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    Triple Bottom Line Investing

Triple Bottom Line Investing


All companies have not only a financial return, but also a social and environmental return. Whether intentional or not, businesses make an impact on their customers, employees, the community, and the environment. Some companies create value while others extract value. The only question is whether we – as investors – are going to take these non-financial returns into consideration.

At IMPACTfolio®, our process involves what we call “triple bottom line” investing by seeking an environmental return, a social return, and a financial return. These three sources of return are what we refer to as our 3 P’s: Planet, People, and Profit.

ESG Investing, Denver Colorado, IMPACTfolio<sup>®</sup>


Quantifying the Results

You may wonder whether a focus on these non-financial considerations will negatively impact your financial returns. Recent research has increasingly shown otherwise. According to February 2020 research from Morningstar, "Investors can build a global portfolio of companies that have positive environmental, social, and governance, or ESG, attributes without compromising returns."

The following charts (click to enlarge) also illustrate that a sustainable or “responsible” approach to investing does not require sacrificing returns over the long term.*

Financial Returns


graph

Social & Environmental Returns


graph


*Source: Russell 1000 Index, CALCOR. Prior to June 19, 2015, CALCOR was known as the Calvert Social Index. CALCOR changed certain of the construction methodologies, including the adoption of the Calvert Principles and a sector-constrained capitalization weighting approach. All data prior to June 19, 2015 reflect the Index’s prior construction methodologies.


We manage two different types of portfolios: STRATEGIC and TACTICAL


STRATEGIC


Our Strategic portfolios manage to a specific allocation target and rebalance periodically to ensure that the allocation remains on track. The Strategic portfolios are optimized for tax efficiency based on your specific tax situation. The graph provides a simplified example of the risk/return characteristics of our Strategic portfolios.

CORE portfolio socially responsible investing approach



explore portfolio socially responsible investment approach


TACTICAL


Our Tactical portfolios use tools to respond to changing market conditions. We look for signs of relative strength as a way of identifying good buying opportunities and, conversely, we aim to sell when we determine signs of relative weakness. We manage two Tactical strategies: an individual stock strategy and a tactical ETF strategy. See our chart for a visual illustration of this strategy.


Sustainable Development Goals


In all of our portfolios, we invest with purpose by covering a wide spectrum of issues. We use the 17 Sustainability Goals established by the United Nations as a framework for our IMPACT investing approach. Our goal is not to focus on only one or two themes, but to seek out sustainable investing across the board in order to maximize the triple bottom line returns (planet, people, and profit).  

United Nations sustainable development goals



Positive Corporate Actions

Sometimes it can be easy to look around at the problems surrounding us and start to feel hopeless or cynical. It can be tempting to wonder what difference you can really make or doubt the impact of these corporations we seek to invest in. But, in fact, there are plenty of stories of companies who are making an IMPACT.

Below there are three examples of how the specific business decisions of companies can move the needle on real positive change.

positive corporate actions



Apple, socially responsible investing

  • 100% of Apple's global facilities are powered by 100% renewable energy.
  • Apple has had a 70% decrease in average product energy use in 10 years.
  • Apple enforces their policies by assessing and closely partnering with suppliers at every point in their supply chain. In 2019, they performed 1142 supplier assessments in 49 countries.
  • Apple's products are free of harmful chemicals like mercury, brominated flame retardants, PVC, phthalates, beryllium, lead in the solder, and arsenic in the display glass.


Praxair, socially responsible investing

  • Almost 30% of Microsoft's board of directors and almost 20% of its managers are women, and the latter number has grown each year Microsoft has published its diversity report. Microsoft also reports equal pay among female and male employees.
  • Microsoft offers a best-in-class working environment for LGBTQIA+ empoloyees, including trans-inclusive health insurance coverage.
  • Microsoft has operated carbon neutral since 2012 and continues to reduce their emissions. They are one of the largest purchasers of renewable energy in the United States. By 2030 Microsoft will be carbon negative, and by 2050 Microsoft will remove from the environment all the carbon the company has emitted either directly or by electrical consumption since it was founded in 1975.


Black Rock, socially responsible investing

  • As a Participant of the United Nations Global Compact, BlackRock is committed to aligning their operations with universal principles on human rights, labor, environment and anti-corruption, and to take actions that advance societal goals.
  • BlackRock partners with nonprofits, start-ups, corporations, and their employees to create impact in line with their mission to help more people achieve financial security and opportunity, whether in our own communities or on a global scale.
  • BlackRock met their 100% renewable power goal in the US in 2018 and offsetting 100% of our 2018 global travel-related emissions – their largest source of carbon emissions – by retiring carbon credits from The Conservation Fund’s Garcia River Forest.

Creating IMPACT Through Shareholder Engagement


There are also changes being made at a leadership level through intentional shareholder engagement with corporate leadership on specific issues. Here is an example of how Change Finance, one of the leaders of sustainable investing, is initiating positive change:

A Demand for Median Racial and Gender Pay Gap Data:

An Open Letter to Companies

June 8, 2020

To Corporate CEO's:

In the last week our nation reached a breaking point, triggered by brutality so horrifying it is seared in our minds. But this was not, sadly, an anomaly. It was fueled by generations of inequity. We therefore ask you, today, to take an active and meaningful step toward solving the institutionalized inequality that has forced good people across the country to take to the streets. We ask that you publish median gender pay gap data across your workforce. Continue to read the rest of the letter.