God’s Stewards: A Global Overview of Christian-Influenced Mutual Fund Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Review of Literature
2.1. Historical Development of Christian Finance
2.2. Overview of the State of Research in the Field of Christian Finance
3. Data and Method
4. Results
4.1. Investment Screens
4.2. Investment Techniques
4.3. Public Presentation of the Non-Financial Investment Objectives
Enjoy peace of mind knowing that you have invested with integrity.(fund provider from the USA)
The Fund is governed by the philosophy that being faithful stewards means using assets God has entrusted to us to promote economic results that are not only productive but also reflect God’s values, caring for others as well as all of Creation.(fund provider from the USA)
5. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Responsible for Ethical Investment Strategy | Country | Denominational Orientation |
---|---|---|
3 Banken Generali | Austria | Catholic |
Schelhammer Capital Bank AG | Austria | Catholic |
Erste Sparinvest Asset Management | Austria | Catholic |
Kepler-Fonds KAG | Austria | Catholic |
Raiffeisenbank International | Austria | Catholic |
Allianz Global Investors | France | Catholic |
Equigest | France | Catholic |
Federal Finance Gestion | France | Catholic |
Etique et Investissement | France | Catholic |
ProClero | France | Catholic |
Ampega Asset Management GmbH | Germany | Catholic |
Bank für Kirche und Caritas eG | Germany | Catholic |
Bank im Bistum Essen | Germany | Catholic |
Deka Bank | Germany | Catholic and Protestant |
Deutsche Kirchenbanken | Germany | Catholic and Protestant |
Evangelische Bank | Germany | Protestant (Lutheran) |
Green Benefit AG | Germany | Protestant (Evangelical) |
Invesco Asset Management Deutschland GmbH | Germany | Catholic |
KD Bank und Brot für die Welt | Germany | Catholic and Protestant |
Liga-Pax Bank | Germany | Catholic |
Lyxor Asset Management | Germany | Catholic |
Salm-Salm & Partner GmbH | Germany | Catholic |
Stadtsparkasse Düsseldorf | Germany | Catholic |
Steyler Bank | Germany | Catholic |
Wettlauffer Wirtschaftsberatung | Germany | Catholic and Protestant |
Altum Faithfuk Investing | Spain | Catholic |
BNP Paribas | Spain | Catholic |
Julius Bär | Spain | Catholic |
Sabadell | Spain | Catholic |
Santander | Spain | Catholic |
Bank J. Safra Sarasin | Switzerland | Protestant |
CCLA Investment Management | UK | Protestant (Anglican) |
Epworth Investment Management | UK | Protestant (Methodist) |
Ave Maria Mutual Funds Group | USA | Catholic |
Dana Investments | USA | Catholic |
Eventide Asset Management | USA | Protestant (Evangelical) |
Everence Financial | USA | Protestant (Anabaptist-Christian) |
GuideStone Financial Resources | USA | Protestant (Baptist) |
Kights of Columbus | USA | Catholic |
LKCM Aquinas Funds | USA | Catholic |
New Covenant Funds | USA | Protestant (Presbytarian) |
SEI | USA | Catholic |
Steward Mutual Funds | USA | Protestant (Evangelical) |
The American Trust Allegiance Fund | USA | Protestant (First Church of Christ, Scientist) |
Timothy Plan | USA | Protestant (Evangelical) |
Appendix B
Screen | Definition |
---|---|
Environmental Destruction | This code will be used for screens that adress envorinmental destruction, e.g., use of water, dangerous chemical or polution. Also positive screens to protect the environment are included here. The specific case of climate change is an own category. |
Climate Change | This code will be used for every activity to fight climate change (positive screening, e.g., renewable energy or electric vehicles) or to exclude activities that foster the climate change (e.g., fossil fuels, fracking, coal, oil sand etc.). This is a separate code to environmental destruction. |
Genetic Engineering | This code will be used for any mention to screen for genetic engineering i. e. changes in the DNA of plants or animals. Genetic engineering of humans i.e. cloning is part of the embryonic stem cells code. |
Nuclear Power | This code will be used for any mention to screen for business activities around the generation of nuclear energy e.g., uran exploration, nuclear power plant construction or nuclear power plant operation. This code does not apply to screens that adress nuclear weapons (this is a different category). |
Animal Treatment | This code will be used for any mention to screen for the treatment of animals, e.g., animal testing or farm animal welfare or furs. |
Human Rights | This code will be used for any mention to screen for human rights and human dignity in general, but also in the case of more specific human rights issues such as for example discrimination, diversity or exploitation of human (e.g., child labour, labour rights, working conditions etc.). In addition, norms such as ILO or OECD guidelines are coded here. This code is used for actions of the company, but also for actions of its suppliers and subsidiaries. |
Weapons | This code will be used for any mention to screen for weapons, military, defense, or armaments. Sometimes it is specified to be only controversial or mass destruction/ABC weapons, sometimes its very general. |
Pornography | This code will be used for any mention to screen for adult entertainment or pornography or other ways of sexual presentation. |
Tobacco | This code will be used for any mention to screen for tobacco, such as production or distribution. |
Embryonic Stem Cells | This code will be used for any mention to screen for the use of or research on embryonic stem cells. Cloning is also part of this. It is a subcode of unborn human life. Protection of human life is coded here and with abortion as both address the right to life—but not with contraception (as before conception there is no life to protect). Health Care and pharmaceuticals is too wide to make any conclusions. |
Alcohol | This code will be used for any mention to screen for alcohol, such as production or distribution. Sometimes it is specified to be only high concentration alcohol, sometimes it’s very general. |
Gambling | This code will be used for any mention to screen for gambling, e.g., production, operation or distribution. Sometimes it is specified to be only controversial gambling activities, sometimes it’s very general. |
Abortion | This code will be used for any mention to screen for abortion, e.g., clinics or abortifacients and the protection of the unborn life. Planned Parenthood is coded here as well as with contraception as they offer both as a service. Protection of human life is coded here and with embryonic stem cells as both address the right to life—but not with contraception (as before conception there is no life to protect). Health Care and pharmaceuticals is too wide to make any conclusions. |
Contraception | This code will be used for any mention to screen for contraceptives (sometimes very technical definition what “contraception” is). Planned Parenthood is coded here as well as with abortion as they offer both as a service. Protection of human life is NOT coded here (as before conception there is no life to protect), but it is coded with abortion and with embryonic stem cells as both address the right to life. Health Care and pharmaceuticals is too wide to make any conclusions. |
Governance Issues | This code will be used for any mention to screen for governance topics e.g., executive compensation, board structure, control or shareholder policies and for criminal and unethical business practices, such as bribery, corruption, money laundering, financial misinformation, ceation of cartels or fraud. |
Appendix C
Technique | Definition |
---|---|
Exclusion | This code will be used for every information that refers to practices where the fund companies use some negative screening, avoidance or exclusion of either business practices or even whole business sectors. |
Positive Approaches | This code will be used for every information that refers to practices where the fund companies use positive screening or best-in-class approach. It is also used for every other ranking, such as best-in-industry or worst-in-class. |
Shareholder Activism | This code will be used for every information that refers to practices where the fund companies influence the portfolio companies—either through dialogue (voice) or an explicit ESG-Voting-Policy (Voice). This code is only used if the engagement is done alone. If it is done with other investors, the code “Collaborative Engagement” should be used. This code is only used if the engagement is done alone. If it is done with other investors, the code “Collaborative Engagement” should be used. |
First Engagement, then Divestment | This code will be used for information on how a company deals with controversies, e.g., if a portfolio company is involved into a scandal, if the portfolio company in an engagement process doesn’t change or if the ESG scores of a portfolio company drops below a defined threshold. If the company does seek the contact to or starts a dialog with the portfolio company, this code is applied. It is possible, that a divestment is the last option—but there must always be some sort of communication before the divestment. This code is NOT used if there is no contact or engagement initiative and the stock is directly sold. It is also not used, if it’s a one-way communication, e.g., just a letter to say goodbye without allowing the portfolio company to react. |
Divest without Engagement | This code will be used for information on how a company deals with controversies, e.g,. if a portfolio company is involved into a scandal, or if the ESG scores of a portfolio company drops below a defined threshold. If the company does NOT seek the contact to or starts a dialog with the portfolio company, but instead sells its investment, this code is applied. This code is also used, if the divestment is no must, but a can and it doesn’t matter if it happens immediate or after a grace period. The important part is, that there is no communication before the divestment. This code is NOT used if there is contact or engagement initiative before the stock is sold. However, if the communication is just a one-way communication, e.g., just a letter to say goodbye without allowing the portfolio company to react, it still is part of this category. |
Collaborative Engagement | This code will be used for every information that refers to practices where the fund companies influence the portfolio companies—either through dialogue (voice) or an explicit ESG-Voting-Policy (Voice). This code is only used if the engagement is done with other investors. If it is done alone, the code “Shareholder Activism” should be used. |
Stigmatization | This code will be used if a fund company publicly expresses its disagreement towards actions of its portfolio companies. If concerns are expressed in private as part of a shareholder dialogue, this code is NOT used. |
Impact claim | This code will be used for any statement, that investing with the fund will positively impact environment and society. The understanding goes beyond the personal dimension of the investor. If a company practices shareholder engagement, it is important, that the fund company clearly states, that it actively influences the portfolio companies—just stating that this might be possible or an engagement without clear impact goal is not sufficient. This code is NOT used, if the focus is just on the investors conscious. |
Integrity claim | This code will be used for any statement, that investing with the fund will not violate or contribute to a good conscious. Important is the personal dimension of the investor—and not a doctrine of a church, a sustainability agenda, or the Christian faith in general. |
1 | While there are no statistics on how much wealth faith-based investors possess, there is strong evidence of an enormous accumulation of assets by faith-based organizations. For example, Bhagwat and Palmer (2009) claim that more than 7% of the world’s land area is the property of religious institutions, and the most recent data of the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility show that their members are responsible for more than $4 trillion in managed assets (ICCR 2021). |
2 | The literature sometimes distinguished between positive screening and best-in-class approaches. However, as the latter is a derivative of the former, they are both treated together in this article (Renneboog et al. 2008; Viviers and Eccles 2012). |
3 | We decided to limit the analysis to the top 15 of more than 50 topics in our sample to analyze them further. Examples of other screens are usurious interest rates, violent video games, and food speculation. This gives an impression of how wide the range of topics is that can form a “Christian” investment policy. |
4 | see, for example, Psalm 139:13–16 or Jeremiah 1:5 (New American Standard Bible 1995). |
5 | For a more comprehensive overview on the SDG-related teachings of the Catholic Church, see the collection of Cichos et al. (2021). |
6 | See https://www.shareholdersforchange.eu/who-we-are/ (accessed on 19 July 2022). |
7 | See https://www.iccr.org/iccrs-shareholder-resolutions (accessed on 22 July 2022). |
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Study | Topic | Results |
---|---|---|
Naber (2001) | Financial performance of Catholic portfolio vs. sin stocks and conventional portfolio | Catholic portfolio and conventional portfolio with similia performance; sin stocks with higher risk-adjusted returns |
Kurtz and Di Bartolomeo (2005) | Financial performance of Catholic Values 400 Index vs. S&P 500 | CV 400 with higher valuation ratios, stronger anticipated growth, lower correlation with the overall market, and lower market capitalization |
Boasson et al. (2006) | Financial performance of five CIFs vs. S&P 500 | Neutral performance; best performing CIF with the strictest exclusion criteria |
Ghoul and Karam (2007) | Investment screening practices of USCCB vs. Dow Jones Islamic Index vs. SRI funds | Unique for Islamic funds is objection to interest, pork, and music, and for Christian funds the opposition to alternative lifestyles, i.e., fornication and homosexuality |
Dion (2009) | Investment screening practices of three CIF providers | 29.6% of controversial companies were part of the portfolio of at least one of the funds |
Peifer (2011) | Fund asset stability of religious funds | Assets in religious funds are more stable than assets in conventional funds |
Adams and Ahmed (2013) | Financial performance of Shariah-compliant funds, CIFs, and SRI funds vs. all U.S. funds | Neutral performance; CIFs with the lowest expense ratio |
Investment Screen | Percentage of CIF Providers That Screen on This Topic |
---|---|
Environment | |
Environmental Destruction | 84% |
Climate Change | 80% |
Genetic Engineering | 51% |
Nuclear Power | 49% |
Animal Treatment | 44% |
Social | |
Human Rights | 93% |
Weapons | 89% |
Pornography | 87% |
Tobacco | 87% |
Embryonic Stem Cells | 76% |
Alcohol | 76% |
Gambling | 76% |
Abortion | 71% |
Contraception | 44% |
Governance | |
Governance Issues | 87% |
Investment Screen | Europe (73%) | USA (27%) |
---|---|---|
Environment | ||
Environmental Destruction | 97% | 50% |
Climate Change | 97% | 33% |
Genetic Engineering | 70% | 0% |
Nuclear Power | 64% | 8% |
Animal Treatment | 58% | 8% |
Social | ||
Human Rights | 100% | 75% |
Weapons | 100% | 58% |
Tobacco | 97% | 58% |
Governance | ||
Governance Issues | 97% | 58% |
Investment Screen | Catholic | Protestant |
---|---|---|
Environment | ||
Environmental Destruction | 90% | 67% |
Climate Change | 83% | 67% |
Social | ||
Human Rights | 97% | 83% |
Pornography | 83% | 92% |
Contraception | 62% | 8% |
Abortion | 76% | 58% |
Embryonic Stem Cells | 86% | 42% |
Alcohol | 62% | 100% |
Gambling | 69% | 92% |
Tobacco | 79% | 100% |
Weapons | 97% | 67% |
Governance | ||
Governance Issues | 90% | 75% |
Investment Techniques | Share of All CIF Providers |
---|---|
Exclusion | 100% |
Positive Approaches | 78% |
Shareholder Activism | 64% |
First Engagement, then Divestment | 42% |
Divest without Engagement | 40% |
Collaborative Engagement | 29% |
Stigmatization | 16% |
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Diener, J.; Habisch, A. God’s Stewards: A Global Overview of Christian-Influenced Mutual Fund Providers. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2022, 15, 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15120547
Diener J, Habisch A. God’s Stewards: A Global Overview of Christian-Influenced Mutual Fund Providers. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2022; 15(12):547. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15120547
Chicago/Turabian StyleDiener, Joel, and André Habisch. 2022. "God’s Stewards: A Global Overview of Christian-Influenced Mutual Fund Providers" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 15, no. 12: 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15120547
APA StyleDiener, J., & Habisch, A. (2022). God’s Stewards: A Global Overview of Christian-Influenced Mutual Fund Providers. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 15(12), 547. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm15120547