KLD Blog
I'm happy to report that the SRI research firm, KLD, is starting a firm blog that will offer insights and commentary on SRI. Peter Kinder, CEO and co-founder of the company has the first post.
I'm happy to report that the SRI research firm, KLD, is starting a firm blog that will offer insights and commentary on SRI. Peter Kinder, CEO and co-founder of the company has the first post.
Back in the early 70s there was a significant surge in interest in socially responsible investing. There was lively debate with articulate advocates like Milt Moskowitz (book plug here) writing in the New York Times, and smart people like Milton Friedman and Burton Malkiel (see his speech in this anthology) raising concerns about the emerging practice.
And that was really the high-water mark for a long time. The general interest in social investing sharply tapered off as the energy crisis hit and the Nifty 50 era came to a crushing end with the 1973-74 bear market.
The present era bears a lot of similarity with those days. Oil prices are through the roof, and with the $100 forecast now looking kind of plausible, the hot new forecast is for $200 oil.
And yet interest in SRI has never been stronger. You see SRI in places it has never appeared before, like The Motley Fool and Value Line (thanks to Lorne Abramson for the tip on that one).
I suspect some of this has to do with the sophistication of the tools available today - social investors can manage portfolio risk in ways they couldn't in the 1970s. Also, there are more funds in different styles, including some good value and and contrarian choices, so performance hasn't been universally poor during the energy bull market of the past three years, despite the weak recent returns of the social indexes.
Socialfunds, the leading SRI news service, now has an RSS feed. If you use an application like Bloglines to pull together your blog reading, you can now include the Socialfunds news feed.
I also want to put in a plug for Philosophy Talk, the radio program that questions "everything... except your intelligence." Their blog is here.
Just discovered this excellent corporate crime blog, written by two law professors. It includes some recent commentary on KPMG, Tyco, and other cases.
Not really a secret as it moves up the best-seller lists, but Freakonomics deserves the praise it's received. At least two chapters - one on the finances of a Chicago crack gang, the other an account of the rise and fall of the Ku Klux Klan - could be books themselves.
The praise is not unanimous. Some economists have criticized Levitt's methods as imprecise or worse. Salon complains that he doesn't offer solutions to the problems he identifies. For my own part, I can't say I'm comfortable with the breathless attempts to turn him into a celebrity. And the title is...not good.
But Levitt's work is very important to social investing. Several of his studies demonstrate that cheating pays in some professions. And he has pioneered analytical techniques (mainly of question framing) that make it possible to detect cheaters in situations you might not have expected. Social investors would do well to borrow some of those tricks.
And yes, there is a blog. Levitt and co-author Dubner helpfully give a list of their negative reviews here.
Here are some blogs I've found useful, some SRI-related and some not. One good way to organize your blog reading is bloglines.com, which also allows convenient access to news services like the BBC.