Abstract

This paper takes as its starting-point the traditionalTreynor and Mazuy timing model and its conditionalversion and adapts them so as to be able to distinguishbetween the stock picking and Market timing abilities ofethical and conventional fund managers. SevenEuropean countries are analysed and similar results arefound for each country. In general, perverse stockpicking and Market timing abilities are observed forconventional fund managers. With regard to ethical fundmanagers, we find they manage to match theirbenchmark both when it outperforms or underperformsthe conventional benchmark. Furthermore in some casesa positive stock picking ability is found for ethical funds.The more restrictive the definition of the term ethicalfund, the greater the cost of diversification for ethicalmanagers. Moreover for best-in-class funds a negativestock picking ability is registered, and in relation withMarket timing, we find that they are more influenced bytheir benchmark than the rest of the ethical funds.

Highlights

  • Responsible investment (SRI) is an old practice but has received little attention for the last two decades

  • We provide the A coefficient which represents the cost of diversification suffered by the ethical mutual fund managers

  • This work seeks to evaluate the stock picking and Market timing abilities of European ethical and conventional fund managers but from a different perspective from that typically used in financial literature to measure these abilities

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Summary

Introduction

Responsible investment (SRI) is an old practice but has received little attention for the last two decades. According to data from the European Social Investment Forum (Eurosif) published in its 2008 study, socially responsible assets managed professionally in Europe represent €2.7 trillion ($3.7 trillion) at the end of December 2007, representing 17.6% of the total of professionally-managed assets in Europe. This corresponds to an impressive growth rate of 102% since December 2005 (a compound annual growth rate of 42%).. We should highlight the growing interest from individuals in this type of socially responsible investment, wealthy individuals

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