From the desk of
Doug Couden, CFA
With companies and investors increasing their public commitments to sustainability related goals, the transition process presents the opportunity for investors to help enact real change. However, meeting these goals means different things for different sectors and different companies - some will need to fundamentally change what they do and how they do it, while others can achieve their targets with more modest shifts.
From Concept to Reality: The Next Phase of the ESG Transition is Here
Although moving to a more sustainable future is clearly desirable and presents an array of investment opportunities, transition does not come for free and the question of who should bear that cost sits largely unaddressed given the intersection of government and corporate policies. For investors, there is also the question of whether it is better to invest in sectors (and companies) that are more advanced in their transition process or those that are just starting out given the costs and potential return trade-offs involved.
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Chief Investment Officer
While ESG-Related Returns Are Trailing the Broader Market This Year, Governance- Focused Themes Are Holding Up Best
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What is commonly known as “the Rule” within the philanthropic space is a fact that is little-known to the general public–in order to maintain foundation status, organizations have to grant out 5% of their endowments per year.
The Other 95%
How Philanthropic Foundations Can Do Good and Do Well
Sources: MSCI, S&P, CS, Bloomberg, BakerAvenue. As of 9/30/2022.
Read to discover how foundations can make the most out of the other 95%.