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Socially Responsible Investment Agenda Adding shareholder value using sustainable development Focusing investments Developing appropriate retail and institutional products Engagement Page 2 Sustainable Development “Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” - Bruntland Commission 1987 Page 3 Why Sustainable Development? World Economic Growth continues, UK GDP/capita doubles (1950 - 2000) OECD Economic Output (Real 1995 US$) 2.50E+07 2.00E+07 US$ 1.50E+07 1.00E+07 5.00E+06 Q1 00 Q3 97 Q4 98 Q2 96 Q1 95 Q4 93 Q3 92 Q2 91 Q1 90 Q3 87 Q4 88 Q2 86 Q1 85 Q4 83 Q3 82 Q2 81 Q1 80 Q4 78 Q2 76 Q3 77 Q1 75 Q4 73 Q3 72 Q2 71 Q1 70 Q4 68 Q3 67 Q1 65 Q2 66 Q4 63 Q3 62 Q2 61 Q1 60 0.00E+00 Page 4 Environmental Costs Pollution Resource depletion Climate change Biodiversity Ozone destruction Deforestation, flooding Acid rain Fisheries on brink Toxic pollutants Freshwater shortages Fresh water pollution Topsoil losses Radio-active wastes Page 5 Climate Change Severe weather, and more to come… Impacts - insurance - ‘exceptional’ losses, - electricity generation - agriculture - energy industries Solutions: renewable energies, fuel cells, energy efficiency, rail transport... Searching for sustainable investment solutions Page 6 Endocrine Disrupters Exposure to a cocktail of chemicals Disturbing evidence: early puberty in girls, low sperm counts, gender distortion in wildlife Industries at risk: chemicals, consumer products, retailers and insurance Friends of the Earth campaign- Boots a key target Page 7 Social Costs Inequality Regional conflicts increasing Diseases reappearing (TB, Malaria, Aids) Diseases of the developed world: Obesity, Heart Disease, Depression Page 8 Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare Page 9 Five World Economy Linear Economy Fossil Fuels, Nuclear Energy DEPLETION Rich Ore Deposits, Ancient Forests, Oil Reserves etc.. CO2, Nox, SOx POLLUTION Materials Heavy metals Carcinogens, EDCs Products and Services OVER CONSUMPTION Page 10 One World Economy Cycling Economy Renewable Sources Sustainably Managed Resources Energy Materials Wastes Bio-degradable wastes Quality of Life Enhancers Page 11 Sustainable Development Key driver to investment performance Economy Society Environment “As investors, we increasingly believe that good environmental and social practice is synonymous with good management of companies and, in turn, good share price performance.” - Keith Jones, Managing Director of Morley Page 13 Appraisal Process Profile each company to: identify environmental and social opportunities & risk judge suitability of a company for the SRI funds highlight areas suitable for progressive engagement Judge suitability of a company based on grading system surrounding 2 key elements: Business sustainability Management vision and strategy Page 16 Product How We Rate Companies - Sustainability Matrix A X B X C X X D X X X X X E X X X X X 1 2 3 4 5 Management Vision and Practice Business Sustainability grading: Management Vision & Strategy Grading: A: 1: Excellent - clear vision of sustainable development and actively working to achieve it …….. core business is sustainability solution …….. E: business is fundamentally in conflict with sustainable development 5: Poor - company is hostile to the concept of corporate social responsibility Page 17 Engagement Good social and environmental practice Good business practice Good financial performance Page 18 Paying the Price of Poor Practice Compensation claims Damage to reputation 82% drop in share price Page 19 Summary SRI must add shareholder value to succeed Traditional negative screening simply restricts where you invest Corporate Governance and engagement are an extension SRI. Page 20