Title: The Best Opponent: Social Investing and Its Critics
1The Best OpponentSocial Investing and Its
Critics
- Lloyd Kurtz
- Nelson Capital Management
- 24 February 2005
2- The best athlete
- wants his opponent at his best.
- The best general
- enters the mind of his enemy.
- The best businessman
- serves the common good.
- The best leader
- follows the will of the people.
- - Lao Tzu, Tao Te Ching
3Topics
- Definitions
- Normative vs. Positive
- Normative Perspectives
- Positive Perspectives
- Conclusion The Best Opponent
4Definitions
5Definitions
- Critics argue that social responsibility is
ill-defined - Hawken, The Economist, and Fortune make this
point. - (What isnt?)
- Socially Responsible Investing (SRI) Can Mean
- The general practice of screening portfolios
- Investing w/ the Progressive Consensus
- Other Paradigms
- Catholic (Diocesan vs. Orders)
- Conservative Christian
- Moslem
- Environmental
- Community Investment, Microlending, etc.
6Definitions (contd)
- Progressive Consensus Exclusions
- Sin Stocks alcohol, tobacco, gambling,
firearms, pornography - Involvement in weapons manufacturing
- Involvement in Nuclear Power
- Major product safety, employee relations, or
environmental issues. - Problematic Issues
- Sweatshops
- Antitrust
- Social Screening Policies Available at
- www.calvert.com
- www.domini.com
- www.kld.com
7Normative vs. Positive
8Levels of the Debate
- Normative How Things Ought to Be
- Values-Driven
- Political
- Ethical
- Religious
- SRI is misguided.
- Positive How Things Work
- Fact-Driven
- Financial
- Economic
- Demographic
- Here is evidence that SRI underperforms.
9Milton Friedman Illustration
- Books
- Normative - Free to Choose
- Positive - A Monetary History of the United
States - Quotes
- Normative The social responsibility of
business is to make money. - Positive In most cases social investing is
neither helpful nor harmful.
10Normative and Positive Commentators
Normative Positive
Supportive of SRI Natl Conf of Bishops (1986) Peter Camejo Pietra Rivoli (2003) Meir Statman (2000) Marc Orlitzky (2003) Rob Bauer (2002)
Skeptical of SRI Jon Entine Paul Hawken Mark Schwartz (2003) Chris Geczy (2003) Arthur Laffer (2004) Jeffrey Teper (1992)
11Normative Perspectives
12A Proponents View
Although all members of the Church are economic
actors every day of their individual lives, they
also play an economic role united together as
Church. On the parish and diocesan level, through
its agencies and institutions, the Church employs
many people it has investments it has extensive
properties for worship and mission. All the moral
principles that govern the just operation of any
economic endeavor apply to the Church and its
agencies and institutions, indeed the Church
should be exemplary. - National Conference of
Catholic Bishops, 1986 Pastoral Letter
13Entines Critique
- Entine believes social investing as currently
practiced is contradictory and hypocritical. - Merely hypocritically, anti-alcohol screens ban
liberal oenophiles from investing in California
wineries. - More troubling, defense firms--those developing
missiles to protect Tel Aviv and San Francisco
from Scud missile attacks--are rejected as
warmongers. - And while some funds screened out Enron Corp. on
the principle that all energy firms are "bad,"
its limp commitment to renewable energy and its
now infamous ethical-sounding Code of Conduct
made it a favorite among the largest firms like
Domini Social Investments.
14Entines Critique (edited)
- Alcohol companies will be screened out, even
though many social investors drink. - Manufacturers of weapons are excluded, even
though many people think weapons are ok. - Domini owned Enron.
15Schwartzs Critique
- Schwartz (2003) believes that the ethics of the
social investment industry need scrutiny. - Calling yourself ethical imposes a higher ethical
duty. - Some industry advertising is vague or misleading.
- Some of the screens are not ethical (e.g.,
Military). - The industrys screening is not transparent.
- See Rivolis (2003) response.
16The Starfish Story
Source Domini Social Investments website, 2005
17Hawkens Critique
- Hawken argues social investing as currently
practiced is insufficient. - The cumulative investment portfolio of the
combined SRI mutual funds is virtually no
different than the combined portfolio of
conventional mutual funds. - The environmental screens used by portfolio
managers are loose and do little to help the
environment. - Few SRI mutual funds engage in shareholder
advocacy or sponsor activist shareholder
resolutions.
18Dixons Critique
- Dixon (2004) believes change needs to be faster.
- Despite social investors efforts there are still
no sustainable companies. - SRI also doesnt do enough to address the
systemic obstacles to change. - Assessments of corporate responsibility should
include companies efforts to create systemic
change, not just incremental leaders.
19Positive Perspectives
20The LiteratureNumbers in parentheses show of
Moskowitz Prizes and Honorable Mentions.
21What About Performance?
- "When we here at Morningstar have conducted
performance studies of socially responsible funds
in the past, we've found that the offerings - as
a group - perform about as well as funds that pay
no attention to ethical considerations when
building their portfolios. - Hall (2004) - Bauer et al (2002) find no performance issues for
mutual funds. - DiBartolomeo and Kurtz (1999) find no performance
issue with the Domini Social Index.
22Positive Tests of SRI
- Social screens might interfere with active
management strategies. - Abramson (1998) finds no problem for value
managers. - Kurtz (1997) finds no problem for growth
managers. - Social responsibility and financial performance.
- Orlitzky (2003) finds positive association.
- Laffer (2004) finds no relationship or a small
negative one.
23Claimed Alpha is Very Issue-Dependent
- Areas Associated with Outperformance
- Environment
- Derwall et al (2004) claim positive impact
- 100 Best Companies to Work For
- Kurtz and Luck (2003) claim positive impact
- RD
- Many studies show positive benefit
- Areas Associated with Underperformance
- Unionization
- Blachflower (1991) claimes negative financial
effects
24Conclusion
25The Best Opponent
- Financially sophisticated
- Principled, but not dogmatic
- Unburdened by a personal agenda
- Presents evidence, expects the same of you
- Seeking to persuade, open to persuasion
- Engagement is transformative
26Further Information
- Online bibliography of SRI
- http//www.sristudies.org
- My SRI blog
- http//srinotes.blogspot.com
- My e-mail
- lklyk_at_pacbell.net
27Notes
- Abramson, Lorne, and Dan Chung. "Socially
Responsible Investing Viable for Value
Investors?" Journal of Investing, Fall 2000. - Bauer, Rob, Kees Koedijk, and Roger Otten.
"International Evidence on Ethical Mutual Fund
Performance and Investment Style." Working Paper,
January 2002. - Blanchflower, David, Neil Millward, and Andrew
Oswald. "Unionism and Employment Behavior." The
Economic Journal, July 1991. - Derwall, Jeroen, Nadja Gunster, Rob Bauer, and
Kees Koedijk. "The Eco-Efficiency Premium
Puzzle." Erasmus University Working Paper, May
2004. - Dixon, Frank. Adapting to the Age of Truth
Addressing Systemic Barriers. SRI in the
Rockies Conference, October 2004. - Economic Justice For All A Pastoral Letter on
Catholic Teaching and the U.S. Economy. National
Conference of Catholic Bishops, 1986. - Geczy, Christopher C., Robert F. Stambaugh, and
David Levin. "Investing in Socially Responsible
Mutual Funds." Wharton School, Working Paper, May
2003. - Hall, Emily. "Evaluating Socially Responsible
Funds." www.morningstar.com, July 7, 2004. - Kurtz, Lloyd and Chris Luck. "An Attribution
Analysis of the 100 Best Companies to Work for in
America. Presentation to Northfield Investment
Conference, Fish Camp, California, May 5-7, 2002. - Kurtz, Lloyd. "The Impact of Social Screening on
Growth-Oriented Investment Strategies," The
Journal of Performance Measurement, Spring 1997. - Laffer, Arthur B., Andrew Coors, and Wayne
Winegarden. "Does Corporate Social
Responsibility Enhance Business Profitability?"
Laffer Associates, 2004. - Orlitzky, Marc, Frank L. Schmidt, and Sara L.
Rynes. "Corporate social and financial
performance A meta-analysis." Organization
Studies, 24, 2003. - Rivoli, Pietra. Making a Difference or Making a
Statement? Finance Research and Socially
Responsible Investment. Business Ethics
Quarterly, July 2003. - Schwartz, Mark. "The 'Ethics' of Ethical
Investing." Journal of Business Ethics, March
2003. - Statman, Meir. "Socially Responsible Mutual
Funds," Financial Analysts Journal, May/June
2000. - Teper, Jeffrey. "Evaluating the Cost of Socially
Responsible Investing," in Kinder, Peter, Steven
Lydenberg, and Amy Domini, ed., The Social
Investment Almanac, New York Henry Holt, 1992.