| Scratching
the Surface of Socially Responsible Index Funds
By John Spence
October 30, 2001 |
|
National tragedies like the events of 9/11/01 inevitably cause
people to reexamine values, and part of this process may include
taking a fresh look at your portfolio.
So assuming you're not interested in the latest hot defense
sector or bioterrorism play, let's take a gander at a few broad
index funds that track benchmarks with social and environmental
screens.
The Domini Social Index (DSI) 400 is an established socially-screened
equity index that was launched in 1990. Billed as an S&P 500
benchmark for the socially and environmentally conscious, the
DSI 400 is governed by rules that exclude companies that engage
in military weapons, alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and nuclear power.
As the name suggests, the index is a capitalization-weighted collection
of 400 socially-screened companies.
The Domini
Social Equity Fund, which is pegged to the DSI 400, was launched
in 1991 and is the granddaddy of socially responsible funds. The
fund has an expense ratio of 0.96%, which is rather steep if you
use the Vanguard
S&P 500 Index Fund, 0.18% expense ratio, as a yardstick.
However, here's how the two funds stack up in terms of performance.
| Fund |
3 mo |
1 yr* |
3 yr* |
5 yr* |
10 yr* |
| DSI 400 |
-14.26% |
-27.31% |
0.90% |
9.90% |
12.20% |
| Vanguard 500 |
-14.72% |
-26.70% |
2.05% |
10.20% |
12.61% |
Source: Morningstar data as of 9/30/2001
*annualized
returns
Some folks might object to the S&P 500 comparison, claiming
the S&P 500 isn't a true measure of "the market,"
and they may be right. After all, an index fund or exchange-traded
fund is only as good as the index it tracks. So let's look at another
large cap domestic option.
Morgan Stanley offers the KLD Social Index Fund. The screened
index is managed by KLD Research & Analytics (which also created
the DSI 400), and is comparable to the Russell 1000. The KLD Large
Cap Social Index (LCSI) contains 700 companies that passed social
and environmental screens, and covers 92% of the available U.S.
market capitalization. The Morgan Stanley fund has expenses capped
at 0.60%.
For those seeking an even broader screened index fund, there's
good news and bad news. KLD does have a Broad Market Social Index
(BMSI) based on the Russell 3000. However, as of yet there are
no funds that track the index.
Although the BSMI and LCSI are relatively new - both were launched
on January 1, 2001 - here's how they have performed relative to
the indexes they're based on.
| Index |
YTD |
| BMSI |
-24.10% |
| Russell 3000 |
-20.78% |
| LSCI |
-24.84% |
| Russell 1000 |
-21.23% |
Source: Frank Russell & Co., as of
9/30/2001
State Street and Barclays Global Launch New Foreign ETFs
State Street Global Advisors recently rounded out its family
of MSCI European sector exchange-traded funds (ETFs) with the
launch of three streetTRACKS tied to European industrials, materials,
and utilities indexes. All three have expenses of 0.50% and began
trading earlier this month on Euronext Paris.
As mentioned in a previous article,
the American Stock Exchange (AMEX) began trading a broad Japanese
iShares ETF based on the S&P/Topix 150 share index. Additionally,
Barclays Global Investors launched three more iShares based on
the S&P Latin America 40 Index, Goldman Sachs Natural Resources
Index, and the MSCI Pacific ex-Japan Index. That brings the latest
ETF count to 174 (excluding the HOLDRs), with 111 ETFs listed
on the AMEX holding assets of over $67 billion.
Trick or Treat?
Faithful readers may remember my rant
about Marketocracy, a website that allowed everyday folks to run
virtual mutual funds with play money. Marketocracy compiled an
index of the top 100 "managers," the m100 index, and
dubiously boasted that it trounced (for a quarter) 94% of professionally
managed funds.
Now, despite the fact that many "chat room" funds employing
similar gimmicks have failed utterly, Marketocracy is launching
a fund based on the m100 index. The Masters 100 Fund will have
a real manager who uses ideas from the m100 index. The fund will
launch on November 5, and until this Friday you can purchase shares
at the subscriptions offering for $10 per share. Now that's scary
stuff.