Sunday, March 25, 2012

Impact Investing: The Trillion Dollar Investment Opportunity

If you are familiar with Boardwalk Capital, then you know that our firm provides a different type of investment management. We focus on sustainable investing --building investment strategies from what may be called "exemplary corporate citizens". 

We think this is pretty important stuff, but to be honest, it's usually just part of the story. To create a full sustainable portfolio, however, one must bring in other asset types such as bonds, commodities, and an array of "specialty" investments -- all with an overarching theme of responsible and profitable investing.

Within the catch-all "specialty" category listed above, one finds what are now called Impact Investments. These are often truly unique enterprises -- companies organized to meet a societal need -- and turn a profit while doing so.

This new and remarkable business model was described by JPMorgan as the next big asset class.  They called it A One Trillion Dollar Investment Opportunity.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Why the World's Largest Investors are Embracing Sustainable and Responsible Investing

Pension plans, college endowments and charitable organizations are some of the largest and most astute investors in the world. As individuals, should we take lessons from their actions?

In recent years, institutions who manage trillions of dollars have begun to take a new approach to investing. They have determined that resource scarcity, climate change, activist consumers and even the speed of social media have changed the investment landscape.

Company reputations are damaged in an instant, and billions of dollars can be wiped away by reckless actions. These institutional investors are increasingly employing a "Sustainable and Responsible Investment" model to help them manage this array of new risks, while positioning themselves to pursue additional opportunities...

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Thursday, March 15, 2012

Companies are Climate Change Believers (even when politicians are not)

Without question, some companies stand to be harmed by climate change. Yet there are many firms who could benefit and are already seizing new opportunities.

Others worry of being impacted by a raft of regulatory changes that seem increasingly likely -- and are lobbying furiously to delay or derail these efforts.

While the impacts will surely vary, no company will be untouched by this issue that sustainable investors increasingly study...


Monday, March 5, 2012

US Buildings need $280bn investment in energy efficiency -- for a $1 trillion return

Buildings account for nearly half of US energy consumption, consume 3/4 of the electricity and, excluding residential, are responsible for more than 45 percent of carbon emissions. The EPA suggests that some 30% of this energy is wasted. 

New research from the Rockefeller Foundation and Deutsche Bank reveals that such inefficiency creates a mammoth investment opportunity --  $279bn investment is needed, and the payback in energy efficiency could yield more than $1 trillion in cost savings over the next decade.  Such a surge of activity stands to employ millions of workers, substantially reduce carbon emissions and provide investors with a handsome return on investment.