Showing posts with label sustainable stock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sustainable stock. Show all posts

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Impact Investing Summit 2011

On Monday June 13, The Impact Investing Summit (iiSummit) aims to mobilize the power of private capital in the Midwest for social and financial return. hosted by the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. The first-ever summit will focus on the ways this growing industry bridges social and environmental impact with investment vehicles that are attractive to mainstream investors.

Impact investing is an emerging asset class that is gaining increased recognition from institutional investors, high net worth individuals, and private foundations. In this nascent industry, there is a range of options around financial returns, type and location of investment, and potential exits. The iiSummit will bring together national experts in this field—including members and advisors to private foundations; State Department and SBA representatives; and institutional, venture capital, and individual investors—to explore impact investment options for the Midwest.

This summit supports current efforts of the U.S. Secretary of State’s Global Partnership Initiative (GPI). In 2010, GPI began the “20ii - Investing for Impact” initiative to leverage the assets of corporations and investors to achieve social and environmental impact in underserved markets and help achieve the U.S. government’s foreign policy objectives.

At the iiSummit, institutional investors, high net worth individuals, private foundations, and USG representatives as well as a broad range of investment practitioners will examine the impact investing sector in a series of lectures and panel sessions. Topics for discussion include successful investment models, social innovation and policy, and social impact trends in the Midwest.

“The Midwest is generating novel for-profit ventures that are creating both social and financial returns but require growth capital,” said Linda Darragh, clinical professor and director of entrepreneurship programs for the Polsky Center for Entrepreneurship at Chicago Booth. “But we can no longer rely on philanthropy alone. Impact investments are the fuel needed to grow this new class of ventures that will better our society and environment.”

“The iiSummit aims to further this discussion by educating the investment community about how to harness private capital in the Midwest and direct these resources for social and financial return,” said Jamie Jones, associate director of the Social Enterprise at Kellogg (SEEK) program at the Kellogg School. “This is an ideal time to bring impact investing and new investment models to the forefront of the business community, especially here in Chicago.”

The events of the day will be capped off by three presentations from Midwest ventures that highlight the opportunity for impact investments.

Speakers:

-Kris Balderston, special representative for global partnerships, U.S. Department of State Global Partnership Initiative
-David Chen, managing partner, Equilibrium Capital Group
-Sasha Dichter, director of business development, Acumen Fund
-Sean Greene, associate administrator for investment and senior adviser for innovation at the U.S. Small Business Administration
-David Kirkpatrick, managing director and co-founder, SJF Ventures
-Wes Selke, investment manager, Good Capital & Hub Ventures
-Thomas Debass, U.S. Department of State Global Partnership Initiative
-Noel Kullavanijaya, Equilibrium Capital
-Tom Balderston, Investors' Circle and Patient Capital Collaborative
-Patrick Fisher, Creation Ventures
-Deborah Quazzo, NeXtAdvisors
-Karen Lehman, Fresh Taste Initiative
-Keith Crandell, ARCH Venture Partners and Clean Energy Trust

For more information click here.

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

The Dow Jones Sustainability Index

The Dow Jones industrial average is the world's best known index and as of 1999 it has been home to the world's first sustainability index.

Dow Jones is the leading full-service index provider that develops, maintains and licenses indexes for use as benchmarks and as the basis of investment products. Dow Jones offers more than 130,000 equity indexes as well as fixed-income and alternative indexes.

In 1999, Dow Jones launched its Sustainability Index (DJSI). The first global indexes tracking the financial performance of the leading sustainability-driven companies worldwide. Based on the cooperation of Dow Jones and SAM (Sustainability Asset Management) they provide asset managers with reliable and objective benchmarks to manage sustainability portfolios.

Currently more than 70 DJSI licenses are held by asset managers in 19 countries to manage a variety of financial products including active and passive funds, certificates and segregated accounts. In total, these licensees presently manage over 8 billion USD based on the DJSI.

The DJSI measures companies’ sustainability initiatives. This family of indexes evaluates the performance of the world’s sustainability leaders. The DJSI focuses on how a company recognizes the risks and opportunities arising from sustainability issues in its business strategy. The DJSI Indexes are the longest-running global sustainability benchmarks worldwide and have become the key reference point in Sustainability Investing for investors and companies alike.

To be incorporated in the DJSI, companies are assessed and selected based on their long term economic, social and environmental asset management plans. Selection criteria evolve each year and companies must continue to make improvements to their long term SAM plans in order to remain on the Index.

Indexes are updated yearly and companies are monitored throughout the year. DJSI conducts a yearly review of the DJSI family and is based on an analysis of corporate economic, environmental and social performance, assessing issues such as corporate governance, risk management, branding, climate change mitigation, supply chain standards and labor practices. It accounts for general as well as industry specific sustainability criteria for each of the 57 sectors defined according to the Industry Classification Benchmark.

Here is a partial list of some of the companies included in the DJSI:

Dow Jones Sustainability World Index
Adidas- United States
Hewlett Packard Co. – United States
BMW AG- Germany
Coca-Cola Co – United States
Christian Dior S.A.- France
Halliburton Co. – United States
Hyundai Engineering & construction Co. Ltd. – South Korea
Intel Corp. – United States
Mitsubishi Corp. – Japan
Nokia Corp. - Finland
Panasonic Corp. – Japan
Rolls- Royce Group PLC – United Kingdom
Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd – South Korea
Siemens AG- Germany
Starbucks Corp. – United States
Toshiba Corp. – Japan
Unilever- United Kingdom
Volvo AB Series B- Sweden

Dow Jones Sustainability North American Index
3M Co. – United States
Allstate Corp. – United States
Bank of Montreal – Canada
Campbell Soup Co. – United States
Dell Inc. – United States
Ford Motor Co. – United States
Gap Inc. – United States
H & R Block Inc. – United States
Kinross Gold Corp. – Canada
Macy’s Inc. – United States
Microsoft Corp. – United States
National Bank of Canada – Canada
Proctor & Gamble Co. – United States

© 2011, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Saturday, June 12, 2010

Investing in Water

Five years ago Jeff Saut suggested that the next war will be fought over water, not oil. As the ongoing contamination of the ocean in the Gulf of Mexico proves, water is a valuable and fragile resource. From an investors point of view, water is a solid growth area with high barriers of entry.

Itron (ITRI) is fast becoming a leader in next-generation smart grid metering of water, electricity, and any other kinds of utilities. A very similar company is Badger Meter (BMI). A large cap name worthy of attention in Europe is French public utility Veolia Environmental (VE). This is a well priced international company.

Calgon Carbon (NYSE: CCC) is a maker of water and air purifying systems, it has two main lines of growth: activated carbon and ultra violet light equipment, which are used to treat water. Both of these business lines are supported by government regulation, specifically mandates from the Environmental Protection Agency.

Calgon’s growth should continue through 2010 and 2011. They will have significant pricing power, they are not really depending on economic growth or funding and the valuations are still relatively low. The stock has traded between $10.93 and $18.35 during the past year.

On June 2, 2010, Calgon Carbon Corp., announced a contract from the U.S. Army for air filtration machinery valued at least $1.9 million. The contract, is worth up to $5.1 million over three years, and covers general-purpose air filtration machinery. Calgon shares rose 33 cents, or 2.3 percent, to $14.43 during afternoon trading.

Water related ETFs worth looking at include the Powershares Water Resources (PHO) and the Claymore S&P Global Water Index ETF (CGW).

Although water should prove to be a great investment, as with many big-picture investments, timing them is always the hardest part. Averting a war over water is a matter of stewardship, efficiency and forward looking companies that provide technologies to manage the coming water crisis.
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