Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!

Here's a statement of the obvious: The opinions expressed here are those of the participants, not those of the Mutual Fund Observer. We cannot vouch for the accuracy or appropriateness of any of it, though we do encourage civility and good humor.

    Support MFO

  • Donate through PayPal

Consuelo Mack's WealthTrack Encore: Guests: Christine Harada & Vishal Khanduja: Impact Investing

FYI:
Regards,
Ted

Septmber 5, 2019

Dear WEALTHTRACK Subscriber,

As WealthTrack and public television wrap up their summer schedules and we prepare new shows for the fall, we are following the money and re-airing a recent program on impact investing. In the meantime, the podcasts we have taped on time sensitive topics are generating a great deal of interest.

In case you missed you missed them:
--We talked to influential global economist, Nick Sargen about the impact trade uncertainty is having on the economy and markets. Could it push us into recession? --China expert Jim McGregor gives us a candid assessment of the competitive threat China’s leadership poses to the U.S. He says “Wake up America!”
--Social Security specialist Mary Beth Franklin explains the new rules for Social Security and the actions needed to take advantage of them, some expire soon and others start at a surprisingly young age.

Some of you are old enough to remember the expression “follow the money”. It was uttered by the Deep Throat character in ALL THE PRESIDENT’S MEN. It turns out Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s anonymous source in the Nixon White House never actually uttered the phrase, but we have taken the directive to heart at WEALTHTRACK. We are following the money for you. We also want to, “Show you the money,” Tom Cruise’s mantra in JERRY MAGUIRE.

We can do both with one investment approach. Socially responsible investing, also known as ESG (for Environmental, Social and Governance), sustainable or impact investing. It is attracting massive amounts of investor dollars - follow the money - and is performing as well if not better than non-ESG investments - showing you the money!

The latest evidence comes from Morningstar. In its “Sustainable Funds U.S. Landscape Report” Morningstar found that the ESG fund group “attracted record net flows in 2018,” its sixth year of “ever higher annual net flows” while non- ESG U.S. funds “collected less than half their historic annual… average” of the last 10 years. And sustainable funds relative performance remained strong, even in the challenging environment of 2018. Sixty-three percent of sustainable funds finished in the top half of their respective Morningstar categories. That helped 58% of them rank in the top half in the trailing five-year period.

Morningstar itself has created 56 unique ESG screened indexes. Its most recent analysis finds that performance across the range of them tends to be strong:
41 of the 56 ESG indexes, that’s 73% of them, outperformed their non-ESG equivalents since inception.

Morningstar reports that the results are even more encouraging when measuring their exposure to various risk factors linked to a positive long-term investor experience. The study concludes that “Morningstar ESG indexes tend to select companies that are less volatile and possess stronger competitive advantages and healthier balance sheets than their non-ESG equivalents.”

One growing subset of ESG investing is known as impact investing, which Morningstar defines as investing explicitly for measurable societal or environmental impact alongside financial return.

Our two guests are seasoned practitioners of impact investing.
Christine Harada is the President of i(x) investments, a privately held company that invests in early stage companies “generating social and environmental impact alongside strong financial returns.” Co-founded in 2015 by Warren Buffett’s grandson, Howard Warren Buffett, i(x) is a holding company modeled after Berkshire Hathaway. Its goal is to go public as a permanently capitalized operating company. Its investment targets are areas such as clean energy, sustainable agriculture, water scarcity and green real estate.

Harada, an aerospace engineer by training was the Federal Chief Sustainability Officer for the U.S. during the Obama administration among other top-level federal jobs. She also worked in the private sector for leading consulting firms including the Boston Consulting Group and Booz Allen Hamilton.

Vishal Khanduja is portfolio manager of the socially responsible Calvert Bond Fund and the Calvert Green Bond Fund, which is directly targeted at environmental impact investing. Calvert, founded in 1976 is a pioneer in ESG investing offers both active and passive socially responsible strategies. Calvert was a founder of The United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment which now has 2,000 large investors participating, representing more than $90 trillion in assets globally.

As always, if you miss the show on Public Television, you can watch it on our website. You’ll also find an exclusive EXTRA interview with Harada and Khanduja revealing what led them to their dedication to socially responsible investing. Neither route was a straight shot.

If you would prefer to take WEALTHTRACK with you on your commute or travels, you can now find the WEALTHTRACK podcast on TuneIn, Stitcher, and SoundCloud, as well as iTunes and Spotify.

Thank you for watching. Have a lovely weekend and make the week ahead a profitable and a productive one.

Best regards,

Consuelo

https://wealthtrack.com/environmental-impact-investing-is-attracting-dollars-delivering-results-2-experts-share-strategies/
Sign In or Register to comment.