Investors’ role in company collaboration

Investors play an important role in facilitating corporate collaborations to improve sustainability says a leading Harvard academic in sustainability.

George Serafeim, the Jakurski Family Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School suggests that in the absence of regulatory intervention that forces prices to reflect all externalities a possible solution is pre-competitive collaboration by corporations and industries. Because of their long time horizons and common stock holdings, large investors can play a key role in encouraging this collaboration, he says.

An example of this is an initiative of the denim industry in Amsterdam. It has set up the Alliance for Responsible Denim which has a goal of producing denim in a sustainable way by tackling the three main ecological issues: the use of water, energy and chemicals.

Another example is American Beverage’s partnership with the Alliance for a Healthier Generation which sought to limit beverage portion sizes in schools. It released a report claiming beverage calories shipped to schools had fallen 58 per cent after two years of implementation.

In his paper, Investors as stewards of the commons?, Serafeim says there are two characteristics of investors that are likely to engage with companies at an industry level on issues of environmental and social importance, namely a long horizon and significant common ownership of companies in the same industry or supply chain.

The full paper can be accessed here

Sponsored Content

George Serafeim, the Jakurski Family Associate Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School is one of the speakers at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium to be held at MIT, October 1-3.

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

The arithmetic of “all-in” investment expenses

In the January/February issue of the Financial Analysts Journal, Jack Bogle, founder and former chief executive of the Vanguard Group, looks at the “all-in” investment expenses including not only expense ratios byt transaction costs, sales loads and cash drag. He highlights, in particular, how damaging these costs can be over the long run, and reaffirms

How to estimate the equity risk premium

Given the importance of equity risk premium, it is surprising how haphazard the estimation of equity risk premiums remains in practice. This paper by Aswath Damodaran at the New York University Stern School of Business examines a number of different approaches to determining the equity risk premium and why different approaches yield different values. It

Risk parity and beyond

This paper analyses whether the use of uncorrelated underlying risk factors, as opposed to correlated asset returns, can lead to a more efficient framework for measuring and managing portfolio diversification. The paper, by academics at EDHEC Business School and SYMMYS, acknowledges that the ability to construct well-diversified portfolios is a challenge of critical importance in

Emerging equity markets in a globalising world

Even though there has been dramatic globalisation over the past 20 years it still makes sense to segregate global equities into “developed” and “emerging” market buckets, according to a paper by Columbia and Duke academics. The research, which has important policy implications for institutional and pension fund management, shows that while correlations between developed and

Citigroup: a case study in managerial and regulatory failures

This article by Arthur Wilmarth from George Washington University Law School uses Citigroup as a case study to demonstrate the question of whether bank executives and regulators are able to supervise and control today’s complex megabanks. The study shows that post-mortem evaluations of Citigroup’s near-collapse revealed that neither Citigroup’s managers nor its regulators recognized the

Macroeconomic risk and hedge fund returns

This paper estimates hedge fund and mutual fund exposure to newly proposed measures of macroeconomic risk that are interpreted as measures of economic uncertainty. The academics, from Georgetown and Stern, find the resulting uncertainty betas explain a significant proportion of the cross-sectional dispersion in hedge fund returns. However, the same is not true for mutual

Previous