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Opportunities & Exposures: Investing
A Separate Peace
Penny Knuff
10/01/2005

For years, affluent investors aspiring to lay out their capital according to their values have sought socially responsible mutual funds. But these funds often limit investors’ options to a limited spectrum of concerns—abortion, adult entertainment, alcohol, tobacco—that are based on someone else’s definition of social responsibility.

Today, some of these forward-thinking investors are able to pinpoint investments that both support their particular causes and maximize their returns. That is the dual promise of using separate accounts in individual, tailored portfolios as vehicles for socially responsible investing. Financial advisors now have new sets of screening tools to identify and select specific companies that meet an individual investor’s definition of socially responsible investing. Investors can now communicate their preferences and construct a portfolio to reflect their choices.

One of our clients is a midwife with $11 million in net worth. She is passionate about holistic medicine and is wary of investing in pharmaceuticals. She is similarly averse to investing in fast food and tobacco companies.

A few years ago, it would have been difficult for her to develop a portfolio reflecting her specific social goals because most financial advisors would not have had the ability to parse the companies that met her criteria. Her likely option would have been to choose a socially responsible mutual fund. But she has been able to create a customized portfolio of individual securities by working with her financial advisor to choose categories of companies to favor or avoid. Her advisor uses Web-based software to tap into databases maintained by third-party screening services that parse thousands of companies.

The socially responsible investing sector is seeing a slow but steady increase in these types of services. In its most recent report on industry trends, the Social Investment Forum noted that total assets in socially screened separate accounts grew by 7 percent between 2001 and 2003. Dating back to 1995, when this approach was a fledgling strategy, assets held in separate accounts in the U.S. totaled $150 billion. Eight years later, that figure was nearly $2 trillion.
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