The World's Best: Henderson Global Investors,
Storebrand Asset Management and Trillium Asset Management
are the world's best practise SRI fund managers and Innovest
(US) and Ethibel/Cordius Asset Management (Belgium) provide
the world's best practise SRI research, according to Mistra research.
16/1/2002
By Felicity Wade
AMP-owned Henderson
Global Investors has joined Norway's Storebrand Asset Management
and Trillium Asset Management from the US as the world's best
SRI fund managers according to a new report commissioned by Mistra,
a Swedish government research body.
Mistra funds sustainability
research has a portfolio of Skr4 billion, about $US400 million.
"Since we support environmental research for sustainability,
our board decided last year that we should have a vision that
our assets should work in the same direction," says Eva Thornelof,
head of asset management and administration at Mistra.
"But SRI is like
a thousand flowers in the field. So many colours. It's not like
traditional financial markets where everything is in place and
understood."
Mistra commissioned
KPMG Consulting to study whether SRI approaches would affect risk
and return levels on investments. KPMG's paper found SRI would
not have an adverse impact, so Mistra then employed Miljoeko and
UK-based consultants SustainAbility to assess the SRI market in
terms of products and services. This report is called "Screening
of Screening Companies."
The study included
only European and US funds and research groups. The report says:
"A rapid SRI-development is taking place outside Europe and
the US but, at the moment, most of these products/services are
newly started and therefore lack the necessary experience to be
included among the best-practice candidates in this study."
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The
study examined 143 SRI products from 77 managers and 24 research organisations
in Europe and the US. It study concluded that Henderson Global
Investors, Storebrand Asset Management and Trillium Asset Management
are world's best practise SRI fund managers and that Innovest (US)
and Ethibel/Cordius Asset Management (Belgium) provided world's best
practise SRI research.
Mistra stipulated that
SRI products and services should "consider company strategies,
organisation and management systems and that the fund benchmarks
companies' environmental performance." Mistra excluded all
negative screened funds. "We don't favour negative screens,"
says Thornelof. "It's the low water mark, just to take away
the bad guys."
However, a tender for
applying a negative screen across the bulk of Mistra's portfolio
closed on Tuesday this week. Thornelof is expecting this screen
will closely mirror the one adopted by Swedish state pension fund,
A-P Fonden 7 which excludes all companies that fail to comply with
UN conventions.
"More importantly
we will start by moving 10-20 per cent of our assets into some kind
of SRI profile management," says Thornelof. "There are
two ways we could go, we could buy good research and then take on
a manager, or we can just buy into a fund."
A short-list of best
practice fund managers and researchers has been invited to meet
with Mistra on January 30. From there, the board and management
will decide on the way forward on its SRI strategy.
"Within Sweden
this development [the Mistra survey] is seen as extremely important
and within Europe it's important because it lends legitimacy to
SRI," says Seb Beloe, New York based director of SustainAbility.
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