| It Pays
to be Good
By John Spence
June 21, 2000 |
|
Socially responsible mutual funds were first introduced
in the early 1980s, but until recently their performance has lagged
the market. The "sin stocks"- those involved in tobacco, weapons
development, nuclear power, and pornography-outperformed socially
responsible funds for those who didn't mind profiting from polluting
our environment, bodies, and minds. With tech stocks flourishing
today, however, socially responsible investors are seeing their
returns grow.
Although each fund has different qualifiers for
what is considered "socially responsible," most put a high priority
on a clean environmental record, a focus on employee relations,
workforce diversity, and product safety. The Noah Fund, for example,
is a large-cap growth fund based on Judeo-Christian Biblical principles.
The Noah Fund shuns new
media companies involved in pornography, healthcare companies
involved in abortion, and even Disney for its R-rated movies.
Well hallelujah, the Noah Fund has gained twice as much as the
Standard & Poor's 500 (S&P
500) in the past three years.
According to the
Social
Investment Forum, nearly $1 of every $8 under professional
management in the United States is in a socially responsible portfolio.
With a variety of socially responsible funds, it is likely that
each investor will find a fund that matches his or her own beliefs.
The
MMA
Praxis funds are aimed at Mennonites, Amana funds are geared
towards Muslims, and Catholic Values funds are designed for Catholics
with a less fundamentalist Christian outlook than the aforementioned
Noah Fund. Some funds have strict guidelines for what will keep
a company out of their portfolio, while other funds will include
offenders who are taking steps to curb their "sinful" behavior
and business practices.
With all the choices out there, it is hard for index
fund investors with a conscience to determine where they should
invest. Here's a sampling of socially responsible index funds
for passive investors:
Domini Social Equity
and Citizens
Index earn 4-star ratings, but these funds have a downside:
they're both relatively expensive. Citizens' 1.58% expense ratio
is higher than that of most large-cap index funds, and although
Domini's 0.98% expenses are lower, they are still above average.
Sophia Collier, who runs the Citizens Index, also manages their
Small Cap Index. This fund is also expensive. Citizens is charging
an expense ratio of 1.55% for the Small Cap Index, which is high
when compared to the average small-cap index fund's expense ratio
of 0.65%.
As a point of reference, Mutual Funds magazine says
that the industry average is 1.53%. According to Lipper, Inc.,
the expense ratio of the average social fund is 2.00%. Some of
the new competitors entering the Socially Responsible fund market
are certain to drive this average down.
The recently launched Vanguard
Calvert Social Index Fund charges a 0.25% expense ratio for retail
shares. Its benchmark will avoid alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and
nuclear-power businesses, and it will screen companies for qualities
like environmentally sound records and workplace policies. TIAA-CREF
has also begun the Social
Choice Equity fund, which will have a correspondently minuscule
0.27% expense ratio.
The Walden/BBT
International Social Index Fund is the first socially screened
fund to track the MSCI EAFE index. The fund will follow the performance
of that index, but it will screen out alcohol, tobacco, gambling,
and firearm businesses, nuclear-power producers, and companies
with poor human-rights records. In addition, the fund's management
plans to be an activist shareholder, encouraging companies to
improve their environmental and employment practices. Walden also
has a domestic Social Index Fund.
| Socially Responsible Index Fund |
Ticker |
Exp. Ratio |
YTD % |
12mo % |
3yr ann. % |
5yr ann. % |
Incpt. Date |
| Citizens Index Std. |
WAIDX |
1.58% |
-6.21 |
+13.38 |
+25.73 |
+27.28 |
3/95 |
| Devcap Shared Return |
DESRX |
1.75% |
-3.56 |
+11.97 |
+21.41 |
N/A |
10/95 |
| Domini Social Equity |
DSEFX |
0.98% |
-6.04 |
+9.91 |
+21.31 |
+24.15 |
6/91 |
| Green Century Equity |
GCEQX |
1.50% |
-6.23 |
+9.40 |
+20.80 |
N/A |
9/95 |
| Capstone SERV
Intern C |
CSINX |
- |
-9.22 |
+9.76 |
N/A |
N/A |
9/98 |
Capstone SERV
Bond C |
CSBFX |
- |
+2.17 |
+1.95 |
N/A |
N/A |
9/98 |
Returns through 5/31/2000 (Source: Morningstar, Inc.)
| The New Players |
Ticker |
Exp. Ratio |
YTD % |
Inception to 6/20/00 % |
Inception Date |
| Walden/BBT Domestic |
WDSIX |
0.75% |
+0.28 |
+10.09 |
7/30/1999 |
| Walden/BBT International |
WISIX |
0.91% |
-4.60 |
+11.74 |
8/26/1999 |
| TIAA-CREF Social Choice Equity |
TCSCX |
0.27% |
+3.11 |
+3.11 |
4/03/2000 |
| Vanguard Calvert Social Index Fund |
N/A |
0.25% |
N/A |
N/A |
5/31/2000 |
Returns through 6/20/2000 (Source: Morningstar, Inc.)
For now, at least, it is profitable to be good. What remains to
be seen is how well socially responsible funds will perform as volatility
in the tech sector continues. Rumblings that tech and dot-com companies
might not be living up to their squeaky "green" reputations can't
be good for socially responsible funds. The fact that Microsoft,
a company that admitted to engaging in unscrupulous business strategies
to dominate competitors, figures so prominently many socially responsible
portfolios, along with union-crushers like Walmart, might also have
investors scratching their heads. In the end what constitutes "socially
responsible" behavior is as complex as each investor's decision
to invest with a social conscience.