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SAVE THE WORLD AND KEEP YOUR HEAD ABOVE WATER

Experts tell Harvey Jones why ethical investment is the hottest long-term trend and recommend low-cost funds that spread risk

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The planet is heating up and the Arctic is melting. July is on course to be the hottest month ever measured on Earth, according to climate scientists. Extreme weather is becoming the norm.

Climate change looks like an insoluble problem right now, but investors should be asking themselves this question: how can I make money from it?

This is not as cynical as it sounds. If we are going to slow or reverse climate change, businesses have to help and savers can do their bit by investing in the new green economy. Renewable energy, battery-charging technology, carbon capture, electric vehicles and even plant-based burger patties can help make the world well again, and with luck might make investors richer too.

Despite growing concern over climate change and other problems such as plastic pollution, ethical investing still has not hit the mainstream. For example, in the UK, ethical funds make up less than 2 per cent of total investment­s.

But Kay Van-Petersen, global macro strategist at Denmark’s Saxo Bank, says attitudes are changing and sustainabl­e investing is now one of the hottest long-term investment trends, particular­ly among younger investors, so-called millennial­s and Generation Z.

Ms Van Petersen says there is a growing body of research showing that investing does not have to be a trade-off between doing something good and sacrificin­g returns.

To take one example, last year UK investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown found that the 11 ethical funds with a 10-year track record delivered a total return of 125.2 per cent, only slightly lagging the average 134.4 per cent return from UK All Companies funds.

Comparison­s are tricky and performanc­e can be cyclical. Ethical funds tend to focus on small and medium-sized companies, which find it easier to be cleaner and greener than sprawling multinatio­nals, but will underperfo­rm when the big-caps swing into favour.

What is ethical investing?

Another challenge facing investors is that there is no single agreed definition of what constitute­s an ethical investment. Some fund managers actively target, say, renewable energy stocks, while others invest more generally but screen out environmen­tal offenders such as oil and mining companies.

Investing with a clean conscience is not new as such. The first ethical investment fund, Pax World Fund in the US, started almost 50 years ago in 1971, while the UK followed in 1984 with the Friends Provident Stewardshi­p Fund. Ethically concerned Sharia-compliant investment funds also have a long history, first appearing in Malaysia in the 1960s. The sector is growing as it targets Muslims who want to invest in line with their faith.

Today the sector goes by different names, including ethical investing, sustainabl­e investing, socially responsibl­e investing and more recently, ethical and social governance (ESG) investing.

Ms Van-Petersen says investors need to ensure any fund matches their personal concerns. “Always check the underlying assets to be sure the basket of companies reflects the trend that you want to invest in,” she says.

As with any investment, Ms Van Petersen says it is important to understand the risks. “Just because something is good for the environmen­t, doesn’t mean it couldn’t drop significan­tly in value,” she says

What socially responsibl­e funds should I invest in?

While you may want to save the planet, you still need to rely on your investment­s for a comfortabl­e retirement. Buying individual stocks is always dangerous but particular­ly so in innovative sectors as start-ups have a high failure rate. You can, however, spread the risk with a mutual fund or low-cost passive exchange-traded fund, giving you access to different companies, themes and regions.

Vijay Valecha, chief investment officer at Century Financial in Dubai, says there are now hundreds of socially responsibl­e ETFs to choose from. His recommenda­tions include iShares MSCI KLD 400 Social ETF, which invests in US large cap stocks and is up an impressive 127 per cent over five years, according to TrustNet. com. The iShares MSCI USA ESG Select ETF, which targets large and midcap stocks that have been screened for positive environmen­tal, social and governance characteri­stics, grew a similar percentage.

Keep in mind, though, that past performanc­e is no guide to the future, and these two funds have benefited from the longest US stock market bull run in history.

Mr Valecha also tips the iShares MSCI Global Impact ETF, which invests in companies that address the United Nation’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, such as education or climate change. It is up a solid but unspectacu­lar 8.95 per cent over three years, broadly in line with his benchmark. ESG investing could outperform over the longer term, as more people embrace ethical and sustainabl­e practices, Mr Valecha says.

“For example, internal combustion engines are making way for electric engines and coal power plants are getting replaced by solar panels.”

Like any technologi­cal revolution, from cars to the internet, there will be failures along the way. As an example, the booming German solar power sector was largely wiped out by cheap imports from China.

Oliver Smith, portfolio manager at investment platform IG in Dubai, tips iShares MSCI EM IMI ESG Screened, launched last October, an emerging markets fund that screens out tobacco and munitions companies.

The recently launched iShares MSCI World ESG Screened applies filters to the MSCI World index, Mr Smith says. “Over the longer term, returns from these two ETFs should not deviate too much from traditiona­l indices,” he says.

Funds actively targeting social and environmen­tal companies can be riskier but Mr Smith recommends the newly launched L&G Clean Water ETF, as well as iShares Global Clean Energy ETF, launched in 2007, which has grown 48 per cent over five years.

In the long run, investors should not have to give up performanc­e to invest in ESGs, Mr Smith says. “However, the more you deviate from a crossthe-market approach, the more volatile your relative returns will be.”

What Sharia-compliant options are available?

Many Muslims struggle to invest in line with their faith because they want to avoid companies that profit from activities deemed harmful or impermissi­ble in Islam, including alcohol, tobacco and gambling.

Mr Valecha says Sharia-based investing is becoming increasing­ly popular in the Middle East and UAE. “For many local investors, it will be a first choice method,” he says.

A small but growing number of Sharia funds are looking to invest in wider social responsibi­lity, including the environmen­t.

Templeton Sharia Global Equity targets long-term capital growth by investing primarily in Sharia-compliant global stocks, although performanc­e is poor with the fund down 2.68 per cent over five years, according to Trustnet Offshore.

NBD SICAV Mena Opportunit­ies Fund from Luxembourg, which invests across Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait and the UAE, is up 21 per cent measured over three years, while the NBD SICAV Emirates Islamic Global Balanced is up 10 per cent over three years.

As the world wakes up to the dangers of climate change, the ESG sector is likely to grow in prominence. One day, it could be the mainstream. The world may have no choice.

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