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Investors Should Reject the Woke Nonsense of ESG funds

Poseur anti-capitalist do-gooders are weakening American corporations

By Bill Flaig, May 10, 2022 6:13 am

This essay is adapted from an earlier piece that ran in The Rubin Report, investment advisors for political conservatives.

Investment decisions should be based solely on maximizing the individual investors’ returns. Unfortunately, investors have unwittingly or unwillingly fallen prey to doing what’s in the best interest of others rather than making the best decisions for themselves.

These investment options have become one of the asset management industry’s fastest-growing investment products. Known as Environmental, Social and Governance— colloquially “ESG” —these types of investments involve, according to Forbes, “investing in companies that score highly on environmental and societal responsibility scales.” Criteria include a company’s carbon footprint or the diversity of its board of directors.

In just a few years, ESG has taken the investment world by storm. It’s been lauded by the likes of BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, who in his recent annual letter declared that planning for a “net-zero” future is an important part of creating “durable returns for shareholders.”

We don’t necessarily disagree with the goals of ESG. But the problem Mr. Fink and other ESG evangelists fail to acknowledge is that companies and asset managers are implicitly expected to support ESG and invest accordingly. Otherwise, they’re likely to face the tedious task of dealing with the ruling class of social justice warriors who dominate the discourse.

Disney CEO Bob Chapek, pictured here with Mickey and Minnie Mouse on July 15, 2017, belatedly gave in to the demands of the woke left and entered a culture war he seemed eager to avoid. (Photo: Disney/Image Group LA)

Our larger concern is ESG’s impact on corporate America. Senior managers should be focused on maximizing their shareholders’ returns, not doing what’s popular among the loudest voices of Twitter. Let individual investors allocate capital. If an investor believes investment in a zero-carbon future maximizes his return, he likely won’t invest in Exxon. It makes sense.

By contrast, an investor with a less clear view of the future might invest in Exxon based on their track record of profits, the result of a successful business strategy that focuses unapologetically on efficiently extracting and distributing fossil fuels. The management team is fully aware of carbon emissions and renewable energy and has concluded that focusing on fossil fuels is the best strategy to maximize their shareholders’ returns.

ESG’s coercive mindset has allowed a handful of activists in the asset management industry to misuse their delegated proxy power to elect “Anti-Fossil Fuel” directors to Exxon’s board. Exxon’s actual shareholders didn’t do this, and, as a result, environmentalists cheer while Exxon’s actual shareholders and employees suffer.

The ESG mindset results from intimidation by vocal political activists (not shareholder activists), direct government intervention, political influence on large public pension funds and the beliefs of a few asset management executives in New York City. In what is supposed to be a free-market economy — where in theory financial decisions are driven by, well, finances — this kind of practice is unacceptable. It is a paradox in the very heart of American capitalism.

Consequently, we are now seeing some negative knock-on effects, such as increased regulatory/compliance costs and political speech by senior executives not connected to business strategy. Take for example Disney’s disastrous decision to oppose Florida’s Parental Rights In Education law at the very last moment—after it was approved in the legislature and just before Gov. Ron DeSantis signed it into law—has resulted in the elimination of the company’s special land status, which could cost the company a fortune.

Further damage to a company’s brand is caused by the hypocrisy of greenwashing, pandering to political issues and ignoring inconvenient human rights and censorship issues.

Look at Coca-Cola and Nike, two companies that have both postured against discrimination in the United States while remaining silent on the lengthy record of human rights abuses by the Chinese government. It’s an obvious discrepancy and everyone knows it, and it’s done nothing to endear either company to anyone outside of the activist class.

All of this, along with corporate social initiatives, alienates customers, employees and profits.

In short, political speech rarely helps a bottom line for a corporation and its shareholders. It does, however, alienate customers, employees and profits. A bottom line helps free corporate managers to focus solely on business strategies that maximize shareholder returns. (Which, by the way, is what they are exorbitantly paid to do).

Rather than letting political activists dictate the direction of a company’s financial decisions, companies should directly educate and influence individual investors about their plans and goals.  Likewise, government intervention and regulation need to be kept to a minimum. Let individual investors allocate capital to maximize their returns.

Collectively, let capitalism’s invisible hand and meritocracy do their jobs. Which, in addition to maximizing investor returns, will also organically address many of ESG’s underlying concerns.

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Bill Flaig
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6 thoughts on “Investors Should Reject the Woke Nonsense of ESG funds

  1. First the companies then us individually. Welcome to the Chinese social credit scores. This is the great reset for society.

  2. Let’s be clear here – the “ESG” ranking is part of the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset” and “Build Back Better” playbook, and Larry Fink & Blackrock are one of the largest participants in this global shakedown scheme and concerted effort to crater the global economy to issue in their centralized command & control economy, of which the Covid plandemic was a precursor…

    What I’m interested in, is an ANTI-ESG EFT or mutual fund, and find companies with the spine to tell these fascist totalitarians to go pound sand and leave the rest of us alone….

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