Elroy Dimson: The motives behind responsible investment

There are three primary motives for investors to act responsibly, argues Elroy Dimson, chairman of the Newton Centre for Endowment Asset Management, Cambridge Judge Business School and Emeritus Professor of Finance at the London Business School, speaking on the first day of the UN-supported PRI in Person conference at London’s ICC, ExCel conference centre.

The first is complicity, which he defines as an “uncomfortable feeling” that comes with receiving rewards via investment in “questionable” corporate activities.

If, say, portfolio returns came from exposure to Deep Water Horizon, the oil rig that exploded killing crewmen and leading to the largest oil spill in US waters, or Indian company Union Carbide’s pesticide plant in Bhopal, where a gas spill killed thousands, Dimson argues investors become “tainted” by such ownership.

“Wanting to end this complicity can drive investment decisions quite differently,” he says.

A second motive for responsible investment is influence, whereby investors seek corporate change through their investment strategies. Here he argues how active investment by Norwegian funds in Monsanto, the US agricultural group, led the company to change policy employing children in its Indian cotton fields. Now the company has commitments to child education and providing schools.

“Asset owners have an opportunity to influence corporate decisions,” he says, adding that in many cases active asset ownership can lead to investors often “knowing more” than the company itself.

Sponsored Content

Dimson believes that “exiting from stocks” is not as effective a tool as “using your voice” to engage with companies to improve practice for better returns.

“Continued engagement is much better than simply divesting from companies that displease you.”

He adds: “If Norwegian investors sell holdings in coal, which are then bought by China, nothing has changed.”

A third factor influencing responsible investment is the phenomenon of “universal ownership.”

Because today’s investors hold diversified, extensive portfolios it is in investors’ financial interests to make sure they don’t have activities that de-skill the workforce or ruin the environment, risking other companies within the portfolio.

For example, some companies might benefit by externalising environmental costs through pollution, but this could raise costs for others, resulting in an economic loss across the portfolio as a whole, he explains.

 

Leave a Comment

Slavery victims look to financial world

Slavery victims look to financial world

Speaking at the PRI in Person in Paris in a panel to highlight the role of finance in addressing social issues, Ghanaian James Kofi Annan, sold into slavery at the age of six, told his story.

Sort content by

Gore still hopeful about climate change

Former US vice-president Al Gore described the worsening effects of climate change but found hope in the efforts of many governments and the increasing prominence of renewables in the economy.

PRI focused on commitment to task

As the 2018 PRI in Person conference begins, the prospect of recovering fossil fuel prices adds urgency to the organisation’s efforts to expand – and to keep current members on task.

GPIF, AP2 go granular on ESG integration

GPIF’s Hiro Mizuno and AP2’s Eva Halvarsson stressed the importance of combating short-termism at every level of the investment chain and throughout the organisation, to forge sustainability.

The value of corporate engagement

Positive corporate engagements increase return on investment but also help improve communication, learning and organisational politics, two studies the PRI commissioned have found.

PRI signatories challenged to act now

Mission 2020 convenor Christiana Figueres challenged PRI signatories to invest 1 per cent of assets in clean technology and renewable energy by 2020, saying the world is nearly out of time.

Happy workers mean quality companies

How workers are treated is a key indicator of the quality of a company, and investors should use this information to help assess a company’s investability, CalPERS trustee Priya Mathur has said.