03/17/2011 11:05:00 AM EST
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):
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.
For additional
commentary on developments in compliance and ethics, visit Compliance Building,
a blog hosted by Doug Cornelius.
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