World’s Most Ethical Companies – 2012 Edition

The Ethisphere Institute announced its sixth annual selection of the World’s Most Ethical Companies. One hundred forty-five organizations made the list in 2012 from more than three dozen industries, including 43 headquartered outside the United States.

Twenty-three companies that have been honored each of the six years the WME has been awarded, including Aflac, American Express, Fluor, General Electric, Milliken & Company, Patagonia, Rabobank. and Starbucks.

In the past, I’ve analyzed the list and found that investing in the companies on the list was a good choice. Last year, I looked at the 2007 list and projected forward and found that an investment in those companies would have out-performed the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrials.

Last year, Ethisphere highlighted the fact that this list of companies outperformed the S&P 500. That’s missing this year.  I went back to the 2007 list to see what happened .

I still see an outperformance: 13.12% versus -3.48% for the S&P and 3.02% for the Dow Jones Industrials.

You can see my calculations in this spreadsheet (in Google Docs):
https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AuuCq02eKVqldDhydERtRmVsdVo2X0NfOUdXbkZTcmc&hl=en

That seems to show that being ethical is generally good for a company’s shareholders.

Should You Invest in the World’s Most Ethical Companies 2011 Edition

The Ethisphere Institute announced its fifth annual selection of the World’s Most Ethical Companies, highlighting 110 organizations that lead the way in promoting ethical business standards. Of the 110 companies honored this year, 74were on the 2010 list. (If you need help with the math, 36 are new to the list in 2011 and 26 companies dropped off from the 2010 list.)

As they did with the 2010 list, Ethisphere is emphasizing the better financial performance by the companies on this year’s list.

“The World’s Most Ethical Companies, if indexed, would have significantly outperformed the S&P 500 by delivering a nearly 27 percent return to shareholders since 2007, compared to the S&P’s negative 8.5 percent shareholder return during the same period, proving there is a strong correlation between a company’s ethics program and its performance,” said Alex Brigham, Executive Director of the Ethisphere Institute.

Personally, I think its bit misguided to judge the past performance of companies on the 2011 list by looking backwards, especially for the new companies included in the list. As we hear for all investments, past performance is no measure of future performance. A good investor would want a tool to help decide whether to invest in a company, not whether they should have invested 5 years ago.

Is inclusion on the list of Most Ethical Companies an indicator of future performance?

Last year, I looked at Ethisphere’s 2007 World’s Most Ethical Companies and tracked their performance forward to determine whether you should invest in ethical companies. The answer was “yes.” That first class, as a whole, did outperform the broader markets.

I decided to update my study and see if it still held true. The answer is still “yes.”  Those public companies on the 2007 list significantly outperformed the broader markets. If you bought one share of each, you would have realized a 3.96% return. That compares to a -12.36% loss on the S&P index and a -9.1% loss on the Dow Jones Industrials.

You can see my calculations in this spreadsheet (in Google Docs):
https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=0AuuCq02eKVqldDhydERtRmVsdVo2X0NfOUdXbkZTcmc&hl=en

They are not all winners. About half outperformed and half underperformed. But as a whole, you came out ahead. Salesforce is the bigger gainer on the list with a 126% gain. Nokia is pulling up the rear with a 70% loss.

The weak spot in my analysis is that it leaves out the effect of dividends on the returns. In looking through the Ethisphere list, they seem to be a broad mix of companies so I assumed the dividends of these companies would be similar to the dividends from the companies in that broader indexes.

My conclusion is that the companies on the 2007 list of the most ethical companies were a good investment. I may just put some money on some of those new 26 companies on the 2011 list.

Should You Invest in Ethical Companies?

2010 World’s Most Ethical Companies

Yesterday, I was excited to see that the World’s Most Ethical Companies for 2010 had outperformed the S&P 500. Ethisphere went back five years and charted the performance. They found a 53% return for the 2010 class of companies, compared to a 4% return in the S&P.

The hindsight of looking back on the performance is great. It’s telling me that I should have bought stock in those companies five years ago. We all know that hindsight is 20/20. I was curious to see if inclusion on the list is an indicator of future performance.

Should I run out and buy the companies on the 2010 list?

I decided to go back and check the performance of the companies on the first edition of Ethisphere’s list: 2007 World’s Most Ethical Companies.

Great news for ethical investing

The group of public companies on Ethisphere’s 2007 World’s Most Ethical Companies dramatically outperformed the broader market.

If you bought one share in each of the 52 companies on June 1, 2007, you would have realized a -6.34% return. In comparison, the S&P 500 had a -19.57% return and the Dow Jones Industrial Average had  a -15.80% return.

If you bought $100 worth of shares in each of the companies instead of 1 share each, your return drops to -9.83%. The difference is due almost entirely to the presence of Google and its lofty share price. (I used the Berkshire Hathaway B shares because the astronomical price of the Berkshire Hathaway A shares would have dwarfed the one share results.)

Methodology

I used SPY SPDRs, an index fund that tracks the S&P 500, and the SPDR DIAs, an index fund that tracks the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

There are 52 stocks on Ethisphere’s 2007 list that were public companies then and now. Two other companies on the list were public, but went private: Sun Microsystems and Bright Horizons. I omitted those two. There were another 38 companies that were private or whose shares were only available on foreign exchanges. I also omitted those 38 from my calculations.

I used the adjusted close price from Yahoo’s historical prices for the 52 companies, SPY and DIA shares, which adjusts the close price for dividends and splits.

Here is the spreadsheet with the underlying values: http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=t5Tg37_FEqFq71zqApUq0Pw&output=html. Feel free to double-check my math or challenge my methodology.

What does it mean?

I own some of the shares on the list, so I’m well aware that almost as many companies underperformed. (After all, it is an average return.) Eighteen of the 52 companies performed worse than the SPY shares. There does not seem to be a clustering of returns or any one big or gain in the group of 52. It seems to me that these ethical companies, as a group, just outperform the broader market.

If I had more time, I might go back to the 2008 list and the 2009 list to see how those companies have done over a shorter term.

World’s Most Ethical Companies 2010 Edition

2010 World’s Most Ethical Companies

Ethisphere Institute just announced its list of the World’s Most Ethical Companies for 2010.

Of the 100 companies on their list, 26 are new to the list. The sole winner for the real estate industry is Jones Lang LaSalle. For the financial services industry there were three companies: American Express, The Hartford and The Principal Financial Group.

A tidbit that caught my eye was the comparative performance of the companies. Ethisphere claims that the “2010 World’s Most Ethical Companies have outperformed the S&P 500 by delivering a 53 percent return to shareholders since 2005—compared to the S&P’s four percent shareholder loss over the same period.”

It’s interesting to see that these companies consistently outperformed the broader in good times and bad. I’m tempted to go back through all of the past winners to see how it would have worked out by investing in these companies over the years. (If I could just find the time to do so.)

Ethisphere’s looks at 7 categories under their “Ethics Quotient”:

  1. Corporate citizenship and responsibility (20%)
  2. Corporate governance (10%)
  3. Innovation that contributes to public well being (15%)
  4. Industry leadership (5%)
  5. Executive leadership and tone from the top (15%)
  6. Integrity track record and reputation (20%)
  7. Internal systems and ethics/compliance program (15%)

Global Ethics Summit Update

Global Ethics Summit

Dow Jones and Ethisphere Institute are teaming up to present the 2010 Global Ethics Summit on February 23-24, 2010 at the Grand Hyatt New York City.

I will be attending, thanks to an offer from the event’s organizers. If you are interested in attending I can offer you a 15% discount on regular conference fees, available by registering online (http://www.globalethicssummit.com/register) with the code “GES10P”.

They just added two new keynote speakers:

  • Mark Mendelsohn, Deputy Chief of Fraud Section, Criminal Division, U.S. Department of Justice
  • C. Turney Stevens, Dean, College of Business, Lipscomb University

They will be joining the other previously announced speakers:

  • Brackett Denniston, Senior Vice President & General Counsel, General Electric
  • Charles L. Harrington, Chairman & CEO, Parsons
  • Andy Hinton, Chief Compliance Officer & Associate General Counsel, Google
  • Georg Kell, Executive Director, United Nations Global Compact
  • Douglas M. Lankler, Senior Vice President & Chief Compliance Officer, Pfizer

I also need to disclose that they gave me a pass to attend as a media sponsor of the event. You can see Compliance Building listed as a media sponsor. In exchange, I’m writing a few blog posts leading up to the summit and will be live-blogging from it.

Global Ethics Summitt main banner

Global Ethics Summit

Global Ethics Summit

Dow Jones and Ethisphere Institute are teaming up to present the 2010 Global Ethics Summit on February 23-24, 2010 at the Grand Hyatt New York City.

I just confirmed that I will be attending, thanks to an offer from the event’s organizers.

“In an effort to help companies deal with anti-corruption compliance and other significant issues, Dow Jones and Ethisphere Institute are teaming up to present the 2010 Global Ethics Summit.  The event will offer participants the opportunity to gain critical and timely insight into the challenging facets of conducting business successfully and ethically.  The event will bring together government and regulatory officials, FCPA attorneys and consultants, NGOs and nonprofit directors, corporate compliance officers and other top executives.  Attendees will get insight on the rulings and legislative changes that are shaping corporate compliance.  They’ll also receive an in-depth and multi-faceted learning experience that encourages the sharing of best practices for navigating an increasingly complex and daunting global corporate legal landscape.”

They have a good-looking agenda:

  • Compliance 2010 – What’s Next?
  • Doing More with Less: Compliance During Tough Economic Times
  • Global Insights into the Anti-Corruption Landscape
  • Training a Diverse Workforce: Best Practices
  • Transparency –What, How Much and When?
  • When the Government Comes Knocking: Trends and Tips for Dealing with Regulators and Enforcement Officials
  • Telling the CEO No
  • Picking Your Partners
  • Emerging Markets – Opportunities, Challenges and Obligations

and a good line-up of speakers:

  • Brackett Denniston, Senior Vice President & General Counsel, General Electric
  • Andy Hinton, Chief Compliance Officer & Associate General Counsel, Google
  • Georg Kell, Executive Director, United Nations Global Compact
  • Genie Gavenchak, Senior Vice President, Chief Compliance and Ethics Officer & Deputy General Counsel, News Corp.
  • Grace Renbarger, Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer, Dell Computer
  • Nan Stout, VP, Business Ethics, Staples
  • … and many others

If you are interested in attending I can offer you a 15% discount on regular conference fees, available by registering online (http://www.globalethicssummit.com/register) with the code “GES10P”.

I also need to disclose that they gave me a pass to attend as a media sponsor of the event. You can see Compliance Building listed as a media sponsor. In exchange, I’m writing a few blog posts leading up to the summit and will be live-blogging from it.

Global Ethics Summitt main banner