Investments & ISAs Overview
Ethical savings accounts and funds often avoid investing in industries such as tobacco, nuclear power and arms.
They may also seek to invest in 'positive' businesses like renewable energy, sustainable timber and waste management. Furthermore such funds and accounts can generate returns as healthy as their non-ethical equivalents.
If you're serious about social and environmental issues, then choosing an ethical fund or savings account represents a long-term investment, not just in your financial future but the world's future too.
Types of investment funds and ISAs
Finding a green or ethical ISA
Share ownership
If you are thinking of dabbling in the stock market, or already own shares, it’s possible to shape your portfolio so that the companies you invest in match your ethical principles. In addition to selecting companies for investment on the basis of their ethical credentials, you can also use your power and influence as a shareholder to improve the ethical performance of the companies in which you invest.
However, it can be time-consuming and difficult to check up on the performance of every company you are interested in. The easiest way for ethically-minded individual investors to choose which companies to invest in is to use a fund manager or stock broker who will adhere to a set of ethical constraints. Another is to invest in a pooled fund which is guided by a green and/or ethical ethos. Different types of green and ethical investment funds and ISAs are described below.
Types of investment funds and ISAs
Ethical Funds
Also known as socially responsible investment (SRI) funds this type of investment generally seeks to avoid certain types of businesses while investing in socially and environmentally beneficial ones. Industries most commonly excluded by ethical funds include alcohol, tobacco, gambling, pornography, animal testing for cosmetic purposes, genetic engineering, intensive farming, armaments and nuclear power.
Green Tech/Climate Change Funds
These 'thematic' funds seek to invest in companies in specific sectors like renewable/alternative energy, carbon-offsetting, sustainable timber and waste management. They may not have the same attitude to certain companies as ethical funds, so it is important to check the fund isn't investing in any areas you would not approve of.
Shariah Funds
These funds may be of interest to Muslim and non-Muslim ethical investors alike, as they tend to avoid investment in areas like alcohol, tobacco, gambling and pornography. Restrictions are also in place on investing in banks or other financial institutions due to the prohibition on excessive 'gearing' or interest-charging. Non-halal and pork meat industries are also excluded.
Please note: this site does not offer financial advice or make any recommendations as to the quality or otherwise of the funds presented. We suggest that you fully consider your green and ethical requirements and speak to an independent financial advisor before committing to any investment. Our independent financial advisor search will help you find a professional ethical investment experience.
How do ethical funds invest
Funds pool together the money of hundreds of investors into a single fund, which in turn invests in the stock market. What makes a fund ethical is what it chooses to invest in. Ethical funds use screening, a 'best-in-class' approach and engagement, or a combination of each of these approaches, in their investment process.
Screening
Companies can either be 'screened in' (positive screening) or 'screened out' (negative screening) of funds based on whether they meet or breach certain criteria. On the positive side, a fund may seek to invest in companies making a positive contribution to society, say in the form of renewable energy or waste management.
On the negative side, a fund might avoid investing in certain areas deemed controversial like the tobacco, arms or fossil fuel industries, companies with poor human rights records, heavy polluters or those that test on animals for cosmetic purposes. Other funds might avoid investment in financial institutions while some, known as 'fund of funds' might invest only in other ethical funds.
Best in Class
In this case, investment decisions are made based on a company's record in relation to its peers. A fund might, for example, invest in the oil or gas sector, but only in those companies which are deemed to be the best in their class, with say, a better record on the environment and human rights than others in their sector.
Engagement
In this instance the fund's manager works with and actively encourages the companies that he or she invests in to adopt or improve social, governance and environmental practices. This can involve meetings with senior management and voting at relevant shareholder meetings, i.e. Annual General Meetings.
Finding a green or ethical ISA
An ISA (Individual Savings Account) is a tax-free savings account designed to encourage people to save money. There are two types of account: a cash ISA and a stocks and shares (equity) ISA.
The annual investment allowance is £7200, £3600 of which can be saved in cash with one provider, the rest can be invested in stocks and shares with either the same or a different provider. It is possible to transfer ISAs between accounts, though it should be noted that while it is possible to transfer a cash ISA to an equity ISA, the reverse is not allowed. From April 2010 the annual investment will rise to £10,200 (of which £5,100 can be saved in cash).
The money deposited in an ISA linked to an equity fund can be invested in companies listed on the stock market, government bonds and corporate bonds. It is therefore considered to be exposed to more risk than a cash ISA as its performance may be subject to market fluctuations. However, this type of ISA could potentially deliver greater returns in the long-term.
Equity ISAs
The number of green and ethical equity ISAs is growing all the time. There are currently around 90 green and ethical funds available, the majority of which come with an ISA wrapper.
Use our search to find an equity ISA whose policy addresses your green/ethical concerns.
Cash ISAs
A cash ISA is similar to a normal savings account except that the interest earned is exempt from tax and there is a limit on how much cash you can deposit.
If you want to invest your money in a green or ethical cash ISA you can do so with a proven green or ethical provider, i.e.:
You can also search our database of banks and building societies to find an ISA provider with the right green and ethical credentials for you.
Alternative investments
In addition to ethical funds and ISAs, there are a number of other green and ethical investment options available, including:
- Triodos Renewables: is a public limited company that invests in large-scale renewable energy projects.
- Newcastle Intermediary Services 'Clean Energy Select Account': is available as a direct investment or cash ISA and invests in a mixture of clean energy technology and equipment companies.
- HSBC Vaccine Investment: open to consumers as an investment plan or an ISA, this product helps raise money for the GAVI Alliance (formerly the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation). It states that every £1000 invested helps immunise over 130 children from five life-threatening diseases, including Diphtheria and Hepatitis B.
- Triodos Microfinance Fund: this fund provides finance to nearly 40 microfinance institutions in countries in Latin America, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe.It is open to individual UK high-net-worth or sophisticated investors. The minimum investment amount is currently €50,000 or £50,000 depending on the share class chosen.
- Big Issue Social Enterprise Investment Fund: the investment subsidiary of the Big Issue magazine has launched a new fund which target foundations, charitable investors and high-net-worth individuals. It aims to invest in social enterprises in the health and social care, environment, and employment and skills sectors and will invest between £100,000 and £500,000 in each business.
Your next steps
Check out our Next Steps Guide - Investments & ISAs for further information on finding a green or ethical fund and questions you might want to ask of your existing investment managers or savings institution.
Investments & ISAs Search
Green / Ethical Fund
CIS FTSE4Good Tracker Fund
The CIS FTSE4Good Tracker Fund is available to retail investors as a Unit Trust. The fund tracks companies featuring on the FTSE4Good Index which is independently calculated and based on the FTSE All-Share stocks which meet the FTSE4Good inclusion criteria. It is open to retail investment and comes with an ISA wrapper and an associated Child Trust Fund.
Company Info
Fund Provider
Co-operative Investments (Retail customers), Co-operative Asset Management (Intermediary market)
Fund Manager
Neil Blower
Website
http://www.co-operativeinvestments.co.uk/
responsibleshareholding@cfs.coop
Phone
08457 46 46 46
Fund Type
Uniti Trust
Sector
UK All Companies
Launch Date
January 2003
CIS FTSE4Good Tracker Fund
Positive Screening
Aspects of a company’s activities that will be taken into account include the extent to which a company is working towards environmental sustainability; developing a positive relationship with stakeholders; upholding and supporting universal human rights; ensuring good labour supply chain labour standards and countering bribery.
Negative Screening
FTSE4Good exclusions include:
- Tobacco producers
- Manufacturers of either whole, strategic parts, or platforms for nuclear weapons systems,
- Owners or operators of nuclear power stations
- Companies manufacturing whole weapons systems
- Those who mine or process uranium
Voting
The fund managers exercise their vote on every motion at every general meeting of every company in which shares are held. In general, they will vote ‘for’ if the resolution is consistent with its guidelines, accords with best practice and is in shareholders' long term interests. It will, however, abstain if the resolution falls short of best practice, but the issue is not sufficiently material to oppose management. Votes ‘against’ arise when the resolution is inconsistent with the fund’s guidelines, does not accord with best practice and is not in shareholders' long term interests.
Examples of recent voting activity include voting against the report and accounts and remuneration report of GlaxoSmithKline and abstaining on the re-election of two directors. Managers also abstained on the remuneration report resolution and amendment to share plan of HSBC Holdings. Voting in support of 'say on pay' resolutions in the US as well as generally being supportive of ESG based resolutions.
Information about voting activity is available on the management company’s website.
Engagement
The CIS UK FTSE4Good Tracker Trust works in tandem with the Co-operative Responsible Shareholding policy, which applies to all of the group's equity investments. Engagement is defined as pursuing a point of difference with a company. The broad aim of Responsible Shareholding is to increase the social accountability on the part of companies in which shares are held, through engagement and by using shareholder voting rights at Annual General Meetings.
To do this the fund’s management might send letters to chief executives, investor relations managers or managers concerned with specific interests or engage in telephone dialogue. Meetings occur with key personnel as part of the investigations conducted by the fund manager or as part of broader initiatives undertaken by the Responsible Investments Unit. The UN Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI) engagement clearing house is used to identify global engagement initiatives.
Examples of engagement include meetings held with BP and Shell to discuss how investing unconventional fossil fuels (oil sands) can be reconciled with pledges to reduce emissions and environmental impact. Others are with HSBC on the issue of funding deforestation projects by Samling and Tesco on labour standards.
In the case of the CIS UK FTSE4Good Tracker Trust, in order to closely track the benchmark index, the stock would not be removed from the portfolio.
Research
The fund's research is conducted in-house by the ESG team and Equities Analyst with regard to research from a number of external bodies, including EIRIS, Innovest, PIRC, IVIS, PRI and GIGN. All holdings are reviewed twice a year to ensure continued compliance with the Trust’s positive and negative criteria.
The fund benefits from advice from independent experts on the suitability of investments on ESG grounds. These experts also offer insight on ESG policy issues such as human rights and climate change.
Divestment Policy
Not applicable as the fund tracks the benchmark index.
Up to date info found
Retail customers: www.co-operativeinvestments.co.uk
IFAs: www.co-operativeassetmanagement.co.uk
Retail customers call the Customer Contact Centre on 08457 46 46 46 (IFAs use this for account information/ holding valuations/ letters of authority). IFAs call Broker support: 0845 603 9986 (for research, sales & performance).
Company Info
Fund Provider
Co-operative Investments (Retail customers), Co-operative Asset Management (Intermediary market)
Fund Manager
Neil Blower
Website
http://www.co-operativeinvestments.co.uk/
responsibleshareholding@cfs.coop
Phone
08457 46 46 46
Fund Type
Uniti Trust
Sector
UK All Companies
Launch Date
January 2003
CIS FTSE4Good Tracker Fund
Fund Size £
£23.5m (05/09)
Charges
| Annual Charge | 1.50% |
|---|
Products
| Products Available | Min Lump Sum (£) | Min Monthly (£) |
|---|---|---|
| Unit Trust/OEIC | £1000 | £None |
| ISA | £1000 | £None |
Top Holdings
| 1 | Royal Dutch Shell |
|---|---|
| 2 | BP |
| 3 | HSBC Holdings |
| 4 | Vodafone |
| 5 | GlaxoSmithKline |
| 6 | BG Group |
| 7 | AstraZeneca |
| 8 | BHP Billiton |
| 9 | Rio Tinto |
| 10 | Tesco |
Asset Allocation
| Equities | 99% |
|---|---|
| Bonds | 0 |
| Cash | 1% |
Sector Weighting
| Cash | 1.00% |
|---|---|
| Technology | 1.40% |
| Industrials | 3.90% |
| Utilities | 5.00% |
| Basic Materials | 6.70% |
| Telecommunications | 7.80% |
| Consumer Goods | 8.40% |
| Healthcare | 10.30% |
| Consumer Services | 11.20% |
| Financials | 21.50% |
| Oil & Gas | 22.70% |
Company Info
Fund Provider
Co-operative Investments (Retail customers), Co-operative Asset Management (Intermediary market)
Fund Manager
Neil Blower
Website
http://www.co-operativeinvestments.co.uk/
responsibleshareholding@cfs.coop
Phone
08457 46 46 46
Fund Type
Uniti Trust
Sector
UK All Companies
Launch Date
January 2003





















