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Friday, July 9, 2010 An SRI Fund Fails to See the Value in the Biggest Banks At least one socially responsible fund firm has decided to screen out giant banks, just like SRI managers treat tobacco companies or casinos. Yesterday Pekin Singer Strauss Asset Management revealed that its Appleseed Fund will not invest in so-called "too-big-to-fail banks," "until the financial system is truly restructured," according to Appleseed co-PM Adam Strauss. "We were disappointed lawmakers did not stand up to the banking lobby in order to avoid future bailouts," Strauss stated. "Without meaningful reform, we fear the next crisis will be larger and more devastating than the last ... it is incumbent on depositors and investors to vote with their wallets." The Huffington Post's Shahien Nasiripour reported on Appleseed's move. The online paper probably took note because Morningstar gives the fund five stars and ranked it the top-performing midcap value fund and the top-performing SRI domestic equity fund for the three-years ended June 30. The Post said that Appleseed now treats the five too-big-to-fail (or money center) banks just like alcohol, gambling, porn, tobacco or weapons companies. CHICAGO, IL--(July 8, 2010) - Appleseed Fund, an equity mutual fund which invests in sustainable, undervalued companies, has amended its sustainability screening criteria to exclude "too-big-to-fail" banks, effective July 1st, 2010. Appleseed, the top performing mid-cap value fund over the three year period ending June 30th, 2010, has generated total returns exceeding the S&P 500 since inception by 12.2% per year. Appleseed is the first mutual fund to create an explicit exclusion for too-big-to-fail banks in its investment selection process. Adam Strauss, one of the Fund's co-portfolio managers, explained the change: "The cost of bailing out Wall Street since 2008 is over $3 trillion, or more than $20,000 per taxpayer, and that cost is increasing daily. The financial burden of that bailout will be felt for a generation and will be paid by children, some not yet born. Instead of an industry structure where the largest banks are serving the economy by lending capital, U.S. policies and regulations favor the largest banks, which have proven themselves incapable of fiscal rectitude. "The banking system's current industry incentives are misaligned since employees keep a disproportionate amount of the profits while taxpayers subsidize the losses; this unhealthy imbalance is unsustainable and encourages excessive financial speculation. In the financial reform bill which recently passed the House of Representatives, Congress failed to break up or limit the size and scope of the largest banks that have destabilized the financial system and destroyed so much value over the past five years. We were disappointed lawmakers did not stand up to the banking lobby in order to avoid future bailouts. Without meaningful reform, we fear the next crisis will be larger and more devastating than the last. "Given the failure of regulators to prevent the previous credit crisis and the subsequent failure of legislators to break up the massive and very much interconnected banks that helped to create the crisis, it is incumbent on depositors and investors to vote with their wallets. Until the financial system is truly restructured, the Appleseed Fund will avoid investments in too-big-to-fail banks, choosing instead to invest in regional banks, community banks, and credit unions which lend money to families and businesses that operate in the productive sectors of our economy." About the Appleseed Fund: Required Disclosures: Printed from: MFWire.com/story.asp?s=32749 Copyright 2010, InvestmentWires, Inc. All Rights Reserved |