Wyoming has become the latest state to float legislation that restricts state funds from being invested with firms that consider environmental, social or governance factors in their actions or investment strategies.
Two of the state’s largest funds warned the bill would shrink the universe of asset managers willing to partner with the state and thus decrease their revenues.
The Wyoming House of Representatives introduced the
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The Wyoming Retirement System estimated its pension fund would lose $193 million in fiscal year 2026, $387 million in 2027 and $580 million in 2028 compared to the status quo, which includes outperformance relative to the WRS reference portfolio.
The Treasurer’s office did not estimate the impact.
The note added that the bill’s administrative impact “appears to increase duties or responsibilities of one or more state agencies and may impact agency spending or staffing requirements.”
The treasurer’s office, retirement system and Republican state Rep. Christopher Knapp, who introduced the bill, did not respond to requests for comment.
It’s the latest bill to be floated by Republican states seeking to block firms that are perceived as considering ESG factors.
The anti-ESG positions have sparked several legal battles. In Oklahoma,