Posts in Invest Your Values
New investment site helps people avoid funding gun manufacturers, military contractors

Weapon Free Funds breaks down the individual offerings from investment companies. The Equity Index 500 fund from T. Rowe Price, for instance, has 18 weapons stocks; its New Horizons fund has just three. The Health Sciences, Emerging Markets, and Global Technology funds have no weapons companies. Users can also pick their battles, as it were–filtering on all types of weapons makers or on just military weapons or just civilian firearms.

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Report: Customer insights, power purchasing, proxy preview and more

Proxy Preview 2018 (As You Sow, the Sustainable Investments Institute and Proxy Impact) features more than 400 shareholder resolutions filed on environmental, social and governance issues. The top three shareholder issues are political activity spending (80 resolutions), climate risk (80 resolutions) and equal treatment for women (70 resolutions). The 125 corporate signatories to the RE100 campaign need to add 87 gigawatts of new wind and solar power capacity worldwide by 2030 to meet their 100 percent renewable energy commitments, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance research. The report suggests that not all of the RE100 members will meet their commitment.

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The New York Times - Funds That Can Put Your Investments on a Low-Carbon Diet

Now there is a tool, the website Fossil Free Funds, that helps pinpoint funds and E.T.F.s focused on companies withsmaller carbon footprints. “There were 10 funds when we started that we identified as fossil-fuel free,” said Andrew S. Behar, chief executive officer of As You Sow, the Oakland, Calif., environmental group that created Fossil Free Funds. “Now it’s up to 31.”

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Can activist investors encourage better carpet recycling?

As You Sow has engaged as shareholders with the electronics, consumer goods and beverage industries over the past two decades to promote corporate responsibility for recycling products and packaging. Carpet makers represent another important industrial sector struggling to make meaningful progress on recycling, and we intend to engage with shareholders of several large publicly traded companies to improve performance in light of problems that have surfaced recently.

"We intend to engage with shareholders of several large publicly traded carpet companies to improve performance in light of problems that have surfaced recently."

"Carpet makers should spend less time hindering vendors to engage on recycling policy and more time figuring how to redesign carpet to make it recyclable."

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Impact Investing And The O'Reilly Factor

Fossil Free Funds scorecards investment companies for carbon contamination. It informs us, for example, that the Vanguard Health Care sector fund (VHT) is relatively innocent, accounting for 8 tons a year of carbon dioxide, or the equivalent in other greenhouse gases, per $1 million salted away. VHT is clean because Pfizer and Merck don’t own steel foundries. With an index fund you'd be looking at 155 tons.

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Meet ... Conrad MacKerron, Senior Vice President, As You Sow

Q5: How should sustainable investors react to 2016's political events?

"In the U.S., we need to defend against any efforts to weaken our ability to engage and file shareholder proposals with companies.  Small and medium-sized shareholders, like those of many SRI firms, have often been the early warning system to companies on business risk.  It is often passionate smaller investors who educate companies first on issues that could blow up eventually into big crises, like toxic ingredients, air and water pollution and waste, and supply chain labor rights.  In many instances, these are brought initially to investors’ attention by committed social and religious investors."

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Is Carbon Hiding in Your Nest Egg?

That brings us back to the carbon that may be hiding in your mutual fund or 401(k). One of the pioneers in the divest/reinvest movement is the nonprofit foundation As You Sow, which works with shareholders to improve corporate accountability. It has developed a tool that finds the carbon in thousands of the most common mutual funds and retirement plans. It does the detective work instantly and cost-free with up-to-date data.

Using 401(k) retirement plans as an example, As You Sow’s explains “those funds can invest in a wide array of securities, and it’s not always easy for investors to investigate what’s inside the funds they own. You can spend hours poring over mutual fund prospectuses, and still not fully grasp everything your 401(k) is invested in. Your retirement money may be invested in economically and morally risky fossil fuel companies.”

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