Practice Strategies
INTERVIEW: Demand For Yield Is No Barrier To Impact Investing, Advisor Says

A time of turbulent markets and talk of more modest returns on assets might not sound promising for advocates of what is called "impact investing", but such a conclusion is premature, a figure in the industry argues, pointing to an increasing weight of data.
It's the impact, stupid.
Well, that might increasingly be the slogan for a trend in
financial affairs that has already gained an audience under
the tag of "impact investing". A recent conference has
highlighted that this trend will gain ground as it overcomes the
doubters despite, or perhaps because of, hunger for yield, a
prominent figure in this area says.
Nick O’Donohoe, senior advisor to the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation and founding chief executive of Big Society Capital,
believes sceptics of this field are increasingly on the back
foot. He recently spoke at a conference in Lisbon, Portugal,
attended by more than 250 people from almost 30 countries. There
is now quite a network of groups promoting such ideas, such as
the Global Impact Investing Network.
"There is a trend towards investors caring about what impact they
have over a long period of time. It is driven by a younger
generation of investors," he said.
Global capitalism has taken a knock and this has encouraged
people to rethink some of their priorities, he said. Another
trigger for impact investing is the upheaval going on in many
parts of the world, such as the Middle East refugee crisis and
environmental concerns.
"There is more awareness around the costs and the benefits of
globalisation," he said.
Although impact investing is not yet a major slice of the total
assets managed, there are $60 billion of impact investing assets
under management, and $12.2 billion of fresh investments was
expected to be put in place last year, according to GIIN. One
forecast has impact investing AuM topping $3 trillion over the
next decade. GIIN defines the area as: "Investments made into
companies, organisations, and funds with the aim to generate
social and environmental impact alongside a financial return.
Impact investments can be made in both emerging and developed
markets, and target a range of returns from below market to
market rate, depending upon the circumstances."
The figures look impressive, but can the trend continue if people
are worried about making ends meet as much as doing good?
O'Donohoe was asked whether, at a time of negative real interest
rates in some countries, low returns, volatility and concerns
about inadequate pension pots, it is realistic to expect more
movement into a form of investing that does not always put profit
and performance top of the list.
"I think actually there is a willingness these days to take more
risk and people are also willing to be more innovative and look
at new things. There has been this perception that impact
investment requires a trade-off for returns but that does not
always have to be the case,” he said.
GINN and Cambridge Associates recently crunched some numbers for
impact investing and more traditional portfolios, and found that
investors taking the impact route were only receiving marginally
lower returns, and so close as to be non-significant except over
very long periods. Funds in the Cambridge Associates Impact
Investing Benchmark, covering areas such as private equity,
posted a net internal rate of return - a measure taking
account of the complex timings of deals - of 6.9 per cent as
of 30 June 2014. This compared to 8.1 per cent for a
comparative universe of non-impact investment funds (source:
Forbes). Smaller impact investing funds did better than
smaller conventional funds, the data showed.
Other evidence seems to add fuel to the impact investing
fire. According to a survey of US asset managers by Cerulli
Associates, the analytics firm, a rising percentage of asset
managers look at environmental, social and governance factors
alongside more traditional financial tests to identify
opportunities and risks. And a recent report by Boston
Consulting Group and MITSloan Management Review found
that investments that deliver financial results are closely
correlated with those that are deemed sustainable (Investing
For A Sustainable Future, 11 May 2016). Separately, a
study by Barclays found that investment-grade bonds with higher
ESG scores outperformed those with low ESG scores between 2007
and 2015 (source: MSCI).
One assumption by impact investing evangelists is that millenials
are keener than their parents on the idea, and this is
significant because a large volume of financial assets are
expected to transfer from baby boomers to their millennial heirs
over the next 30 to 45 years, with an estimated $30 trillion
changing hands in North America alone.
Millennials want to bring about changes with their investments,
so surveys have stated: 52 per cent of US millennials
believe they individually can make a difference globally
(source: Telefonica Global Millennial Survey); some 61 per cent
of this age group are worried about the state of the world and
feel personally responsible for making a difference (source:
Standard Life Investments). A survey by US Trust has shown that
28 per cent of millennials surveyed in 2016 use impact
investments, up from 17 per cent in 2015.
O'Donohoe points to how big firms such as BlackRock - it has a
director of impact investing - are throwing their considerable
AuM muscle behind the trend. He would like to see more
involvement from the world's wealth management industry in
general. One problem, he says, is that there is a relative
shortage of fund products and other channels for investors to
pursue. It is important to recall that these are early days - it
will take time for impact investing portfolios to generate
track records that are credible and catch the eye. Trustees of
pension schemes, for example, have a fiduciary responsibility to
get the most bang for their investment buck, so the more data
available, the better.
There remain dissenting voices. Back in 2012, Kevin Starr,
writing in the January edition of the Stanford Social
Innovation Review, published by California's Stanford
University, opined: "Few solutions that meet the fundamental
needs of the poor will get you your money back. Scalable rural
livelihoods, basic health care, basic education solutions, clean
water—with very few exceptions, you don’t make money off this
stuff, sorry."
Despite such comments, it appears that the trend of impact
investing is here to stay, particularly if doing well by doing
good proves to be a credible trend over time. The controversy
over impact investing is not over - which is perhaps healthy in
any market where ideas should be tested - but impact
investing advocates appear to have a spring in their step.