A billionaire's foundation is investing all of its assets in companies that have a " measurable and beneficial social or environmental impact," the New York Times reports.
Nathan Cummings, a Canadian billionaire who built Sara Lee into a global packaged food company, established the Nathan Cummings Foundation in 2000 with a mission to "create a more just, vibrant, sustainable, and democratic society."
His goal was to invest 5% of his fortune in companies that help the environment and treat workers fairly.
But at a 2017 board meeting, several generations of the Cummings family had to vote in favor of investing all of the foundation's assets in companies that have a positive social or environmental impact.
"The usual investing wisdom is that if you want to b) have a measurable and beneficial impact, then you a) won't make as much money," CNBC quotes the Cummings Foundation as saying in a new report.
Instead, the foundation invested all of its assets in 100 companies that have a social or environmental impact of "at least not actively harm" the environment or violate human rights, according to the Times.
The investment paid off: The foundation's investments in companies that have a positive social or environmental impact have returned an average of 10.4% per year over the past five years, compared to 6.5%
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Senay Ataselim-Yilmaz, Chief Operating Officer, Turkish Philanthropy Funds, writes that philanthropy often solves the very problems that stems from market failure. Some social issues, however, cannot be tackled by questioning the return on investment.