ESG
Entrepreneur Launches Fund That Challenges "Woke" Boardrooms – Media

There has been such a concentrated push towards ESG investing, with arguably more focus on social, cultural and non-financial aspects of corporate life, that some wealth industry figures are becoming concerned that important objectives are getting lost. Here's an example from the US.
  A young US health and technology entrepreneur has had enough of
  “woke” business practices and has raised $20 million to launch a
  fund that presses companies to focus on making money rather than
  political stances, according to a media report. 
  
  Vivek Ramaswamy, the author of Woke Inc who made his
  fortune investing in pharmaceutical companies, has won the
  backing of hedge fund manager Bill Ackman and billionaire tech
  entrepreneur Peter Thiel to launch the new venture, which is
  called Strive, the Wall Street Journal reported on 10
  May. Ramaswamy said Strive will only invest in firms that focus
  on maximising profits and shun those that espouse political
  beliefs.
  
  Such a story highlights how some figures in wealth management –
  not under bright lights at the moment – are questioning the
  direction of the trend of environmental, social and
  governance-themed investment. It raises questions over the proper
  role of publicly listed firms. Half a century ago, Chicago
  economist Milton Friedman famously stated that the role of
  companies is to maximise shareholder returns, not to foster
  social or non-financial objectives not explicitly stated in
  articles of incorporation. Since then, however, the trend has
  shifted to the point where Friedman’s argument is treated as
  incomplete. Whether opinion changes as inflation hits some
  portfolios remains to be seen.
  
  In the US, the Securities
  and Exchange Commission has 
  drawn controversy by proposing to force listed firms to
  disclose the impact they have on the environment. In other
  jurisdictions, governments can require firms to disclose data
  such as senior female hires, and other measures of performance
  that aren’t strictly financial. 
  
  Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – highlighting Europe’s dependence
  on Russian natural gas – coupled with skyrocketing energy prices
  and dislocations caused by Covid-19, means that some investors
  aren’t happy with where asset management has been going. For
  example, when Larry Fink, chief executive of fund titan BlackRock issued a regular
  note to investors, he was at pains to deny that his firm was
  
  engaging in “woke” politics. (The term is a play on the idea
  of people "waking up" from certain previous states of presumed
  ignorance about topics such as gender and race relations. The
  term is sometimes an alternative to what can be dubbed “political
  correctness” and is usually seen as a left-wing phenomenon
  because it focuses on equality of outcomes, the alleged evils of
  unfettered capitalism, etc).
  
  The WSJ report about Ramaswamy, who at 36 is a relative
  youngster in the sector, has called his approach “excellence
  capitalism”. He criticised the stance from what he dubbed the
  “ideological cartel” of BlackRock, Vanguard and other major money
  managers.  
  
  “We will tell oil companies to be excellent oil companies and
  coal companies to be excellent coal companies and solar companies
  to be excellent solar companies,” he is quoted as
  saying. 
  
  Mr Ramaswamy said he “naturally took the next step” to launch his
  own fund after the Manhattan Institute invited him and
  BlackRock’s Fink to debate stakeholder capitalism in 2020 and
  Fink declined.
  
  Meanwhile, as this news service attests, ESG investing remains
  one of the dominant trends in wealth management. This publication
  has its own “Wealth
  For Good” awards programme that is designed to highlight
  what firms do in the space. We continue to track this space,
  including controversies such as “greenwashing”.