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Social Responsible Investments

Excluding companies
involved in alcohol, gambling,
tobacco products, arms production, pornography and nuclear power.
Investing in the stock market does
not mean forgetting about ethical principles, as the example of some
mutual funds demonstrates. A profile by the Detroit News on May 10,
2005, of Ave Maria Mutual Funds described the success of this
approach.
Founded four years ago, Ave Maria has grown to a company that
manages four funds, including one launched this earlier this month.
Overall, the funds have assets totalling around $300 million. In the
period since Ave Maria started investing, all its funds have
obtained higher returns than the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
The Ave Maria Web site explains that its funds "are designed
specifically for morally responsible investors who are looking for
financially sound investments in companies that do not violate the
core teachings of the Catholic Church."
Furthermore, it explains that the funds "take a pro-family approach
to investing." This involves examining companies on issues such as
abortion, pornography, and policies that undermine the sacrament of
marriage. The Detroit News noted that the funds dropped their
investment in PepsiCo last year after the soft-drink maker started
providing health-care coverage to unmarried couples, including gay
and lesbian partnerships.
In Canada, meanwhile, investments made according to "socially
responsible guidelines" are also increasingly popular. Assets
invested using social or environmental criteria rose by 27% to
$65.46 billion Canadian ($51.8 billion US) in 2004 from 2002,
according to a report by the Social Investment Organization. The
report was cited by the Globe and Mail newspaper May 6.
A wide variety
Ethical investing, or socially
responsible investment (SRI) as it is termed by many, can use a
variety of criteria. There are specifically Catholic funds, such as
Ave Maria, or funds that exclude companies involved in activities
such as tobacco, alcohol and armaments.
The New York Times on May 1 noted that there are Muslim funds that
exclude financial services companies because they lend with
interest. There are also single-issue funds, such as the Sierra Club
and Portfolio 21, which concentrate on the environment. Other funds
use what the article termed a "best-in-class approach." Instead of
eliminating an entire industry sector, the fund invests in the most
acceptable companies in the sector.
Some of the funds have come in for criticism, the Times noted,
because they are insufficiently strict in their criteria. The
newspaper cited a report by Paul Hawken, of the Natural Capital
Institute in San Francisco, which was critical of many funds for
being too indiscriminating in their investments.
Last Nov. 15 the Christian Science Monitor also reported on Hawken's
criticisms of "ethical funds." A study published in October by the
Natural Capital Institute showed that the funds own shares in 90% of
the firms on the Fortune 500 list.
But both the Monitor and the Times noted that the issue of deciding
how to invest is complicated. As well, a lot depends on how each
fund applies the ethical principles they follow.
"We would like to have neat little boxes that all the funds could
fit into," said Anita Green, vice president for social research at
Pax World Funds. "So far we haven't found a method that will do it,"
she told the New York Times.
The Times article also cited Amy Domini, founder of the Domini
Social Equity Fund. This fund, along with others managed by Domini
Social Investments, currently manages over $1.8 billion, according
to the Domini Web site. Domini, noted the Times article, invests in
companies such as McDonald's. Replying to those who criticize
investing in the fast-food industry, Amy Domini told the newspaper
that McDonald's had made some changes, such as using napkins made of
recycled paper and avoiding antibiotics in beef.
The Monitor article cited Garvin Jabusch, director of the Sierra
Club fund family. The funds, he explained avoids risky investments
"that are long on ideals and short on track records." Instead of
excluding every company that may not be 100% acceptable, they prefer
to concentrate on major corporations that make consistent
improvements in their business practices.
The article noted, however, that more than 600 funds worldwide claim
the SRI label, and investors cannot always be sure what it means,
since the definitions used by the funds vary widely.
And sometimes the funds do decide to sell stocks, even those that
are giving good returns, when they see that the companies are no
longer acceptable. An article April 14 in the British newspaper The
Guardian described how Pax World Funds decided to sell its stocks in
Starbucks, following the firm's decision to introduce a coffee-based
liqueur. Pax World Funds, described by the Guardian as one of the
first SRI funds in the United States, excludes companies involved in
alcohol, gambling, tobacco products, arms production, pornography
and nuclear power.
Pressuring companies
The article also raised the point as
to whether such funds can really have much influence on company
policy. In the case of Starbucks, the decision by Pax World Funds to
sell $23.4 million worth of stocks is not likely to have much impact
on a company with a current market value in excess of $20 billion.
Yet, excluding investments according to ethical criteria is only
part of the picture. Another way to have an impact is by exercising
voting rights as shareholders. The Guardian noted that ethical
investors in the United States have already filed 200 resolutions on
social and environmental issues in the run-up to the spring 2005
annual-meetings.
Reuters described this activity in a May 2 article. The article
reported on some of the activities of the New York-based Interfaith
Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR). The organization filed
264 shareholder resolutions this year, an almost fourfold increase
from 20 years ago.
The ICCR Web site describes the organization as "an association of
275 faith-based institutional investors." The members pressure
companies "to be socially and environmentally responsible." The
combined portfolio value of ICCR's member organizations, reported
the Web site, is estimated to be $110 billion.
The ICCR annual report for 2003-2004 notes a wide variety of issues
that the organization is grappling with, from corporate governance
to global warming, financial speculation, human rights and violence
in video games.
Moral principles
Such a range of issues will
understandably give rise to a gamut of opinions. Nevertheless, the
underlying point -- that investors should pay attention to ethical
principles when deciding where their money should go -- is growing
in importance.
As the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church explains,
Catholic social teaching values the role of business and the market
economy (Nos. 334-5). The Compendium also defends the role of
financial markets, observing that the large investments needed in a
modern economy would not be possible without capital markets that
can direct savings to help economic development (No. 368).
But the Compendium also notes that businesses are occupying a wider
role and taking on greater responsibilities in today's economy. "Due
to the increasing complexity of business activities, decisions made
by companies produce a number of very significant interrelated
effects, both in the economic and social spheres" (No. 344).
This brings with it, the text continues, a responsibility on the
part of businessmen for an increased reflection on the moral issues
involved in their activity. The general public also have a role to
play, the Compendium adds, by deciding where to place their
financial resources. This means making a value judgment regarding
possible investments (No. 358).
The decision of where to place funds is always a moral and cultural
choice, says the Compendium, citing John Paul II's encyclical "Centesimus
Annus." A point that is meeting increasing acceptance among
investors.
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