Funds cater to the faithful

MAR 31, 2013
By  JKEPHART
Advisers who have clients with strong religious beliefs have a variety of mutual funds to choose from, including ones focused on Catholics, Southern Baptists and Muslims. Religious funds make up just over one-third of the universe of socially conscious funds.

"SIN' NO MORE

The religious funds typically screen out so-called “sin” stocks, which go against investors' sacred beliefs. The Ave Maria Funds, for example, are governed by a Catholic advisory board. George Schwartz, president of Schwartz Investment Counsel Inc., the Ave Maria Funds' adviser, screens out companies that run counter to the board's moral criteria. That means no health care companies involved in abortion services, or companies that donate to nonprofit Planned Parenthood Federation of America Inc. The fund also cannot invest in hotel companies, because they offer adult films. Gambling company stocks, however, are allowed. “The Catholic Church has long been big on bingo,” Mr. Schwartz said. Screening companies eliminates approximately 150 companies from the benchmark Russell 3000 Index.

SOME STANDOUTS

Despite the negative screens, religious funds have fairly typical performance numbers when compared with peers' — although several have stood out. The $376 million Ave Maria Rising Dividend Fund (AVEDX) has been among the top 10% of all large-cap mutual funds in terms of performance over one, three, five and 10 years, according to Morningstar Inc. The $2.2 billion Amana Growth Fund (AMAGX), which invests according to the principals of Islamic Shariah law, also ranks among the top 10% over 10 years. GuideStone Funds, which are available only through a Southern Baptist Evangelical church, won the Lipper Award for best overall small fund group in 2012 — the first socially conscious fund to win a group Lipper award. “You don't have to give up your values to get performance,” said Timothy Head, spokesman for GuideStone. [email protected] Twitter: @jasonkephart

Latest News

Carson, Lido strengthen RIA networks with bicoastal deals
Carson, Lido strengthen RIA networks with bicoastal deals

Carson is expanding one of its relationships in Florida while Lido Advisors adds an $870 million practice in Silicon Valley.

Goldman gets shareholder backing on $80M executive bonus packages
Goldman gets shareholder backing on $80M executive bonus packages

The approval of the pay proposal, which handsomely compensates its CEO and president, bolsters claims that big payouts are a must in the war to retain leadership.

Integrated Partners, Kestra welcome multigenerational advisor teams
Integrated Partners, Kestra welcome multigenerational advisor teams

Integrated Partners is adding a husband-wife tandem to its network in Missouri as Kestra onboards a father-son advisor duo from UBS.

Trump not planning to fire Powell, market tension eases
Trump not planning to fire Powell, market tension eases

Futures indicate stocks will build on Tuesday's rally.

From stocks and economy to their own finances, consumers are getting gloomier
From stocks and economy to their own finances, consumers are getting gloomier

Cost of living still tops concerns about negative impacts on personal finances

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.