May 6, 2024

Wealth Matters: Seeking Investments That Are Profitable and a Little Bit Green

SARAH KUPFERBERG’S youthful rebellion was slightly unconventional — she wanted to invest in green companies, not the big industrials her parents had preferred. But like most novice investors, she stumbled along the way, once putting money into a company that was trying to use buoys to turn ocean waves into electricity.

“When I started investing in companies on my own, I made a lot of bad choices,” Ms. Kupferberg, an ecologist who works on issues related to energy and power. “These were companies at the leading edge of technology. They weren’t great investments.”

Today, Ms. Kupferberg, 50, said she has taken a more pragmatic approach to investing. She is no longer looking for companies at the vanguard of the green movement. Instead, she’s interested in those that are making a profit while also acting in a way that takes into account sound environmental, social and governance practices.

A focus on these factors — known by the shorthand E.S.G. — is a distance from the pure green investments that had less to do with returns. She has invested in Starbucks (even though she prefers to drink Peet’s Coffee) because of its policies toward its employees, like health benefits for part-time workers.

Applying an E.S.G. screen in this instance is a way to look at how companies in similar sectors compare, said Matthew W. Patsky, chief executive of Trillium Asset Management. He drew a contrast between Starbucks and McDonald’s, which does not offer health care benefits for part-time workers. Ms. Kupferberg’s view of looking for the best-behaved companies in a sector is consistent with others who are using their investment dollars to try to push companies toward more socially responsible policies. Rebekah Helzel, a retired proprietary trader for an investment bank, for example, said her focus was on eliminating “carbon-based business models” from her investment portfolio. Yet she has invested in United Parcel Service, which, of course, moves packages around the world in planes and trucks.

“They have a lot of carbon in their business model but they have done remarkable things to reduce it,” Ms. Helzel said. She mentioned their use of new technologies to reduce their carbon footprint but also the company’s oft-cited mapping technology to allow drivers to make as many right-hand turns as possible on their routes.

And many of those who embrace green have distanced themselves from the view that to be environmentally conscious is to lack investment rigor.

“This doing good while doing well thing is getting to be a bit out of date,” said Garvin Jabusch, co-founder and chief investment officer at Shelton Green Alpha Fund. “We’re looking past mere tree-huggery.”

He said E.S.G. investors needed to focus on ways to generate electricity and recycle existing products that could save resources, make a profit and be widely used.

While most E.S.G. investors are not ready to give up on tree-hugging altogether, they are taking an approach that has come a long way from simply screening out certain companies — like oil and gas, military and tobacco. They are moving toward companies that are just as focused on being profitable businesses as operating in a way that is generally better all around.

But this approach lends itself to questions — at least it did for me.

First, let’s talk returns. Are they as good as a portfolio without an E.S.G. screen? The short answer is yes. But that does not mean the returns are always spectacular.

Joseph F. Keefe, president and chief executive of Pax World Management, a mutual fund company focused on E.S.G. investments, said there was no evidence that managers focused on companies committed to improving environmental, social and governance factors were at a disadvantage.

He said that the company’s Global Environmental Markets Fund has outperformed the MSCI World Index since the fund was started in March 2008. A newer fund that invests in exchange-traded funds with the same screen has also outperformed a broader index.

“Do we have funds that are underperforming?” Mr. Keefe asked. “We sure do. We’re in the stock-picking business.”

Advisers who have been taking E.S.G. factors into consideration for years bristle at the suggestion that their process is somehow less rigorous or still based on excluding certain sectors.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/07/your-money/seeking-investments-that-are-profitable-and-a-little-bit-green.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

U.P.S. to End Health Benefits for Spouses of Some Workers

U.P.S., the world’s largest package delivery company, said its decision was prompted in part by “costs associated with” the federal health care law that is commonly called Obamacare. Several health care experts, however, said they believed the company was motivated by a desire to hold down health care costs, rather than because of cost increases under the law.

In a memo addressed to employees, U.P.S. said, “Limiting plan eligibility is one way to manage ongoing health care costs, now and into the future, so that we can continue to provide affordable coverage for our employees.”

The memo also estimated that about 33,000 spouses were covered under its insurance plan for white-collar employees and that “about 15,000 of these would have health care coverage available through their own employers.”

In explaining its move — which was first reported by Kaiser Health News and USA Today — U.P.S. told employees, “Since the Affordable Care Act requires employers to provide affordable coverage, we believe your spouse should be covered by their own employer — just as U.P.S. has a responsibility to offer coverage to you, our employee.”

“In an effort to maintain premiums at or below current cost,” Andrew McGowan, a U.P.S. spokesman, said, “U.P.S. made a change that affects a limited number of employees.”

U.P.S. is one of the biggest companies so far to drop spousal coverage for some segment of its work force, and its announcement was viewed by some as a harbinger of a broader trend in employers’ restrictions on health care benefits.

Large employers like Xerox and Teva Pharmaceuticals already impose surcharges for spousal coverage. And some cities, like Terre Haute, Ind., decided to follow what many of its private corporations were doing, by adopting a “spousal carve-out” so that working spouses would not be covered under its health plans.

The limits on coverage are occurring as some cities and companies are also considering changes to coverage for retirees under 65 and not eligible for Medicare, who might be shifted to the health insurance exchanges being established in states under the Obama health care law.

While the percentage of employers adopting changes in policies like U.P.S.’s new limits remains in the single digits, it is growing. According to a corporate survey by Mercer, a consulting firm, 6 percent of companies with 500 or more employees excluded coverage for spouses in 2012 if their spouses could obtain coverage through their own employer. That is double the percentage in 2008, Mercer found.

Mercer’s survey also found that 6 percent of employers required a surcharge for workers who keep their spouses on their health coverage even though their spouses could obtain coverage from their own employer. A Towers Watson survey found that 33 percent of large employers said they would impose such a surcharge by 2015.

The new U.P.S. policy does not apply to the children of those employees. Nor does it affect the company’s 250,000 unionized workers, who belong to the International Brotherhood of Teamsters. At the end of last year, the company had around 399,000 employees.

Several health care experts said companies were taking these moves partly because the federal health care law does not require employers to provide spousal coverage, but does require them to offer it to employees and their children. U.P.S. made clear that it would continue to provide coverage to spouses who did not have it through another employer.

Assessing U.P.S.’s new policy, Gary Claxton, a vice president and health care expert at the Kaiser Family Foundation, said, “It’s clear that it’s a competitive industry, and they want to cut costs.”

Barry Schilmeister, a senior health consultant at Mercer, said one reason more employers were embracing this policy was to help avoid being hit by the so-called Cadillac tax, which imposes a 40 percent tax on health care premiums above a certain threshold. In 2018, when that tax takes effect, the threshold will be $10,200 for individual coverage and $27,500 for family coverage.

“The Cadillac tax is going to be a serious extra cost for plans that exceed a certain level,” Mr. Schilmeister said. He added that with this move, “U.P.S. is in an indirect way addressing its overall costs — it’s going to lower its total exposure by potentially covering fewer people.”

Mr. Schilmeister predicted that many companies would shun the policy because it posed numerous problems. “It’s not going to be a popular move among employees,” he said.

He added that it would put many employers and employees in an uncomfortable position, with companies that adopt this policy often requiring employees to sign an affidavit affirming that their spouse was not being offered health coverage by another employer.

Many corporations have complained that their health costs would rise as a result of various provisions of the Affordable Care Act, like the requirement that insurance plans cover workers’ children up to age 26 and the prohibition against a lifetime cap on the amount insurance plans would pay for an employee’s health care. Both those provisions took effect in 2010.

Joanne Peters, a spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services, pointed to numerous studies that predicted that employers would continue to offer coverage notwithstanding the law’s requirements.

Moreover, premiums have been rising modestly, she said. In a survey of employers released on Tuesday, the Kaiser Family Foundation found that the average annual premium for a family rose 4 percent in 2013, to $16,351.

Mr. Claxton, the vice president with the Kaiser Family Foundation, said he doubted provisions like the requirement to insure employers children up to age 26 were creating strains on U.P.S. and other companies.

“Those things are trivial in terms of expenses — just pennies per month,” Mr. Claxton said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/22/business/ups-to-end-health-benefits-for-spouses-of-some-workers.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Patriot Coal and Union Reach a Deal on Cutbacks

ST. LOUIS — The nation’s biggest miners’ union and Patriot Coal said on Monday that they had reached a potential settlement that the union said would ease the severity of wage and benefit cuts a bankruptcy judge had allowed the company to impose.

The United Mine Workers of America did not publicly reveal details of the deal, pending a vote Friday by about 1,800 current or laid-off Patriot workers in West Virginia and Kentucky eligible to cast ballots. Patriot also did not release the terms.

But the union said the deal was a significant improvement from the cuts Patriot enacted on July 1, a little more than a month after the federal bankruptcy judge in Missouri, Kathy A. Surratt-States, allowed the company to abandon its collective bargaining agreements with the mine workers.

“We have been able to restore, or at least improve upon, many of the most drastic changes that the judge ordered, including in the area of wages, health care benefits, paid time off, pensions and more,” Cecil Roberts, the union’s president, said in a statement. “In addition, we have negotiated a mechanism that will allow retiree health care benefits to continue.”

Bennett K. Hatfield, Patriot’s president and chief executive, said in a separate statement that the “successful conclusion of a difficult negotiation” helped the company avoid being dissolved.

“Both parties want to preserve jobs and protect health care benefits for retirees by keeping Patriot on track for reorganization — and not liquidation,” Mr. Hatfield said. “We appreciate the cooperation of the U.M.W.A. leadership and the sacrifices of all of our employees and retirees as we work to restore Patriot to viability.”

Patriot, based in St. Louis, said it would seek the bankruptcy court’s authorization to enter into the agreement.

Last month, Patriot said without elaborating that it had imposed less severe wage and benefit cuts on its miners than it could have under Judge Surratt-States’s ruling, and that it would keep retired workers’ health plans unchanged for two months as negotiations with the union pressed on.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/13/business/patriot-coal-and-union-reach-a-deal-on-cutbacks.html?partner=rss&emc=rss