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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
1.06.2006 ET
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Top Five Socially Responsible Investing News Stories of 2005
Socially responsible investing, corporate social responsibility, and microfinance embraced by the mainstream; shareowner advocates withdraw several climate change resolutions as companies agree to report; and exchange traded funds apply SRI strategies.
(CSRwire) After more than a quarter century of building credibility, socially
responsible investing (SRI) and corporate social responsibility (CSR) took
the final steps crossing over from the periphery into the mainstream in
2005. Household names such as Citigroup (ticker: C) and GE
(GE) went
public with initiatives confirming that SRI and CSR considerations can
steer investment and business strategies, respectively. Recognizing these
watershed events, SocialFunds.com chooses these developments as its top two
news stories of 2005. Rounding out the top five SRI stories of the year
are microfinance emerging as a new asset class, the withdrawal of
shareowner resolutions on climate change after companies agree to issue
climate change reports, and exchange traded funds (ETFs) adopting SRI
strategies.
1. Mainstream Firms Adopt SRI Strategies
How do you know when SRI has entered the mainstream? When traditional
brokerages, investment consultants, and law firms embrace SRI, and when
illogical opposition lashes out.
This past year, at least four mainstream investment banks issued research
reports utilizing SRI analytical lenses spanning the gamut of social
investment research strategies. Citigroup subsidiary Smith Barney issued
a report that took a decidedly qualitative approach, assessing
sustainability issues across 28 sectors. Goldman Sachs (GS) sailed
the opposite tack, taking a quantitative approach by correlating 42
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) criteria in the energy sector
to financial performance as well as exposure to "new legacy assets," or
newly discovered oil and gas reserves.
UBS (UBS)
sought to quantify that which is qualitative by establishing a framework
to measure corporate social liabilities across nine sectors in its SRI
report. Finally, Merrill Lynch (MER)
partnered with an environmental nongovernmental organization (NGO)--the
World Resources Institute (WRI)--to produce a report
analyzing investment opportunities due to climate change in the auto
sector, making specific stock recommendations on seven companies.
Mercer Investment
Consulting stepped into the SRI fray by releasing a
survey of mainstream investment managers' approaches to SRI in March.
Then in October, Mercer's
SRI consulting team launched an ongoing
research stream rating investment manager capacity to assess corporate
ESG performance and conduct active shareholder engagement and proxy
voting.
The conventional wisdom that fiduciary duty precludes the
consideration of ESG issues was turned on its head this past year. A
report from the uber-mainstream law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus
Deringer commissioned by the United Nations Environment Programme
Finance Initiative (UNEP
FI) established that fiduciary duty not only allows ESG
considerations, it sometimes requires them!
Perhaps inevitably, the mainstreaming of SRI met some opposition. In a
December move widely viewed as a capitulation to big business, UK
Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown unexpectedly killed the
Operating and Financial Review (OFR), a
regulation mandating annual corporate disclosure of environmental, social,
and governance information. Incomprehensibly, Mr. Brown cited concern over
"goldplating" (or blind adoption of European Union regulations) when the
OFR was homegrown, the product of a multi-year, multi-stakeholder
consultation overseen by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).
"With such major players embracing and validating social investing
strategies, it is clear that mainstream financial institutions are finally
seeing the light regarding the merits of SRI and sustainability investing,"
said Jay Falk, president of SRI World Group, which publishes
SocialFunds.com.
SocialFunds articles on the mainstreaming of SRI:
Citigroup
Smith Barney Report Seeks to Bridge Divide Between SRI and Traditional
Analysis
SRI
Research from UBS Strikes Balance Between Ethics and Economics
Spreading
SRI: Goldman Sachs Adds Its Own Twist in Social and Environmental
Assessment
Merrill
Lynch and World Resources Institute Analyze Climate Change Investment
Opportunities
Institutional
Investors Drive Research on Mainstreaming of SRI by Investment
Managers
Fiduciary
Duty Redefined to Allow (and Sometimes Require) Environmental, Social and
Governance Considerations
UK Kills
Operating and Financial Review of Environmental and Social
Information
2. Mainstream Companies Embrace CSR Strategies
If irrational opposition is a testament of success, 2005 started with a
bang for corporate social responsibility when The Economist issued its diatribe
against CSR in January. Apparently, the markets did not agree with the
magazine's assessment, as several of the world's most influential
corporations adopted significant CSR initiatives and policies this past
year.
In May, GE launched its "Ecomagination" environmental
responsibility initiative, a move that reverberated widely. When a
corporate giant such as GE places its stamp of approval on CSR as a
legitimate mainstream business strategy, it suddenly becomes much harder
to invalidate CSR. The fact that GE made the announcement on the eve of
the second Institutional Investor Summit on
Climate Risk at the United Nations Headquarters demonstrates the
company's recognition of the importance of corporate environmental
responsibility to the investment markets.
Wal-Mart (WMT),
infamous for its truculence on CSR, astounded observers with its October
announcement
of broad commitments to environmental and social responsibility. These
included 100 percent renewable energy, zero waste, and reducing greenhouse
gas emissions by 20 percent by 2012, as well as increasing the percentages
of women and minority managers.
And in November, Goldman Sachs became the first major investment bank to
adopt a comprehensive environmental
policy--and the fourth major US financial institution to do so, after
JPMorgan Chase (JPM)
earlier in 2005 and Bank of America (BAC) and
Citigroup in previous years.
"2005 was the year of announcements embedding CSR as a valid mainstream
business strategy," Mr. Falk said. "2006 and beyond will be the litmus
test years for companies to demonstrate action on CSR and critics to
assess if these actions measure up."
SocialFunds articles on the mainstreaming of CSR:
Institutional
Investors Call on SEC, Wall Street, and Companies to Address Climate
Risk
Institutional
Investor Summit on Climate Risk
Wal-Mart
Embraces Sustainability: Does the SRI Community Buy It?
A Light Bulb
Turns On: Goldman Sachs First Investment Bank to Adopt Environmental
Policy
JPMorgan
Chase Environmental Policy Triggers Tipping Point for US Bank
Sustainability
3. Microfinance Emerging as a New Asset Class
The United Nations (UN)
dubbed 2005 the "Year of Microcredit," and the
markets reflected this by ushering in microfinance (which provides small
loans to the poor for starting up small businesses) as an emerging new
asset class. The most significant development advancing this trend was
the November launch of the Global Commercial Microfinance Consortium.
Deutsche Bank (DB) not
only coordinates the consortium, which also includes the Calvert Social
Investment Foundation, Merrill Lynch, and Munich Re, but also manages its $75
million fund that provides financing to microfinance institutions (MFIs)
around the world.
"Social investors' portfolios have included microfinance for years, so the
emerging recognition of microfinance as a distinct asset class with a host
of different vehicles and strategies is a welcome development," said Mr.
Falk.
SocialFunds articles on microfinance as new asset class:
Consortium
Advances Microfinance as an Emerging New Asset Class
4. Climate Change Resolutions Withdrawn as Companies Agree to Report
and Act
This past year, shareowner advocates solidified momentum toward convincing
companies to address climate change. This progress stems from a campaign
coordinated by Ceres
and the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR). This past March saw the withdrawal
of shareowner resolutions after Apache (APA),
Anadarko Petroleum (APC),
Chevron (CVX),
Marathon Oil (MRO),
Tesoro (TSO), and
Unocal (UCL)
agreed to issue reports measuring climate change impacts and presenting
plans for mitigation. Five companies who made similar commitments leading
to resolution withdrawals in 2004--American Electric Power (AEP),
Cinergy (CIN),
Reliant Energy (REI),
Southern Company (SO) and
TXU (TXU)--issued
their reports or enacted increased disclosure this past year.
"In the matter of a few years, shareowner advocates have used the
resolution-filing process to shift climate change from the periphery to a
priority on the corporate agenda, compelling companies to disclose
information on how they plan to track and minimize their environmental
impacts," said Mr. Falk.
SocialFunds articles on climate change resolution
withdrawals:
Faith-Based
and Environmentalist Shareowners Withdraw Climate Change Resolutions at
Six Companies
5. SRI Exchange Traded Funds Launched
One of many signs of the maturation of SRI is the adoption of increasingly
sophisticated investment strategies. One such strategy is the exchange
traded fund (ETF), which resembles a mutual fund by bundling securities
but differs by allowing trades all day to exploit market flux instead of
setting net asset value (NAV) once daily. One measure of the explosive
growth of interest in ETFs is the rise in assets under management by ETF
provider PowerShares
Capital Management, which mushroomed from $280 million at year-end 2004
to exceed $3 billion before the end of 2005.
Early in 2005, Barclays Global Investors
launched the iShares KLD Select Social Index Fund (KLD) on the New York Stock
Exchange (NYSE). KLD Research & Analytics
devised the underlying index to utilize an "optimization" technique that
overweights companies with strong social and environmental performance and
underweights companies with weaker social and environmental performance.
Mainstream institutional investors appreciated this strategy, judging by
the list of top institutional holders,
which includes JPMorgan Chase, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, and UBS.
Soon thereafter, the American Stock Exchange (Amex) began listing the PowerShares
WilderHill Clean Energy Portfolio (PBW), comprised of companies
that promote renewable and alternative energy. The fund clearly appeals
to social investors, as the top institutional holder is
Trillium Asset
Management and the top mutual fund holder is the Winslow Green Growth
Fund (WGGFX),
but mainstream institutions such as Merrill Lynch and Wells Fargo (WFC) also
find it attractive. PowerShares subsequently launched other ETFs that
overlap into the SRI space, including one focused on nanotechnology and
another on water.
SocialFunds articles on SRI exchange traded funds:
Two Socially
Responsible Investment Exchange Traded Funds Launch
New Index and
Exchange Traded Fund Expose Risks and Potentials in Nanotech
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