments in companies that score well on a variety of ESG criteria – from the level of carbon emissions generated, to the number of women on the board and the quality of disclosure on executive pay. It also reduces exposure to companies that score poorly on these measures.

The advantage of reducing investments in poorly-scoring companies, rather than selling their shares completely, is that the Legal & General team can engage to help them improve. An increased investment in exchange for improvement on various factors is also a good incentive, so investors' money could make a positive difference.

The fund also adopts a decarbonisation pathway. This means it aims to reduce emissions by 50% compared to the non-ESG benchmark and then achieve at least a 7% reduction in carbon emissions per year until 2050. The goal is to align the fund with the Paris Agreement, which aims to limit the temperature rise caused by global emissions to 1.5°C above pre-industrial times. We think this is a positive step, but it increases the fund’s complexity.

Culture

Legal & General has developed its passive fund range over the last three decades. The company manages around £510bn in tracker funds, allowing it to offer a wide range of index-tracking options.

It’s built a team of experienced passive fund specialists and they’re innovative too. If an index doesn’t exist for a sector they’d like to track, they’ll often work with index providers, like Solactive, to create a suitable index for them to track.

The team managing this fund work closely with various risk departments across the business. We believe this provides support and adds challenge where appropriate.

Employees are also encouraged to participate in Legal & General’s share save scheme which should encourage them to be more engaged with the growth of the company. In addition, a portion of fund managers’ bonuses are invested into the funds they manage. By doing this, their interests are further aligned with the investors in the fund.

ESG Integration

Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM) is predominantly a passive investor, but we’re impressed with the extent to which they’ve woven Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) matters into their culture. Being a mostly passive fund house hasn’t stopped them being innovative when it comes to ESG. In May 2019, the firm launched its ‘Future World’ range of funds, which this fund is part of.

The Future World range incorporates LGIM’s ‘Climate Impact Pledge’, which is their commitment to assess and engage with the world’s largest companies on how well they manage the implications of climate change. Engagement is carried out with reference to comprehensive ‘sector guides’, which outline best practice and LGIM’s expectations for companies in each key sector. Companies that consistently show a lack of awareness of climate change, and don’t respond positively to engagement, are sold from the Future World funds.

In 2019, LGIM established its Global Research and Engagement Platform, which brings together representatives from the Investment and Stewardship teams, in order to unify their engagement efforts. Engagement is conducted in line with the firm’s comprehensive engagement policy. A detailed description of the firm’s engagement and voting activity (including case studies) is available in its annual Active Ownership report. Quarterly Engagement reports are also available.

LGIM’s Stewardship team is responsible for exercising voting rights globally, both for LGIM’s active and index funds. Voting decisions are publicly available through a tool which allows a user to search for any company to find out how LGIM voted, and a detailed rationale is provided for votes against management and abstentions.

Cost

The fund has an ongoing annual charge of 0.20%, but we’ve secured a discount for HL clients of 0.05%. This means you will pay a net ongoing charge of 0.15%. This is more expensive than some other global market tracker funds, but we think it's a reasonable price to pay given the additional ESG analysis that takes place.

We recently made some changes to the amount clients pay to invest with us. Find out more about these changes

Our platform charge of up to 0.35% per year also applies, except in the HL Junior ISA, where no platform charge applies.

Performance

Since the fund launched in April 2019, it’s done a good job of tracking its benchmark, gaining 133%* over this time. As expected from an index tracker fund, it’s fallen behind the benchmark over the long term because of the costs involved in running the fund. However, the tools used by the managers have helped to keep performance close to the index. Remember, past performance isn’t a guide to future returns.

Over the past 12 months, the fund has risen 13.61%. Despite most global stock markets performing well, it’s been a volatile year with tariff uncertainty, trade tensions and ongoing conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East.

The US stock market contributed the most to the fund’s performance as it makes up a large part of the global market. While returns were positive, the US lagged most other major markets due to concerns that Trump’s tariffs could cause inflation to rise again and slow growth in the US.

Japan was the next largest contributor to returns. The Japanese stock market reached a new all-time high in December, supported by government policies aimed at boosting growth and a more optimistic backdrop under new Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. Continued improvements in corporate governance have also attracted more investors.

Denmark was the weakest major developed market. This was mainly driven by sharp falls in Novo Nordisk’s share price following downgraded growth forecasts, disappointing clinical trial outcomes and rising competition from US rival Eli Lilly. Novo Nordisk, best known for its weight loss drugs, makes up 35% of Denmark’s stock market, which means it has a big impact on the performance of the broader market.

Due to the exclusions and ESG tilting mechanism, we expect the fund’s performance to differ slightly from non-ESG developed market index tracker funds.

Given Legal & General’s size, experience and expertise running index tracker funds, we expect the fund to continue to track its benchmark closely in the future, though there are no guarantees.

Annual Percentage Growth

Feb 21 – Feb 22

Feb 22 – Feb 23

Feb 23 – Feb 24

Feb 24 – Feb 25

Feb 25 – Feb 26

Legal & General Future World ESG Tilted & Optimised Developed Index

13.26%

2.10%

21.46%

14.36%

13.61%

Past performance isn't a guide to future returns.
*Source: Lipper IM to 28/02/2026.
Important information - Please remember the value of investments, and any income from them, can fall as well as rise so you could get back less than you invest. This article is provided to help you make your own investment decisions, it is not advice. If you are unsure of the suitability of an investment for your circumstances please seek advice. No news or research item is a personal recommendation to deal.
Written by
Danielle Farley
Danielle Farley
Passive Investment Analyst

Danielle is a member of our Fund Research team and is responsible for analysing passive funds and ETFs across all sectors. She has worked at HL since 2018 and draws experience from different areas of the business.

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Article history
Published: 11th March 2026